WORLD / AMERICAS
CIA, FBI release secret files
Reports provide fresh info on Kennedy assassination case
Published: Dec 16, 2021 06:03 PM
The FBI's J. Edgar Hoover headquarters building in Washington. Photo: AP

The FBI's J. Edgar Hoover headquarters building in Washington. Photo: AP



 US authorities released thousands of pages of secret documents Wednesday on president John F. Kennedy's assassination, a case that still fuels conspiracy theories despite the official conclusion that he was shot by Lee Harvey Oswald.

The CIA and FBI files show US investigators spread their net wide and deep to find out if Oswald conspired with others in the November 22, 1963 murder that shocked the world.

Documents show they chased down myriad leads, from Soviet intelligence to some African groups and the Italian mafia.

The papers also show the extensive US efforts to spy on and influence the government of  Cuba, where Oswald had contacts and which Kennedy had sought to overthrow.

The 1,491 files, many of them lengthy reports, were posted on the JFK Assassination Records page of the National Archives, which already has tens of thousands of listings related to Kennedy's death and the investigation that followed. 

Kennedy's assassination has long given rise to numerous conspiracy theories that do not accept the official verdict that Oswald worked alone when he shot Kennedy as the young president was rolling through the streets of Dallas, Texas in a convertible limousine.

Some believe that anti-Cuba activists, possibly with support in US intelligence or the FBI, had Kennedy killed.

And still others believe that his political rivals could have been at the root of the assassination.

Four years ago, then-president Donald Trump was legally bound by a 1992 law to release the information held back by the US intelligence on the subject. 

The law requires all government records on the assassination be disclosed "to enable the public to become fully informed." 

Trump declassified more than 53,000 documents in seven tranches, taking the portion of the entire assassination archive available to the public to 88 percent, according to the National Archive.

But Trump left thousands of others under wraps on national security grounds.

In 2021, President Joe Biden pledged to honor the law, but he too came under fire in October when the White House postponed more releases.

Biden said at the time the delay was necessary "to protect against identifiable harm to the military defense, intelligence operations, law enforcement, or the conduct of foreign relations." 

The White House is now under pressure to complete reviews of the documents before the end of 2022.

Philip Shenon, an expert in the Kennedy Assassination dossier, wrote in an article published by Politico on Wednesday that there are probably documents that will never be released for security reasons.

"So long as the government continues to keep some documents hidden, it will only further promote the idea that sinister conspiracies about Kennedy's death have a basis in fact," he said.