In late September 1963 (two months prior), Lee Harvey Oswald visited Mexico City and attempted to obtain visas from the Cuban and Soviet embassies. The CIA intercepted calls from someone claiming to be Oswald, but the details don’t add up:
• The caller spoke in broken Russian, yet Oswald was known to be fluent in the language.
• Surveillance photos of the person visiting these embassies don’t match Oswald’s appearance.
If this wasn’t Oswald, then who was it—and why were they impersonating him?
This isn’t speculation; it’s documented fact. But it raises questions the Warren Commission and even subsequent investigations largely ignored. Was this part of an effort to set Oswald up as the “fall guy”? Was someone creating a false trail to connect him to foreign governments, particularly during the height of Cold War tensions?
The CIA’s mishandling of this evidence is also deeply troubling. Did they simply fail to investigate, or were they covering up something bigger? This incident stands out as one of the clearest indications that there’s more than meets the eye in the JFK assassination.
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