It appears to me that LHO was a meticulous planner. His planning for the attempted Walker assassination seems to me to be a good example of him over-planning, although also for being prudent to help avoid being caught. Perhaps his planning for his defection was also over-planned to provide some contingencies. Or maybe just some diversions to confuse things a bit. His use of his alias Hidell might be another example of an attempt to confuse or deceive and try to “cover his tracks.”
Anyway, I have often thought that his imprisonment in the brig in the Marines would have been likely to affect him and his inflated ego profoundly. Maybe he decided during his imprisonment to become the enemy of the people who imprisoned him. Some of the language in some of his letters to his brother Robert seem to confirm those types of feelings. Here is a timeline from that period in time:
April 11, 1958: LHO is court-martialed for the first time for illegal possession of a firearm.
June 27, 1958: LHO is court-martialed for the second time for assaulting a superior and
sentenced to the brig.
August 13, 1958: LHO is released from confinement.
September 14, 1958: LHO and his unit sail for the South China Sea.
September, 1958: LHO's unit arrives in Taiwan, where he suffers a nervous breakdown
and is sent back to Japan.
October 5, 1958: LHO arrives in Atsugi.
October 6, 1958: LHO is put on general duty.
October 31, 1958: LHO receives his last overseas rating, a 4.0.
November 2, 1958: LHO departs Japan.
November 15, 1958: He arrives in San Francisco.
November 19, 1958: LHO takes 30 days leave.
December 22, 1958: LHO is assigned once again to El Toro, this time with MACS-9.
January, 1959: LHO is given his semi-annual ratings, which are average.
February 25, 1959: LHO requests a foreign language test in Russian and scores "poor".
March 9, 1959: LHO is promoted to Private 1st Class again.
March 19, 1959: LHO applies to the Albert Schweitzer College in Switzerland.
Spring, 1959: LHO meets Kerry Thornley, who often engaged him in political debate and
years later would write a book based on him.
June 19, 1959: LHO forwards a $25 registration fee to the Albert Schweitzer College.
July, 1959: LHO is given his semi-annual ratings, which are average.
August 17, 1959: LHO requests a dependency discharge because of an injury sustained
by his mother.
The nervous breakdown appears to me to be indicative that LHO no longer wanted to serve in the USMC. They were now “his enemy.”
Thanks, there's some interesting facts here.
Oswald was 18 when he had a nervous breakdown and along with being diagnosed earlier with psychological problems which required Professional help, which by the way he never received, paints a picture of a troubled,
possibly unhinged young man. I wonder if he got that help, then Oswald's assassination attempt on General Walker, the successful attempt on the President and the cold blooded killing of Tippit, might never have happened? Or was his solution of violence his only answer? I suppose if you ask Marina his wife who copped a hiding, she'd probably agree?
Also Oswald's premeditated attempt on Walker's life was as you say meticulously planned, Oswald ordered a rifle under an alias and just days before Oswald posted the order, he took surveillance photos of Walkers house, the position he planned to take the shot, the railway tracks where he planned to bury the rifle and in addition, Oswald had a map of General Walker's location all of which he filed in a notebook. Oswald was into James Bond novels which he borrowed from the library "Goldfinger", "Thunderball", "Moonraker", and "From Russia, with Love" and two paperbacks "Live and Let Die" and "The Spy Who Loved Me" which he had in his possessions. Did Oswald pretend he was a secret agent on a mission, who had a licence to kill?
Another interesting fact is Oswald apparently watched Frank Sinatra's "Suddenly" a film about an assassin who wanted to kill the President from a building which looked down on a train station where the President was going to be.
Mr. RANKIN. Do you recall films that he saw called "Suddenly," and "We were Strangers" that involved assassinations?
Mrs. OSWALD. I don't remember the names of these films. If you would remind me of the contents, perhaps I would know.
Mr. RANKIN. Well, "Suddenly," was about the assassination of a president, and the other was about the assassination of a Cuban dictator.
Mrs. OSWALD. Yes, Lee saw those films.I can just see Oswald thinking he was Frank Sinatra as Oswald picked the appropriate window and later taking the shots. Well, Sinatra in the film didn't get the chance because his co-conspirators botched the plan and that's an interesting parallel, I think Oswald thought of himself as smart enough that he could do it all on his own and he got the job done but he didn't have the time to think through all the contingencies of his escape and was promptly caught!


JohnM