Trump had promised pre -election that he would release confidential documents and enforcement law enforcement files
The office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) sent his proposals to President Donald Trump last week on which secret documents could make public about the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy in 1963.
Trump had promised pre -election that he would release secret documents and law enforcement files on the murder of the 35th US President, as many question the official version of the authorities to date.
For Kennedy’s murder in Dallas, Texas was then considered Responsible one only armed, Lee Harvey Oswald. The Ministry of Justice and other federal services reaffirmed this conclusion in the coming decades. However, polls show that many Americans believe that his death was the result of a wider conspiracy. As soon as he took up his duties, Trump signed a mandate to declassification of secret archives and promised to publicize the documents concerning the murders of the militant rights for political rights Martin Luther King Junior and Senate Robb The same year, 1968. Trump has yet given a longer time to draw up a plan on how and which of these files will be declassified.
King was shot and killed in Memphis by the advocate of the superiority of the White Tribe James Erl Ray. Robert Kennedy was killed in Los Angeles by Palestinian refugee Sirhan.
“According to the president’s executive order, Odni submitted his plan to the White House“, A spokesman for the office at Reuters said. Trump had given the Odni deadline until last Friday to send him his proposals.
Trump’s candidate for Minister of Health, Robert F. Kennedy Junior, son of Robert Kennedy and a nephew of J. F. Kennedy has stated that he believes that the CIA had some involvement in his uncle’s murder. The service characterizes this claim unfounded.
Kennedy Junior also believes that his father was killed by many armed men, a claim denied by official theories.
Trump had promised to disclose the secret documents on the assassination of President Kennedy during his first term. It really gave some of them, but eventually succumbed to the pressures of the CIA and the FBI and a significant part of the file remained confidential for “national security” reasons.
Conspiracy theories continue
The documents may reveal some details about one of the most painful moments in American history, but historians say they are unlikely to confirm some of the conspiracy theories for the JFK murder.
“I suspect we won’t see anything dramatic or something to overthrow what we know happened to Dallas“, Said Fredrik Logov, a history professor at Harvard, who spoke to Reuters.
The documents may show that the CIA was more aware of Oswald’s moves than it admitted. Any documents revealing that the CIA did not share its Oswald information with the FBI could be very important, commented Gerald Posner, the author of a JFK murder book that came to the conclusion that Oswald acted alone.
“My question is not whether the CIA was complicit but if it showed negligence“, The writer said. According to Posner, there are still questions about how much CIA knew about Oswald’s trip to Mexico, six weeks before the murder. On this trip, Oswald visited the Soviet Embassy.
Barbara Perry, a co -director of the Oral History Program at the Miller Center, which belongs to the University of Virginia, said the CIA might have been watching Oswald. “He was definitely watching the FBI, but they did not associate the details between them. But it was not conspiracy on behalf of CIA or FBI or any foreign country“, He added.
Alice L. George, author of another book about the murder, argued that conspiracy theories would not stop, even if all the documents are released. “I cannot imagine that a document would convince them (the conspirators) that Oswald acted alone. Especially the people who are really stuck in this way of thinking. They will probably continue to believe the same ones who believe and now“, He concluded.
Source :Skai
With a wealth of experience honed over 4+ years in journalism, I bring a seasoned voice to the world of news. Currently, I work as a freelance writer and editor, always seeking new opportunities to tell compelling stories in the field of world news.