The – more than 2,000 – documents just made public and related to the research on the murder of President John Fitgerald Kennedy are remarkable not only for what they contain – but also for what is omitted, the BBC comments.

As many experts expected, the latest batch of files released by the Trump government does not answer all persistent questions about one of the key events in US history – Kennedy’s murder in 1963 in Dallas.

However, the latest batch includes documents that are mostly, or completely, unprocessed – including original material, instead of tanned words or the space where there were suggestions are empty.

A US government’s survey concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald, a former US wanderer who at some point self -sufficient in the then Soviet Union, acted alone when he shot Kennedy’s motorway from a nearby building.

However, more than 60 years later the case still raises questions, along with outrageous conspiracy theories – and the last batch of documents is unlikely to change that. But some key conclusions are drawn.

More items on Oswald – but not disturbing revelations

Several analysts have released liberation as one step forward for transparency. In the past, hundreds of thousands of documents were available, but partially censored. Others were kept out of publicity, with officials citing concerns about national security.

Many of the new documents have seen publicity in the past – but now more complete versions are available. Although experts continue to “comb” the documents, no disturbing revelations have appeared.

However, Jefferson Morley, a former Washington Post journalist and editor of the JFK Faces blog, calls them “The most exciting news around JFK files since the 1990s.” ‘Many very important documents have come to public’, he said.

The documents are making further light on Oswald’s extensive monitoring by the Central Intelligence Service (CIA), said Morley, whose extent has only been clear in recent years.

“Oswald is ” object ” intense interest in the CIA” Long before the murder, he said.

Philip Sinon, who wrote a book on the murder in 2013, told the Associated Press that previously published documents described an Oswald trip to Mexico in September 1963, a few months before the assassination.

The CIA was watching him that time, he said, according to the Associated Press. “There is a reason to believe that he spoke openly about Kennedy’s murder in the city of Mexico and that people heard him say that. “

In a note previously released in April 1975, the CIA downgraded what it knew about Oswald’s journey to Mexico, the AP said. The CIA recorded three phone calls between Oswald and a Soviet Embassy guard, he noted, but Oswald only recognized himself in one.

Lee Harvey Oswald holds rifle and communist newspapers

Discarded information collection methods were revealed

Some of the documents shed light on Kennedy’s relationship with the CIA before his death and information collection techniques – giving a picture of Cold War businesses.

A recently declassified file reveals a more complete version of a memorandum written by Kennedy’s assistant, Arthur Schlesinger.

Conflict for the CIA and its role in shaping foreign policy, the note highlights the huge presence of the service at the US embassies, even in allied countries such as France.

In this, Schlesinger warns Kennedy of the influence of the service on US foreign policy. Although not directly related to the murder, the memorandum describes in detail the difficult relationship between the President and the Intelligence Services.

The CIA is traditionally opposed to publicizing business or budgetary information, said David Barrett, a professor at Vilanova University and CIA expert and presidential authority.

“It is very good that the government has released these documents, even if there are still some interventions.”he said.

A document describes in detail the use of radioscopic scanning – the use of X -rays to display images of the interior of an object. The technique was developed to detect secret microphones that were probably used to monitor CIA offices.

In another document, the CIA describes a system for hidden “bedbugs” and the recognition of public phones that were spying, using a paint that was only visible with ultraviolet light.

The note is also noteworthy for one of the names in it – James McCord, who would later become infamous as one of the perpetrators of the Watergate Bureau of Bureau. The burglary was the beginning of the scandal that overthrew President Richard Nixon.

Old theories ‘resurrected’

Some well -known online accounts argue that recent documents reveal new details about long -term alleged conspiracies against Kennedy – although some of the supposed revelations have been public for years.

They include many viral posts for Gary Antrothil – a World War II military information agent.

Anthebs allegedly claimed that a group of CIA agents, a theory that was openly published in Ramparts, a left -wing magazine in 1967, was found behind the assassination.

Photos from a seven -page memorandum on Antehill became viral on Tuesday – but most of them are not new. His story has long been discussed on the internet, and the CIA memorandum was released for the first time in 2017.

Only a few phrases on a memo page had been declassified in the latest version.

And most importantly, the theory is based on a “second -hand” reference published after Antheftal’s death and does not include incomprehensible evidence.

However, this story was just one of the unfounded theories released after the release of the archives.

Are the files fully declassified?

A 1992 law required the publication of all Kennedy murder documents within 25 years – but this law included exceptions for national security.

Pressure for greater transparency has led to more publications over time – both President Trump in his first term and President Biden, only in 2023, published lots of documents.

In view of the new publication, President Trump said he asked his staff ‘Not to delete anything’ by the documents.

This does not seem to be fully true – the new documents have again undergone some interventions. However, experts largely agreed that the latest edition of the documents was one step forward for transparency.

The JFK Morley case reporter said there are other documents in national records that have not yet been made public, and others held by the CIA and the FBI that have not yet been recorded.

Although more editions could follow – as well as promises of disclosure for the murders of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King – the questions about the JFK murder are almost certain to continue.

“Whenever there is a murder, there will be discussions and to some extent there will be conspiracy theories,” Barrett, the historian of the University of Vilanova, observed. “This is not going to change because of them or any other documents.”