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Author Topic: Oswald Was a CIA “Agent” and LBJ Was Worried About a Nuclear War  (Read 4278 times)

Offline Anthony Frank

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The CIA, according to its own documents, defines an agent as: “A person who acts in our behalf, at our instigation and in consonance with our direction.”

Oswald was alleged to be a Communist sympathizer who defected to the Soviet Union, but he was most definitely a CIA “agent.”

A CIA document titled “Excerpts From Unpublished Writings of Lee Harvey Oswald” quotes Oswald as having written, “When I first went to Russia in the winter of 1959 my funds were very limited, so after a certain time, after the Russians had assured themselves that I was really the naive American who believed in Communism, they arranged for me to receive a certain amount of money every month . . . . It was arranged by the MVD [Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs] . . . . It really was payment for my denunciation of the US in Moscow in November 1959.”

A CIA memo from March 1964 makes reference to Oswald’s writings and states, “In his writings, Oswald is highly critical of Soviet rigged elections, the massing of crowds for staged demonstrations, travel restrictions, regimentation, and the lack of freedom of press, speech, and religion.”

On November 29, 1963, the CIA sent a message to the White House stating that while Oswald was enroute to the Soviet Union, he “passed through Sweden during October 1959” and was “unsuccessful in obtaining a visa to the USSR in Helsinki, which resulted in his returning to Stockholm.”

The CIA message also stated, “Two days after he arrived in Stockholm, Oswald traveled directly to Moscow . . . . There was no record that there was any request for a USSR visa processed through normal channels for Oswald at any time during 1959 . . . . It was difficult to explain how Oswald might have received his visa in two days without going through normal channels.”

The CIA sent out a cable in July 1964, stating that Headquarters “wants to know minimum time required to obtain Soviet tourist visa.”

The response in a CIA cable three days later states, “Normal visa processing takes seven days, which can be shortened ‘in exceptional cases’ to five days. Impossible in two or three days.”

As for Oswald being “a person who acts in our behalf, at our instigation and in consonance with our direction,” Oswald’s Marine Corps record shows that on February 25, 1959, he was tested on his Russian language “comprehension” skills, including his ability to “understand” Russian, his ability to “read” Russian, and his ability to “write” in Russian.

On August 17, 1959, less than six months after being tested on his Russian language skills, Lee Harvey Oswald “submitted a request for a ‘dependency’ discharge from the Marine Corps.” The alleged reason for the “dependency discharge” was the “hardship of his mother.”

After submitting his request, Oswald first “appeared before the Hardship/Dependency discharge board,” which “recommended that he be released from active duty for reason of dependency,” and his discharge from the Marines was approved on August 31, two weeks after Oswald submitted his request.

Two days after Oswald’s discharge was approved, a CIA memorandum addressed the “legal travel operations into the USSR,” stating that the CIA’s Soviet Russia Division “will conduct all legal travel operations involving the use of U.S. citizens.”

On September 4, Oswald applied for a passport. His application states that the countries to which he would be traveling include France, England, Finland, and Russia.

Then, on September 11, 1959, one week after applying for a passport, Oswald was officially released from “active duty” in the Marines, whereupon he was transferred into the Marine Corps Reserve with obligated service until December 8, 1962. He then went to Fort Worth, Texas, where he visited with his mother for “approximately three days” and told her that he would like to “travel abroad,” after which he went to New Orleans.

On September 16, five days after his release from active duty in the Marines due to the alleged “hardship of his mother,” Oswald paid $215 to travel to France aboard the SS Marion Lykes, a “passenger-carrying freighter.” He boarded the ship on September 19 and “wrote his mother that he had booked passage for Europe.”

The ship set sail on September 20, 1959, and Oswald arrived in France on October 6. He subsequently departed for England the same day, arriving in England on October 9. The next day, he boarded a flight that would take him to Helsinki where, as previously noted, he was unsuccessful in obtaining a Russian visa, after which he went to Stockholm and waited two days for a Russian visa, even though “there was no record that there was any request for a USSR visa processed through normal channels for Oswald at any time during 1959.”

The only explanation for Oswald getting a visa “without going through normal channels” and getting it in “two days” is that the CIA created one for him. A 1961 CIA document states that the CIA Deputy Director of Operations “is authorized to suspend procedures” when “operational and security aspects of an agent’s management are so sensitive as to require processing through special channels.” The document also states that one of the “basic requirements” in a “secure operation” is “to keep to an operational minimum the number of persons aware of the true aims of the operation.”

Oswald’s fabricated visa, for which there was “no record” of a request, lists “Helsinki” as the place where it was issued, and the “signature” of the person issuing the visa is “illegible.”

On October 16, eight months after the Marine Corps tested Oswald on his Russian language “comprehension” skills and forty-four days after the CIA memorandum about “legal travel operations into the USSR,” Oswald arrived in Moscow, where “he was handled” by “a KGB agent.”

A CIA paper dealing with the alleged defection states, “All such defectors would be interrogated by the KGB” and “surrounded by KGB informants wherever they re-settled in the USSR.”

Fifteen days after arriving in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Oswald went to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and claimed that he was renouncing his American citizenship, stating afterward, “I will never return to the United States for any reason.”

The Embassy reported that Oswald “was aggressive, arrogant, and uncooperative,” and in response to his alleged desire to renounce his citizenship, the Embassy “advised Oswald by mail of his right to renounce citizenship, such renunciation in manner prescribed by law being valid, and that he might appear on any normal business day and request documents be prepared.”

But Oswald never went back to do the paperwork, and a U.S. State Department memo in December 1961 states that Oswald “did not, in fact, renounce United States citizenship . . . . Mr. Oswald did not expatriate himself and remains a citizen of the United States.”

Eleven months before the State Department memo, Oswald wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Navy due to receiving an undesirable discharge for traveling to the Soviet Union. A short fifteen months after the alleged attempt to renounce his citizenship, Oswald told the Secretary of the Navy that he is “still a U.S. citizen” and “had gone to the Soviet Union to reside only for a ‘short time.’”

Oswald also wrote a letter to a Marine Corps General on March 22, 1962, stating, “I have never taken steps to renounce my U.S. citizenship . . . . I refer you to the United States Embassy, Moscow, or the U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C., for the verification of this fact.”

According to the State Department officer who dealt with Oswald during the phony attempt to renounce citizenship, Oswald appeared to have been “tutored in connection with his apparent attempts to renounce his American citizenship,” and Oswald’s trip to the Soviet Union was suspiciously a “competently arranged trip.”

The State Department officer also reported, “Oswald evidently knew something of the procedure for renunciation of citizenship when he came into the office. This seemed a bit unusual since it was so soon after his first departure from the United States on his first trip abroad traveling as a private citizen.”

The Warren Commission told CIA officials in March 1964, “The letters Lee Oswald wrote to the American Embassy in Moscow while he was trying to get permission for himself and his wife Marina to return to the United States might have been ‘coached.’”

A Warren Commission staff member told the CIA officials that “these letters reflected a higher degree of sophistication and knowledge of passport procedures than would be expected of a man of Lee Harvey Oswald’s known character.”

The FBI documented that an Associated Press reporter spoke with Oswald at his hotel soon after his claim that he wanted to “relinquish his United States citizenship and remain in Russia.” The reporter “engaged him in a conversation” and “asked Oswald why he was going to remain in Russia.”

The FBI report states, “Oswald replied, ‘I’ve got my reasons,’ but did not elucidate.”

On June 18, 1962, five days after he returned from the Soviet Union, Oswald had Pauline Bates, a stenographer in Fort Worth, Texas, type up notes that he made while in Russia. Bates testified to the Warren Commission that the notes, both typed and handwritten, were in Russian and that Oswald spent three days translating them for her. She also stated that she was “anxious to get on it” because she was very interested in the fact that Oswald “had just come back from Russia and had notes.”

She told the Warren Commission, “I started asking him some questions – ‘Why did you go to Russia?’ - and a few things like that. Some of them he’d answer and some of them he wouldn’t . . . . He wasn’t very talkative. And whenever I did get him to talk, I had to drag it out of him. He didn’t talk voluntarily.”

The information that Pauline Bates “dragged” out of Oswald included the fact that he would “scribble notes” while in Russia “whenever he could” and then “surreptitiously” type them when “Marina would cover for him . . . muffle the tone of the typewriter and everything . . . . He said she would cover or watch for him so that nobody would know that he was making them . . . try to steer anybody away while he was doing this, because he could have got in trouble.”

She testified that the notes were “about the living conditions and the working conditions in Russia. And they were very bitter against Russia . . . . It was the terrible living conditions and the terrible working conditions . . . . The notes were very, very bitter about Russia.

“He smuggled them out of Russia. And he said that the whole time until they got over the border, they were scared to death they would be found, and, of course, they would not be allowed to leave Russia.”

Oswald also told Pauline Bates that while he was in the Marine Corps, he “had taken elementary Russian - a course in elementary Russian.” As noted earlier, six and a half months before he left on a “passenger-carrying freighter” with the Soviet Union as his ultimate destination, the Marines tested Oswald on his ability to understand Russian, read Russian, and write in Russian.

The FBI reported that when they interviewed Oswald on June 26, 1962, thirteen days after he returned to the United States, “Oswald declined to answer the question as to why he made the trip to Russia in the first place” and stated he “would not be willing to take a polygraph test.”

Oswald was put on the CIA’s Counterintelligence “Watch List” on November 9, 1959, nine days after he told U.S. embassy officials that he was renouncing his American citizenship and would “never return to the United States for any reason.”

The card with Oswald’s name on it simply states, “Recent defector to the USSR, Former Marine,” but it is also stamped “Secret: Eyes Only,” which means it was of the highest restriction when it comes to who sees it, and anyone who sees it knows they are not supposed to ask any questions about Lee Harvey Oswald.

Very few people were supposed to know that Oswald was acting on behalf of the CIA in his feigned defection to the Soviet Union. In an executive session of the Warren Commission on January 27, 1964, Congressman Hale Boggs asked former CIA Director Allen Dulles, “Did you have agents about whom you had no record whatsoever?”

Dulles replied, “The record might not be on paper,” adding that if anything were “on paper,” it “would have hieroglyphics that only two people knew what they meant, and nobody outside of the Agency would know.”

It’s all in my book. Click the link.

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« Last Edit: June 29, 2021, 02:00:52 AM by Anthony Frank »

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Offline Jerry Freeman

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Re: Oswald's Feigned Defection to the Soviet Union
« Reply #1 on: June 01, 2021, 06:26:59 AM »
From the Oswald timeline...  https://jfkassassination.net/parnell/chrono.htm

February 13, 1961...The American Embassy in Moscow is notified by LHO that he wants to return to the United States. [This was about one month before he reportedly ever met Marina.]

April 30, 1961...[After a whirlwind romance that lasted all of six weeks]...Lee and Marina were married.

October 18, 1961... LHO spends his 22nd birthday at the opera. With who? Marina was reportedly visiting her aunt in Kharkov (1000 miles away in Ukraine)
Who would have ever thought that Lee (lowly warehouse worker, wife beater, and assassin) was such a highbrow ::)


December, 1961...LHO writes Texas Senator John Tower, asking for his help with exit visas for Marina and himself. Suggesting that he assisted in some manner. [Tower as it seems merely forwarded the letter to the State Dept and presumably brushed his hands of it.] https://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/14/washington/14letters.html

December 25, 1961... Marina is called to the passport office and told that she and LHO will be granted exit visas. [That entry throws me. What 'passport office'? Marina was a Soviet. She had to have a Soviet international passport to travel. Perhaps she had one but had no reason previously to posses this document. Also...passport offices never call people to advise them that they will be given a visa. The US State Dept issues visas for travel to the USA.]

December 27, 1961... LHO tells the Embassy that they will be given visas and asks to extend his passport. [This also make no sense. Extend his passport? Passports are good for 10 years. Oswald's passport was never voided. Also, the return of his passport shows that he is an American citizen and he had no need for a visa. Just Marina and also later the daughter would need the USA entry visas. You don't tell the US Embassy what they need to do..they tell you what they are going to do :-\]

January 15, 1962... The Embassy tells LHO it needs proof that Marina will not become a ward of the state. [That was never done. Supposedly, Oswald listed that his mother would take care of them. What a laugh.. after he fraudulently signed off on a hardship discharge stating that Oswald would take care of dear old disabled mom!]

 

Offline Tom Scully

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Re: Oswald's Feigned Defection to the Soviet Union
« Reply #2 on: June 01, 2021, 08:58:41 AM »
The first passport I was issued expired after five years...



His 1959 issued passport expired after just two years...

Quote
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_passport#History

...Initially, a U.S. passport was issued for two years, although by the 1950s on application by the holder a passport could be stamped so that this time was extended without reissue. Stamping for a further extension is not permitted at present. In the succeeding decades the periods of validity for adult applicants were gradually extended to three, five, and eventually ten years, the current standard.

https://www.archives.gov/research/jfk/warren-commission-report/appendix-15.html#return

"...During the course of the interview Oswald filled out an application for renewal of his American passport.101 The renewal application was required since Oswald's existing passport would expire on September 10, 1961,102 and it was extremely unlikely that he would be able to obtain the requisite Soviet departure documents before that time. The renewal application contained a printed statement which set forth, in the disjunctive, a series of acts which, if committed by the applicant, would either automatically disqualify him from receiving a passport on the ground that he had lost his American citizenship, or would raise a question whether he might be so disqualified. The printed statement was preceded by two phrases, "have," and, "have not," the first phrase being printed directly above the second. One carbon copy of the application indicates Oswald signed the document after the second phrase, "have not," had been typed over, thereby apparently admitting that he had committed one or more of the acts which would at least raise a question as to whether he had expatriated himself. Snyder was not able to remember with certainty to which of the acts listed on the statement Oswald's mark was intended to refer, but believed it may have been to "swearing allegiance to a foreign state." 103 He points out that the strikeout of "have not" may also have been a clerical error.104 On the actual signed copy of the application kept in the

Page 756

files of the Moscow Embassy, which is not a carbon copy of the copy sent to the Department, the strikeout is slightly above the "have;" therefore, since the "have" is itself printed above the "have not," the strikeout may have been intended to obliterate the "have." 105

In any event, Oswald filled out the supplementary questionnaire which was required to be completed if the applicant admitted he had performed one or more of the possibly expatriating acts. He signed the questionnaire under oath.106 Snyder testified that it was routine for any kind of "problem case" to fill out the supplementary questionnaire.107 The Passport Office employee who processed the Oswald case in Washington testified that she routinely regarded the questionnaire rather than the application itself as the controlling document for expatriation purposes, so that she probably paid no attention to the strikeout.108

The pertinent questions included on the questionnaire, with Oswald's answers, read as follows:

    2.(a) Are you known or considered in your community to be a national of the country in which you are residing? No. (Yes or No)

    (b) If your answer to 2(a) is "No," explain why not. On my document for residence in the USSR my nationality is American.

    3.(a) Have you ever sought or obtained registration as a national of a foreign country, applied for or obtained a passport, certificate, card document or other benefit therefrom in which you were described as a national of a country other than the United States? No. (Yes or No)

    (b) If your answer to 3(a) is "Yes," did you voluntarily seek or claim such benefits? (Yes or No) If "No," please explain. I received a document for residence in the USSR but I am described as being "Without citizenship."

    4.(a) Have you ever informed any local or national official of a foreign state that you are a national of the United Stares? No.***

    (b) If your answer to 4(a) is "No," explain why not. On my document for residence in the USSR, my nationality is American.

    6.(a) Have you ever taken an oath or made an affirmation or other formal declaration of allegiance to a foreign state? No.***

    8. Have you ever accepted, served in, or performed the duties of any office, post or employment under the government of a foreign state or political subdivision thereof? No... I do not regard factory employment as state employment, as is meant in the question above.109

Page 757

On the basis of these answers, and on the basis of the statements Oswald made orally during the interview, Snyder concluded that Oswald had not lost his citizenship. Snyder therefore handed him back his passport. Pursuant to the instructions from Washington, it was stamped, "This passport is valid only for direct travel to the United States." 110

In a despatch dated July 11, 1961,111 the Embassy informed the Department of State of its conclusion that Oswald had not lost his American citizenship and requested that, if Washington agreed with the conclusion, "the Embassy be authorized to renew Oswald's passport at its discretion." The despatch, with which Oswald's application and supplemental questionnaire 112 were enclosed, informed the Department that Oswald was questioned at length at the Embassy and that no evidence was revealed of any act which might be considered as having caused the loss of his American citizenship.

The Embassy added in the despatch--

    It is our intention not to renew it [the passport] without the Department's prior approval of the enclosed renewal application, and then only upon evidence of a present need for the renewal in connection with his efforts to return to the United States.113

Oswald appeared at the Embassy once again on July 11, 1961, this time accompanied by Marina, in order to complete the papers necessary to obtain permission for his wife to enter the United States.114 In a letter dated July 16, 1961, Oswald informed the American Embassy about his and Marina's application to the Soviet officials for permission to leave Russia, and described the harassment which Marina was allegedly undergoing because of her attempts to leave the country.115

Based upon Snyder's recommendation and the information in its files, the passport Office on August 18, 1961, concluded that Oswald had not expatriated himself.116 Therefore, on that date, the Department of State sent a despatch to the Embassy in Moscow stating that they concurred in the Embassy's recommendation of July 11, 1961, with respect to Oswald's citizenship:

    We concur in the conclusion of the Embassy that there is available no information and/or evidence to show that Mr. Oswald has expatriated himself under the pertinent laws of the United States.

    The renewal of Mr. Oswald's passport, issued on September 10, 1959, is authorized upon his referenced application if no adverse reason is known, to take place upon his presentation of evidence that he needs such renewal in connection with his efforts to return to the United States as indicated in the final sentence on page 2 of Despatch 29. As requested in the final paragraph of the Despatch the Embassy may perform this citizenship function for Mr. Oswald at its discretion.

Page 758

    Any passport renewal granted to Mr. Oswald should be limited to his passport needs and, as stated in the second paragraph of the Department's A-173, April 13, 1961 his passport should be made valid for direct return to the United States. The additional precaution set forth in the same paragraph should be observed and his passport should be delivered to him on a personal basis only. When available, a report of his travel data should be submitted, as well as a report of any intervening developments.117

On October 12, 1961, the Embassy wrote the Department to inform it of four letters it had received from Oswald dated July 15, August 8, and October 4, and an undated letter received in August. With reference to these letters, the despatch noted:

    ... that Oswald is having difficulty in obtaining exit visas for himself and his Soviet wife, and that they are subject to increasing harassment in Minsk. In replying to Oswald's latest letter, the Embassy pointed out that it has no way of influencing Soviet action on exit visas. It informed him that the question of his passport renewal could be discussed with him personally at the Embassy. In answer to Oswald's question, the Embassy notified him that the petition to classify his wife's status had not yet been approved.118

The Department on December 28, 1961, informed the Embassy that the Passport Office approved the manner of the Embassy's reply to Mr. Oswald with respect "to his receiving further passport facilities." 119 After a further exchange of correspondence between Oswald and the Embassy, dealing primarily with Oswald's difficulties in obtaining the necessary Soviet clearance, his impatience in receiving American approval for Marina's entry into the United States, and his efforts to obtain a repatriation loan,120 the passport problem was finally concluded on May 24, 1962, when the Embassy renewed Oswald's passport for 30 days, stamped it valid for direct return to the United States only and handed it to him.121 A week later he used it to return to the United States.122

The decision that Oswald was entitled to a new passport because he had not expatriated himself was made for the Embassy by the consul, Richard E. Snyder.123 For the Department it was made initially by Miss Bernice L. Waterman, a worker in the Passport Office for 36 years, and was then approved by her area chief, by the head of the Foreign Operations Division, and by the Legal Division of the Passport Office.124 Snyder and Miss Waterman have both testified that they reached their decisions independently and without influence from any other person.125 The Director of the Passport Office and the Legal Adviser to the State Department both stated that after a review of the record they concluded that Oswald had not expatriated himself and that Snyder and Waterman, therefore, acted correctly.126

Page 759

Legal Justification for the Return and Reissue of Oswald's Passport..."
« Last Edit: June 01, 2021, 09:26:31 AM by Tom Scully »

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Re: Oswald's Feigned Defection to the Soviet Union
« Reply #2 on: June 01, 2021, 08:58:41 AM »


Offline Jerry Freeman

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Re: Oswald's Feigned Defection to the Soviet Union
« Reply #3 on: June 02, 2021, 05:14:59 AM »
Quote
His 1959 issued passport expired after just two years...
noted
I found an old Oswald passport thread here..... "Oswald's Passport History"

https://www.jfkassassinationforum.com/index.php/topic,2397.msg76184.html#msg76184

Quote
June 24, 1963: LHO applies for a new passport.
That is all the timeline mentions about the '63 passport. It does not say when he got it.
He received it [I guess he did supposedly] the very next day... Passport dated June 25 1963.
Like it was already to go overnight ::)
With modern 21st century computer processing ---try doing that for any amount of money.
Quote
Get a Passport Quickly
Please note: You can now get routine (10-12 week) and expedited (4-6 week) passport processing by mail and at local acceptance facilities. You can visit a passport agency by appointment only for a life or death emergency. Learn more about the status of passport processing.

Getting or Renewing a U.S. Passport | USAGov

Offline Anthony Frank

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Oswald Was a CIA “Agent” and LBJ Was Worried About a Nuclear War
« Reply #4 on: June 03, 2021, 07:29:01 AM »
What is most relevant is the CIA statement that “there was no record that there was any request for a USSR visa processed through normal channels for Oswald at any time during 1959.”

The CIA clearly supplied Oswald with a visa to enter the Soviet Union. Oswald would have obviously relied on his CIA handlers for any of his passport needs.

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« Last Edit: June 29, 2021, 02:00:12 AM by Anthony Frank »

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Oswald Was a CIA “Agent” and LBJ Was Worried About a Nuclear War
« Reply #4 on: June 03, 2021, 07:29:01 AM »


Offline Anthony Frank

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Oswald Was a CIA “Agent” and LBJ Was Worried About a Nuclear War
« Reply #5 on: June 16, 2021, 01:31:00 AM »
February 13, 1961...The American Embassy in Moscow is notified by LHO that he wants to return to the United States. [This was about one month before he reportedly ever met Marina.]

In 1984, the KGB officers admitted that their plans to assassinate President Kennedy began to take shape when Kennedy took the oath of office on January 20, 1961.

On February 1, 1961, less than two weeks after Kennedy became President, Oswald wrote to the U.S. embassy in Moscow requesting the return of his U.S. passport, stating, “I desire to return to the United States.”

The KGB’s desire to bring Lee Harvey Oswald back to the United States explains why Soviet authorities granted his wife, Marina, permission to “leave the Soviet Union and travel to the United States” when, “in practice, permission for a Soviet wife to accompany her foreign national husband abroad is rarely given.”

Marina “received her exit document” from Soviet authorities in May 1962,  and Oswald returned home with her in June.

The CIA was rife with KGB officers, including the CIA Director himself, and they wanted an American residing in the Soviet Union to return to the United States as part of a plan to assassinate the President, all of which means Soviet authorities would grant permission for Marina to leave.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y
« Last Edit: June 29, 2021, 01:59:46 AM by Anthony Frank »

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Oswald's Phony Defection to the Soviet Union
« Reply #6 on: June 17, 2021, 03:33:08 AM »
A copy of an envelope containing a letter sent by Oswald to the Supreme Soviet asking for political asylum in the former U.S.S.R. (Reuters)


Offline Walt Cakebread

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Re: Oswald's Phony Defection to the Soviet Union
« Reply #7 on: June 17, 2021, 05:14:03 PM »
Oswald was alleged to be a Communist sympathizer who defected to the Soviet Union, but a CIA document titled “Excerpts From Unpublished Writings of Lee Harvey Oswald” quotes Oswald as having written, “When I first went to Russia in the winter of 1959 my funds were very limited, so after a certain time, after the Russians had assured themselves that I was really the naive American who believed in Communism, they arranged for me to receive a certain amount of money every month . . . . It was arranged by the MVD [Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs] . . . . It really was payment for my denunciation of the US in Moscow in November 1959.”

A CIA memo from March 1964 makes reference to Oswald’s writings and states, “In his writings, Oswald is highly critical of Soviet rigged elections, the massing of crowds for staged demonstrations, travel restrictions, regimentation, and the lack of freedom of press, speech, and religion.”

On November 29, 1963, the CIA sent a message to the White House stating that while Oswald was enroute to the Soviet Union, he “passed through Sweden during October 1959” and was “unsuccessful in obtaining a visa to the USSR in Helsinki, which resulted in his returning to Stockholm.”

The CIA message also stated, “Two days after he arrived in Stockholm, Oswald traveled directly to Moscow . . . . There was no record that there was any request for a USSR visa processed through normal channels for Oswald at any time during 1959 . . . . It was difficult to explain how Oswald might have received his visa in two days without going through normal channels.”

The CIA sent out a cable in July 1964, stating that Headquarters “wants to know minimum time required to obtain Soviet tourist visa.”

The response in a CIA cable three days later states, “Normal visa processing takes seven days, which can be shortened ‘in exceptional cases’ to five days. Impossible in two or three days.”

A CIA document pertaining to CIA “Operations” dated September 19, 1961, less than two years after Oswald went to the Soviet Union and nine months before his return to the United States, define an agent as: “A person who acts in our behalf, at our instigation and in consonance with our direction.”

As for Oswald being “a person who acts in our behalf, at our instigation and in consonance with our direction,” Oswald’s Marine Corps record shows that on February 25, 1959, he was tested on his Russian language “comprehension” skills, including his ability to “understand” Russian, his ability to “read” Russian, and his ability to “write” in Russian.

On August 17, 1959, less than six months after being tested on his Russian language skills, Lee Harvey Oswald “submitted a request for a ‘dependency’ discharge from the Marine Corps.” The alleged reason for the “dependency discharge” was the “hardship of his mother.”

After submitting his request, Oswald first “appeared before the Hardship/Dependency discharge board,” which “recommended that he be released from active duty for reason of dependency,” and his discharge from the Marines was approved on August 31, two weeks after Oswald submitted his request.

Two days after Oswald’s discharge was approved, a CIA memorandum addressed the “legal travel operations into the USSR,” stating that the CIA’s Soviet Russia Division “will conduct all legal travel operations involving the use of U.S. citizens.”

On September 4, Oswald applied for a passport. His application states that the countries to which he would be traveling include France, England, Finland, and Russia.

Then, on September 11, 1959, one week after applying for a passport, Oswald was officially released from “active duty” in the Marines, whereupon he was transferred into the Marine Corps Reserve with obligated service until December 8, 1962. He then went to Fort Worth, Texas, where he visited with his mother for “approximately three days” and told her that he would like to “travel abroad,” after which he went to New Orleans.

On September 16, five days after his release from active duty in the Marines due to the alleged “hardship of his mother,” Oswald paid $215 to travel to France aboard the SS Marion Lykes, a “passenger-carrying freighter.” He boarded the ship on September 19 and “wrote his mother that he had booked passage for Europe.”

The ship set sail on September 20, 1959, and Oswald arrived in France on October 6. He subsequently departed for England the same day, arriving in England on October 9. The next day, he boarded a flight that would take him to Helsinki where, as previously noted, he was unsuccessful in obtaining a Russian visa, after which he went to Stockholm and waited two days for a Russian visa, even though “there was no record that there was any request for a USSR visa processed through normal channels for Oswald at any time during 1959.”

The only explanation for Oswald getting a visa “without going through normal channels” and getting it in “two days” is that the CIA created one for him. A 1961 CIA document states that the CIA Deputy Director of Operations “is authorized to suspend procedures” when “operational and security aspects of an agent’s management are so sensitive as to require processing through special channels.” The document also states that one of the “basic requirements” in a “secure operation” is “to keep to an operational minimum the number of persons aware of the true aims of the operation.”

Oswald’s fabricated visa, for which there was “no record” of a request, lists “Helsinki” as the place where it was issued, and the “signature” of the person issuing the visa is “illegible.”

On October 16, eight months after the Marine Corps tested Oswald on his Russian language “comprehension” skills and forty-four days after the CIA memorandum about “legal travel operations into the USSR,” Oswald arrived in Moscow, where “he was handled” by “a KGB agent.”

A CIA paper dealing with the alleged defection states, “All such defectors would be interrogated by the KGB” and “surrounded by KGB informants wherever they re-settled in the USSR.”

Fifteen days after arriving in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Oswald went to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and claimed that he was renouncing his American citizenship, stating afterward, “I will never return to the United States for any reason.”

The Embassy reported that Oswald “was aggressive, arrogant, and uncooperative,” and in response to his alleged desire to renounce his citizenship, the Embassy “advised Oswald by mail of his right to renounce citizenship, such renunciation in manner prescribed by law being valid, and that he might appear on any normal business day and request documents be prepared.”

But Oswald never went back to do the paperwork, and a U.S. State Department memo in December 1961 states that Oswald “did not, in fact, renounce United States citizenship . . . . Mr. Oswald did not expatriate himself and remains a citizen of the United States.”

Eleven months before the State Department memo, Oswald wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Navy due to receiving an undesirable discharge for traveling to the Soviet Union. A short fifteen months after the alleged attempt to renounce his citizenship, Oswald told the Secretary of the Navy that he is “still a U.S. citizen” and “had gone to the Soviet Union to reside only for a ‘short time.’”

Oswald also wrote a letter to a Marine Corps General on March 22, 1962, stating, “I have never taken steps to renounce my U.S. citizenship . . . . I refer you to the United States Embassy, Moscow, or the U.S. Department of State, Washington, D.C., for the verification of this fact.”

According to the State Department officer who dealt with Oswald during the phony attempt to renounce citizenship, Oswald appeared to have been “tutored in connection with his apparent attempts to renounce his American citizenship,” and Oswald’s trip to the Soviet Union was suspiciously a “competently arranged trip.”

The State Department officer also reported, “Oswald evidently knew something of the procedure for renunciation of citizenship when he came into the office. This seemed a bit unusual since it was so soon after his first departure from the United States on his first trip abroad traveling as a private citizen.”

The Warren Commission told CIA officials in March 1964, “The letters Lee Oswald wrote to the American Embassy in Moscow while he was trying to get permission for himself and his wife Marina to return to the United States might have been ‘coached.’”

A Warren Commission staff member told the CIA officials that “these letters reflected a higher degree of sophistication and knowledge of passport procedures than would be expected of a man of Lee Harvey Oswald’s known character.”

The FBI documented that an Associated Press reporter spoke with Oswald at his hotel soon after his claim that he wanted to “relinquish his United States citizenship and remain in Russia.” The reporter “engaged him in a conversation” and “asked Oswald why he was going to remain in Russia.”

The FBI report states, “Oswald replied, ‘I’ve got my reasons,’ but did not elucidate.”

On June 18, 1962, five days after he returned from the Soviet Union, Oswald had Pauline Bates, a stenographer in Fort Worth, Texas, type up notes that he made while in Russia. Bates testified to the Warren Commission that the notes, both typed and handwritten, were in Russian and that Oswald spent three days translating them for her. She also stated that she was “anxious to get on it” because she was very interested in the fact that Oswald “had just come back from Russia and had notes.”

She told the Warren Commission, “I started asking him some questions – ‘Why did you go to Russia?’ - and a few things like that. Some of them he’d answer and some of them he wouldn’t . . . . He wasn’t very talkative. And whenever I did get him to talk, I had to drag it out of him. He didn’t talk voluntarily.”

The information that Pauline Bates “dragged” out of Oswald included the fact that he would “scribble notes” while in Russia “whenever he could” and then “surreptitiously” type them when “Marina would cover for him . . . muffle the tone of the typewriter and everything . . . . He said she would cover or watch for him so that nobody would know that he was making them . . . try to steer anybody away while he was doing this, because he could have got in trouble.”

She testified that the notes were “about the living conditions and the working conditions in Russia. And they were very bitter against Russia . . . . It was the terrible living conditions and the terrible working conditions . . . . The notes were very, very bitter about Russia.

“He smuggled them out of Russia. And he said that the whole time until they got over the border, they were scared to death they would be found, and, of course, they would not be allowed to leave Russia.”

Oswald also told Pauline Bates that while he was in the Marine Corps, he “had taken elementary Russian - a course in elementary Russian.” As noted earlier, six and a half months before he left on a “passenger-carrying freighter” with the Soviet Union as his ultimate destination, the Marines tested Oswald on his ability to understand Russian, read Russian, and write in Russian.

The FBI reported that when they interviewed Oswald on June 26, 1962, thirteen days after he returned to the United States, “Oswald declined to answer the question as to why he made the trip to Russia in the first place” and stated he “would not be willing to take a polygraph test.”

Oswald was put on the CIA’s Counterintelligence “Watch List” on November 9, 1959, nine days after he told U.S. embassy officials that he was renouncing his American citizenship and would “never return to the United States for any reason.”

The card with Oswald’s name on it simply states, “Recent defector to the USSR, Former Marine,” but it is also stamped “Secret: Eyes Only,” which means it was of the highest restriction when it comes to who sees it, and anyone who sees it knows they are not supposed to ask any questions about Lee Harvey Oswald.

Very few people were supposed to know that Oswald was acting on behalf of the CIA in his feigned defection to the Soviet Union. In an executive session of the Warren Commission on January 27, 1964, Congressman Hale Boggs asked former CIA Director Allen Dulles, “Did you have agents about whom you had no record whatsoever?”

Dulles replied, “The record might not be on paper,” adding that if anything were “on paper,” it “would have hieroglyphics that only two people knew what they meant, and nobody outside of the Agency would know.”

It’s all in my book. Click the link.

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

Great post. Tony....  And just this one simple fact ( That Lee was an American agent who was sent to Russia) should be an "eye opener " for many of the willfully blind dunces who post their nonsense in this forum.    But Alas ...."None is so blind as he who will not see"......
« Last Edit: June 17, 2021, 05:15:35 PM by Walt Cakebread »

JFK Assassination Forum

Re: Oswald's Phony Defection to the Soviet Union
« Reply #7 on: June 17, 2021, 05:14:03 PM »