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Like many Latin Americans who grew up in the 60s, the Argentine Guillermo Gaede admired Ernesto "Che" Guevara. In 1973, at age 21, "Bill" as they say you all- joined communism and prepared to help Cuba, as he had done his compatriot. But his attempt to travel to the island failed when the country rejected his request for visa.
A decade later, thirty years old, married and living in the United States, Gaede came up with a different way to collaborate with the government of Fidel Castro. He was an engineer and had found work in one of the most important companies that emerged from the fledgling US computer industry: Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).
So it was that had the idea of transferring to Cuba technological secrets on how to build integrated circuits AMD. "I became a spy for the Cuban government," he told BBC Gaede, during a visit to Buenos Aires.