logo
The release of a 1961 plan to break up the CIA revives an old conspiracy theory about who killed JFK

The release of a 1961 plan to break up the CIA revives an old conspiracy theory about who killed JFK

Independent20-03-2025

A key adviser warned President John F. Kennedy after the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961 that the agency behind it, the CIA, had grown too powerful. He 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 was among the newly public material in documents related to Kennedy's assassination released this week by the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. So, too was Schlesinger's statement that 47% of the political officers in U.S. embassies were controlled by the CIA.
Some readers of the previously withheld material in Schlesinger's 15-page memo view it as evidence of both mistrust between Kennedy and the CIA and a reason the CIA at least would not make Kennedy's security a high priority ahead of his assassination in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. That gave fresh attention Thursday to a decades-old theory about who killed JFK — that the CIA had a hand in it.
Some Kennedy scholars, historians and writers said they haven't yet seen anything in the 63,000 pages of material released under an order from President Donald Trump that undercuts the conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald, a 24-year-old Marine and onetime defector to the Soviet Union, was a lone gunman. But they also say they understand why doubters gravitate toward the theory.
'You have this young, charismatic president with so much potential for the future, and on the other side of the scale, you have this 24-year-old waif, Oswald, and it doesn't balance. You want to put something weightier on the Oswald side,' said Gerald Posner, whose book, 'Case Closed,' details the evidence that Oswald was a lone gunman.
The first 'big event' in the US to spawn conspiracy theories
But Jefferson Morley said the newly released material is important to 'the JFK case.' Morely is vice president of the Mary Ferrell Foundation, a repository for files related to the assassination, and editor of the JFK Facts blog, and he rejects the conclusion that Oswald was 'a lone nut."
Morley said that even with the release of 63,000 pages this week, there is still more unreleased material, including 2,400 files that the FBI said it discovered after Trump issued his order in January and material held by the Kennedy family.
Kennedy was killed on a visit to Dallas, when his motorcade was finishing its parade route downtown and shots rang out from the Texas School Book Depository building. Police arrested Oswald, who had positioned himself from a sniper's perch on the sixth floor. Two days later Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner, fatally shot Oswald during a jail transfer broadcast live on television.
'It was the first big event that led to a series of events involving conspiracy theories that have left Americans believing, almost permanently, that their government lies to them so often they shouldn't pay close attention,' said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia Center for Politics and author of 'The Kennedy Half-Century"
The Bay of Pigs fiasco prompts an aide's memo
Morley said Schlesinger's memo provides the 'origin story' of mutual mistrust between Kennedy and the CIA.
Kennedy had inherited the Bay of Pigs plan from his predecessor, President Dwight Eisenhower, and had been in office less than three months when the operation launched in April 1961 as a covert invasion to topple Cuban leader Fidel Castro. Schlesinger's memo was dated June 30, 1961, a little more than two months later.
Schlesinger told Kennedy that covert all operations should be cleared with the U.S. State Department instead of allowing the CIA to largely present proposed operations almost as accomplished tasks. He also said in some places, such as Austria and Chile, far more than half the embassies' political officers were CIA-controlled.
Ronald Neumann, former US ambassador to Afghanistan, Algeria and Bahrain, said most American diplomats now are 'non-CIA,' and in most places, ambassadors do not automatically defer to the CIA.
'CIA station chiefs also have an important function for ambassadors, because the station chief is usually the senior intelligence officer at a post," Neumann said, adding that ambassadors see a CIA station chiefs as providing valuable information.
But he noted: 'If you get into the areas where we were involved in covert operations in supporting wars, you're going to have a different picture. You're going to have a picture which will differ from a normal embassy and normal operations.'
A proposal to break up the CIA that didn't come to fruition
Schlesinger's memo ends with a previously redacted page that spells out a proposal to give control of covert activities to the State Department and to split the CIA into two agencies reporting to separate undersecretaries of state. Morley sees it as a response to Kennedy's anger over the Bay of Pigs and something Kennedy was seriously contemplating.
The plan never came to fruition.
Sabato said that Kennedy simply 'needed the CIA' in the Cold War conflict with the Soviet Union and its allies like Cuba, and a huge reorganization would have hindered intelligence operations. He also said the president and his brother, U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, wanted to oust Castro before JFK ran for reelection in 1964.
'Let's remember that a good percentage of the covert operations were aimed at Fidel Castro in Cuba,' Sabato said.
Timothy Naftali, an adjunct professor at Columbia University who is writing a book about JFK's presidency, discounts the idea of tensions between the president and the CIA lasting until Kennedy's death. For one thing, he said, the president used covert operations 'avidly.'
'I find that the more details we get on that period, the more it appears likely that the Kennedy brothers were in control of the intelligence community,' Naftali said. 'You can you can see his imprint. You can see that there is a system by which he is directing the intelligence community. It's not always direct, but he's directing it.'
___

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EXCLUSIVE Why the next James Bond should NOT be a woman, female ex-CIA intelligence officer has surprising good reasons
EXCLUSIVE Why the next James Bond should NOT be a woman, female ex-CIA intelligence officer has surprising good reasons

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Why the next James Bond should NOT be a woman, female ex-CIA intelligence officer has surprising good reasons

Since the release of No Time to Die in 2021, rumors have swirled about who will be the next James Bond. The conversations are heating up again now that producer Barbara Broccoli and producer-writer Michael G Wilson sold the franchise to Amazon. Will he remain British? What race will he be? And could Bond be a woman? Names tipped to succeed Daniel Craig in the iconic role have included Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Henry Cavill and Theo James. Actresses Sydney Sweeney and Zendaya have both been suggested as possible Bond girls, and it seems Amazon has, at least for now, silenced any possibility of a female 007. As a former CIA intelligence officer - and a woman - myself, people naturally assume I'm in favor of a female Bond. Imagine their surprise when they learn I'm not. It's no secret that espionage has long been a 'man's world' - the disparities in pay and position between men and women at the CIA were documented as early as 1953, around the same time Ian Fleming first introduced us to the suave, womanizing spy in his novel Casino Royale. The Bond world Fleming created largely reflected this male-centric reality, its female characters relegated to seemingly less important roles behind a typewriter or at the British spy's side as his far less capable companion. And don't get me started on their scandalous attire and sexual innuendo-filled names. The reality at the CIA was that women donned sensible skirts with pantyhose - pants weren't permitted - and wore crisp, white gloves. Despite having both the skill and desire to work in clandestine operations, women served in positions that 'better suited' their abilities - think secretaries, librarians and file clerks. Many even began their espionage careers as unpaid 'CIA wives,' providing secretarial and administrative support to field stations. It was an undoubtedly clever, yet misogynistic, strategy in which the agency leveraged male case officers' highly educated spouses for free labor. 'I always felt like, you know, I'm not stupid - and here I was, doing filing, typing,' Marti Peterson told me of her time as a CIA wife in Laos in the early 1970s. In 1975, Peterson became the first female case officer to operate in Moscow, only after turning down the CIA's initial offer to become an entry-level secretary. A mere month into her tour, she began handling one of the Moscow station's most prized assets, even delivering a suicide pill to him at his request. (He wanted to be prepared to die by suicide in the event the KGB arrested him for treason.) Hidden in a fountain pen, the lethal package was tucked into Peterson's waistband and held close to her body as she twisted and turned through the streets of Moscow ensuring she wasn't being followed, before making the delivery. After months of operating freely in one of the harshest counterintelligence environments - women were largely able to go undetected as our enemies didn't expect us to carry out plans - Peterson's world changed. This time, when she conducted the dead drop, she was accosted by nearly two dozen KGB officers who she said forced her into a van and off to Lubyanka prison for interrogation. Peterson didn't break under their questioning, and was released after several hours with strict orders to leave the country and never return. Her male managers accused her of failing to spot a surveillance team on her, a cardinal sin in espionage. Peterson shouldered that blame for seven years until it was revealed that the asset was compromised by double agents working for both the CIA and the Czech intelligence service. She could finally rest easy knowing she wasn't to blame for the arrest of that most important Moscow asset. It was thanks to her bravery that the asset was able to boldly choose his own fate, rather than be subjected to whatever punishment the KGB had in mind for him. There were others like Peterson - intrepid women who successfully convinced their male colleagues they had more to offer than typing and filing skills. Janine Brookner, for example, entered on duty in 1968 and by the '80s became the first female chief of a station in Latin America, in one of the Caribbean's most dangerous posts. Around that time, more women were conducting clandestine operations - and they were good at it. Really good. This should have come as no surprise, given that women had already operated in this capacity unofficially for decades. Even so, women had to fight for the best cases that traditionally went to male counterparts, and despite repeated operational successes, the mostly male managers still doubted their clandestine capabilities. The same stereotypes meant women were equally underestimated by the enemy - a situation we continue to take full advantage of even today, allowing us to go unnoticed in some of the most dangerous environments in the world. Janine Brookner became the first female chief of station in Latin America, in one of the Caribbean's most dangerous posts Across the Atlantic, women in the UK have also been key players in the British Secret Intelligence Service, MI6. Kathleen Pettigrew, for example, served as the personal assistant to not one but three MI6 chiefs, making her far more powerful than the Miss Moneypenny character she inspired. In her book, Her Secret Service, author and historian Claire Hubbard-Hall describes the forgotten women of British Intelligence as 'the true custodians of the secret world,' whose contributions largely remain shrouded in mystery, while men's are often cemented in our collective memory thanks to their self-aggrandizing memoirs. At the same time women were making slow gains in intelligence, the Bond girl was evolving on the silver screen, a credit to Broccoli who, together with her half-brother Wilson, took over the rights from their ailing father in 1995. In the decades since, Broccoli expertly shepherded Bond through an ever-changing global and political landscape, adding nuance to the charming, deeply flawed intelligence operative so many of us have grown to love. Perhaps just as importantly, she brought balance and inclusivity to the films, creating multi-dimensional, capable Bond girls and even casting a woman as 'M,' the head of MI6, in 1995. The real MI6, on the other hand, has yet to have a woman in its top leadership role, and it wasn't until 2018 that the CIA saw its first female director. It's taken every bit of the past 70-plus years to somewhat level the playing field for real women in espionage, so one might argue that it's about time for a female James Bond. Certainly, women are capable - a history of successful female intelligence officers from both sides of the pond already proves that. But what if it's not a question of whether she's able to believably pull off the role but whether that's something viewers, especially women, actually want? Broccoli didn't seem to think so. 'I'm not particularly interested in taking a male character and having a woman play it. I think women are far more interesting than that,' Broccoli told Variety in 2020. Perhaps she knew something the rest of us didn't - or something we just weren't ready to admit: Women don't want to be James Bond. Not because we're content as his sexy sidekick, but because we want our own spy. The success of shows like Netflix's Black Doves and Paramount's Lioness suggest a female-led spy thriller isn't just palatable for audiences - it's satisfying a hunger for something new: a unique spy character created specifically for a woman. And while we're at it, let's make her more capable than Bond. After all, that reflects the reality on the ground. The best spies are those who operate in the shadows and avoid romantic entanglements with their adversaries - the antithesis of James Bond. Spies who are unassuming and underestimated. Delivering poison right under the noses of our greatest adversaries. Spies who are, dare I say, women? Christina Hillsberg is a former CIA intelligence officer and author of Agents of Change: The Women Who Transformed the CIA, published June 24.

Donald Trump branded 'unprofessional and embarrassing' after latest 'wild' move
Donald Trump branded 'unprofessional and embarrassing' after latest 'wild' move

Daily Mirror

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Donald Trump branded 'unprofessional and embarrassing' after latest 'wild' move

Donald Trump has been known to make some wild statements in the past, but his latest move has left people gobsmacked, with some branding him "unprofessional and embarrassing" Donald Trump has left jaws on the floor with his recent gesture. The US President, famed for his bold rhetoric and becoming a larger-than-life figure in political circles, has advocated a clampdown on illegal immigrants in America from the first day of his presidency on January 20, pledging "mass deportations." On the evening of Friday, May 30, Trump drew people's attention to it once more by posting an image on Instagram depicting multiple aircraft with the phrase "let the deportations begin" emblazoned across the centre in large, bold capitals. This provocative move followed a decision by the US Supreme Court, which granted Trump's administration the power to temporarily strip over half a million migrants in the US of their legal status. ‌ The Instagram post has sparked over 14,000 responses, with one user expressing disbelief, writing: "I can't believe we live in a age where the president can s*** post on Instagram." Another user said: "This post is so unprofessional and embarrassing." ‌ A different commenter implored the president, saying: "Have a little class man, you have the opportunity to go down as the best president ever. Let's behave that way sir please, with all due respect." A fourth startled individual reacted: "What the f****** f*** is this?" This sentiment was echoed in a flurry of comments such as "straight up wild", "this is so embarrassing for Americans", "no way he posted this on Insta - I thought this was a meme page" and "I guess this message [is] his way of showing what a class act he is." Another individual weighed in, remarking: "Staggering that an office of so much history, dignity and respect has been reduced to this. ‌ "Hard to watch what is being played out and what a single man and his entourage has done to a country I used to call home." Warning: Comments in the below post may include offensive language ‌ But it wasn't all criticism; Trump's advocates were swift to express their delight with the president's actions. One supporter declared: "Exactly what I voted for. We are making America great again." Another enthusiast asserted: "This is what leadership looks like. No more weakness, no more open borders - just strength, action and America first! "President Donald J. Trump is the only one with the courage to do what's right for our country. God bless America, and God bless President Trump!" ‌ The US Supreme Court recently put a hold on a lower court's order that would have stopped the administration from maintaining the "parole" immigration program, which began under former President Joe Biden, according to BBC News. The policy, designed to shield migrants fleeing economic duress and political upheaval in their homelands, is now under threat. With the new injunction, approximately 530,000 immigrants hailing from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela face the prospect of deportation. Also, during his presidential campaign in 2016, Trump pledged to build a wall on the border with Mexico as a cornerstone of his immigration strategy and focussed on this goal throughout his tenure from 2017 to 2021. March saw a record low in illegal crossings, with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents reporting only 7,181 migrants entering the US illegally. Since resuming office this year, President Trump has deported over 100,000 illegal migrants, as stated on the official White House website.

PBS sues Trump administration over defunding
PBS sues Trump administration over defunding

Leader Live

time5 hours ago

  • Leader Live

PBS sues Trump administration over defunding

In the claim, PBS relies on similar arguments, saying Mr Trump was overstepping his authority and engaging in 'viewpoint discrimination' because of his claim that PBS' news coverage is biased against conservatives. 'PBS disputes those charged assertions in the strongest possible terms,' lawyer Z W Julius Chen wrote in the case, filed in a US court in Washington. 'But regardless of any policy disagreements over the role of public television, our constitution and laws forbid the president from serving as the arbiter of the content of PBS's programming, including by attempting to defund PBS.' It was the latest of many legal actions taken against the administration for its moves, including several by media organisations impacted by Mr Trump's orders. A PBS spokesman said that 'after careful deliberation, PBS reached the conclusion that it was necessary to take legal action to safeguard public television's editorial independence, and to protect the autonomy of PBS member stations'. Mr Trump's order 'would have profound impacts on the ability of PBS and PBS member stations to provide a rich tapestry of programming to all Americans,' Mr Chen wrote. PBS said the US Department of Education has cancelled a 78 million dollar grant to the system for educational programming, used to make children's shows like Sesame Street, Clifford the Big Red Dog and Reading Rainbow. Besides Mr Trump, the claim names other administration officials as defendants, including US education secretary Linda McMahon, treasury secretary Scott Bessent and homeland security secretary Kristi Noem. PBS says its technology is used as a backup for the nationwide wireless emergency alert system. The administration has fought with several media organisations. Government-run news services like Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty are also struggling, The Associated Press has battled with the White House over press access and the Federal Communications Commission is investigating television news divisions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store