Vasilios Vazakas was born in Athens, Greece, and studied in Edinburgh, Scotland; he holds a BEng in energy engineering and an MSc in building services engineering. He has had a long-running interest in the JFK assassination, its relation to US foreign policy, and its relevance today. Vasilios has contributed a number of book reviews to this site.
Vasilios Vazakas provides a helpful appendix for his multi-part series on “Creating the Oswald Legend” identifying the actors and players on this grand chess board.
Vasilios Vazakas concludes his seven-part investigation into the creation of the Oswald legend by exploring the delay in opening up a CIA 201 file using Betsy Wolf’s HSCA investigation notes and its relation to James Angleton’s use of mole hunts as cover for more sinister operations.
In the sixth part of this multi-part series, Vasilios examines a wilderness of mirrors, elite connections, and a pawn on the chess board as he continues to expose and flesh out the Oswald legend. He details associations to Richard Case Nagell, PFC Eugene Dinkin, the OAS, Bill Harvey, Edward Lansdale, Dr. Ochsner, Frederick Henry Osborn Sr., Allen Dulles, Ruth and Michael Paine, C. D. Jackson and Life magazine, Clay Shaw, David Ferrie, Freeport Sulphur, LBJ and Congo, Sukarno and Indonesia, and more!
In the fifth part of this multi-part series, Vasilios examines the Tippit murder, how LBJ prevented a war, CIA police training and the CIS, Domestic Operations, air proproprietaries and the drug trade, James Angleton, E. Howard Hunt, and so much more.
In the fourth part of this multi-part series, Vasilios reveals how James Angleton was holding, close to his vest, the Oswald files from the very beginning and how he did it via a very unusual mail routing system to ensure absolute control.
In the third part of this multi-part series, Vasilios explores the evidence that Oswald was a government agent by examining the Oswald legend created in New Orleans, Mexico City, and Dallas. He concludes by exposing the sinister use of a CIA mole hunt to produce the perfect patsy and prevent any genuine investigation of the true perpetrators of the JFK assassination.
In the second part of this multi-part series, Vasilios examines Oswald’s links to CIA-sponsored or CIA-connected anti-communist organizations and figures, and asks if it is possible that Oswald was being prepared from the outset to be an infiltrator.
In the first part of this projected multi-part series, the author reviews Oswald's "defection" to the USSR in the light of Cold War games and his possible connection to them, and proposes an interesting twist on what the role of his stay there may have been.
This is a good enough documentary for the novice, but it does not contain enough information that is vital to understanding this complex case. I also believe that there were plenty of good researchers to recruit instead of David Kaiser, who, with all due respect, is just a better version of Robert Blakey, writes Vasilios Vazakas.
This book is really an entry level book for the novice, an overview of the assassination that tries to touch all of its aspects. ... Its major themes, like the shooting sequence and the identification of the conspirators are not well constructed and some of his conclusions are not supported by the latest findings. And his criticism of Jim Garrison was unfortunate and unjustifiable. After finishing the book you are left with the impression that it was probably written in the 90s and not in 2013, writes Vasilios Vazakas.
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