Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition
Tawdry snippets from the JFK files
CIA kicked around plots to kill Cuba’s Castro with poisoned swimsuit, exploding seashells
Cuban assassination plots involving exploding seashells and poisoned swimsuits. Bounties on the heads of high-profile communists. A secretive investigation that tracked John F. Kennedy’s assassin into Mexico.
As scholars, journalists and the merely curious pored through a tranche of nearly 3,000 secret documents related to the 35th president’s assassination, there were few if any major plot twists about what happened that day in Dallas in 1963.
Instead, the files released Thursday — which include secret FBI memos, handwritten notes from top White House officials and CIA field reports — tell the story of America’s paranoid underworld in the 1960s, where shadowy figures chased secrets at home and abroad and hatched plots to change the course of history.
The newly released records shine a light on America’s covert operations at a time when America was deeply suspicious of its Cold War adversaries, combating Soviet influence around the globe and engaging in disastrous attempts to overthrow communist revolutionaries in Cuba.
New details emerged about the U.S. military's vast anti-Castro operations leading up to and following the Nov. 22, 1963, assassination.
The Cuba operations, labeled different names over time, were designed to trigger a revolt by Cubans against the country's communist regime by using propaganda and other means to blame sabotage and terror on Castro, documents show.
Military leaders suggested, among other things: using plastic bombs to sink a boat of Cuban refugees; using biological weapons to disrupt the country's sugar crop; blowing up copper mines and bridges; offering bounties to Cuban citizens in exchange for killing or kidnapping communist leaders; and recruiting “gangster elements” to execute Cuban military and police officers.
Most of the proposals were drawn up by the CIA and the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff to oust Castro or as a pretext for launching a military invasion of Cuba. Kennedy was apprised of some of the details, documents show, but he eventually put the plans on hold in the midst of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962.
The files portray the extent to which Kennedy’s death sent shockwaves across both West and East: An informant in the Soviet Union told U.S. officials that Kennedy’s death was greeted there “by great shock and consternation and church bells were tolled,” according to a topsecret Dec. 1, 1966, memo from then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover.
Soviet officials suspected Kennedy was killed by “some well-organized conspiracy on the part of the ‘ultraright’ in the United States,” part of what analysts in Moscow believed was an attempt to stage “a coup” in order to heighten tensions with the Soviet Union and communist Cuba, according to the memo.
The Russians described Kennedy’s assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, who had visited the Soviet Union in 1959 and sought citizenship there, as too “mentally unstable” to defect and a “neurotic maniac who was disloyal to his own country and everything else.”
One FBI file shows how agents also tracked Oswald’s bus trip to Mexico City in October 1963. It included information that Oswald was wearing a “short sleeve light colored sportshirt and no coat,” seemingly innocuous information that had been classified to protect the FBI’s “operations in foreign country.”
For all that the new documents reveal, the reality is that the government’s most sensitive documents related to the sprawling, decadeslong investigation into Kennedy’s assassination have yet to be released.
President Donald Trump on Thursday ordered some records to remain secret for the next 180 days until they can be reviewed and redacted, after intelligence and law enforcement officials protested that some information in the records could compromise sources or America’s relations with other nations.
The most tawdry accounts in the files only loosely involve Kennedy’s assassination, focusing instead on the U.S. government’s own plots to kill foreign government leaders and politicians.
One top-secret White House document detailed a proposal to create “Operation Bounty” to assassinate prominent Cuban communists — suggesting up to $20,000 to kill communist informers, up to $100,000 for Cuban government officials, and a morbidly cheeky 2 cents for the death of Fidel Castro.
Some ideas to assassinate Castro included using the Mafia, which displeased Kennedy’s brother, U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, “because at that time he felt that he was making a very strong drive to try to get after the Mafia,” said one top-secret 1975 document that was prepared for the Rockefeller Commission, which in the 1970s investigated CIA activities inside the U.S. “His comment was to us that if we were going to get involved with the Mafia, in the future at any time, to make sure you see me first.”
That document alludes to the existence of a 1967 memo from Hoover titled “Central Intelligence Agency’s Intentions to Send Hoodlums to Cuba to Assassinate Castro.” Hoover’s memo said that one CIAoffered payout for the Mafia killing Castro wasn’t 2 cents, but $150,000, and noted skeptically that one Mafia member was “using his prior connections with CIA to his best advantage.”
As a result, Robert Kennedy “issued orders that CIA should never again take such steps without checking with the Department of Justice.”
Some of the proposed plots involved placing botulism pills in Castro’s food, with the CIA’s director of security at one point testing the pills on some guinea pigs “because I wanted to be sure they worked.” Pills were sent to “assets” in Cuba who tried to poison Castro at a restaurant, but failed.
Another CIA plot was based on Castro’s fondness for diving, and proposed “to dust the inside of the suit with a fungus that would produce a disabling and chronic skin disease, and also contaminating the suit with tuberculosis bacilli in the breathing apparatus.”
Another one involved a “booby-trap spectacular seashell which would be submerged in an area where Castro often skindived. The seashell would be loaded with explosives to blow apart when the shell was lifted.”
But plotters discovered that “there was no shell in the Caribbean area large enough to hold a sufficient amount of explosive.”
That document also reviewed the CIA’s efforts to assassinate other foreign leaders, including discussions about killing Congo leader Patrice Lumumba, who was shot to death in 1961, three days before Kennedy’s inauguration.
The agency denied playing a role.
Presidential researcher Ken Hughes of the University of Virginia’s Miller Center says “the government is still withholding the best documents” — that is, information not just on Kennedy’s death, but about America’s foreign policy in the 1960s.
“We still need to see the CIA’s internal report on the US government’s role in the overthrow of President Ngo Dinh Diem of South Vietnam,” who was assassinated less than a month before Kennedy’s death, Hughes said in an email.
“The documents they’re holding back may not tell us JFK’s position on the coup, since the CIA gives presidents plausible deniability in sensitive covert operations, but they should at least tell us what our government was telling the coup plotters before they overthrew and assassinated their president.”
But these are the Kennedy files, after all. “And in case you’re wondering,” Hughes added, “No, I don’t think JFK was assassinated in retaliation for Diem’s assassination.”