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JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate / Re: Larry Hancock Tips His Hat To KGB Suspects
« Last post by Lance Payette on Today at 05:34:59 PM »I think kindly Larry H. would say “Well, it could be” to virtually any conspiracy theory, so I hardly consider that much of an endorsement. (Unfortunately, the "many leads" that Hancock and Boylan have uncovered don't lead very convincingly to Oswald or Dealey Plaza.)
Here in the real world, I just don’t think the KGB-did-it scenario survives the threshold test.
1. Yes, Russian hardliners regarded the Cuban missile crisis (CMC) as a humiliation. However, Khruschev remained in power for nearly a full year after the JFKA.
2. I just read a long, Harvard-published, almost hour-by-hour piece about the CMC by Marvin Kalb, who was CBS’s chief Moscow correspondent at the time. He says that Berlin, not Cuba, was Khruschev’s real obsession and that the prevailing sentiment was that Cuba was too far away and too unimportant to allow it to become a line in the sand.
3. Thanks to the behind-the-scenes agreement to remove U.S. missiles from Turkey, the CMC was less a humiliation for Russia than those who weren’t in the know might have thought. In some ways, moreover, it made the Russians appear pragmatic and even reasonable.
4. The negotiations made pretty clear that JFK was not eager for any kind of actual confrontation that posed the threat of war. He was someone the Russians could work with. KGB intelligence presumably would have known that the Joint Chiefs were itching for nuclear war and had told JFK that 40,000,000 American deaths would be an acceptable cost. Would the Russians really have wanted to replace JFK?
5. Could the Russians have known what they would have with LBJ as President? Had he ever said or done anything that would have given them comfort that they would fare better with him than with JFK?
6. In all of the various KGB file releases, smuggled documents, defectors, former KGB officers, etc., has there been any solid indication that the KGB was behind or even encouraged the JFKA? I don’t believe there has.
7. Unless the KGB was being run by Curly, Larry and Moe, would they seriously have recruited an erratic former defector with in-your-face Cuban and Marxist sympathies to carry out this revenge hit? Isn’t this self-evidently ridiculous? Oswald with his M-C and Dealey Plaza were the best the supermen of the KGB could do?
It just makes no sense at all – does it? LBJ (as well as RFK and Jackie) didn't suspect the Russians were behind the JFKA. He knew people would make this connection, and the Joint Chiefs would encourage it, for precisely the reasons set forth in #7.
As always, it seems to me, this theory takes a handful of known facts – Oswald had defected to Russia, Oswald went to the Soviet Embassy in MC, Oswald was a Marxist, Oswald was obsessed with Cuba – and weaves them into a completely speculative “coulda happened” but pretty much preposterous KGB-did-it theory.
For that matter, what did the KGB supposedly DO? Plant Oswald in the TSBD? Put all the facts together on 11-21 or thereabouts and suggest it would helpful if he shot JFK? Tell him in MC they certainly wouldn’t be unhappy if shot JFK? I really just don’t even understand what those who think the KGB was behind the JFKA are even talking about in terms of WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED in this theory.
This is one of my absolute favorite Russian movies from 1967: "Kidnapping, Caucasian Style." You can quickly see how slavishly the Russians copied the Three Stooges. In fact, Russian movies of the era 1950-1975 in general are SO FAR from what you probably picture as grim Soviet propaganda that it's jaw-dropping. The Three Stooges make their appearance at 16:12 and dominate the rest of the movie.
Here in the real world, I just don’t think the KGB-did-it scenario survives the threshold test.
1. Yes, Russian hardliners regarded the Cuban missile crisis (CMC) as a humiliation. However, Khruschev remained in power for nearly a full year after the JFKA.
2. I just read a long, Harvard-published, almost hour-by-hour piece about the CMC by Marvin Kalb, who was CBS’s chief Moscow correspondent at the time. He says that Berlin, not Cuba, was Khruschev’s real obsession and that the prevailing sentiment was that Cuba was too far away and too unimportant to allow it to become a line in the sand.
3. Thanks to the behind-the-scenes agreement to remove U.S. missiles from Turkey, the CMC was less a humiliation for Russia than those who weren’t in the know might have thought. In some ways, moreover, it made the Russians appear pragmatic and even reasonable.
4. The negotiations made pretty clear that JFK was not eager for any kind of actual confrontation that posed the threat of war. He was someone the Russians could work with. KGB intelligence presumably would have known that the Joint Chiefs were itching for nuclear war and had told JFK that 40,000,000 American deaths would be an acceptable cost. Would the Russians really have wanted to replace JFK?
5. Could the Russians have known what they would have with LBJ as President? Had he ever said or done anything that would have given them comfort that they would fare better with him than with JFK?
6. In all of the various KGB file releases, smuggled documents, defectors, former KGB officers, etc., has there been any solid indication that the KGB was behind or even encouraged the JFKA? I don’t believe there has.
7. Unless the KGB was being run by Curly, Larry and Moe, would they seriously have recruited an erratic former defector with in-your-face Cuban and Marxist sympathies to carry out this revenge hit? Isn’t this self-evidently ridiculous? Oswald with his M-C and Dealey Plaza were the best the supermen of the KGB could do?
It just makes no sense at all – does it? LBJ (as well as RFK and Jackie) didn't suspect the Russians were behind the JFKA. He knew people would make this connection, and the Joint Chiefs would encourage it, for precisely the reasons set forth in #7.
As always, it seems to me, this theory takes a handful of known facts – Oswald had defected to Russia, Oswald went to the Soviet Embassy in MC, Oswald was a Marxist, Oswald was obsessed with Cuba – and weaves them into a completely speculative “coulda happened” but pretty much preposterous KGB-did-it theory.
For that matter, what did the KGB supposedly DO? Plant Oswald in the TSBD? Put all the facts together on 11-21 or thereabouts and suggest it would helpful if he shot JFK? Tell him in MC they certainly wouldn’t be unhappy if shot JFK? I really just don’t even understand what those who think the KGB was behind the JFKA are even talking about in terms of WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED in this theory.
This is one of my absolute favorite Russian movies from 1967: "Kidnapping, Caucasian Style." You can quickly see how slavishly the Russians copied the Three Stooges. In fact, Russian movies of the era 1950-1975 in general are SO FAR from what you probably picture as grim Soviet propaganda that it's jaw-dropping. The Three Stooges make their appearance at 16:12 and dominate the rest of the movie.
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That only happens in the "Looney Tunes". And this in the face of SA Landis finding a bullet in the BACK Seat area of the JFK Limo, which would tie to the shallow JFK BACK Wound? 
] and leave such a small hole in JBC's jacket?