Another question that is never really answered....Why make out an application for a visa to a country that is expressly prohibited to visit?
See page 4--- https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docId=1139#relPageId=851
I've seen one response that people still flew to Cuba all the time anyway...a nifty reply that has no discernible foundation.
It wasn't a visa; it was a
transit visa. He told the Cubans - Duran - that he was headed to the Soviet Union to live and that on the way there he wanted to transit or go through Havana. He wasn't going to return to the US. This is why the Cubans needed to see his Soviet visa; to prove that he wasn't lying about going to the USSR. And it's why he then went to the Soviet Embassy in search of one. If he was just getting a visa to Cuba he didn't need to show a Soviet visa.
From Duran's testimony:
TIRADO - Well, that he needed to, he said that a transit visa so that he needs a visa to the country that he was going, from, if it was a Socialist country, the visa was given, as soon as he gets the other visa, and uh...
CORNWELL - When he first asked about the requirements for a visa, did he tell you that his objective was to go to cuba or to another country?
TIRADO - To the Soviet Union.
His plan was to defect, leave the US and live in Cuba. How he was going to persuade the Cuban officials to let him stay there is a mystery; probably claim that he was being politically persecuted by the "notorious FBI", the phrase he used when he talked with the Soviets. But he lied about wanting to go to the USSR (he had no visa for the country; how was he going to get there?). Marina said that he told her that she could - somehow - get herself to Cuba and meet him there. In other words, he was abandoning her on her own. Swell guy.
From her testimony:
Mr. RANKIN. Did he tell you why he wanted to go to Mexico City?
Mrs. OSWALD. From Mexico City he wanted to go to Cuba--perhaps through the Russian Embassy in Mexico somehow he would be able to get to Cuba.
Mr. RANKIN. Did he say anything about going to Russia by way of Cuba?
Mrs. OSWALD. I know that he said that in the embassy. But he only said so. I know that he had no intention of going to Russia then.
Mr. RANKIN. How do you know that?
Mrs. OSWALD. He told me. I know Lee fairly well--well enough from that point of view.
Mr. RANKIN. Did he tell you that he was going to Cuba and send you on to Russia?
Mrs. OSWALD. No, he proposed that after he got to Cuba, that I would go there, too, somehow.
You think Oswald was worried about violating American laws against visiting Cuba? He was leaving the US - defecting - to live in another country; what was going to happen to him legally if he was in Cuba? He didn't give a damned about US laws since he was, again, turning his back on the country.
There were regular flights leaving from Mexico City to Cuba and vice versa. Mexico had normal relations with the Castro government; hence the establishment of the Cuban Embassy and consulate. This method, the flights, was how people in the Cuban consulate got from Cuba to Mexico. And then went back.
Question: Why would an impostor ask for a transit visa? If they gave him one then what was he going to do?
This "Oswald was impersonated" theory makes no sense to me on any level. Not the way this supposed impersonator acted. He gave the Cubans an actual photo of Oswald. Why would an impostor do that? And he behaved like an erratic unstable person. For what purpose? This supposed impostor was lucky the Cubans or Soviets didn't have the police arrest him.