Deep Politics on Oswald, Mexico, and Cuba
New Revelations in U.S. Government Files 1994-1995
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Narrated by:
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Dennis Holland
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By:
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Peter Dale Scott
About this listen
Peter Dale Scott has written extensively on the Kennedy assassination and other dark corners of the American political scene. His encyclopedic knowledge enables him to connect the dots among the players, the organizations, and the unacknowledged collusions - the deep politics - of our often troubled political system. Deep Politics on Oswald, Mexico, and Cuba, originally published in 1995, narrows the focus of Scott's earlier Deep Politics and the Death of JFK. Scott delivers the most detailed treatment yet of the mysterious sojourn of Lee Harvey Oswald (or someone using his name) to Mexico City in the fall of 1963. Was this trip a key aspect of the framing of Oswald, was it an approved intelligence operation, or was it perhaps both?
It is now known that allegations of Communist conspiracy in the wake of the JFK assassination, emanating mostly from Mexico City, caused Lyndon Johnson to put together a "blue ribbon commission" to investigate what happened in Dallas. Scott explains through meticulous research and analysis exactly why LBJ would want the Warren Commission to rush to a conclusion, and the far-reaching political ramifications of the commission's public findings.Scott's analysis suggests the evidence from Mexico City was part of a frame-up, making Deep Politics on Oswald, Mexico, and Cuba an essential piece of research and analysis, shedding new light on the Communist conspiracy allegations behind the JFK assassination.
©2013 Peter Dale Scott (P)2013 Audible, Inc.Editor reviews
The 1992 John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act brought a slew of new documents on the controversial 1963 assassination. Professor Peter Dale Scott dissects and reviews the document's writing his findings in essays, some of which are collected here. The themes of his third volume are Oswald, Mexico, and Cuba centering on Oswald’s mysterious trip to Mexico City shortly before the assassination and whether he or an imposter visited the Soviet embassy and spoke with the Cuban and Mexican consulates. Dennis Holland’s deep and stable voice guides us through this complex analysis of a peculiar piece of one of the most debated puzzles of the 20th century.