KGB Col. Oleg Nechiporenko, stationed in Mexico City: many in the Mexican intelligence
service DFS suspected Lyndon Johnson in the wake of the JFK assassination.
The CIA helped to create and run the DFS.
QUOTE
I have more concrete information as
to how the embassy telephone lines were tapped and how the FBI worked with Mexican
special services on the Oswald case. I learned this from a member of el Direccion Federal de Seguridad (DFS)
whom I’ll call “Jose.” He was part of the group that protected the Soviet cosmonauts,
and we were friends for several years.
The CIA and FBI conducted a very
thorough investigation of Oswald’s stay in Mexico, without the assistance of
the Mexican special secret service. The DFS was very interested in clarifying individual
moments pertaining to Oswald in their country, and all the information that they
gathered was presented to representatives of the “legal attache” of the U.S. embassy.
This division of the embassy represented the FBI in Mexico, and its employees maintained
close contact with Mexican law enforcement. During this period the legal attache
was Joseph Garcia, who had long served in this capacity. Traditionally, the FBI
had plenty of its own resources in Mexico and, like the CIA, solved problems without
the knowledge or participation of the Mexican police.
Shortly after the assassination, Jose said that many in the
DFS felt that Lyndon Johnson was responsible. Jose was very interested in
pursuing the investigation.
UNQUOTE
[Col.
Oleg Maximovich Nechiporenko, Passport to
Assassination, The Never-Before-Told Story of Lee Harvey Oswald by the KGB Colonel
Who Knew Him, pp. 180-181]
The Mexican
DFS was like the “CIA of Mexico” and our CIA had a huge role in creating and running
it.
Wiki
on the Mexican DFS: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direcci%C3%B3n_Federal_de_Seguridad
“According to Peter Dale Scott, the DFS was in part a CIA
creation, and "the CIA's closest government allies were for years in the DFS".
DFS badges, "handed out to top-level Mexican drug-traffickers, have been
labelled by DEA agents a virtual 'license to traffic'".[3]
Scott also said, "The Guadalajara Cartel, Mexico's most powerful drug-trafficking
network in the early 1980s, prospered largely because it enjoyed the protection
of the DFS, under its chief Miguel Nazar Haro, a CIA asset.”
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