Soupnazi630
Gold Member
- Dec 9, 2013
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He commited no crime technical or otherwise. It is perfectly legal to emigrate to other countries even the USSR during the height of the cold war. He was not a traitor in any legal sense.Maybe Oswald committed a technical crime by defecting to the USSR but he was automatically a suspect when he returned to the U.S. during the coldest part of the Cold War after Russia started building the Berlin Wall. Oswald's wife was the daughter of a KGB officer. Even a fledgling CIA operative would have wondered why a nerdy U.S. traitor would have come in contact with the KGB. Oswald worked in the military in Japan where they were monitoring U-2 flights. Shortly after Oswald defected a U-2 flight was shot down.
Oswald's wife qwas NOt the daughter of a KGB officer. Her father was only a local cop.
tens of thousands of Army navy Airforce and Marine personel were stationed or cycled through that same airbase.
Geographical proximity is not a connection