S u m m i n g i t u p
After extensive studies with regards to his background I've found that Lee Harvey Oswald was played by both sides.
He found himself in the military spotlights in 1959 when he singled himself out, becoming a loner.
Any CIA operative stationed where he was at the time could have noticed him and figured he would make a good asset because he kept to himself. He easily distanced himself from others.
According to some researchers there are FBI notes in existence of Oswald being impersonated as early as 1960.
This was odd enough.
But I've yet to come across this evidence.
As for the reason why it was so important to impersonate this insignificant young man, well that could've only been to establish an unstable appearance in the eyes of the law enforcement agencies, as well as the general public.
By 1962, when Oswald finally made it back to the U.S., the FBI didn’t arrest him for treason, which would have normally been the case during that time. No, instead they turn him into an informer and tell him to spy on the CIA.
When he got wind that a big mission was coming, he could have been told to partake, report, then disrupt or stop it from happening.
The Chicago plot was foiled when it was called in by a man calling himself “Lee”. Then the Tampa and Houston plots fell through also.
When the Dallas plot wasn’t foiled, it was probably because Lee wasn’t told it was taking place there, or perhaps they saw through him and threatened his family if he tried to stop it.
I believe he purposely stayed near the lunchrooms, hoping he would be seen by someone who could corroborate his innocence.
But when he heard the shots, he got scared and left the building.
He goes back to his boardingroom, gets his revolver (expecting a shootout one way or the other), and goes to the Texas Theater.
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There is ample evidence of his CIA background, but little on his FBI background, but the fact that he never got arrested by the FBI when he came home from Russia is enough proof they offered him a deal.
Even his trip to Russia was secretly sanctioned. It had to have been. He was sent there to spy on the Russians and somehow find a way to get close to anyone working for the government. And it was a very dangerous assignment.
So much so that instead of remaining alone, which would have made moving around a lot easier, he decided to find a wife so he would blend in even easier. A married man would probably stand out less.
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In any case he was being moved around by both sides. When Agent James Hosty went to talk with Marina, I believe it was about Lee.
Not to send him messages (like some researchers like to believe), or to get information on Ruth Paine (who some feel was a CIA asset set to spy on Lee and Marina), but to put pressure on Lee to keep doing what he was doing.
And this was, most likely, the reason that Lee got so angry with Hosty.
Eventually the CIA set him up during the assassination.
He most likely didn’t really know how to handle himself the second he realized they ditched him at the book depository.
They could have even told him that the Texas Theater was a rally point.
And then Billy Seymour made sure the cops found their way there.
Oswald thought they were operatives dressed as cops, so he pulled his pistol and yells “this is it!”
But when they arrested him he starts yelling “I am not resisting arrest!”.
The patsy was in custody.
And the operatives were free and clear.
Now, if you still don’t believe that there was something fishy going on, that for some reason the government protected themselves from people finding out their actual relationship with Lee Oswald, ask yourself this: why are there still so many documents about Oswald being withheld from the public? Why is so much information about him categorized as ‘classified’?
They said he wasn’t anyone special. Inconsequential.
If that’s true, release all his documents and let us read about him.
The fact that this doesn’t happen is indisputable proof that his ties to government agencies exist, and, most likely, link these agencies to the JFK assassination in some way.
But not destroying these documents is really the dumbest thing to do. Especially if they are that damning.
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