Tag: False Flag Operation

  • The Call To The Soviet Embassy That Made Langley Flinch

    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 three days before the assassination - came from someone inside the United States, speaking fluent Russian, asking about “arrangements in Dallas.”


    ☎️ The Call No One Could Explain

    The document is a briefing note from the Office of Security to the CIA Deputy Director of Plans, summarizing a flagged phone intercept from a monitored UN communication circuit.

    Here’s the redacted transcription of the key line:

    “Will everything be prepared by the 22nd? I was told it would be handled in Dallas.”

    The speaker used fluent Russian, but with what linguists described as an East Coast American accent.

    The note goes on:

    “Caller requested assurance that event would be completed in accordance with earlier arrangements. Used informal vocabulary inconsistent with embassy protocol.”


    🛑 Who Was On The Line?

    The Soviets never responded to the call.

    That fact is what triggered the alarm.

    If this was a planned call between collaborators - where was the reply?

    A CIA linguistic analyst theorized:

    “Caller may have been attempting provocation or signal test.”

    That line - “signal test” - appears four times in the memo, suggesting fear that the Soviets were either:

    1. Running a backchannel warning, or
    2. Being set up by a third party to take the fall.

    🧾 The Mole Hunt That Followed

    Two immediate actions were taken after the intercept:

    1. A request to FBI counterintelligence to check if “any cleared domestic parties had access to Russian-linguist training and Dallas itinerary details.”
    2. A review of NSA logs for similar phrasing patterns or matching call fingerprints.

    Neither search returned a match.

    But on November 23, 1963 - the day after JFK was assassinated - a CIA internal routing slip recommended:

    “No further inquiry. Treat as anomalous and unconnected unless supporting intercepts surface.”

    Just like that - the call disappeared from the investigation trail.


    🎯 A Test Call Or A False Flag?

    The biggest clue is buried in a footnote in the document:

    “Analyst suggests caller may have been testing Soviet awareness or staging a signal to be noticed by U.S. monitoring.”

    In short: someone may have known the CIA was listening - and called the Soviet embassy on purpose, with deliberate phrasing about Dallas.

    Which raises one unavoidable question:

    Who knew enough to say it - and smart enough to make it untraceable?


    🧨 They Tapped The Line But Ignored The Message

    The CIA caught the call.

    They transcribed it.

    They flagged it internally.

    And then… chose not to follow it.