Gulf Times

Biden delays release of JFK assassinat­ion files

-

The White House has said it would delay the release of longclassi­fied documents related to the assassinat­ion of US President John F Kennedy. President Joe Biden wrote in a statement that the remaining files “shall be withheld from full public disclosure” until December 15 next year — nearly 60 years after Kennedy’s assassinat­ion in Dallas, Texas in 1963.

In 2018, former president Donald Trump released several thousand secret files on the assassinat­ion, but withheld others on national security grounds.

The White House said the national archivist needs more time for a review into that redaction, which was slowed by the pandemic.

Biden also said the delay was “necessary to protect against identifiab­le harm to the military defence, intelligen­ce operations, law enforcemen­t, or the conduct of foreign relations” and that this “outweighs the public interest in immediate disclosure.”

The assassinat­ion of the 46-year-old president was a “profound national tragedy” that “continues to resonate in American history and in the memories of so many Americans who were alive on that terrible day,” the statement said.

A 10-month investigat­ion led by then-Supreme Court chief justice Earl Warren concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald, a former Marine who had lived in the Soviet Union, acted alone when he fired on Kennedy’s motorcade.

But the Commission’s investigat­ion was criticised for being incomplete, with a Congressio­nal committee later concluding that Kennedy was “probably assassinat­ed as a result of a conspiracy.”

US law requires that all government records on the assassinat­ion be disclosed “to enable the public to become fully informed.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar