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21
By paperless would you mean a soft file that existed only on Angletons desk?

Maybe, maybe not.
22
If John M. Newman is correct that Oswald was recruited by a KGB mole in the CIA (Bruce Solie in the Office of Security), he would have been run as a paperless "vest pocket" operation by Solie's confidant, protege, and mole-hunting subordinate, unwitting James Angleton, or by Bruce Solie, himself.

By paperless would you mean a soft file that existed only on Angletons desk?
23
In the below form, at the top left of the form one can either tick the "CI Operational Approval and Support Division" or "Security Support Division/Office of Security".

Under what circumstances would one tick one box over the other?



If Oswald had been a CIA asset, which box on the above sheet would have been ticked?

If it was CI, then this would mean that anyone from OS who had been interviewed about LHO after the JFKA would be telling the truth that LHO was not a CIA asset in so far as they understood it because their division would not have been notified if it.

Likewise, if the OS box had been ticked, then this would mean that anyone from CI who had been interviewed about LHO after the JFKA would be telling the truth that LHO was not a CIA asset in so far as they understood it because their division would not have been notified of it.

Is that reasoning correct?

If John M. Newman is correct that Oswald was recruited by a KGB mole in the CIA (Bruce Solie in the Office of Security), he would have been run as a paperless "vest pocket" operation by Solie's confidant, protege, and mole-hunting subordinate, unwitting James Angleton, or by Bruce Solie, himself.
24
Unless of course the bus Oswald took to arrive into Dallas from Laredo on Oct 3rd passed by the Marseilles stop and so Oswald had an idea that a bus to Mexico could be got from that area. Not sure though long haul buses to Laredo would be stopping at small bus stops like at Marseilles. That would be a stop more for a city bus I'd imagine.

No, you've missed the point.

The Lansing bus, which he could catch at Jefferson & Marsalis, would take him down to the VA hospital.  From the VA hospital, he could catch a Greyhound to Laredo.  For what it's worth, the transfer he had on him would have been good for the Lansing line as long as he got to that bus stop for the "next available" Lansing bus, i.e. the transfer, issued around 1 PM, would be good for the Lansing line for the next time the Lansing bus arrived at that stop (which I believe was scheduled at 1:30, if I recall correctly).

The question is, was he aware of this.
25
In the below form, at the top left of the form one can either tick the "CI Operational Approval and Support Division" or "Security Support Division/Office of Security".

Under what circumstances would one tick one box over the other?



If Oswald had been a CIA asset, which box on the above sheet would have been ticked?

If it was CI, then this would mean that anyone from OS who had been interviewed about LHO after the JFKA would be telling the truth that LHO was not a CIA asset in so far as they understood it because their division would not have been notified if it.

Likewise if the OS box had been ticked, then this would mean that anyone from CI who had been interviewed about LHO after the JFKA would be telling the truth that LHO was not a CIA asset in so far as they understood it because their division would not have been notified of it.

Is that reasoning correct?
26
This route is depending on LHO getting a bus near Marseilles to Mexico? But there is no evidence that LHO was familair with the bus routes down there.

Being a Marine, and always taking buses everywhere, I'd say there's at least a decent chance that Oswald knew where the VA hospital was and from there, he could catch a Greyhound to Laredo.

However, obviously nothing is for sure.
27
(Note: When Nosenko told the HSCA that the KGB had nothing to do with former Marine sharpshooter and U-2 radar operator Oswald during the two-and-a-half years he lived in the USSR, the Committee laughed him out of the joint.)


ME: Did Nosenko betray anyone to the CIA who was either still unsuspected or who still had access to classified information?

GROK: No, Yuri Nosenko did not betray (or compromise) any KGB agents, sources, or assets who were either still unsuspected by Western counterintelligence at the time of his defection in 1964 or who still had active, ongoing access to classified information.

The core controversy around Nosenko — detailed in declassified CIA documents, books like Tennent "Pete" Bagley's Spy Wars (2007), and analyses by former officers — centers precisely on this point. Nosenko's revelations largely replayed or confirmed information already provided by the earlier KGB defector Anatoliy Golitsyn (who defected in 1961).

Key examples include:

Confirmation of KGB honeytrap compromises of Western figures such as British Admiralty clerk John Vassall, Canadian ambassador John Watkins, and former CIA officer Edward Ellis Smith — all cases Golitsyn had already exposed.

Details on the compromise and arrest of GRU Colonel Pyotr Popov (a major CIA asset in the late 1950s), attributed by Nosenko to routine KGB surveillance rather than a high-level mole.

Other overlaps, like cases involving Boris Belitsky (a Soviet radio reporter used as a double agent) and various diplomatic honeytraps.

These were not new compromises of unsuspected, still-active KGB spies with current access to secrets. Instead, they involved:

Already-known or previously exposed Western victims of KGB recruitment.

Past Soviet operations that had ended (e.g., Popov was arrested and executed in 1960–1961).

No identification of active, unsuspected KGB penetrations (e.g., moles) in the CIA, NATO, or allied services with ongoing classified access.

Critics like Bagley (Nosenko's initial CIA handler) and James Jesus Angleton (CIA counterintelligence chief) argued that Nosenko provided no significant new, high-value betrayals of unsuspected Soviet assets. His information often appeared designed to discredit or confuse Golitsyn's warnings about deep KGB penetrations, fueling suspicions that Nosenko was a deliberate KGB "dispatched agent" (plant/false defector) to sow doubt and protect real moles.

Nosenko did share broader, useful intelligence on KGB tradecraft (e.g., embassy bugs in Moscow, surveillance methods, targeting of Americans and foreigners), personnel details on thousands of officers, and leads on 238 Americans/200 foreigners approached by the KGB (with varying recruitment success). Some accounts credit him with contributing to the identification or disruption of low-level or already-suspected compromises, but nothing points to outing still-unsuspected, actively operating KGB spies with sensitive access.

The CIA officially cleared Nosenko as a genuine defector after re-evaluations (including polygraphs) in the late 1960s, released him, compensated him, and employed him as a consultant until his death in 2008. However, skeptics (including Bagley and some later analyses) maintain the lack of major new compromises of active Soviet sources supports the view he was controlled or limited in what he revealed.

In summary, reliable sources and historical accounts consistently show Nosenko's defection caused no documented betrayals of unsuspected, still-operational KGB agents or sources with classified access—unlike defectors who exposed active penetrations (e.g., Golitsyn's leads on certain cases). This absence is central to the enduring debate over his bona fides.

28
When putative KGB staff officer Yuri Nosenko testified in 1978 that the KGB had absolutely nothing to do with "uninteresting" and "unstable" former Marine sharpshooter and U-2 radar operator Lee Harvey Oswald during the two-and-a-half years he lived in The Worker's Paradise because it didn't realize he'd been a U-2 radar operator and because he'd allegedly tried to kill himself, the HSCA said he was lying.

Given that, why do so many Lone Nutters and Tinfoil Hat JFKA Conspiracy Theorists alike believe that Nosenko was a true defector-in-place in Geneva in June 1962 and a true physical defector to the U.S. in February 1964?

https://aarclibrary.org/publib/jfk/hsca/secclass/pdf/Nosenko_6-20-78.pdf
29
Not exactly Satan, just profoundly dishonest.

   The Mark Lane interviews of JFK Assassination witnesses was no different than the WC Q/A of JFK Assassination witnesses. Both were one sided. The difference between the 2 is that Lane gets consistently slammed and his work product relegated to "You Tube", while the WC Q/A of a very selective witness list receives historical recognition.  The JFK Assassination evidence scales have always been severely weighted.     
30
Mark Lane could be Satan himself...but what matters is the veracity of his observations.

Not exactly Satan, just profoundly dishonest.
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