Richard Snyder, who clearly served as an intelligence liaison at the Soviet Embassy, facilitated the “defection” of Lee Harvey Oswald and at least eight other “defectors”, who came during the same month and returned during a later one. Oswald, according to Snyder, had also threatened to give up secrets he knew from his Marine service about the U-2 spy plane that created the international scandal that sabotaged moves to detente between Soviet Premiere Nikita Kruschev and President Eisenhower and led to the trial of pilot Gary Powers in Moscow for spying. Yet, Oswald was not held at the Embassy. Marina Oswald’s testimony to the Warren Commission about how she met Oswald and how he came to the USSR match the story another of the “defectors”, Robert Webster, but not Oswald. Snyder also suggested to Priscilla Johnson, a journalist in Moscow for North American Newspaper Alliance (an intelligence front operation), that she interview Oswald at the Metropole Hotel as an American “defector”. Oswald married Marina soon after he met her and was inexplicably able to take her with him back to the United States, even though her family was employed in the NKVD security police agency, and the Embassy returned his passport despite his attempts to renounce American citizenship, and paid his way back to the United States.
Richard E. Snyder, Foreign Service officer who handled Oswald’s attempted defection, dies at 92
Washington Post
By T. Rees Shapiro
Published: January 31
Richard E. Snyder, a Foreign Service officer who as a senior consul in Moscow handled the attempted defection of future presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald to the Soviet Union, died Jan. 9 at a health-care facility in Georgetown, Ky. He was 92.
He had Alzheimer’s disease, said his daughter Dianne Snyder.
Mr. Snyder served as a Japanese and Russian specialist in the State Department from 1950 to 1970. He spent the much of his career serving in posts across Japan, and he helped prepare for the 1972 transfer of the Ryukyu Islands from the United States back to Japan.
But it was his two years in Russia during the height of Cold War tensions that proved the most eventful.
From July 1959 to July 1961, Mr. Snyder served as a senior consular official at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. During that time, he attended the trial of Francis Gary Powers, an American spy-plane pilot who was shot down in 1960 over the Ural mountains.
In 1979, Mr. Snyder wrote an expansive account published in The Washington Post of his encounters with Oswald.
It was on a Saturday — Oct. 31, 1959 — that Mr. Snyder was approached by Oswald, a slim and primly groomed man who announced his desire to dissolve his American citizenship. He had recently separated from the U.S. Marine Corps and had traveled to the Soviet Union inspired by his professed belief in Marxism.
When he came to Mr. Snyder’s desk that day in October, Oswald thrust his U.S. passport into the consul’s hands.
Mr. Snyder inspected Oswald’s papers and found that he’d just had his 20th birthday. During his tenure in Moscow, Mr. Snyder had dealt with such defection cases before.
“Among the humanitarian and political considerations in such cases was the naivete of the principals,” Mr. Snyder wrote in The Post. “A common characteristic of those who chose the Soviet Union as the place to work out their problems was that they knew nothing about it.”
Although Oswald seemed adamant about becoming a Soviet citizen, Mr. Snyder told the young man to think about his decision and return the following Monday to sign the appropriate documents. In the meantime, Mr. Snyder stowed Oswald’s passport in his embassy desk for safekeeping.
Oswald did not come back for 20 months. During that time, he worked in a factory in Minsk.
When Oswald returned to the U.S. Embassy in July 1961, he told Mr. Snyder that he had “learned a hard lesson the hard way.”
As one of his last duties in Russia, Mr. Snyder agreed to return Oswald his passport. Days later, Mr. Snyder left Moscow for another assignment in Tokyo.
Mr. Snyder later wrote that Oswald had been “relegated to a forgotten corner of my mind” until President John F. Kennedy was fatally shot in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. Oswald was shot and killed two days later by nightclub owner Jack Ruby.
Oswald was the principal suspect in the presidential assassination, and Mr. Snyder later testified for the Warren Commission about his handling of Oswald in Moscow.
“Why, an acquaintance once asked me, did we let a guy like Oswald back into the country?” Mr. Snyder wrote in 1979. “The answer is that an American doesn’t need permission to return to his own country. Unlike some, the American state has no power to banish those it thinks unworthy.”
Richard Edward Snyder was born Dec. 10, 1919, in Newark. During World War II, he served in the Army in Europe and received the Bronze Star Medal for helping to evacuate his wounded comrades while under enemy fire. He spent 10 years in the Army Reserve and retired at the rank of major.
He was a 1948 Yale University graduate and received a master’s degree in Russian studies from Harvard University in 1956.
Mr. Snyder lived in Alexandria for more than 30 years before moving to Kentucky in 2004.
His wife of 64 years, Anna Dimeo Snyder, died in 2006.
Survivors include two daughters, Dianne Snyder of Alexandria and Gail Wiederwohl of Georgetown, Ky.; a brother; three grandchildren; and two great-granddaughters.