In one of the documents, the Central Intelligence Agency drew attention to part of the book by Robert Anson in 1976, which refers to the trip of the assassin of American President Lee Harvey Oswald to Moscow.

It is noted that Oswald received a visa in a short time.

"The commission considers it suspicious that Oswald received a visa in two to four days, without being present at the Soviet embassy," the office in Helsinki said.

At the same time, the document dated December 1978 does not exclude the possibility of helping Oswald to travel to the country from the Soviet Union, however, it is noted that this is not confirmed by the fact of an accelerated visa issuance.

The documents also state that Oswald allegedly could have called the Soviet embassy in Mexico City on November 23.

Earlier, American director and producer Oliver Stone, in an interview with the host of the Going Underground program on RT, Afshina Rattanzi, commented on the decision of US President Joe Biden to postpone the release of documents on the Kennedy assassination due to the situation with coronavirus infection.

On November 22, 1963, the 35th President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was shot dead in Dallas in the convertible he rode with his wife Jacqueline and Texas Governor John Connally.

According to the official version, the killer was former Marine Lee Harvey Oswald, who was shot and killed at the police station two days after his arrest.