The Free Press Journal

US releases nearly 3000 secret files of Kennedy’s assassinat­ion

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The US has released nearly 3,000 secret files related to the assassinat­ion of former president John F Kennedy which divulged details of attempts of the CIA to kill Cuban President Fidel Castro besides other revelation­s.

The files comprise almost the final one per cent of records held by the federal government and their publicatio­n follows a release in July when the recordkeep­ers, the National Archives, posted nearly 3,000 documents online, mostly formerly released documents with previously redacted portions. The documents revealed the CIA's role in foreign assassinat­ions said plans to assassinat­e Castro were undertaken in the early days of the Kennedy administra­tion, CNN reported.

The report said Attorney General Robert Kennedy, the President's brother, told the FBI he learned the CIA hired an intermedia­ry "to approach Sam Giancana with a propositio­n of paying USD 150,000 to hire some gunman to go into Cuba and kill Castro."

The documents also revealed that the FBI had got a death threat on assassin Lee Harvey Oswald the day before his murder it said. The files also revealed a national security council document from 1962 -- before Kennedy's murder -- referenced 'Operation Mongoose', a covert attempt to topple communism in Cuba.

In the minutes of a secret meeting on Operation Mongoose from September 14,1962, "General (Marshall) Carter said that the CIA would examine the possibilit­ies of sabotaging airplane parts which are scheduled to be shipped from Canada to Cuba", the report said. One of the first documents to be unearthed was a memo written by director J Edgar Hoover that said the FBI had warning of a potential death threat to Oswald, who was then in police custody. The newly released documents also reveal that Soviet Union leaders considered Oswald a "neurotic maniac who was disloyal to his own country and everything else", according to an FBI memo documentin­g reactions in Russia to the assassinat­ion.

The files also showed that the Soviet officials feared a conspiracy was behind the death of Kennedy, perhaps organised by a rightwing coup or Kennedy's successor Lyndon Johnson. These revelation­s came after the National Archives released 2,891 records related to the assassinat­ion of Kennedy in Dallas on November 22, 1963. The released the documents after receiving an order from President Donald Trump. However, at the request of security agencies, Trump agreed to withhold some files. He ordered that they be reviewed in the next 180 days. "This temporary withholdin­g from full public disclosure is necessary to protect against harm to the military defence, intelligen­ce operations, law enforcemen­t, or the conduct of foreign relations that is of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in immediate disclosure," Trump said in a statement.

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John K Kennedy

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