A dump of JFK-related records reveals past CIA secrets but also some personal data
The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration posted more than 63,000 pages of records on its website, following an executive order from President Donald Trump. Many of the documents had been released previously but with redactions that hid the names of CIA sources or details about its spying and covert operations in the 1960s.
Kennedy was killed on Nov. 23, 1963, during a visit to Dallas. As his motorcade finished its parade route downtown, shots rang out from the Texas School Book Depository building. Police arrested Lee Harvey Oswald, who had positioned himself from a sniper's perch on the sixth floor. Two days later, night club owner Jack Ruby fatally shot Oswald during a jail transfer broadcast live on television.
The latest release of documents pumped new energy into conspiracy theories about the assassination. Kennedy scholars said they haven't seen anything out of line with the conclusion that Oswald, a 24-year-old ex-Marine, was the lone gunman.
'The chase for the truth will go on forever, I suspect,' said Philip Shenon, who wrote a 2013 book about the killing of JFK.
It's a big document dump, but it doesn't include everything
The vast majority of the National Archives' collection of more than 6 million related pages of records, photographs, motion pictures, sound recordings and artifacts had already been released before the archives posted about 2,200 files online this week.
Writers, historians and conspiracy promoters have spent decades pushing for the release of all the records. In the early 1990s, the federal government mandated that all assassination-related documents be housed in a single collection in the National Archives and Records Administration. The collection was required to be opened by 2017, barring any exemptions designated by the president.
According to researchers and the FBI, roughly 3,700 files held by federal authorities still haven't been released.
Trump's order also called for declassifying the remaining federal records related to the 1968 assassinations of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
Scholars describe a chaotic release
Scholars and history buffs described the latest release as rushed and expressed frustration that going through the files one by one represented a random search for unreleased information.
'We've all heard the reports about the lawyers staying up all night, which I believe, because there's there's a lot of sloppiness in this,' said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics and author of 'The Kennedy Half-Century.'
Scholars and history buffs grumbled that, unlike past releases, the National Archives didn't provide an index or workable search tool. Also, the files included material generated after the 1960s, and some people listed in the records were angry to find out that sensitive information about them was revealed, including Social Security numbers.
They include Joseph diGenova, a former campaign lawyer for Trump. His personal information was on documents relating to his work for a U.S. Senate select committee that investigated abuses of power by government officials in the 1970s, including the surveillance of U.S. citizens.
He is planning to sue the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration for violating privacy laws.
'I think it's the result of incompetent people doing the reviewing,' he said. 'The people who reviewed these documents did not do their job.'
White House officials said a plan was in place to help those whose personal information was disclosed, including credit monitoring, until new Social Security numbers are issued. Officials are still screening the records to identify all the Social Security numbers that were released.
New details about covert CIA operations
The latest release represented a boon to mainstream historians, particularly those researching international relations, the Cold War and the activities of the CIA.
One revelation was that a key adviser warned President Kennedy after the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961 that the CIA had grown too powerful. The aide proposed giving the State Department control of 'all clandestine activities' and breaking up the CIA.
The page of Special Assistant Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s memo outlining the proposal had not been released before. A previous release of part of his memo redacted Schlesinger's statement that 47% of the political officers in U.S. embassies were controlled by the CIA.
Schlesinger's plan never came to fruition.
Timothy Naftali, an adjunct professor at Columbia University who is writing a book about JFK's presidency, said scholars likely now have more details about U.S. intelligence activities under Kennedy than under any other president.
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New York Times
41 minutes ago
- New York Times
‘War Is Too Serious to Take Seriously All the Time,' So He Wrote a Comic Novel
'We go to war because of stories,' said the novelist Elliot Ackerman, who tells stories because he went to war. He was thinking of Vladimir Putin redrafting history to justify Russia's actions in Ukraine. But also of Iraq and Afghanistan, where he served five tours of duty as a Marine and C.I.A. paramilitary officer, awarded a Bronze Star, a Purple Heart and a Silver Star with a citation for 'heroic actions' during the second battle for Falluja in 2004. In his 2019 memoir 'Places and Names,' Ackerman offered eviscerating details underlying that commendation, mindful of the men he had lost, the abandoned allies and missions gone wrong. He chose not to deploy a sixth time. 'You have to declare for yourself a separate peace,' he said recently. The writer that the wars made of him has now taken an unexpectedly comic turn with his new novel, 'Sheepdogs,' published by Knopf on Aug. 5. In two memoirs and seven novels he has been reflective, elegiac, often ruefully nostalgic, at times quietly angry, always sternly principled, and analytical to the point of prophetic about what he considers pernicious developments at home and abroad. Many of his fictional subjects, like the orphaned Afghan boys in 'Green on Blue,' his 2015 debut, have tended to be caught in the roil of warfare and the fallout of ethnic, religious and cultural clashes. 'Sheepdogs' is a gear shift into deceptively rip-roaring caper mode. 'When I get together with guys I served with,' Ackerman said, 'we tell funny stories, even about serious stuff. War is too serious to take seriously all the time, and absurd because it flips norms — like 'Thou shalt not kill' — on their heads. Because I love heist books and buddy comedies, I wanted to tell a story in that register, about the economy that exists around war after it ends.' Ackerman keeps his medals in a bedroom drawer in the Fifth Avenue apartment he shares with his second wife, the novelist and screenwriter Lea Carpenter. (He spends half his time in Washington, D.C., with his daughter and son from his first marriage.) On a sizzling day in July he was sitting in the velvety cool of his Manhattan living room, one large wall covered with a mural-size lithograph of the 1792 storming of the Tuileries Palace, created by Ashley Hicks, a family friend. The French Revolution is one sly subtext to Ackerman's twisty who-stole-it. Disney's 'Robin Hood,' and 'great two-handers' like 'Lethal Weapon,' he said, are two others. (Still, he doesn't want it forgotten that Mel Gibson's Los Angeles police detective in the movie franchise is 'also a suicidal Vietnam vet.') In 'Sheepdogs,' two down-on-their-luck ex-military pals (think Robin Hood and Little John) accept a lucrative assignment from an online source known only as Sheep Dog: to repossess a private jet with a mysterious cargo held hostage on an airstrip in swampy Uganda. Cheese (as in 'Big Cheese Aziz') is a former flying ace with the Afghan Air Force, reduced to working nights at a Texas gas station. His American counterpart, discharged for conduct unbecoming of a member of a C.I.A. division so clandestine it's known only as the Office, goes by Skwerl, because, like a squirrel, he 'could get you anything you needed' and 'because Marines can't spell for [expletive].' Apart from the G.I. Joes and model fighter planes Ackerman single-mindedly collected as a boy, landing in the military scarcely seemed in the cards. He was raised in Los Angeles, Washington D.C. and London, a son of the Wall Street investor Peter Ackerman, a co-founder of FreshDirect and a prominent proponent of international nonviolent conflict resolution. His mother, the novelist Joanne Leedom-Ackerman, has long been active in PEN International. Aimless as a teenager, Ackerman said he found his first sense of meritocratic community and competitive drive among the 'skater rats' of the as-yet-ungentrified South Bank in London. He 'joined R.O.T.C. in college, graduated summa cum laude from Tufts University in 2003, was first in his class at Quantico and, at 24, was among the youngest commissioned officers in charge of a platoon in Iraq. A few years later he traded his Marine Corps body armor for Pashtun mountain garb, working covertly as a paramilitary adviser to Afghan troops battling the Taliban. He remains bitter over 'the catastrophic withdrawal from Afghanistan' in 2021, when, as chronicled in his second memoir, 'The Fifth Act,' he participated long-distance in an effort to evacuate as many Afghan allies as possible from Kabul. Ackerman said he has never been required to vet his writing with the Marine Corps or the C.I.A. This leaves open to conjecture what Langley would make, in 'Sheepdogs,' of Knotty Pleasures, a rope-manufacturing business run by Skwerl's dominatrix girlfriend that is markedly more solvent than his security company; of her excommunicated Amish client's unforeseen skills; or of the White Russian, a female mastermind from the South Bronx with ultimate authority over 'America's off-the-books armies.' The book is being developed as a streaming series by Tom Hanks's production company, and Ackerman is at work on a sequel. Despite its zany elements, 'Sheepdogs' turns somber in its apparent allusions to a disastrous 2008 U.S. military raid on the village of Azizabad that left some 90 civilians dead, including about 60 children. (The Pentagon disputed this figure.) Ackerman, who was the Marine Special Operations Officer in charge of ground operations for the strike, has not spoken publicly about it. Asked about how the attack reverberates in the novel, which locates it in a place called Now Zad, and its psychic toll on Skwerl, he said, 'My fiction is my way of writing about war in its totality, and the degrees of complexity around it, whether in Falluja, Haditha, Helmand Province or Azizabad. 'Now Zad is not a stand-in for Azizabad, no more than Sperkai is in 'Green on Blue,'' he added. 'My job was raids for years, and I saw a lot, some of it good and some of it horrible. All the books I've written engage with that.' He is proud to have served in 2005 as commander of a Marine infantry battalion aiding in relief operations in post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans. But he feels just as strongly, in view of the ongoing Marine and National Guard presence in cities like Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., that 'sending Federal troops on what increasingly feels like a politically motivated deployment is toxic to our society and to our military.' Ackerman credits his military and intelligence-gathering experiences for his ability to hone his characters psychologically. 'Living inside your characters' heads is like leading a platoon or, in special ops, figuring out what makes your adversaries tick,' he said. He now co-teaches a course at Yale, 'Field Operations in Global Affairs,' with Matt Trevithick, the C.E.O. of Blank Slate Technologies, which works with the defense, aviation and security industries. They became friends at the start of Ackerman's writing career, while Trevithick was a consultant to humanitarian and development organizations in the volatile borderlands of southern Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran. 'Sheepdogs' leans more into 'the eccentric and absurdist' than other Ackerman books, Trevithick said, but it's not a complete change of direction. 'Both of us agreed a long time ago that the truest way to write about our complicated experiences was through fiction, which can capture what's true even if the stories aren't,' he added. Or, as Ackerman sees it, 'Times of great upheaval are vital for fiction.'

13 hours ago
Amid criticism from Laura Loomer, RFK Jr. says he won't run for president in 2028
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Friday ruled out running for president in 2028, apparently defending himself against accusations by conservative influencer Laura Loomer that he and top aides are quietly preparing for another White House bid as Kennedy runs America's health apparatus. "The swamp is in full panic mode," Kennedy wrote in a lengthy post on X. "DC lobby shops are laboring fiercely to drive a wedge between President Trump and me, hoping to thwart our team from dismantling the status quo and advancing [Trump's] Make America Healthy Again agenda." "They're pushing the flat-out lie that I'm running for president in 2028. Let me be clear: I am not running for president in 2028." In the post, Kennedy also defended his longtime aide and deputy chief of staff at HHS, Stefanie Spear, whom Loomer accused in a Politico interview this week of trying "to lay the groundwork for a 2028 RFK presidential run." In his X post, Kennedy defended Spear, calling her "a fierce, loyal warrior for MAHA who proudly serves in the Trump Administration and works every day to advance President Trump's vision for a healthier, stronger America." Spear served as press secretary for Kennedy's failed presidential campaign, which ended last August with an endorsement of Trump. Loomer, a staunch pro-Trump figure, has previously boasted of initiating the firings of government officials she deemed insufficiently loyal to the president. She did not immediately respond publicly to Kennedy's post.


The Hill
14 hours ago
- The Hill
Trump, Putin meet in Alaska
President Trump made new demands for peace between Russia and Ukraine as he touched down in Alaska at 2:20 p.m. Eastern on Friday for a historic summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Trump said he's prepared to walk away from the negotiating table if he doesn't believe Putin is open to a deal that would end the three-year war. 'I think it's going to work out very well — and if it doesn't, I'm going to head back home real fast,' Trump told Fox News anchor Bret Baier aboard Air Force One. 'If it doesn't, you walk?' Baier asked. 'I would walk, yeah,' Trump said The president also drew a red line with Putin, who brought along several businesspeople on the trip. 'They're not doing business until the war is settled,' Trump said. And Trump put European leaders at ease, announcing that he has no intention of discussing potential concessions on Ukraine's behalf. 'I'm not here to negotiate for Ukraine,' Trump said. Over the course of the trip from Washington to Anchorage, the previously planned one-on-one meeting between Trump and Putin expanded and will now be a three-on-three meeting. Trump will be joined by Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff. Trump arrived with a big crew that includes Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, chief of staff Susie Wiles, press secretary Karoline Leavitt, and others. Putin's plane landed a half-hour after Trump's. The Russian president endeavored on his own side quests while making the trip from Moscow to Anchorage. Putin participated in a wreath-laying ceremony in Eastern Russia at a monument dedicated to Soviet and American pilots who cooperated during World War II. He also met with local hockey players. Trump and Putin deplaned at 3:08 p.m. Eastern time. They walked down the red carpets between fighter jets to shake hands. Trump arrived first, clapping as Putin approached. The leaders exchanged greetings, then walked to a riser, as a military fly-over was conducted overhead. They shook hands again and stepped off the riser. They rode together in the Beast — the presidential limo — to the summit location. A Kremlin spokesman said the summit, which will include an expanded bilateral meeting with additional Russian and American officials, could last six to seven hours. Trump and Putin are expected to conduct a press conference afterwards. BACK IN KYIV… Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is the odd man out on Friday, having not been invited to the bilateral summit. Trump has said he hopes a trilateral meeting between himself, Putin and Zelensky will come together quickly after Friday's meeting. Back in Kyiv, Zelensky told a small group of reporters, including NewsNation's Robert Sherman, that the summit will benefit Putin more than anyone, arguing that the Russian leader will be bolstered at home for appearing on equal footing with the U.S. president. 'What [Putin] is seeking frankly, is photographs,' Zelensky said. 'He needs a photo from a meeting with President Trump.' 'First, he will be meeting on U.S. soil, which I believe is his personal victory,' Zelensky added. 'Second, he is coming out of isolation … third, with this meeting, he has somehow postponed the sanctions policy. President Trump has serious sanctions. We will see what happens next.' Ukraine on Thursday launched drone attacks on cities in southern Russia, killing one person and injuring at least 16 more. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) accused Zelensky of seeking to 'sabotage' the peace talks with the military offensive. 'Zelensky doesn't want peace and obviously is trying to sabotage President Trump's heroic efforts to end the war in Ukraine,' Greene posted on X. Russian forces have been carrying out their own airstrikes across Ukraine's eastern and southern regions. 'There is not only no order but also no signals from Moscow about preparing to end this war,' Zelensky said. 'On the day of negotiations, they are also killing. And that says a lot.' • A federal appeals court panel overturned a judge's block on the Trump administration's dismantling of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, paving the way for mass layoffs to resume. Office of Personnel Management Director Scott Kupor says that by the end of 2025, the Trump administration will have shed around 300,000 workers. • Trump says he's open to following through on former President Biden 's push to reschedule marijuana, a move that comes up short of legalization but would still provide a major boost for the cannabis industry. • PBS is cutting its budget by more than 20 percent after Congress eliminated roughly $500 million in federal funding from public TV and radio. • U.S. District Judge Stephanie Gallagher blocked two memos issued by the Trump administration that threatened schools with funding cuts for diversity, equity and inclusion programs. 💡 Perspectives: • The Hill: The meeting in Alaska is already a success for Vladimir Putin. • New York Times: Putin should be careful what he wishes for. • CNN: How Trump and Putin's relationship has evolved. • Washington Post: How Putin will seek to sway Trump at Alaska summit. • The Telegraph: The most dangerous moment of the war for Zelensky. Read more: • GOP momentum for Ukraine aid package grows. • 5 questions ahead of the Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska. • What do Putin, Trump and Zelensky want from Alaska summit? CATCH UP QUICK Retail sales rose a solid 0.5 percent last month and June spending was stronger than expected, according to a new Commerce Department report. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr said on Friday that he is not running for president in 2028, denying speculation amid attacks from right-wing activist Laura Loomer. NEWS THIS AFTERNOON Texas redistricting showdown nears the end Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows (R) gaveled in the start of a second special session Friday afternoon, saying he expected there to be enough lawmakers present Monday for the GOP to vote on its new gerrymandered maps. 'I have been told, and I expect that we will reestablish quorum on Monday,' Burrows said. 'Although I have not seen any public statements directly from those who are not here, that seems to be what people have the expectation of.' Texas Democrats fled the state almost two weeks ago to deny a quorum and delay a vote on the new maps, which could help Republicans win an additional five House seats in next year's midterm elections. However, the missing Democrats signaled they're ready to return if a second special session is called and if California moves ahead with its own redistricting efforts. The first Texas special session ended Friday, and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) immediately gaveled in a second special session. The missing Democrats are being fined $500 a day, and Abbott has promised to keep calling new special sessions until enough Democrats return to the state to allow for a vote on the new maps. California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) this week launched his own campaign to redraw the Golden State's maps, satisfying the second demand from Texas Democrats. At least one Texas Democrat that fled the state announced she'd return for the new special session. 'I am proud of what we accomplished,' state Rep. Ann Johnson (D) said in a statement. 'We ended a session that had nothing to do with helping Texans and everything to do with silencing them. And we exposed the truth behind the Governor's political agenda: to hijack the maps, erase opposition, and decide the next election before a single vote is cast. Now, with that session behind us, I'm returning to Texas to continue the fight — from the floor of the House.' MEANWHILE… California legislators are expected to release their proposed gerrymandered maps soon to counter the Texas GOP's moves. Still, a poll released this week indicates Newsom has his work cut out for him to sell voters on the idea of circumventing the independent redistricting commission, which at the moment has sole authority to draw the state's maps. 'Trump's election rigging comes to an end now,' Newsom posted on X. 'California won't stand by and watch Trump burn it all down — we are calling a special election to redraw our Congressional maps and defend fair representation. This is a five alarm fire for Democracy. Vote YES November 4.' Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) has been a vocal opponent of California's redistricting efforts, teasing a fight with Newsom over social media Friday. 'I'm getting ready for the gerrymandering battle,' Schwarzenegger wrote above a photo of him lifting weights. Republicans in Florida, Ohio and Indiana are also eyeing potential mid-decade redistricting efforts. The Hill's Mike Lillis and Caroline Vakil report that California's move is putting pressure on other blue states to follow suit. 'The Democrats don't want to stop [with California], pressing party leaders in Illinois, New York and even Maryland to take a page from Newsom's playbook to help the party flip control of the House — and establish a check on President Trump — in next year's elections.' 💡 Perspectives: • American Prospect: Newsom's defining moment for the party. • The Hill: DeSantis is diminished as 2028 GOP nominee. • The Liberal Patriot: Why populism could dominate both parties. • Whole Hog Politics: Checking in on Election Day 2025. ON TAP IN OTHER NEWS DC attorney general sues Trump over police takeover Washington, D.C., Attorney General Brian Schwalb (D) sued President Trump on Friday, seeking to end the federal takeover of the District's Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). The 33-page lawsuit alleges that Trump exceeded his emergency authorities by appointing Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) Administrator Terry Cole as temporary police commissioner. The lawsuit seeks to reinstall Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) and Police Chief Pamela Smith at the head of the MPD. 'There is no greater risk to public safety in a large, professional police force like MPD than to not know who is in command,' the lawsuit reads. The federal takeover of the MPD can only last for 30 days, at which point Congress would have to vote to authorize an extension. In addition to taking over the MPD, Trump dispatched more than 800 National Guard troops to join agents from other federal departments in patrolling the nation's capital to crack down on crime. FBI Director Kash Patel said Friday that federal authorities made 18 additional arrests Thursday night. 'We're now over 120 arrests since President Trump's initiative began,' Patel said. 'The good cops are getting the job done.' The raids are also targeting homeless encampments, clearing them off of federal property. In addition, Attorney General Pam Bondi ordered the end to a number of Washington, D.C., policing policies on immigration, declaring 'DC's sanctuary policies no longer apply.' Bondi said the MPD would begin cooperating with federal authorities on immigration matters, although the local police force will not be allowed to make arrests based solely on a person's immigration status. Trump's border czar Tom Homan said the administration is not asking MPD officers to directly enforce immigration laws, which are the responsibility of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers. 'Law enforcement needs to work with law enforcement,' Homan told NewsNation, The Hill's sister network. 'We're not asking Metro PD to be immigration officers, but when you're enforcing criminal law and when you find an illegal alien not only in violation of immigration law here illegally but involved with criminal activity, they absolutely should call us. Separately, Bondi said she sent letters to 32 mayors and governors of sanctuary cities, warning them 'we're going to come after you' if they don't comply with 'our federal policies and with our federal law enforcement.' 'They have, I think, a week to respond to me, so let's see who responds and how they respond,' Bondi told a Fox News reporter. Federal agents have been met by protests and hecklers in Washington, which is one of the most heavily concentrated regions of Democratic voters in the country. 'Donald Trump wants to impose police ice checkpoints all over D.C., and the freedom-loving people of Washington are not going to put up with that,' Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) said on MSNBC's 'All In.' 'The whole thing is absurd, and he wants to use it as the basis for taking these police state tactics across the country and the people of America,' Raskin added. 'The majority is not going to stand for it.' Bowser, the Democratic mayor, was briefly under fire Thursday when it was revealed she'd left town for Martha's Vineyard. Bowser explained over social media that she was picking her 7-year old daughter up from camp, saying she'd return Friday. The mayor said she canceled a previously scheduled family vacation 'to lead our city's crisis management efforts.' 'I am in constant contact with my senior team and have been in constant consultation with our partners throughout a short swing out of the District,' Bowser said. 💡 Perspectives: • MSNBC: Trump exerts control over Kennedy Center Honors. • City Journal: Trump is right to send National Guard to Washington. • The Nation: Mamdani's victory over fear. • UnHerd: DC and LA failures play into Trump's hands. • Racket: Russiagate releases lift veil on surveillance state abuses. Read more: • National Guard ramps up DC presence amid signs of tension. • Democrats introduce bill to block Trump DC police takeover. • GOP relishes forcing Dem votes on extending Trump DC police power. • Judge temporarily blocks Medicaid data sharing with ICE officials.