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LATEST ARTICLES
Moscow’s Eyes on Mexico: A Forgotten Pattern of Embassy Surveillance
In the recently released CIA memo from document 206-10001-10003, a curious Soviet national in Mexico City asked targeted questions about U.S. embassy staffing in 1962. While the memo has no known connection to Lee Harvey Oswald, it reveals something deeper: a quiet,...
Cold Case Cuba: The Oswald Warnings We Ignored
Declassified memos from both sides of the Florida Straits show Havana tried to sound the alarm about Oswald-and the U.S. buried it. 🌴 The Havana Backchannel While Lee Harvey Oswald’s trip to Mexico City in September 1963 has drawn intense scrutiny, less attention has...
The Russian Visitor Who Asked One Too Many Questions
Document 206-10001-10003, newly released in the 2025 JFK files, contains a short CIA memo from September 1962 about a Soviet national in Mexico City who raised quiet alarms by asking unusually specific questions about U.S. embassy operations. At the time, it seemed...
The Cuban Intelligence Asset That Slipped Through the Net
In the trove of CIA records released in 2025, a short memo dated September 1963 points to a Cuban intelligence officer operating in the United States-one with direct ties to groups Lee Harvey Oswald associated with. The memo was never acted on, never referenced in...
"He Was Neurotic… Undesirable": The KGB’s Unsolicited Denial
In the weeks following JFK’s assassination, Soviet officials scrambled to shape the narrative. Document 180-10144-10133, newly released in the 2025 JFK files, captures an urgent and defensive communication: the KGB emphatically insisted that Lee Harvey Oswald was not...
The Isolation Pattern Intelligence Tried To Decode
Within the 2025 declassified document 206-10001-10009 lies a quiet psychological profile note regarding Oswald’s "conditioning response to isolation." The phrase is buried in a report assessing his post-defection behavior, but its implications are anything but minor....
How Oswald Slipped Past the State Department
Document 194-10002-10187, from the 2025 JFK file release, contains a damning piece of paper: a brief 1961 cable from the U.S. Embassy in Moscow stating it had "no objection" to Lee Harvey Oswald returning to the United States. At a time when Cold War paranoia ran high...
The Autopsy Edits: Photos They Cropped, Retouched, or Replaced
2025 files confirm what many suspected: the visual record of JFK’s wounds was deliberately manipulated before being archived. 🧠 Introduction: The Photos Never Matched the Wounds Researchers and doctors have long noted that the autopsy photos don’t align with: Early...
"We Had Nothing to Do With Him": Soviet Officials Disavow Oswald in Minsk
Document 180-10131-10325, released in the 2025 JFK files, contains firsthand commentary from Soviet officials responding to U.S. inquiries about Lee Harvey Oswald’s time in the USSR. The verdict from Moscow was firm: Oswald was isolated, distrusted, and ultimately...
The Page They Pulled From Oswald’s Notes
Buried in document 206-10001-10009, declassified in 2025, is a low-profile but explosive reference to an internal memo describing a page "of cryptic personal notations" found among Oswald’s possessions after his arrest. This page, which allegedly contained references...
The CIA File That Raised a Flag Then Got Buried
Document 206-10001-10000, newly released as part of the 2025 JFK files, is just one page long. It outlines a suspicious disappearance: a Soviet defector scheduled to leave Mexico City who seemingly never did. The CIA flagged the irregularity. Then they closed the...
The Soviet Who Called the Embassy After Oswald Was Named
Document 180-10145-10265, released as part of the 2025 JFK files, contains an FBI summary of a phone call placed to the U.S. Embassy in Canberra, Australia, just hours after Lee Harvey Oswald was named the chief suspect in the assassination of President John F....
The Soviet Call to "End the Rumors" After Dallas
Document 180-10144-10288, released as part of the 2025 JFK files, captures a fascinating diplomatic moment in the days after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination. Soviet officials urgently communicated with U.S. contacts, not to explain, but to appeal. Their...
When the Kremlin Flinched: Soviet Panic in the Wake of JFK’s Death
Document 180-10144-10240, part of the 2025 JFK file release, provides an inside look at how Soviet officials reacted in real time to President Kennedy’s assassination. Instead of gloating, they were terrified. Soviet sources feared that Lee Harvey Oswald's ties to the...
The Routine Telegram That Let Oswald Come Home
On July 3, 1961, a U.S. Embassy telegram quietly approved Lee Harvey Oswald’s return from the Soviet Union. Now released as part of the 2025 JFK files in document 194-10002-10187, this short, seemingly procedural message has become a symbol of how Cold War bureaucracy...
The KGB’s Real-Time Reaction to the Kennedy Assassination
Document 180-10144-10240, part of the 2025 JFK file release, captures a rare and immediate reaction from Soviet officials following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Sent by an informant who met directly with Soviet embassy staff, the report reveals a...
"Oswald Had No Friends Here": The KGB’s Unsolicited Denial
In the weeks following JFK’s assassination, Soviet officials scrambled to shape the narrative. Document 180-10144-10133, newly released in the 2025 JFK files, captures an urgent and defensive communication: the KGB emphatically insisted that Lee Harvey Oswald was not...
"We Don’t Talk About Oswald": A State Department Memo That Dodged the Bullet
Document 194-10007-10426, released in the 2025 JFK files, includes a 1964 State Department memo that appears designed to distance the Department from any responsibility in the Lee Harvey Oswald case. The tone isn’t investigatory-it’s protective. The message is clear:...
The Soviet Tip That Came Too Late
Document 180-10144-10130, released in the 2025 JFK files, reveals a chilling moment from the days after President Kennedy’s assassination: a Soviet source, known to the FBI, claimed Oswald was a patsy-and that the assassination was "not the work of one man." But the...
The Call To The Soviet Embassy That Made Langley Flinch
In document 206-10001-10014, declassified in March 2025, the CIA confirms it was operating a "passive intercept device" on a direct phone line to the Soviet Mission to the UN in New York City. What wasn’t expected? That the call logged on November 19, 1963 - just...
How a Moscow Cable Tried to Rewrite the Oswald Narrative
Document 194-10002-10189, released in the 2025 JFK files, is a 1963 diplomatic cable from the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Sent shortly after President Kennedy’s assassination, the cable wasn’t an inquiry, warning, or investigation. It was a defense. A carefully worded...
The State Department’s Internal Autopsy of Oswald’s Return
Document 194-10006-10315, released in the 2025 JFK files, is an internal State Department review from January 1964 outlining how Lee Harvey Oswald was able to return to the United States after defecting to the Soviet Union. What’s most telling is what the memo doesn’t...
How the State Department Crafted the "Right" Answer on Oswald
Document 194-10006-10316, released in the 2025 JFK files, shows how the U.S. State Department carefully shaped the language used to explain how-and why-Lee Harvey Oswald was allowed back into the country. The memo doesn’t explore the facts. It focuses on how to...
"Don’t Disclose to the Press": The State Department’s Order on Oswald
In document 194-10006-10318, released as part of the 2025 JFK files, a short but pointed message from a State Department official lays down one clear instruction regarding Lee Harvey Oswald: do not speak to the press. Written after JFK’s assassination, the directive...
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