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Author Topic: The KGB Impersonated Oswald in Mexico to Connect Castro to the Assassination  (Read 23530 times)

Offline Anthony Frank

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CIA Headquarters sent a cable to the Mexico City station on November 23 instructing them to send a CIA officer “with all photos” of Oswald at the Soviet and Cuban Embassies “to HQ on next available flight.”

But the CIA’s Mexico City station sent back a cable on November 23 stating they had done a “complete recheck” of the photographs of “all visitors” to the Soviet and Cuban Embassies from September 1 through the “first half November,” and it “shows no evidence Oswald visit,”  and a CIA memorandum on December 13, 1963 states, “None of our several photo observation points in Mexico City had ever taken an identifiable picture of Lee Oswald.”

A 1967 CIA memorandum confirms, “No photograph was taken, acquired, or received of Oswald alone or with any individual in front of the Cuban Embassy, the Soviet Embassy, or anywhere else in Mexico.”

The CIA documented that their “criteria for selecting subjects for photographing” is as follows: “If the target is unknown, and/or a previous photograph has not been taken, the observer takes one.”  (Oswald was unknown and the CIA did not have a “previous photograph” of him.)
A CIA memorandum on November 27, 1963, states, “We have photographic coverage during daylight hours,” and “their consulates are located in the embassies and therefore the coverage of the embassies would include coverage of the consulates. The photographic coverage of the mentioned installations is of a continuous nature during daylight hours.”

Another CIA memo states that during September 1963, Soviet Embassy hours were from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and “offices in the Soviet compound may be visited by appointment only.” It also states, “Visitors may enter the Cuban Consulate” from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday through Friday.

The CIA documented that Sylvia Duran, the Cuban Consulate employee who spoke with the KGB officer impersonating Oswald, “works at the Cuban Consulate from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. daily.”

Oswald’s alleged visits would have clearly occurred “during daylight hours” when the “photographic coverage” of the embassies “is of a continuous nature.” If Oswald had made six visits to the Soviet and Cuban Embassies, CIA observers at each embassy would have had ample opportunity to take several pictures of him coming and going.

In 1975, the CIA claimed they had no photograph of Oswald visiting the Cuban Embassy on Friday, September 27, 1963, because, “The camera, based upon the recollection of officers still in service at headquarters, was down on the 27 because of mechanical malfunction.”

But on November 23, when the CIA’s Mexico City station did a “complete recheck” of the photographs of all visitors to the Soviet and Cuban Embassies from September 1 through the first half November, the complete recheck that “shows no evidence Oswald visit,”  they made no mention of a malfunctioning camera at the Cuban Embassy on September 27.

The allegedly malfunctioning camera explained only why Oswald was not photographed visiting the Cuban Embassy on Friday, September 27, but as for the alleged visit to the Soviet Embassy on that day, the CIA stated, “Why Oswald was missed in his probable entry to the Soviet installation on the 27th is not yet explained,”  which means they have no explanation.

And as for no photographs of Oswald during his alleged visits to the two embassies on Saturday, September 28, the CIA claimed, “Both the Cuban and Soviet Embassies were closed to the public on Saturdays,” and “photographic coverage was normally suspended” on Saturdays.

How could Oswald have visited either embassy on Saturday, September 28, if both embassies were closed to the public that day?

Three years later, in 1978, the CIA came up with a new story in a memorandum to the House Select Committee on Assassinations about the “camera bases” at the Soviet Embassy, stating, “There were two separate bases which covered the Soviet gate,” and one camera base “was not working on September 28, 1963, a Saturday, although it did work four out of the eight Saturdays in September and October 1963 . . . . Coverage for the Soviet gate on Saturdays was standard operating procedure.”

So, the new story is that photographic coverage was not suspended on Saturdays, but they had no photograph of Oswald coming and going from the Soviet Embassy due to one of the two cameras not working on some Saturdays, whereas their previous story was that the camera covering the Cuban Embassy was not working on Friday, September 27.

Again, there had been no mention of a malfunctioning camera when the CIA’s Mexico station did the “complete recheck” of all visitors to the Soviet and Cuban Embassies from September 1 through the first half of November. And since they were specifically looking for photographs of Oswald on September 27 and 28, it certainly would have been important to say something about cameras not functioning on those two particular days.

The CIA’s 1978 story continues by stating the other camera base covering the Soviet Embassy “would have been working on the afternoon of the 27th and on Saturday the 28th,” but it is “the base whose production is unaccountably missing. The Agency has not as yet offered any explanation as to why the production is ‘missing.’”

The CIA “acknowledged” to the Assassination Records Review Board that back in 1963, the Mexico City station had “three photographic surveillance operations targeting the Soviet compound; and one photographic surveillance operation, which employed at least two cameras, targeting the Cuban compound.”

On March 12, 1964, the Warren Commission told the CIA that no government agency could “fill in the very large gaps still existing in Lee Harvey Oswald’s visit to Mexico.” The Commission also stated “there were many days during which we knew nothing about his whereabouts” and “the evenings of his entire trip were unaccounted for.”

Further, the Warren Commission stated the “registry” at the hotel where Oswald allegedly stayed “showed the name of Oswald,” but the hotel clerk “completely denies any other memory of Oswald’s being at the hotel . . . . All the subordinate hotel personnel, such as cleaning ladies, etc., likewise deny any memory of Oswald,” and a CIA document from December 1963 addresses Oswald’s alleged time in Mexico, stating, “No source then at our disposal had ever actually seen Lee Oswald while he was in Mexico.”

Two Church Committee staffers examined the CIA’s records on Oswald and the alleged Mexico visit, and in correspondence to another staffer, they wrote, “The unidentified individual visited the Soviet Embassy on October 1 and October 4, 1963 and impersonated Lee Harvey Oswald.”

The staffers also wrote that according to “a dispatch from Mexico City to Headquarters,” the CIA’s Western Hemisphere Division Chief “knew the identity of the individual.”

The evidence is overwhelming that it was not Oswald at either the Soviet Embassy or the Cuban Embassy, but the entire cover-up hinged on Oswald’s alleged visits to the Soviet and Cuban Embassies, which would cause President Johnson to fear that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and Cuban Premier Fidel Castro were behind President Kennedy’s assassination.

The Church Committee Report states, “For the first twenty-four hours after the assassination, the CIA’s attention focused primarily on Oswald’s September 27, 1963, visit to Mexico City.”

It’s all in my book. Click the link.

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« Last Edit: July 09, 2021, 03:13:41 AM by Anthony Frank »

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Offline Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: Oswald Was Never in Mexico
« Reply #1 on: May 25, 2021, 10:10:13 PM »
The photo below is the one (of four six) that a person saying he was Oswald gave to the Cuban secretary (Silvia Duran) at the consulate in Mexico City for the transit visa application he applied for. Duran testified that she made sure the photo was of the man who applied for the visa. She says the man was Oswald.

CORNWELL - Correct?... Did you look at the photos when he brought them back, careful about to be sure that it was the same man who was standing in front of you?
DURAN - Yes.



The signature on the visa application was identified as belonging to Oswald. Oswald's signature on the hotel registrar that he stayed at in MC was identified as his. Several people at the hotel where he stayed at said the man was Oswald. Two Australian women who were on a bus to Mexico City said they met Oswald.  A Mexican visa application - in Oswald's signature - was found.

Oswald's visa with his signature and the dates stamped on his entry to and exit from Mexico: https://ep01.epimg.net/internacional/imagenes/2017/10/26/estados_unidos/1508970024_281131_1508972040_sumario_normal.jpg

Oswald typed a letter - using Ruth Paine's typewriter - that he sent to the Soviet Embassy where he discussed going to Mexico City. A draft copy of that letter - in his handwriting - was discovered. It too mentions the Mexico City visit.

The three Soviet Embassy officials/KGB officers who say they met Oswald over two days and several hours when he went to Mexico City to go to Cuba all said the man they met was indeed Lee Oswald, the man arrested for the assassination of JFK.

The three KGB officers are shown below. They were shown the photo of the reported "impostor" and all said the man was not the person who said he was Oswald. They said the man who identified himself as Lee Oswald was the actual Oswald.

The video of their interview is here: go to the 1:10:30 mark to see the above:
https://www.pbs.org/video/frontline-who-was-lee-harvey-oswald/

We have numerous eyewitness accounts, physical evidence - signatures, photos, and circumstantial evidence. The evidence is overwhelming that he went to Mexico City and went to the Cuban consulate and Soviet Embassy.




« Last Edit: May 26, 2021, 10:58:26 PM by Steve M. Galbraith »

Offline Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: Oswald Was Never in Mexico
« Reply #2 on: May 25, 2021, 10:24:44 PM »
Here is the typed letter (both Marina and Ruth Paine saw him type it; he used Ruth's typewriter and the FBI verified that it was typed on her typewriter) that Oswald typed and sent to the Soviet Embassy where he discussed his trip to Mexico City. The signature and the writing on the envelope were identified as his.

« Last Edit: May 25, 2021, 11:18:12 PM by Steve M. Galbraith »

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Re: Oswald Was Never in Mexico
« Reply #2 on: May 25, 2021, 10:24:44 PM »


Offline Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: Oswald Was Never in Mexico
« Reply #3 on: May 25, 2021, 10:28:21 PM »
And here are the pages of the draft for the above letter that Oswald sent. In the draft he mentions - as in the sent letter - going to Mexico City and visiting the consulate and embassy. The handwriting was identified as his.


Page two:

Offline Anthony Frank

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Sylvia Duran testified to the House Select Committee on Assassinations about the man claiming to be Oswald, and a staff member of the Committee asked Sylvia Duran how much the man weighed, and she said, “About your weight.”

She also said, “He has stronger shoulders, perhaps, than yours.”

The staff member then stated, “Just for the record, my weight is 199 pounds.”

Duran also testified that the man she saw “didn’t have very much hair.”

When asked if “his hair line” was “receding,” she said, “Yeah, yeah. Quite a bit.”

But less than two months after the alleged visit to Mexico, the autopsy report on Oswald stated that he was only 5 feet, 9 inches and weighed 150 pounds, which is exactly what Oswald put on his job applications, including his application for employment at the Texas School Book Depository on October 15, less than three weeks after the alleged visit to Mexico.

Sylvia Duran, who spoke with someone weighing as much as the 199-pound staff member, but with “stronger shoulders,” a receding hair line, and not very much hair, obviously did not speak with Lee Harvey Oswald, who, besides being 5 feet, 9 inches and 150 pounds, had a slender build and a full head of hair. Duran’s description matched the description of the man photographed by the CIA at the Soviet Embassy, who clearly impersonated Oswald.

A CIA memo states that in 1978, Eusebio Azcue, a Cuban Consul who spoke with the Oswald impersonator, “said that the man who applied for a visa was not the man shown on TV as Lee Harvey Oswald.”

Azcue stated at a gathering in Havana, “In no way did the person I saw in film and photographs resemble the person who visited me.”

As for that “Oswald letter” that someone sent to the Soviet Embassy in Washington, the Soviet Ambassador to the United States, Anatoly Dobrynin, sent a telegram to Moscow on November 26, 1963, declaring that someone had forged the letter as a “provocation.” The letter, allegedly written by Oswald, is on file as a Warren Commission Exhibit.

In it, “Oswald” allegedly wrote, “I had not planned to contact the Soviet Embassy in Mexico, so they were unprepared. Had I been able to reach the Soviet Embassy in Havana as planned, the embassy there would have had time to complete our business . . . . Please inform us of the arrival of our Soviet entrance visas as soon as they come.”

Dobrynin’s telegram to Moscow states, “This letter is clearly a provocation. It gives the impression we had close ties with Oswald and were using him for some purposes of our own. It was totally unlike any other letters the embassy had previously received from Oswald. Nor had he ever visited our embassy himself. The suspicion that the letter is a forgery is heightened by the fact that it was typed, whereas the other letters the embassy had received from Oswald before were handwritten.”

Oswald had written letters to the Soviet Embassy in Washington to inform them of the current address of his wife, Marina, pursuant to her Soviet-issued visa requirements. He also wrote to the Embassy on July 1, 1963, requesting that they “rush” an “entrance visa” for his wife and make “transportation arrangements” for her to go back to the Soviet Union. And as Anatoly Dobrynin noted in his telegram to Moscow, all of Oswald’s letters were handwritten, not typed like the letter implying Oswald had been to the Soviet Embassy in Mexico and had plans to go to Cuba and the Soviet Union.

Dobrynin goes on to say in his telegram to Moscow, “One gets the definite impression that the letter was concocted by those who, judging from everything, are involved in the President’s assassination. The competent U.S. authorities are undoubtedly aware of this letter, since the embassy’s correspondence is under constant surveillance.”

To repeat: Killing President Kennedy was part of the CIA’s quest to control the government, and I have it all documented. Click the link.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
« Last Edit: July 09, 2021, 03:12:26 AM by Anthony Frank »

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Offline Anthony Frank

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My documented evidence in the first post speaks for itself. If Oswald had visited the Soviet and Cuban embassies six times, the CIA would have photos of him doing so.

The CIA had ample resources, yet no one saw Oswald in Mexico. Anyone who thinks Oswald made the trip to Mexico needs to go back and read my first post.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
« Last Edit: July 09, 2021, 03:12:07 AM by Anthony Frank »

Offline Gerry Down

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Re: Oswald Was Never in Mexico
« Reply #6 on: May 26, 2021, 04:59:09 AM »
My documented evidence in the first post speaks for itself. If Oswald had visited the Soviet and Cuban embassies six times, the CIA would have photos of him doing so.

The CIA had ample resources, yet no one saw Oswald in Mexico. Anyone who thinks Oswald made the trip to Mexico needs to go back and read my first post.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y

If the conspirators faked the backyard photos (as CTers propose), then why not just fake photos of Oswald entering the Cuban and Soviet consulates?

Online David Von Pein

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Re: Oswald Was Never in Mexico
« Reply #7 on: May 26, 2021, 05:16:25 AM »
Re: the "199 pounds" subject....

That's merely a typo. It should say 119. Here's the proof of that (near the bottom of this page):

http://jfk-archives.blogspot.com/2014/09/jfk-assassination-arguments-part-793.html

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Re: Oswald Was Never in Mexico
« Reply #7 on: May 26, 2021, 05:16:25 AM »