He also believes that Oswald was pulling a Herbert Philbrick and pretending to be a leftist; in reality he was a gung-ho patriotic American working with the FBI (but not the CIA apparently) who was protecting us from Marxism. Everything up is really down.
None of us can know for certain what Oswald really believed.
What we do know is:
- He had many rightwing or anti-communist associates, but no Leftist associates.
- He portrayed himself publicly as supporting both the Communist Party and the Socialist Workers Party. The problem with that is that the groups were bitter rivals in Oswald's time. So it makes little sense that someone would support both. It would be like supporting the Libertarian Party and the Republican Party. And maybe Oswald revealed his true feelings about the Communist Party when he ridiculed them in the Summer of 1963. With his contradictory statements about Communism, Socialism, and Marxism, it's legit to ask questions about what he really believed.
Anyway, why in the heck would the FBI need a person like Oswald (not exactly Prince Charming) to infiltrate and discredit a non-existent FPCC movement in New Orleans? There's nothing to infiltrate.
The FPCC was a national movement with supporters everywhere. While there may not have been a Chapter in New Orleans, it's possible that there were supporters of the FPCC movement in New Orleans. Or maybe they were baiting Communists? Both groups were targeted by the FBI's COINTELPRO operations.
And the FBI uses weird individuals and criminals all the time as informants or assets.
One of the founders of the FPCC, Richard Gibson, was outed as a CIA asset:
CIA Reveals Name of Former Spy in JFK Files—And He's Still AliveIn a strange twist, on April 26, when the National Archives released thousands of documents pertaining to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, they included three fat CIA files on Gibson. According to these documents, he had served U.S. intelligence from 1965 until at least 1977. This was well after Wright wrote his book, and it's not clear if Gibson had engaged in espionage before that period. But his files revealed his CIA code name, QRPHONE-1; his salary (as much as $900 a month); and his various missions, as well as his attitude ("energetic") and performance ("a self-starter").https://www.newsweek.com/richard-gibson-cia-spies-james-baldwin-amiri-baraka-richard-wright-cuba-926428Gibson was alive at the time when that Newsweek article was published. It was indeed odd that the CIA published the name of an asset while the person is still alive.