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71
    Have YOU an explanation for the "getaway" car being absent from the Wiegman Film and roughly 15 seconds later being on the Couch/Darnell Films? Nobody caught this over the last 62+ years. This all began with my proving that the Huge Gates were "wide open" and therefore provided clandestine entry/exit from the TSBD. Those "wide open" Huge Gates are within a stone's throw of this "getaway" car. And, there is more to this. We know extremely little about the Elm St Ext. We also know extremely little about the train yard, which the Elm St Ext provides the only means of entry/exit.  (Hint, Hint).   

Well, yes, I do have an explanation: There is no reason to think it's a getaway car. If the conspiracy required a getaway car, then "in front of the TSBD on Elm Street" strikes me as about the least likely place within a 1.5 mile radius of the TSBD for said getaway car to be. One would think the vast open area behind the TSBD or down the block on Houston might be at least somewhat less Stooge-like. Have you perhaps seen "Bonnie & Clyde" one too many times?

One problem with the CT community is this absolute mania to be someone who Discovers Something New That No One Has Ever Noticed Before!!! This goes back to the earliest days of CT theorizing, with the scenarios becoming ever-more Three Stooges-like. Now we've reached the nadir of CT luminary Bart Kamp supposedly faking photos for reasons that don't help his Prayer Man theory at all but throw a monkey wrench into someone else's even wackier CT theory! The Huge Gates! The Getaway Car! The Fake Shelley and Fake Lovelady! Yee-ha!  :D

How the JFKA went down, more or less ...

72
The issue remains: Why does our "former Marine sharpshooter" TAKE this "highest difficulty" shot that requires him to contort himself and exposes him to the greatest risk of being seen? Is this because he is a "stupid former Marine sharpshooter," sort of the Wile E. Coyote of former Marine sharpshooters? Yes, we understand a Z-124 shot would have had obvious difficulties. That's why I don't think Oswald took it. Surely he had time and brains enough to know that being comfortably in place and waiting for the limo to emerge from the tree would be an easy shot and the way a prudent former Marine sharpshooter would do it.

Dear FPL,

1. Maybe Oswald didn't realize how difficult a shot it would be.

2) Since the Secret Service follow-up car had just turned onto Elm Street at "Z-124," the agents in said car, "hung over" or not, would have had to break their necks to look up at Oswald's sixth-floor Sniper's Nest window.

-- Tom
73
Dear FPL,

Ever heard of angular velocity?

ChatGPT:

While the traffic mast hypothesis is indeed often tied to "Z-107" in specific forensic models (such as Dale Myers'), your focus on "Z-124" highlights the peak tracking difficulty for the sniper. At "Z-124," the angular velocity was actually at its highest for the entire sequence, making it physically the most difficult shot for the shooter to coordinate.

1. Angular Velocity Peak

As the limousine moved away from the Depository, the required tracking motion for the sniper did not decrease linearly; it started fast and then "slowed down" as the distance increased:

At "Z-124": The pivoting required to track the target was approximately 8 degrees per second. While this seems slow on paper, for a sniper using a 4x scope with a limited field of view, this represents a significant and complex anatomical motion involving both horizontal and vertical adjustment.

At Z-224 and Z-313: By the time of the second and third shots, the required tracking movement had decreased by half. The target was moving more directly away from the sniper’s line of sight, meaning the rifle barely had to pivot at all to keep the crosshairs on JFK.

2. Why the Miss is "Strange" at "Z-124"

If the traffic mast was no longer an obstruction by "Z-124," the miss becomes more attributable to the dynamic geometry of the shot:

The "Lead" Problem: Although the car was moving nearly away, it still had a slight horizontal drift. At "Z-124," the target was at its closest point (approx. 100 feet), where any slight error in tracking speed is magnified.

Scope Parallax/Alignment:

Oswald’s 4x scope was notoriously misaligned, striking high and to the left. At the close range of "Z-124," this mechanical error is more pronounced than at 80 yards, where the bullet’s trajectory has more time to "settle" relative to the point of aim.

Trigger Jerk: Many marksmen suggest that the first shot of a high-stress event is the most likely to be "jerked." Given that this shot had the highest angular velocity of the three, a jerked trigger combined with the need to pivot the rifle at 8°/s makes a complete miss more plausible.

Summary of Difficulty

Shot Location    Distance (approx.)   Angular Velocity (Tracking)   Tracking Difficulty

"Z-124"   100–105 feet   ~8 degrees/sec   Highest

Z-224   190 feet   ~4 degrees/sec   Medium

Z-313   265 feet   ~2 degrees/sec   Lowest

By "Z-124," JFK’s head was moving faster relative to the sniper's field of view than it would be for the rest of the motorcade route, which likely contributed to the total miss.

. . . . . . .

-- Tom
The issue remains: Why does our "former Marine sharpshooter" TAKE this "highest difficulty" shot that requires him to contort himself and exposes him to the greatest risk of being seen? Is this because he is a "stupid former Marine sharpshooter," sort of the Wile E. Coyote of former Marine sharpshooters? Yes, we understand a Z-124 shot would have had obvious difficulties. That's why I don't think Oswald took it. Surely he had time and brains enough to know that being comfortably in place and waiting for the limo to emerge from the tree would be an easy shot and the way a prudent former Marine sharpshooter would do it.
74
"Former Marine sharpshooter" ... "missing everything" at Z-124. Do we see a troubling disconnect here?

Dear FPL,

Ever heard of angular velocity?

ChatGPT:

While the traffic mast hypothesis is indeed often tied to "Z-107" in specific forensic models (such as Dale Myers'), your focus on "Z-124" highlights the peak tracking difficulty for the sniper. At "Z-124," the angular velocity was actually at its highest for the entire sequence, making it physically the most difficult shot for the shooter to coordinate.

1. Angular Velocity Peak

As the limousine moved away from the Depository, the required tracking motion for the sniper did not decrease linearly; it started fast and then "slowed down" as the distance increased:

At "Z-124": The pivoting required to track the target was approximately 8 degrees per second. While this seems slow on paper, for a sniper using a 4x scope with a limited field of view, this represents a significant and complex anatomical motion involving both horizontal and vertical adjustment.

At Z-224 and Z-313: By the time of the second and third shots, the required tracking movement had decreased by half. The target was moving more directly away from the sniper’s line of sight, meaning the rifle barely had to pivot at all to keep the crosshairs on JFK.

2. Why the Miss is "Strange" at "Z-124"

If the traffic mast was no longer an obstruction by "Z-124," the miss becomes more attributable to the dynamic geometry of the shot:

The "Lead" Problem: Although the car was moving nearly [straight] away [from Oswald], it still had a slight horizontal drift. At "Z-124," the target was at its closest point (approx. 100 feet), where any slight error in tracking speed is magnified.

Scope Parallax/Alignment:

Oswald’s 4x scope was notoriously misaligned, striking high and to the left. At the close range of "Z-124," this mechanical error is more pronounced than at 80 yards, where the bullet’s trajectory has more time to "settle" relative to the point of aim.

Trigger Jerk: Many marksmen suggest that the first shot of a high-stress event is the most likely to be "jerked." Given that this shot had the highest angular velocity of the three, a jerked trigger combined with the need to pivot the rifle at 8°/s makes a complete miss more plausible.

Summary of Difficulty

Shot Location    Distance (approx.)   Angular Velocity (Tracking)   Tracking Difficulty

"Z-124"   100–105 feet   ~8 degrees/sec   Highest

Z-224   190 feet   ~4 degrees/sec   Medium

Z-313   265 feet   ~2 degrees/sec   Lowest


By "Z-124," JFK’s head was moving faster relative to the sniper's field of view than it would be for the rest of the motorcade route, which likely contributed to the total miss.

. . . . . . .

-- Tom
75
Given the fact that former Marine sharpshooter Oswald fired all three shots in 10.2 seconds (with his first shot missing everything at "Z-124") in the echo chamber known as Dealey Plaza, deliberating whether or not he could have done it in 5.6 seconds is like arguing over how many angels can dance on the head of a needle to "Enter Sandman" and/or "Hell's Bells."

Ergo the "LOL!" in my OP.

LOL!

"Former Marine sharpshooter" ... "missing everything" at Z-124. Do we see a troubling disconnect here?

There seems to me scant evidentiary basis for thinking the back shot was not, in fact, the first shot. Tree limbs, traffic poles, dud bullets, whatever - all rather tortured and, well, troubling attempts to manufacture a missed shot. LNers push the missed shot back to give the LN more time, while the CT folks want to keep things manageable so we don't have two shots too close together.

Two shots by Oswald seems to me the most plausible scenario. Those could have been the back shot and the head shot, as the WC suggested was possible, and all is well in LN Land.

But if there were two shots after the back shot, and if those shots were virtually simultaneous, then there is an obvious LN problem. Hence the mania for an early missed shot. One plausible CT scenario is what Ben seems to favor - the second shot being the one that hit JBC.

For this to be plausible, the second shot would have to be sufficiently long after the back shot for Oswald to have fired it. Otherwise, the second shooter is no better shot than Oswald. The head shot would then be Mafia Guy.

A theory that seems at least reasonably plausible to me is: (1) Oswald's first shot hits JFK in the back and does its SBT thing (with the possibilty, suggested by Orr, that some of JBC's wounds were from a head shot fragment); (2) as Oswald is preparing to fire a second time, Mafia Guy in the Dal-Tex or County Records building gets the job done; and (3) JFK's head explodes in Oswald's scope (or sight) just as he's about to pull the trigger, causing him to - yep - miss everything.

I haven't really analyzed the extent to which this might be plausible in terms of bullet fragments and whatnot (Orr favors Mafia Guy with a 6.5 sabot, although in my Mafia scenario it wouldn't really matter if Mafia Guy was using a 30.06 or .308 or whatever).

At least as worth thinking about, it seems to me, as efforts to keep trying to give our "former Marine sharpshooter" ever more time to ... "miss everything." If we insisit on eliminating Mafia Guy from the scenario, then I think two shots are more plausible than any "missed everything" scenario.
76
From: Hoover, J. Edgar

To: Watson, Marvin; Special Assistant to the President

Title: REACTION OF SOVIET AND COMMUNIST PARTY OFFICIALS TO JFK ASSASSINATION

Date: 12/01/66

NARA Record Number: 178-10003-10131; Released 26 October 2017

My comments are in brackets.


A source [SOLO*] who has furnished reliable information in the past and who was in Russia on the date of the assassination of the late President John F. Kennedy, advised on December 4, 1963, that the news of the assassination of President Kennedy was flashed to the Soviet people almost immediately after its occurrence. It was greeted by great shock and consternation, and church bells were tolled in the memory of President Kennedy. According to our source, officials of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union believed that there was some well-organized conspiracy on the part of the “ultraright” in the United States to effect a “coup.” They seemed convinced that the assassination was not the deed of one man, but that it arose out of a carefully planned campaign in which several people played a part. They felt that those elements interested in utilizing the assassination and playing on anti-communist sentiments in the United States would then utilize this act to stop negotiations with the Soviet Union, attack Cuba and thereafter spread the war. As a result of these feelings, the Soviet Union immediately went into a state of national alert.

Our source further stated that Soviet officials were fearful that without leadership, some irresponsible general in the United States might launch a missile at the Soviet Union. It was the further opinion of the Soviet officials that only maniacs would think that the “left” forces in the United States, as represented by the Communist Party, USA, would assassinate President Kennedy, especially in view of the abuse the Communist Party, USA, has taken from the “ultra-left” as a result of its support of the peaceful coexistence and disarmament policies of the Kennedy administration.

According to our source, Soviet officials claimed that Lee Harvey Oswald had no connection whatsoever with the Soviet Union. They described him as a neurotic maniac who was disloyal to his own country and everything else. They noted that Oswald never belonged to any organization in the Soviet Union and was never given Soviet citizenship.

A second source [Aleksei Kulak, Hoover's shielded-from-CIA FEDORA] who has furnished reliable information in the past advised on November 27, 1963, that Nikolai T. Fedorenko, the Permanent Representative to the Soviet Mission to the United Nations, held a brief meeting with all diplomatic personnel employed at the Soviet Mission on November 23, 1963. During this meeting, Fedorenko related for the benefit of all present the news of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and stated that Kennedy's death was very much regretted by the Soviet Union and had caused considerable shock in Soviet government circles. Fedorenko stated that the Soviet Union would have preferred to have had President Kennedy at the helm of the American government. He added that President Kennedy had, to some degree, and mutual understanding with the Soviet Union, and had tried seriously to improve relations between the United States and Russia. Fedorenko also added that little or nothing was known by the Soviet government concerning President Lyndon Johnson and, as a result, the Soviet government did not know what policies President Johnson would follow in the future regarding the Soviet Union. According to our source, Colonel Boris Ivanov, Chief of the Soviet Committee for State Security (KGB) Residency in New York City, held a meeting of KGB personnel on the morning of November 25, 1963. Ivanoff informed those present that President Kennedy's death had posed a problem for the KGB and stated that it was necessary for all KGB employees to lend their efforts to solving the problem. According to our source, Ivanov stated that it was his personal feeling that the assassination of President Kennedy had been planned by an organized group rather than being the act of one individual assassin. Ivanoff stated that it was therefore necessary that the KGB ascertained with the greatest possible speed the true story surrounding President Kennedy's assassination. Ivanov stated that the KGB was interested in knowing all the factors and all of the possible groups which might have worked behind the scenes to organize and plan this assassination. Our source added that Ivanov also emphasized that he was of extreme importance to the Soviet government to determine precisely what kind of a man the new President Lyndon Johnson would be. Ivanov said that President Johnson was practically an unknown to the Soviet government and, accordingly, the KGB had issued instructions to all of its agents to immediately obtain all data available concerning the incumbent president. I have an off said that it would be necessary for KGB personnel to gather and correlate all information concerning President Johnson, including his background, his past working experience and record in Congress, his present attitude towards the Soviet Union, and particularly all information which might have bearing upon the future foreign policy line he would follow.

On December 16, 1965, this same source [FEDORA] reported that the KGB residency in New York City received instructions approximately on September 16, 1965, from KGB headquarters in Moscow to develop all possible information concerning President Lyndon B. Johnson's character, background, personal friends, family, and from which quarters he derives his support in his position as President of the United States. Our source added that in the instructions from Moscow, it was indicated that “now” the KGB was in possession of data purporting to indicate President Johnson was responsible for the assassination of the late John F. Kennedy. KGB headquarters indicated that in view of this information, it was necessary for the Soviet government to know the existing personal relationship between President Johnson and the Kennedy family, particularly that between President Johnson and Robert and “Ted” Kennedy.

On March 3, 1964, [false-defector-in-place in 1962 / false (or perhaps rogue) physical defector to the U.S. in February 1964] Yuri I. Nosenko, Soviet defector whose bona fides has not been established, advised that he was handling Soviet Committee for State Security (KGB) investigations of tourists from the United States at the time Lee Harvey Oswald visited Russia in 1959, and consequently was fully cognizant of the Lee Harvey Oswald case. According to Nosenko, Oswald came to the attention of the KGB when he expressed a wish to defect to the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics shortly after his arrival in Russia. However, the KGB, after inquiry, decided he was mentally unstable and informed him he had to return to the United States upon completion of his visit. Thereafter, when Oswald missed a sightseeing tour he was to take, his hotel room was forced open and he was found with one of his wrists badly cut. Nosenko added that Oswald was hospitalized and thereafter was allowed to remain in Russia, apparently through the efforts of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Red Cross. Oswald again came to the attention of the KGB when he attempted to reenter the Soviet Union by placing a request with the Soviet Embassy in Mexico, after his return to the United States. Nosenko stated that the KGB recommended against allowing Oswald to reenter the Soviet Union. According to Nosenko, Oswald's case was a routine one in which the KGB had no interest until he assassinated President Kennedy. He was not approached or recruited for espionage by the KGB, nor was his wife, Marina. Nosenko said Marina was regarded as a woman who possessed little intelligence and he added that she had once been a member of the Communist Party but had been dropped for failure over a long period of time to pay her dues.

It was the opinion of Nosenko that President Kennedy was held in high esteem by the Soviet Government and that President Kennedy had been evaluated by the Soviet Government as a person interested in maintaining peace. According to an Nosenko, following the assassination, Soviet guards were removed from around the American Embassy in Moscow and the Soviet people were permitted without interference to visit the American Embassy to express their condolences. Nosenko added that the JGB provided approximately 20 men who spoke the English language to handle duties in the immediate vicinity of the American Embassy in Moscow at that time to ensure that no disrespect was shown during this period. Following the assassination of President Kennedy, Anatoli Dobrynin, Soviet Ambassador to the United States, turned over to the Secretary of State a file alleged to be the complete consular file on Lee H. and Marina Oswald maintained in the Soviet Embassy, Washington, D. C. Subsequently, the Soviet Government made available to the United States Government the hospitalization record of Lee Harvey Oswald during his hospitalization in the Soviet Union. This record corroborated data previously received indicating Oswald had attempted to commit suicide in the Soviet Union.

Reaction of Communist Party officials to the assassination of President Kennedy and to the investigation conducted by the Warren Commission concerning such assassination closely follows the Soviet party line. On December 4, 1963, Gus Hall, General Secretary, Communist Party, USA, informed one of our sources [SOLO] who has furnished reliable information in the past that the assassination followed a pattern which clearly indicated it could have been done by no one other than the “ultra-right” and that Hall feels that Oswald was killed by the “ultra-right” in order to prevent him from talking. Hall indicated to our source that he planned to contact Soviet officials to determine if they plan to interview Marina Oswald and, if so, he planned to ask the Soviets to question Marina whether Lee Harvey Oswald had any connections with the “ ultra riot,” had any relations with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or had any relations or contacts with Jack Ruby.

Hall also told our source that he felt the Soviets are too lax in allowing “all kinds of persons to go to Moscow.” Hall expressed his opinion that at the time Oswald went to Moscow, he was operating for the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Hall further stated that Oswald “could have been a nut, too.”  The position of the Communist Party, USA, toward the Warren Commission Report was clearly set forth in the October 11th, 1964, issue of “The Worker,” an East Coast communist newspaper. In an article captioned “Warren Report Brushes Off Ultra-Rightist Conspiracy,” it was stated that the Warren Report gives comparatively little space to the material that came before it indicating that a “Right-wing conspiracy” was in the making and that Oswald was a “Left-painted” undercover instrument of such forces or of a Government agency. The article further stated that even the limited material which the Warren Commission has put into the record on the Rightest conspiracy that was in progress is an important contribution that provides a basis for further investigation.

No information has been developed indicating any of the so-called communist “splinter groups,” such as the Progressive Labor Party, Socialist Workers Party or the Workers World Party, have planned or instituted any concerted effort or drive to discredit or attack the Warren Commission. Official publications of these organizations have from time to time contained isolated articles which have been critical of the Warren Commission. For example, “Progressive Labor,” the official publication of the Progressive Labor Party, issued a special supplement dated November 27, 1963, which contained an article which attempted to raise doubts as to whether Lee Harvey Oswald actually killed President Kennedy. The article also attempted to establish that Oswald possibly had been “framed.” The December, 1963, issue of this same magazine contained an article which further attempted to establish that Oswald had been “framed” and that the Warren Commission did not make a thorough investigation of the assassination.

The Soviet press, from time to time since the assassination of President Kennedy, has carried articles attacking the conclusions of the Warren Commission. Immediately following the publication of the Warren Commission report on September 24, 1964, the Soviet newspaper “Pravda” carried an article in its September 28, 1964, edition summarizing the findings of the Warren Commission. In this article, the Soviet author stated that the Warren Commission Report did not dispel all doubts and suspicions about the “crime of the century.” The article also noted that “not everything mysterious has become public” and pointed out that at the beginning of the work of the Warren Commission, Mr. Warren declared that some facts connected with the assassination of President Kennedy may not be revealed in the lifetime of this generation. In an article of the Soviet newspaper “Izvestia” for September 21, 1965, Soviet reporter V. Zorin criticized the Warren Commission investigation and the conclusions of the Warren Commission. The author also summarized the allegations of a number of American and European authors who have written books critical of the Warren Commission Report and concluded that the assassination in Dallas has many riddles to offer and that the mystery remains a mystery.

In September, 1966, the Soviet publication “New Times” published excerpts of book reviews by American journalist Professor Richard Popkin. Among the excerpts pointed out were comments made by Professor Popkin concerning the books “Whitewash” by Harold Weisberg and “Inquest” by Edward J. Epstein. The Soviet publication points out that it is the conclusion of Professor Popkin that the Kennedy assassination was the outcome of a carefully laid plot in which influential quarters were implicated.

(The End)

*See my thread, "Was SOLO a Kremlin-loyal Triple-Agent?"
77
JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate / FEDORA
« Last post by Tom Graves on Yesterday at 07:27:17 AM »
KGB Major Aleksei Kulak, J. Edgar Hoover's shielded-from-CIA FEDORA, was a Kremlin-loyal triple agent at the FBI's NYC field office off-and-on for a total of about ten years from early 1962 to 1976. Among many other things (like protecting false -- or perhaps rogue -- physical defector to the U.S. Yuri Nosenko), he spread disinformation about the KGB's reaction to the assassination.

His name is mentioned several times in the following excerpt from Mark Riebling's 1994 book, Wedge: The Secret War Between the FBI and CIA, which book you can read for free by googling "wedge" "riebling" and "archive" simultaneously.

My comments are in brackets.

[True-defector Anatoliy Golitsyn wouldn't have anything to do with the FBI's liaison to the CIA], but Angleton himself was willing to share the defector’s theories with Papich in long talks after work at their homes. They lived only a few blocks apart, in North Arlington, and Papich would find himself at two or three o’clock in the morning in the backyard greenhouse where Angleton grew orchids. The hobby had become a full-blown obsession for Angleton, who frequently traveled as an orchid salesman for cover on sensitive missions abroad. When he took his custom hybrids to flower shows, he showed them with the professionals, and sometimes won prizes. It was always warm in the orchid house, and Angleton would be diddling around with his plants while they talked, but it got them away from the families, and there were a couple of old wood benches where Papich could sit down. So it was among the leafy shadows and eternal summer of the greenhouse that Papich learned the details of what Golitsyn called the Soviets’ “long-range plan” [or "Master Plan" -- what his detractors called "The Monster Plot"].

Greatly simplified, this plan called for massive political warfare, buttressed by secret intelligence deceptions. At the Twentieth Communist World Congress, in 1959, the U.S.A. had been designated the Main Enemy, but at the same time it had been decided to try a new approach. There was to be a thaw in relations, and a return to Leninist deceptions like the Trust and the New Economic Program (NEP), which had once convinced the U.S. that the Soviets were reforming. The KGB was to be reorganized to project an image of disunity and weakness in the communist world. By playing up false splits between communist nations, the Soviets would hope to divide and confuse the West, ultimately weakening it. Over the short term, the objective was economic aid to the communist world; over the long term, the goal was to end the Cold War, which would cause the U.S. to disarm.

Papich was skeptical. Even if the KGB had been divided, as Golitsyn said, into an elite “inner” core which knew about such things as secret bloc coordination, and a much larger “outer” KGB, which did not, hundreds if not thousands of people would eventually have to know. How could such a big secret be totally kept from the West?

The answer, Angleton said, was contained in the question. Human nature being what it was, such a secret surely couldn’t be kept forever; therefore, the Soviets must exploit human nature to keep the West from believing the secret, once it was out. That would not be too difficult, for the Western mind naturally wanted to believe in Soviet weakness and evolution, and probably would, if that false message came from a plurality of Soviet sources especially when those sources provided other information that was verifiably true. Where [in the 1920s] the NEP had used Western contacts with The Trust to inject its reformist message into British intelligence, Golitsyn said, the KGB would now create a new “Trust” of anticommunists — defectors and “walk-ins” from Soviet intelligence. False information would even be planted on genuine defectors and unimportant agents in the KGB, on the assumption that these would be cultivated by the West — a process Golitsyn compared to the deliberate misbriefing of “doomed pilots” in World War II. Dis-informants would confirm the reality of bogus schisms within the communist world, perpetuate a false picture of communist designs, and deflect from true information provided by defectors such as Golitsyn. [KGB "defector" Yuri] Nosenko could be part of that strategy, Angleton reasoned, even if his information overlapped with Golitsyn’s on many counts; eventually, once his credibility was established, he would take CIA for a ride. [Nosenko was eventually hired by the CIA to teach counterintelligence to its new recruits.] Disinformation messages would be shifted over time, to accord with Western preconceptions, and the net effect would be to keep the West from taking seriously the idea of any secret Soviet plot.

Papich was still not convinced. How would the Soviets know whether and when certain information was believed by CIA, and when and how to shift their messages accordingly?

Angleton smiled. Here at last, he said, was the “final cause” of Soviet penetration, its ultimate logic, the key to KGB strategy. Although the most obvious purpose of any Soviet mole was simply to relay secrets to Moscow Center, the most valuable type of secret was knowledge of how KGB disinformation was being interpreted, so that it could be tailored to Western perspectives. The penetration and disinformation agents were to work in tandem: the “outside” men [like FEDORA and TOPHAT] supplying the disinformation, and the “inside” [like probable KGB moles Bruce Solie and Leonard V. McCoy] reporting what was thought of it. If operating successfully, that “feedback loop” would leave Western intelligence agencies, and their sponsor governments, completely at the mercy of the KGB — unable to distinguish falsehood from fact. And Golitsyn believed, as did Angleton, that the Soviets had indeed penetrated Western intelligence to the point where such a feedback loop could successfully operate. The defector employed a medical analogy to describe the severity of the problem: “When the patient refuses to recognize it exists, it grows and spreads, with bad cells infecting good cells.” Western intelligence was “sick” from the cancer of penetration at various levels. The French and British and other services were already dead; CIA had been penetrated broadly at a fairly low [sic] level, and was gravely ill; the FBI, because of at least three penetrations in its New York and Washington field offices [FEDORA, TOPHAT and SHAMROCK -- Boris Orekhov], was “dying.” “I listened with great interest to what Jim was getting from Golitsyn,” Papich later said. “To a certain extent, Jim [Angleton] sold me a message on that; some people might say I was Jim’s man at the FBI. I was very much concerned about all of our vulnerabilities, because our inclination at the FBI was sometimes to accept things at face value, to be impressed only when a defector gave us cases. Well, the whole idea of disinformation agents made me realize that we had to look at all our cases goddamned carefully.”

But Papich immediately understood that the new Angleton-Golitsyn line was bound to be “controversial” and “irritating,” especially to FBI officers who had already soured on Golitsyn. When Papich relayed the essence of Golitsyn’s thesis to others at the FBI, it was rejected out of hand. Privately, G-men like Don Moore and William Branigan would make fun of what they called Golitsyn’s “Monster Plot,” while simply telling Papich and Angleton that the idea was “too speculative.” Strictly speaking, that was true; though CIA had established Golitsyn’s bona fides, his account of the new long-range [KGB] strategy had not yet been independently confirmed. The Agency could document a secret KGB meeting in May 1959 [the 20th Party Congress] and some subsequent reorganization and could glean a return to Leninism from open party sources, and even [false-defector Yuri] Nosenko had confirmed the existence of Department D [in the First Chief Directorate, but not of its counterpart, Department 14 in the Second Chief Directorate]. But otherwise everything rested ultimately on Golitsyn’s word. “We need confirmation; we need more detail,” the FBI counterespionage experts told Papich.

The liaison officer sensed that there were other reasons why his colleagues didn’t want to believe Golitsyn. Hoover had always said, “An attack on any employee of the FBI will be considered an attack on me personally,” and in alleging that three employees in Hoover’s two most important field offices were Soviet agents, Golitsyn caused a closing of ranks against the very possibility. Whereas the Bureau was only too eager to chase down alleged Soviet moles in CIA, it stubbornly refused to investigate Golitsyn’s allegations about communist spies in the FBI, saying that the defector’s leads were not specific enough. Angleton countered by suggesting, through Papich, that Golitsyn’s memory might be jogged, or his deductions sharpened, if he were allowed to view certain FBI personnel and operational files in sanitized form, with sensitive methods and sources concealed. But the Bureau flatly refused all CIA requests to examine its files. “We never gave Golitsyn any of our material, despite [Angleton's] many requests that we do so,” FBI counterintelligence man James Nolan recalled.

Yet Papich knew that FBI resentment of CIA’s star defector [Golitsyn] ran even deeper than unwillingness to believe the KGB had penetrated the Bureau. There was also a will to believe that the Bureau had successfully penetrated the KGB. Indeed, the FBI had just recently made its first-ever recruitments within Soviet intelligence, and though Golitsyn would cast them as probable disinformation agents, the Bureau wanted to believe they were bona fide.

The first of the FBI’s two new sources was forty-year-old Aleksei Isidorovich Kulak, nicknamed “Fatso by his Bureau handlers and officially code-named “Fedora.” He served as a consultant to the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, but his real task was to collect scientific and technological secrets from KGB spies in the U.S. One afternoon in March 1962, he simply walked into the FBI’s New York Field Office, on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, and claimed to be disenchanted by lack of advancement within the KGB’s First Chief Directorate. For cash, he would provide the FBI with the identities of other KGB officers, furnish Soviet military-technological “wish lists," and report on Red Army missile capacity and nuclear-development plans.

The second new FBI source was Dmitri Fedorovich Polyakov, code-named “Top Hat.” An officer in the GRU and a junior military attache at the UN, he approached an
FBI agent in New York in early 1962. Claiming to be disillusioned because he had to remit 90 percent of his salary to Moscow, he agreed to further meetings in a room at the Cameron Hotel, on West 86th Street. Soon he was serving up the identities of GRU cipher clerks, gossiping about political developments in Moscow, and bad-mouthing guidance systems on Soviet missiles (so inaccurate, he said, that they could not hit Miami from Cuba).

Fedora and Top Hat were so prized and so jealously protected by the Bureau that for much of 1962 their existence was hidden from CIA. Theoretically, enough contextual information about both men should have been turned over to CIA for Angleton to assess their bona fides, even if their true identities were obscured. But Hoover bypassed Angleton and sent reports based on Fedora’s and Top Hat’s information straight to President Kennedy. When one report described Fedora as “a source of unknown reliability,” the FBI director took up his infamous blue-inked fountain pen and slashed out the “un.”

By 1963, CIA had to be informed of both sources, however, because both were begging the FBI to supply “feed material," doctored or low-grade intelligence, to keep their KGB superiors happy. That was a complicated process which required careful coordination. Military secrets had to be cleared by Military Intelligence, naval secrets by Naval Intelligence, etc. The game would be lost, moreover, if doctored intelligence passed by the FBI did not cohere with what the Soviets might be getting from doubles run separately by CIA. Indeed, the necessity of coordination in such double-agent schemes had been one of the great counterintelligence lessons taught by the Dusko Popov and Kopff-Baarn cases of World War II. So by 1963, CIA had been brought into the feeding of Fedora and Tophat [By probable KGB "mole" Leonard V. McCoy in the Soviet Russia Division's Reports & Requirements section?].

“They checked with us, and there was a mechanism for clearance of feed material for the two UN diplomats,” Angleton’s deputy Scotty Miler confirmed. “They didn’t tell us all the details of how they were met and how they were handled, but that wasn’t really important. We knew enough, not only from Golitsyn, but from other sources, that we weren’t too sure the agents were kosher. And it was our business to tell the FBI why we didn’t think Fedora and Top Hat were for real: because they weren’t giving the proper poop, because they were asking for things that fit in with what we thought the Soviets could check on, and because of what they told us about Soviet objectives, some of which was counter to Golitsyn.”

There were other caution flags. It seemed odd to Papich, as to Angleton, that, after almost a half-century without a Soviet walk-in, the FBI should suddenly get two of them. Their reporting ranged across compartments, which was odd in the notoriously compartmented KGB. And much of what they provided was dated. “They gave us cases,” Papich said, “but most of them we knew already.”

Those few cases the Bureau hadn’t known about seemed of dubious value, at least to Papich and Angleton.

In 1963, for instance, Fedora said that the Soviets had a spy in a British nuclear-research facility. Suspicion soon hovered over Giuseppe Martelli, a physicist at Culham Laboratory. Investigation revealed rendezvous information locked in a drawer in his desk and partially used coding pads for secret communications. But, according to MI5’s Peter Wright, “no evidence had been found that Martelli had access to secrets or was passing them to a foreign power.” To Angleton and Papich, as to Wright, the Martelli case seemed clearly of the “throwaway variety,” as if designed to build up the credibility of the source at little real cost to Soviet operations.

The very nature of Fedora’s approach to the FBI caused suspicion. “I got turned off on Fedora right from the beginning,” Papich said. “If you’re doing something, and you’ve been trained in such-and-such a way, overall, you’re going to try to adhere to orthodox principles. In football, for instance, you’re going to punt on fourth down, for the most part. And in espionage, you’re not just going to stroll into the enemy camp in broad daylight and volunteer. But what the hell did Fedora do? He walked into our goddamn office in New York! Right on 72nd Street, not too far away from the Soviet consulate [and said that he felt confidant doing so because all of the other KGB officers in NYC were at a meeting about their mole "Dick" in the NYC FBI, which information caused the FBI to search in vain for years for non-existent "Dick"]. And you don’t do that if you’re going to defect, knowing that it’s surveilled by your own people. If you do it that way, and you’re a bona-fide agent, you’re going to get your head chopped off.”

But when Papich made that case to Don Moore, the Bureau’s Soviet counterintelligence chief, he got nowhere. “Sam, maybe just walking in one day was the best way of doing it, because it’s what the Soviets would least expect,” Papich would recall Moore as saying. “He knew just where to go, which floor. He had confidence he wasn’t going to get burned, he had confidence he wasn’t being tailed by his own people — all that traffic and whatnot in New York, who the hell was going to see him going into the field office? That’s not the way we would do it, but he did it that way, and people don’t always adhere to orthodox principles. Sometimes you’re not going to punt on fourth down. Sonny Jurgensen sometimes didn’t; sometimes he’d throw a pass. Well, the same thing can happen in counterintelligence.”

My comment:

LOL!
78
JFK Assassination Plus General Discussion And Debate / Re: U.S. Politics
« Last post by Tom Graves on Yesterday at 05:49:27 AM »
Guess you missed the just-released cop cam.

Dear Sonderführer Storing,

I've probably watched it more times than you have, dude.

Question:

Looking at the earlier-released video (the one taken from the left-rear), where was The Idiot when he fired his first shot, and which direction was Ms. Good's vehicle moving when he fired it - to her left, straight ahead, or to her right?

Answer:

He was standing on the side of the vehicle near the driver's side headlight, and her vehicle was turning to her right, away from him.

D'oh!

-- Tom
79

  Guess you missed the just released Cop Cam. You're currently speaking out of ignorance. Stop merely accepting what is being repeated inside that bubble you are inside. Educate yourself.
80
You certainly have a rather Curious propensity for Capitalizing words in the Middle of sentences without apparent rhyme or Reason. Is this some sort of nervous typing tic?

Does not every early-missed-shot scenario have a missing bullet? Do you have one that doesn't? What I suggested is no more "based on" a missing bullet than any theory except the reasonably plausible one that Oswald fired only two shots, which does not require a missing bullet.

What you call Revisionist History is simply Pat Speer's reasonable, evidence-based assessment of what occurred, with the missed shot coming at the end rather than the beginning: Oswald's first shot being the back wound and his second being the one that missed immediately after the head shot, with the head shot presumably being fired by Someone Else if it and Oswald's second shot were almost simultaneous as witnesses described. In this scenario, Oswald simply fired two shots, which even the WC recognized was a possibility, which Jack Nessan has written a well-reasoned book about, and which eliminates any timing problems. I don't say it's what happened, but it is more plausible and evidence-based than the assorted missed-early-shot scenarios.

"Revisionist History," indeed. CT speculation is virtually nothing but revisionist history. Getaway cars in front of the TSBD, anyone?  :D :D :D (As I recall, when I joined here a year ago you were promising to embarrass old-fart researchers with some stunning bombshell that would pretty much wrap up the case. Was the mysterious - indeed, revisionist - getaway car said bombshell, or are we still awaiting it?)

    Have YOU an explanation for the "getaway" car being absent from the Wiegman Film and roughly 15 seconds later being on the Couch/Darnell Films? Nobody caught this over the last 62+ years. This all began with my proving that the Huge Gates were "wide open" and therefore provided clandestine entry/exit from the TSBD. Those "wide open" Huge Gates are within a stone's throw of this "getaway" car. And, there is more to this. We know extremely little about the Elm St Ext. We also know extremely little about the train yard, which the Elm St Ext provides the only means of entry/exit.  (Hint, Hint).   
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