Oh my goodness! Seriously? I take it you've never read the Lopez Report? I take it you're unaware of the new evidence and research on Oswald's activities in Mexico City? It is just amazing that you guys are so many years behind the information curve and keep repeating myths that were debunked years ago, some of them literally decades ago.
Let's start with the fact that we now know that J. Edgar Hoover advised LBJ that the American on the tape recording sent by the CIA from Mexico City was not Oswald. FBI agents listened to the tape and concluded the voice on it was not Oswald's. Surely you aren't going to tell me that you believe the later CIA fairy tale that they "sent the wrong tape"?
The CIA also claimed it had pictures that showed Oswald outside the Soviet Embassy, but when the pictures subsequently came to light, it was clear the man in them bore no resemblance to Oswald.
Let's consider the scenario that WC apologists would have us believe: The President of the United States had just been assassinated. Shortly thereafter, the CIA was asked to assist the Warren Commission in its investigation. The CIA then claimed it had photographic and audio evidence that Oswald, the alleged assassin, phoned and visited the Soviet and Cuban embassies in Mexico City. A short while later, the Agency said that while at the Soviet Embassy, Oswald spoke with Valery Kostikov, a KGB expert in sabotage and assassination. However, the CIA, in the most important investigation of the century, somehow gave the FBI the wrong photos and the wrong tape, even though voice intercepts are carefully catalogued, and even though Oswald's picture was in nearly every newspaper in the civilized world within hours of the assassination. Gosh, really? Really? You actually believe that?
It should be pointed out that the CIA never actually showed the pictures to the Warren
Commission--they surfaced years later and are clearly not of Oswald. On January 24, 1964, the
CIA told the Warren Commission that Oswald had met with Valery Kostikov at the Soviet
Embassy. The Agency said Kostikov was a KGB agent involved in assassination and sabotage.
The Commission was so frightened by this information that it decided to simply take the CIA's
word about Oswald's Mexico City activities. FBI agents examined the pictures and listened to the
tape and knew they were not of Oswald,
but the FBI did not inform the Commission of this
fact.
In the mid-1990s, new information bearing on this issue came from files released by the Assassination Records Review Board. Among the released files was the transcript of the 11/23/63 telephone conversation between J. Edgar Hoover and LBJ in which Hoover advised LBJ that the American on the tape and in the pictures was not Oswald. Here's the exchange from the transcript:
JOHNSON. Have you established any more about the [Oswald] visit to the Soviet Embassy in Mexico in September?
HOOVER. No, that's one angle that's very confusing for this reason. We have up here the tape and the photograph of the man who was at the Soviet Embassy, using Oswald's name. That picture and the tape do not correspond to this man's voice, nor to his appearance. In other words, it appears that there is a second person who was at the Soviet Embassy.
Bullseye. Yes, there was a "second person" who was at the Soviet Embassy, and, as Hoover explained, he was not the real Lee Harvey Oswald.
And then there's the very strange delay in the CIA cable about the alleged Oswald conversation with Kostikov. Let's use some common sense, shall we? If the real Oswald had actually talked with Kostikov, there is no way on this planet that it would have taken
seven days for the cable about this conversation to get to the CIA. Give me a break. If this event had actually occurred, that cable would have been sent at flash precedence; at a minimum, it would have been at the CIA within 24 hours.