The Press

Trump breaks promise to lift lid on JFK assassinat­ion files

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President Donald Trump boasted last year that he would open all remaining John F Kennedy assassinat­ion records. So far, he hasn’t made good on the ‘‘great transparen­cy’’ promised.

Trump announced yesterday that the public must wait another three years or more before seeing material that must remain classified for national security reasons – more than five decades after Kennedy was killed on November 23, 1963 in Dallas, Texas.

The National Archives released its last batch of more than 19,000 records yesterday. But an undisclose­d amount of material remains under wraps because Trump said the potential harm to US national security, law enforcemen­t or foreign affairs is ‘‘of such gravity that it outweighs the public interest in immediate disclosure’’.

He ordered the CIA and other agencies to take yet another look at each blacked-out section of their documents during the next three years to see what can be released.

CIA spokesman Nicole de Haay said the agency had already released more than 99 per cent of its informatio­n from the Kennedy

UNITED STATES:

assassinat­ion records collection. ‘‘CIA narrowly redacted informatio­n in rare instances only to protect CIA assets, officers and their families as well as intelligen­ce methods, operations and partnershi­ps that remain critical to security,’’ she said.

Larry Sabato, author of a book about Kennedy, lamented that it might be 100 years after the assassinat­ion before everyone had a more complete picture of what happened. ‘‘I envy the scholars of, say, 2063,’’ Sabato said.

The files released yesterday – mostly FBI and CIA records – detail how authoritie­s combed through tips in the wake of Kennedy’s death, including a report from a woman who claimed she saw a man who looked like Oswald at a party in Mexico City.

Another file shows ex-CIA officer David Atlee Phillips being grilled about whether he believed Oswald was the lone assassin. Phillips said he wished there was informatio­n showing the Soviets or former Cuban leader Fidel Castro had played a role, ‘‘because there are so many people, especially on college campuses, who are convinced the CIA did it’’.

But Phillips said that since there was no evidence showing Cuban or Soviet involvemen­t, he had to believe Oswald was just ‘‘a kind of loony fellow who decided to shoot the president’’.

‘‘Lee Harvey Oswald didn’t miss, and the American public doesn’t want to believe that one man could murder Camelot,’’ Phillips said.

The records are still being released today because in 1992, Congress passed the President John F Kennedy Assassinat­ion Records Collection Act. The act ordered the archives to disclose all informatio­n collected – some 5 million pages of material – on the assassinat­ion within 25 years, barring any exceptions designated by the president.

Those 25 years ended on October 26, 2017, and Trump had to decide whether any of the documents should still be kept secret. Several days before the deadline, it appeared he had no plans to withhold anything.

‘‘Subject to the receipt of further informatio­n,’’ he tweeted on October 21, 2017, ‘‘I will be allowing, as president, the long

‘‘Lee Harvey Oswald didn’t miss, and the American public doesn’t want to believe that one man could murder Camelot.’’

David Atlee Phillips, former CIA officer

blocked and classified JFK FILES to be opened.’’

Again, on the day before the deadline, it appeared that every last shred of the government’s material was headed for release. ‘‘The long anticipate­d release of the #JFKFiles will take place tomorrow. So interestin­g!’’ Trump tweeted.

A lot of documents were released, but not all. Bending to appeals from the CIA and FBI, Trump blocked the release of hundreds of records, pending a sixmonth review.

‘‘In the end there will be great transparen­cy. It is my hope to get just about everything to public!’’ Trump tweeted in October.

His six-month review ended yesterday, when all documents, he said, were to be released ‘‘with redactions only in the rarest of circumstan­ces’’.

While happy for what’s been released so far, Sabato said more than 15,000 of the 19,045 documents in yesterday’s National Archives release had redactions – ‘‘some quite substantia­l’’ – and more than 500 files were held back in their entirely for various reasons. –AP

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Part of a file from 1964 details efforts to trace Lee Harvey Oswald’s travel from Mexico City back to the United States. It was released for the first time yesterday.
PHOTO: AP Part of a file from 1964 details efforts to trace Lee Harvey Oswald’s travel from Mexico City back to the United States. It was released for the first time yesterday.

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