A SOVIET AGENT? EVIDENCE POINTS TO OSWALD'S TRAINING BY REDS

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000600160042-6
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 18, 1999
Sequence Number: 
42
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 14, 1964
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000600160042-6.pdf160.13 KB
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CPYRGHT Sanitized - Approved For Releas PALO ALTO TILES APR 4 1964 PALO, CALIFORNIA ave a: a icrz. ,oaaci a- 7 ' .1 . :3 '4 tr.,b' t. .';'..,, JOHN KEPLINGER Smith is convinced usw,-1 la 1 ne porn( is tins: i ;:r.e.?..?.....1 of a 3cric3) ?N ..i':e Harvey Oswald suddenly was not actin); on orders of theimental direction. Foreigners are letters in ;vri:':, :I! wl'ic found himself in truly strange'Kremlin when he allegedly firednot allowed to join them. There- son dreeped sly, aeti-Soviei hints1 and foreign surroundings. I . From the shots tha','" killed Kennedy. fore, Oswald either was a mem- and made mention of a desire to ''e giant metropolis of Moscow, In Minsk, Smith says, Sovietiber of a Soviet outfit or, more return home. This represented he had been hastily removed to:military intelligence had a bi,.11ikely, a special arrangement a sudden and uncharacteristic the small, bleak city of Minsk in job ahead: "... to obtain ever yiIwas made for him so he could change of heart, Smith believes. particle of information ? Oswald apparently began the winter of 1959.from, practice shooting." He had come a long way sine6(Oswald), not merely on elec..1 Oswald's in t e r r o g at i o n mixing in circles well above the i..;A day in ..feris - Angeles etwo:tronics and call signs (Oswald dragged on into the spring of station of an alleged sheet metal months e.--irliCr When his pass-had been a radio iechnic.ian)..0960, Smith estimates. When it 'worker, for he met and began port application to travel abroad:hut also on Marine rorps pin finally ended, intelligence offi-lcourting Marina Nikolayevna . was apritoved, c.ediires . . . cials, probably began debatingPrusakova, reportedly the niece , b-..,(1 made WS war 1.f. :Rus- "An interrogation job el eeve how best to utilize him. i Pe t,of a Soviet intelligence colonel. . l sia. ee,eking Soviet cidzensnip in oral months .ae(A ;,-,?,i(e nitelli-1 Did Oswald have .agent Filen- ?In February, 1961, Oswald 1 ?:.'f)r'.-61.:ned with his own dis- been aleri and;lad used hislThis was one of the prime clues_I'Moseow. stating he wanted to re_i wrote the American Embassy in' . ? , vihere the political way of eence, epecialle I (-),,,,aid hadltial or was he too unstable? Marine Corps tour to nrepare new. his passni ot t and 1 eturn 1.? :. eiew'-s. lions confronting them, Smith ...'. arrival in Moscow in i While waiting for a decision ; 11C;M. --On Anvil 30, 1961, Oswald . eie course of events since 'himself for this sort of interro- believes. gation,'' Smith continues. ,, ee C,(Jober had undergone a ,,It. is Ili ter ly inconceivable.; De made, Oswald apparently: married ,he "ttractive 19-yean- d change. His hoped-for Citi - old Marina. that a Soviet intelligence interH grew impatient, a trait that waH eenship was denied him and he rogation did not Lake pla.ce," he l to take on disastrous n ;hese lat_ter .two. acts ye e:e-- , r?0?1-ipee:Hly significant a' rid c o.m- ,e; moved. to an out adds. - itions a few short years later l .. . , in, ey contradictory Under So- As for rnporfs Oswald was giv-iSmith believes. t \net if..?clitions, Smith contends. Hace. '' '1 ET A(;11'.NTS en a low-paying (80 1 uble or MI Still hungering for Soviet citi-.!-Ie eenlies the Rir sians would eie epinion of Edward El- a month') :,-,heri metal worker's' zenship, Oswald managed to': .,,,, i,.,.k in on an Ame.rican Jon In Minsk, :--;inith is skepticall'.1write a letter to the Marine' ' mith of Palo Alto, a former -i -t.eeecor supposedly intent on security -intelligence officer He behenee [hp .1 rib was simply; Corps asking that he be dis-! , i rericrocting with a Russian wife .. !charged as a reservist so tn!. "T-.e logical nterpretation," i the Army, State Depart--.n "cover" clutiiig the interroga- . e !could accept Soviet citizenship.' . :.??ni: and Central Intelligence tion pE.,,riod.' i'.. _ . Agency, Oswald was at this junc- (The Marines complied with aniiSmith eontinues, "is that by this RIFLE CV 111 i.tire in the hands unsatisfactory discharge.) time a firm decision had been .of Soviet mill- ' Continuing with his analysis of i tary intelligence agents. Oswald's reported stav in It is almost incredible that the ade as to what (Oswald's): Smith, who has lived in Mos-Minsk, Smith says: ' ' ?letter passed Soviet cen i-risorshipi mission was to be. - cow and was the first full-time - ''We are told that while in Smith acknowledges, because ill "Furthermore, the intelligence State Department security of:Minsk' Oswald joined a rifle club could have damaged Oswald's toperators had decided to estab- ficer of the American Embassy and practiced marksmanship. I"agent potential." lish 'control'- throug?h a Russian . there, has traced Oswald's ?flys- Now, there are no rifle clubs in There could have been some wife who would leave hostages reason for the letter, but it is hound, who was susceptible to sey from the time he obtained a the Soviet Union. Unless one be- ' passport in Los Anpoles to a hunter's "Sovkhoz' Smith's assessment that it got: discipline and suitable for train- untir.longs ' ' the day four year; later when,(for professional hunters), a So- through censorship as the re-i ing,. and who could he weA as s u 1 t of some inexplicable! Oswild's assistant.-- .p. r-. (;,-. :, oi h- President John F. Kennedy wa,...vi.pt.eitizen is allowed to prac- assassinated in Dallas. - itiCe shooting only . within . the "snafu." 1 er things, for conimir..r.l'i.ons," 'framework of the All-Union Vol- Despite this jolt, Soviet Intel:II-I Smith asserts. luntary. Society. for Cooperation , gence decided .to take Oswald! In subsequent fee,. with the Army, Air Force andi into the fold, Smith is mother Oswald re c o n- 1-- l , e - Navy?a sort of combination na- vinced. As evidence, be cites the eta.' aid to return holop. i . finial gui-ird and reserve train- following events: letter written Fiboa! T.:)cci...7..r. ling program.. i 1191, Oswald announced II ? I S CPYRGHT nese or- his farnily would roceo'z visas in February and be. :.he -about March. 1962. Sanitized - Approved For Release : CIA-RDP75-00149R000600160042-cetinued ? Sanitized - Approved For Release : CIA-RDP75-00149R000600160042-6 APR 4 1964 CPYRGHT - It is inte:csting, Smith be- lieves, that Oswald knew two months in advance vhen the exit visas would be granted. He states "there is no precedent for the Soviets providing such advance notice." ASSIGNMENT "Indeed, what would be their purpose?" he asks. "If a visa ?had been promised some time in December for mid-February, an assignment was involved !which Oswald was to complete before leaving," Smith argues,. "No, (the assignment) w a s hardly a matter of sheet metal world rig. This precise predating would make much sense, how- ever, if it was anticipated that Oswald would be completing a ' course of instruction preparing for his return to the I tinted States as an agent." Smith offers one further bit of evidence which he behaves lends credence to the theory Oswald was trained as a Soviet agent: . Jo Jamiary, 1`.162, while still in Minsk, 0:wald wrote two more letters. One was to Sen. John Tower r:t Texas, a' con- servative Republican, beseech- ing help for his return home, and the other was to Secretary ? of the Navy John Connaily ask- in reconsideration of his unsat- islactor).7 discharge from the Marines. Says Smith with a touch of cynicism: "An A mrrion detector living in Minsk \valid in deadly peril contact the U.S. Navy and a conservative U.S. senator. He would have, been immediately accused of attempted espionage . against. the Soviet. Union. "Had these letters not been, lea red beforehand with Soviet ;reurity authorities, he would lave been promptly arrested!" Thus, the ground was laid for )swald's return home. (Next: the significance of his marriage) Sanitized - Approved For Release : CIA-RDP75-00149R000600160042-6