This has all been debunked ages ago on the EF. Perhaps you should go over there and study this subject in more depth. I can't believe in this day and age that someone still misconstrues what John Newman said. Do you have much experience about that which you posit? It's not wise to piggyback off of someone's words and apply your own meaning to it, especially in this case. Just do a search for it on the EF, I am sure every question that you have thoughts about, is plainly and more than amply stated over there.
Jeff,
Debunked by whom?
A tinfoil hat-wearing "The Evil, Evil, Evil CIA Did It" ... "researcher," or two?
Doesn't it bother you that Duran and Azcue both described the Oswald they'd dealt with (or not) in such a way that perfectly described "Third Secretary/Assistant Cultural Attache" KGB colonel Nikolai Leonov, and that the Soviet Embassy "security guard" who volunteered (over a sure-to-be-tapped-by-CIA phoneline) the made-radioactive-by-KGB name "Kostikov" to an Oswald impersonator (who, as Peter Dale Scott points out, spoke Russian poorly -- i.e., on purpose? --
AND English poorly -- i.e., naturally?) was a KGB triple-agent whom CIA mistakenly believed was working for CIA?
What's with the attitude, btw?
-- MWT
PS Disregard the Bruce "Sucker" Solie-influenced "Osborn Document" that Michael Clark posts every time I say something good about his bugbear,Tennent H. Bagley, and just bear in mind that it was proved in Bagley's 2007 book that he, Newton "Scotty" Miler, and Angleton, et al., were right, after all: Nosenko was a false defector sent here to get CIA and FBI to disbelieve a previous (true) defector -- Anatoliy Golitsyn.
Newman even convinced Peter Dale Scott of this last year in San Francisco.
Btw, ever heard of the first CIA officer ever recruited by the KGB, Edward Ellis Smith, in 1956?