This is my point with the original question: "And risky if the Russians or Cubans had evidence to the contrary."
Why impersonate him when the Soviets and/or Cubans could expose this impersonation?
How would they have known that someone impersonated Oswald? And unlike the Soviet embassy, some Cuban officials from Mexico City were not sure if they were visited by the real Lee Harvey Oswald.
The phone call impersonation claim involving the Soviet embassy originates from the FBI and some CIA officers.
How would the Soviets have known that the person who called the Soviet embassy on September 28th, 1963 was impersonating Oswald? So why didn't they expose it? It seems obvious to me: they didn't because he wasn't impersonated. .
You're applying circular logic to dismiss credible claims that Oswald was impersonated.
You don't want to believe Oswald was impersonated so you cite what the Soviets said while ignoring what the Cuban embassy officials said.
J Edgar Hoover, the translators of the phone calls to the embassies in Mexico City, Sylvia Duran, and some of the CIA officials from Mexico City have all given us information that strongly suggests that at least in the phone calls between September 28 and October 1, 1963, Oswald was being impersonated by someone.
We can't confirm the impersonation story because the audio tapes no longer exist. But the descriptions given by the translators of the phone calls plus Duran's claim that she wasn't with Oswald on September 28th suggest that someone impersonated him.