I tried to motivate Valery to do a number of projects, but he was even more secretive than the other KGB operatives I worked with.
What I am prepared to share is that for Valery to do a book that would do justice to his career in KGB would reveal operations of such geopolitical sensitivity, that even today - the reverberations would be destructive.
This because he was connected to Dept 13 / Dept V, which conducted the most physically serious of FCD operations.
But spending an evening with him and a 1.75 liter bottle of Stoli will permanently change the way you understand how the World really works.
##BDL
https://www.rferl.org/a/us-ussr-kennedy-assassination-oswald-kgb-contact-mexico-assassinations-officer/28819941.html
If I may, did Kostikov ever express any doubts about whether the man who came to the Embassy was indeed Oswald? And not an impostor?
It seems to me that the reaction by the Soviets on this issue - or lack of one, i.e., they didn't report that Oswald was impersonated - is a sort of "dog that didn't bark" type clue. They officially blamed the CIA for the assassination; why wouldn't they *also* say that part of this CIA plan was to impersonate Oswald in order to blame Cuba or the USSR for the act?
The fact that the Soviets and Cubans both agreed that the man that went to Mexico City was Oswald is a problem for those that say he was impersonated. If you think the CIA and US government all lied then what exactly? You think that both Moscow and Havana lied too. Or they fell for this impersonation?
So Kostikov et al confused this man below with Oswald? That's not believable. Especially since Nechiporenko said (to Edward Epstein) the man below was not the man who said he was Oswald but a different American, a US Air Force enlisted man who came to the Embassy offering military secrets (interesting that the CIA missed this matter).