I am reading an interesting book: “Oswald and the CIA” by John Newman. Here is a snip from pages 116-118:
Time and place:
November 16, 1959
Moscow, Russia
Snip:
Room 319, the Metropole
“So I went back to the hotel, mail in hand, and I asked the lady at the end of the hall on the second floor if there was an Oswald there,” Priscilla recalls. “Yes, he is in Room 233,” the lady answered. “And I went to his room and knocked on his door, and there he was.” It was about five-twenty P.M. Priscilla describes what happened next this way:
So the door opens and Oswald came out, and he stood in the door, not letting me in his room but talking to me. I said, “My name is Priscilla Johnson and I work for the North American News Alliance. I am a reporter here and I live in your hotel, and I wonder if I could talk with you. He said “Yes,” and I said, ”Well, when can I come and see you?” He said, ”Nine tonight. I’ll come to your room.“30 Oswald showed up on time. He talked with Priscilla until one or two in the morning.
In December 1963 Priscilla wrote her recollections of the interview. Oswald began, she recalled, by saying he had dissolved his American citizenship, “as much as they would let me at that time,” and he then complained that “they refused to allow me to take the oath at that time.”31 Priscilla says she next put a question to him about “the official Soviet attitude,” and he responded that the Russians had “confirmed” that he would not have to leave the country. Oswald then added, “They have said they are investigating the possibilities of my continuing my education at a Soviet institute.” This 1963 description of the way the interview opened matches almost precisely her 1959 notes written during the interview with Oswald.32
Oswald explained that since the embassy had “released”33 the story of his defection, he was granting this interview “to give my side of the story—I would like to give people in the United States something to think about. “He continued. “Once having been assured by the Russians that I would not have to return to the United States, come what may, I assumed it would be safe for me to give my side of the story” [the underline was in Priscilla’s contemporaneous notes and may have been Oswald’s emphasis].34 Again, Priscilla’s 1963 account matched her 1959 notes, but what did Oswald mean by “safe”?
Please not that there is not an underline (that the author refers to) in my Kindle version of the book. But, based on the point that Newman is making, I would assume his reference involves the “would be safe” comment. I am the one who underlined the “something to think about” comment. It would be easy to speculate what LHO might have meant by that remark. Newman is concerned with whatever secrets LHO might have had (and was willing to give the Soviets) regarding his radar experiences in the USMC, including the U2 spy plane. I don’t believe that LHO could have even imagined the JFK assassination in 1959. But he did (eventually) achieve his goal of “giving people of the United States something to think about.” We are still thinking about it almost 60-years later…