Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can

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Online Tom Graves

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Re: Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can
« Reply #14 on: March 26, 2025, 02:24:03 AM »
As to why he would have listed Cuba and Russia on his passport application, I have no convincing theory other than Oswald's being Marxist Me for his own amusement. From the application to ASC in March to the passport application in September, no one being guided by an intelligence agency would have done what LHO did.

Dear Lance,

What if the intelligence agency at issue (i.e., the CIA) was, unbeknownst to its top management, under the control of the KGB*?

*Today's SVR and FSB

-- Tom

Offline Lance Payette

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Re: Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can
« Reply #15 on: March 26, 2025, 05:39:17 PM »
Dear Lance,

What if the intelligence agency at issue (i.e., the CIA) was, unbeknownst to its top management, under the control of the KGB*?

*Today's SVR and FSB

-- Tom
Tom, I'm not ignoring you but simply don't know enough about your theory to answer intelligently. I will look into some of your writings on this.

Perhaps you can tell me: Would what Oswald did have made sense if the CIA were under the control of the KGB?

Online Tom Graves

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Re: Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can
« Reply #16 on: March 26, 2025, 06:21:46 PM »
Would what Oswald did have made sense if the CIA were under the control of the KGB?

The CIA was under the control of the KGB in the sense that the father-figure-requiring Chief of Counterintelligence, James Angleton, was manipulated by a probable KGB "mole" (Bruce Leonard Solie) who was aided by other probable KGB "moles" (e.g., George Kisevalter).

What did Oswald do?

He starts teaching himself Russian while still in the Marines.

He gets out of active duty several months early.

He goes to Moscow.

He walks into the American Embassy and tells the probably-expecting-him Consul (and probable CIA agent) Snyder and the KGB's hidden microphones that he's going to tell the Soviets about Marine Corps radar and what he knows about the U-2.

He lives two blocks from a KGB school in Minsk for two-plus years.

He marries a former KGB "swallow" and probable KGB informant.

He returns to the U.S. with his wife and young daughter.

He starts his own chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee.

With or without encouragement or logistical support of the KGB, he tries to kill Edwin Walker.

He tries to visit Cuba and ostensibly move back to the USSR.

With or without the encouragement or logistical support of the KGB, he kills JFK.
« Last Edit: March 26, 2025, 06:47:27 PM by Tom Graves »

Offline Lance Payette

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Re: Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can
« Reply #17 on: March 26, 2025, 06:47:14 PM »
What did Oswald do?
Hello? He did what I have already described him as doing in 5,000 bloated words in this thread. I sort of assumed that's what you were responding to.

Now that I think about it, why didn't Oswald, regardless of whether he was acting alone or at the instigation of the CIA or KGB, simply appear at the Soviet Consulate in Helsinki and tell Golub he wanted to defect? Why go through the tourist visa charade? I suppose he might've felt more confident once he was actually in Moscow. Or perhaps he actually did tell Golub this and Golub said "Oh, geez, kid, don't put me in that spot. Take a tourist visa and do your defecting in Moscow."

Online Tom Graves

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Re: Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can
« Reply #18 on: March 26, 2025, 06:49:32 PM »
I've edited this post some:

The CIA was under the control of the KGB in the sense that the father-figure-requiring Chief of Counterintelligence, James Angleton, was manipulated by a probable KGB "mole" (Bruce Leonard Solie) who was aided by other probable KGB "moles" (e.g., George Kisevalter).

What did Oswald do?

He starts teaching himself Russian while still in the Marines.

He gets out of active duty several months early.

He goes to Moscow via probably-expecting-him Golub in Helsinki.

He walks into the American Embassy and tells the probably-expecting-him Consul (and probable CIA agent) Snyder and the KGB's hidden microphones that he's going to tell the Soviets about Marine Corps radar and what he knows about the U-2.

He works in a radio factory and lives comfortably two blocks from a KGB school in Minsk for two-plus years.

He marries a former KGB "swallow" and probable KGB informant.

He returns to the U.S. with his wife and young daughter.

He starts his own chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee.

With or without encouragement or logistical support of the KGB, he tries to kill Edwin Walker.

He tries to visit Cuba and ostensibly move back to the USSR.

With or without the encouragement or logistical support of the KGB, he kills JFK.
« Last Edit: March 26, 2025, 06:57:21 PM by Tom Graves »

Offline Lance Payette

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Re: Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can
« Reply #19 on: March 26, 2025, 07:16:40 PM »
The CIA was under the control of the KGB in the sense that the father-figure-requiring Chief of Counterintelligence, James Angleton, was manipulated by a probable KGB "mole" (Bruce Leonard Solie) who was aided by other probable KGB "moles" (e.g., George Kisevalter).

What did Oswald do?

Well, OK, but little if any of this is relevant to the specific issues I raised in this thread.

Quote
He starts teaching himself Russian while still in the Marines.

I'm not sure that's true in terms of the Marines being where he started. He had a longstanding interest and was receiving Russian newspapers and magazines, so trying to learn Russian isn't too mysterious. In the ASC application, he optimistically described himself as having the proficiency of one year of schooling, and the Marine test he took not long before defecting rated his Russian as poor. Sure, trying to learn some Russian is consistent with a plan to defect, but not inevitably so and I don't see his efforts as particularly mysterious.

Quote
He gets out of active duty several months early.

OK, why? What was the necessity? Why add that complexity instead of just wafting a few months to fulfill his enlistment? Perhaps he was just fed up with the Marines. What I see from many CTers is an ad hoc, after-the-fact overlay of mystery and intrigue on actions that to me look no more mysterious than simply Oswald Being Oswald.

Quote
He goes to Moscow.

He walks into the American Embassy and tells the probably-expecting-him Consul (and probable CIA agent) Snyder and the KGB's hidden microphones that he's going to tell the Soviets about Marine Corps radar and what he knows about the U-2.

He lives two blocks from a KGB school in Minsk for two-plus years.

He marries a former KGB "swallow" and probable KGB informant.

He returns to the U.S. with his wife and young daughter.

He starts his own chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee.

With or without encouragement or logistical support of the KGB, he tries to kill Edwin Walker.

He tries to visit Cuba and ostensibly move back to the USSR.

With or without the encouragement or logistical support of the KGB, he kills JFK.
This is all way beyond the scope of my posts. I do have my own views of all of it, all them consistent with Oswald Being Oswald.

FWIW, I've been to Oswald's apartment (not in it). I've been to the big yellow KGB building (not in it) and photographed it. "Two blocks" is a bit misleading. Oswald's apartment is separated from the big theater in Minsk (I've attended the ballet there twice) by a park, and the theater is separated by a river from the business district where the KGB building is located. To suggest he was popping in and out of some "KGB school" is misleading. My wife lived in Minsk as a municipal administrator for decades, and she says no one had any idea what went on in the KGB building nor did she ever hear it described as a school.

Online Tom Graves

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Re: Oswald's 1959 passport application - explain this please, if you can
« Reply #20 on: March 26, 2025, 07:21:00 PM »
Little if any of this is relevant to the specific issues I raised in this thread.

In that case, I'll start a new thread for your enlightenment.