Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation

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Online Tom Graves

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Re: Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation
« Reply #7 on: October 20, 2025, 05:25:24 AM »
Okay, if you want to dismiss all of these (and other) files, the interviews with the agents, the interviews with Oswald's friends and associates, Oswald's very critical statements about the Soviet Union when he returned, his erratic behavior there, then what should we use to evaluate what happened in the Soviet Union?

If you think all of this was faked, orchestrated, the documents falsified, the agents all lied, the accounts by the people who knew Oswald staged then where can we go? No matter what evidence is produced can be dismissed as disinformation, as a sort of Potemkin Village account of what happened in Minsk. This is like the conspiracy Left arguing that all of the evidence he didn't work for the CIA is false, that he was a CIA agent or asset.

What are we supposed to use? We look at the evidence, weigh it, consider explanations and make judgments.

Dear Steve M.,

Even if the JFKA wasn't a Soviet plot, the Kremlin didn't (and still probably doesn't) want U.S. investigators to realize that a KGB "mole" in the CIA sent former U-2 radar operator Oswald to Moscow on a completely different mission -- to unwittingly protect said "mole" from being uncovered as the person who 1) betrayed CIA's spy, GRU Lt. Col. Pyotr Popov, in Washington, D.C., movie houses in early 1957, and 2) leaked the U-2's specifications to the KGB at some point before April 1958 (according to probable "mole" George Kisevalter -- Popov's CIA handler in West Berlin who sent an alarming cable to CIA headquarters -- and former high-level CIA officer Willian Hood in his 1982 book, "Mole").

-- Tom
« Last Edit: October 20, 2025, 10:05:48 AM by Tom Graves »

Offline Tommy Shanks

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Re: Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation
« Reply #8 on: October 21, 2025, 04:18:22 PM »

I think the true nature of the "Oswald letter" is getting lost here. This is a hugely important discovery and validates Hunt's own belief that the KGB were trying to set him up as part of the assassination team. The reason that the letter appeared to be in Oswald's handwriting is BECAUSE it was actually his handwriting - just cleverly combined into a "new" fake letter.

Online Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation
« Reply #9 on: October 21, 2025, 04:39:04 PM »
I think the true nature of the "Oswald letter" is getting lost here. This is a hugely important discovery and validates Hunt's own belief that the KGB were trying to set him up as part of the assassination team. The reason that the letter appeared to be in Oswald's handwriting is BECAUSE it was actually his handwriting - just cleverly combined into a "new" fake letter.
Yes, we (led by me) got side-tracked to the Belarus/KGB files and whether Oswald was used as a KGB asset. I thought that the Hunt letter was shown to be a forgery about 20-30 years ago? Or dismissed as not reliable? Seems the conspiracy crowd ignored it and they have very low standards when it comes to evidence. At least evidence they like. In any case, this should close the question. That Paese Sera disinformation about Shaw can be the next nonsense to be tossed into the garbage.

One last (hah) post about Oswald and the KGB: We've had numerous sources - defections and reports - supporting the conclusion that the KGB didn't use Oswald, that they viewed him as too risky and unreliable (Q: Has Marina been lying all of these decades? She was a KGB "swallow"?). And that Nosenko for all of his problems *was* truthful when he said this. He may or may not have been a legitimate defector (I think the evidence at this point is he was); but he was truthful when he said the KGB didn't use Oswald.

Oleg Nechiporenko, one of the KGB officers who Oswald talked to in Mexico City, said he reviewed Oswald's file in Moscow and it showed that the KGB had no interest in using Oswald. Too unreliable. He also quoted in his book "Passport to Assassination" from a report that the then head of the KGB, Vladimir Semichastny, sent to the Politburo after the assassination saying the same thing: the KGB didn't recruit Oswald. Oleg Kalugin, the head of KGB counterintelligence, said Nosenko was legitimate (he was seen as a drunken, womanizing buffoon but he was indeed an agent) and the KGB didn't use Oswald. Vitaly Yurchenko, the agent who defected and then changed his mind, said the same thing. Et cetera, et cetera.

Quotes from Semichastny's memo are here: https://www.drivehq.com/file/DFPublishFile.aspx/FileID12897371455/Key2b656lhgowhe/nechiporenko%20and%20semichastny.JPG

If you want to believe they all lied - Semichastny lied to Khrushchev? - and that all of the files were whitewashed and everything was faked by the "inner" KGB as part of a "Monster Plot" then, well, there's nowhere to go. Whatever evidence that is produced that shows the KGB didn't use Oswald will be viewed as evidence that they did use him. This is the "CIA killed JFK" view where everything showing they didn't kill JFK is evidence they did. Since it's all faked.

Up is down and down is up and we'll just go in circles.




« Last Edit: October 21, 2025, 07:48:48 PM by Steve M. Galbraith »

Offline Tommy Shanks

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Re: Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation
« Reply #10 on: October 21, 2025, 08:52:22 PM »

If you want to believe they all lied - Semichastny lied to Khrushchev? - and that all of the files were whitewashed and everything was faked by the "inner" KGB as part of a "Monster Plot" then, well, there's nowhere to go. Whatever evidence that is produced that shows the KGB didn't use Oswald will be viewed as evidence that they did use him. This is the "CIA killed JFK" view where everything showing they didn't kill JFK is evidence they did. Since it's all faked.

Up is down and down is up and we'll just go in circles.

Excellent point, Steve. I have rarely, if ever, met a JFK conspiracy theorist who is willing to admit when they're wrong and that the evidence does not support their claims. This is another example of how an entire line of thinking could easily be tossed in the trash forever, but the nutjobs at the JFK Education Forum will spin it backwards in a way they think proves their nutty beliefs.

Online Tom Graves

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Re: Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation
« Reply #11 on: October 21, 2025, 09:51:52 PM »
Yes, we (led by me) got side-tracked to the Belarus/KGB files and whether Oswald was used as a KGB asset. I thought that the Hunt letter was shown to be a forgery about 20-30 years ago? Or dismissed as not reliable? Seems the conspiracy crowd ignored it and they have very low standards when it comes to evidence. At least evidence they like. In any case, this should close the question. That Paese Sera disinformation about Shaw can be the next nonsense to be tossed into the garbage.

One last (hah) post about Oswald and the KGB: We've had numerous sources - defections and reports - supporting the conclusion that the KGB didn't use Oswald, that they viewed him as too risky and unreliable (Q: Has Marina been lying all of these decades? She was a KGB "swallow"?). And that Nosenko for all of his problems *was* truthful when he said this. He may or may not have been a legitimate defector (I think the evidence at this point is he was); but he was truthful when he said the KGB didn't use Oswald.

Oleg Nechiporenko, one of the KGB officers who Oswald talked to in Mexico City, said he reviewed Oswald's file in Moscow and it showed that the KGB had no interest in using Oswald. Too unreliable. He also quoted in his book "Passport to Assassination" from a report that the then head of the KGB, Vladimir Semichastny, sent to the Politburo after the assassination saying the same thing: the KGB didn't recruit Oswald. Oleg Kalugin, the head of KGB counterintelligence, said Nosenko was legitimate (he was seen as a drunken, womanizing buffoon but he was indeed an agent) and the KGB didn't use Oswald. Vitaly Yurchenko, the agent who defected and then changed his mind, said the same thing. Et cetera, et cetera.

Quotes from Semichastny's memo are here: https://www.drivehq.com/file/DFPublishFile.aspx/FileID12897371455/Key2b656lhgowhe/nechiporenko%20and%20semichastny.JPG

If you want to believe they all lied - Semichastny lied to Khrushchev? - and that all of the files were whitewashed and everything was faked by the "inner" KGB as part of a "Monster Plot" then, well, there's nowhere to go. Whatever evidence that is produced that shows the KGB didn't use Oswald will be viewed as evidence that they did use him. This is the "CIA killed JFK" view where everything showing they didn't kill JFK is evidence they did. Since it's all faked.

Up is down and down is up and we'll just go in circles.

Dear Steve M.,

You're naive if you believe Yuri Nosenko was a true defector-in-place in Geneva in June 1962 and a true physical defector to the U.S. in February 1964 (News Flash: He was either STILL a false defector or had "gone rogue" and got himself to The Land of Milk and Honey (the U.S.) with the "The KGB Had Absolutely Nothing To Do With Former Sharpshooting U-2 Radar Operator LHO In The USSR" disinfo Gribanov had sent him back to Geneva to "lay on" Bagley and (probable mole) Kisevalter), that Aleksei Kulak (FEDORA) really did spy for the FBI -- LOL!, that Igor Kochnov really did collude with the CIA and the FBI, and that Vitaliy Yurchenko was a true "but very, very homesick" defector in 1985, etc., etc., etc.

LOL!

When are you going to get around to reading Bagley's book, "Spy Wars," his 35-page follow-up article, "Ghosts of the Spy Wars," and the parts about Nosenko in John M. Newman's book, "Uncovering Popov's Mole" (which he dedicated to Bagley)?

Here's my Wikipedia article on Bagley.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tennent_H._Bagley


-- Tom
« Last Edit: October 22, 2025, 11:47:47 AM by Tom Graves »

Offline Michael T. Griffith

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Re: Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation
« Reply #12 on: October 22, 2025, 01:41:51 PM »
https://www.onthetrailofdelusion.com/post/soviet-file-given-to-luna-proves-a-kgb-operation

Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation 

A letter written by Lee Harvey Oswald, contained in the Soviet file given to Congresswoman Luna, proves the KGB conducted an operation to influence American public opinion that the CIA was involved in the JFK assassination.

To put it another way, the KGB was aware that rogue CIA elements played a role in JFK's death and sought to bring this fact to the attention of the American people in response to right-wing efforts to blame the Soviet Union for JFK's murder.

This Soviet file provides substantial indirect confirmation of Richard Case Nagell's claims. We know that Nagell was deeply involved in the U.S. intelligence long after he left the Army because he had the real names of several counter-intel CIA officers in his notebook. As I have told you before, Fred, go ask anyone with a TS/SCI clearance how abjectly impossible it would be for a non-intel person to know the real names of several counter-intel CIA personnel. Only someone who had the required clearance and access could know such information.

Online Tom Graves

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Re: Soviet File Given to Luna Proves a KGB Operation
« Reply #13 on: October 22, 2025, 01:46:34 PM »
To put it another way, the KGB was aware that rogue CIA elements played a role in JFK's death and sought to bring this fact to the attention of the American people in response to right-wing efforts to blame the Soviet Union for JFK's murder.

This Soviet file provides substantial indirect confirmation of Richard Case Nagell's claims. We know that Nagell was deeply involved in the U.S. intelligence long after he left the Army because he had the real names of several counter-intel CIA officers in his notebook. As I have told you before, Fred, go ask anyone with a TS/SCI clearance how abjectly impossible it would be for a non-intel person to know the real names of several counter-intel CIA personnel. Only someone who had the required clearance and access could know such information.

Dear Comrade Griffith,

"Rogue elements," or KGB "moles"?

Regardless, please tell me, again, how many bad guys and bad gals were involved altogether in the planning, the "patsy-ing," the planting of evidence, the shooting, the getting-away, the altering of photos, films and x-rays, and creating other aspects of the all-important (and evidently ongoing!!!) cover-up?

Just twenty to thirty?

LOL!

-- Tom

PS Your buddy, Putin, says "Keep up the good work!"
« Last Edit: October 22, 2025, 07:03:23 PM by Tom Graves »