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  • The Nothingburgers? Nope.

    The Nothingburgers? Nope.

    The Nothingburgers? Nope.

    The MSM is at it again. The New York Times, for example, is saying that there is nothing notable in the declassified files released by executive order of President Trump. Well, if you know anything about the case, that is not an accurate statement. Which is what one would expect from The Grey Lady about the JFK case.

    I make no claim to having gone through all 77,000 pages of these documents. But I did go through a few hundred files at random. I have already explained the paramount importance of Arthur Schlesinger’s memorandum about President Kennedy’s desire to reorganize the CIA in the wake of the Bay of Pigs fiasco. (Click here https://www.kennedysandking.com/john-f-kennedy-articles/the-schlesinger-memo-jfk-v-cia) That plus the revelations by attorney Andre Iler about how the CIA did not want anyone to see that memo anywhere near in its entirety—a matter which I noted before the Luna Committee– is an important story in and of itself. (Click here for that addendum https://www.kennedysandking.com/john-f-kennedy-articles/the-schlesinger-memo-jfk-v-cia-addendum)

    When these newly declassified files appeared, they were not in OCR form, that is, they were not accessible by optical character recognition. Which meant they were not easily accessible for search functions. But the Mary Ferrell Foundation, under Rex Bradford, has cured that problem, and Rex has also arranged them by agency. He deserves credit for doing so.

    In appearances on Len Osanic’s Black Op Radio, Coast to Coast with Richard Syrett, and Katie Helper’s podcast with Oliver Stone, I have shown that, just in a random sample—before Rex made the files truly accessible– there were several notable things in these files. Which I believe have been ignored by the MSM. So let us take up some of them.

    First, as most people engaged in this case know, Fidel Castro was very curious about what happened to President Kennedy. Within 24 hours of the assassination, he went on Cuban TV and said he had suspicions about who Oswald really was. He predicted he was a likely FBI undercover agent. He also predicted that Cuba would be blamed for the assassination. (Click here for that speech https://www.kennedysandking.com/john-f-kennedy-articles/fidel-castro-s-first-speech-on-the-jfk-assassination-11-23-1963) Five days later, he was talking to a group of students. He detoured from his original subject and said that he was familiar with rifles from his experience in the Cuban revolution against Batista. He could not understand why an assassin would use a manual bolt-action rifle. (Click here for that speech https://www.kennedysandking.com/news-items/castro-figured-out-the-jfk-case-in-five-days-speech-of-november-27th-1963)

    Well, according to the new documents, in 1969, Castro was still bothered by the JFK assassination. He was speaking to another group of students, explaining all the problems with the Oswald scenario. After which, he ordered a reconstruction. He wanted his three best marksmen to try and duplicate what Oswald did.

    None of them could do it. To my knowledge, this is the third time this was attempted—and it was the third failure. In his book, Kill Zone: A Sniper Looks at Dealey Plaza, Craig Roberts describes consulting with Carlos Hathcock about the subject. He asked Carlos if he thought Oswald could have done what the Commission said he did. Hathcock was the greatest sniper of the Vietnam War. He had 95 confirmed kills. He was so lethal that Hanoi put a bounty on his head. For about two decades, he held the record for the longest kill shot: he hit a man from a mile and a half away. After he retired from the service, he opened up a SWAT team school with an obstacle course. He replied to Roberts that they had tried it more than once. And they did everything according to the book. They could not accomplish what Oswald did.

    As I noted in my article about the CBS special of 1967, their original sniper could not achieve it either. So what they did was they cheated in the tests by enlarging the target. (Click here for that story https://www.kennedysandking.com/john-f-kennedy-articles/why-cbs-covered-up-the-jfk-assassination) If America had an objective media on the JFK case, this latest revelation about Castro would be more dirt on the grave of the Warren Commission.

    Another fascinating memo has been noted by some other critics and on YouTube. As most of our readers know, one of the most incriminating pieces of information that the CIA released in the wake of Kennedy’s assassination was that, while in Mexico City, Oswald had met with a Soviet agent under diplomatic cover, namely Valeri Kostikov. And further, that Kostikov was secretly a part of the KGB’s Department 13, which handled liquidations in the Western Hemisphere. (The Assassinations, edited by James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease, p. 223). This then suggested that Oswald had killed Kennedy for the USSR.

    Well, in 1971, the CIA wrote a memo about this subject. In that memo, they said they had no credible evidence that Kostikov was part of Department 13. To say that this is fascinating is really an understatement. Because it would seem to indicate that the CIA, in 1963, was using the Kostikov story as a prop in an attempt to frame Oswald. In fact, J. Edgar Hoover, just a few weeks after the assassination, wrote a note saying that the FBI should not trust the CIA anymore since the Agency had given them a “false story re Oswald’s trip to Mexico….” (ibid., p. 224). If this recently declassified memo is accurate, it would appear to be incriminating of the Agency.

    Related to this, in blind memos the CIA wrote during the House Select Committee on Assassinations, this is the way they referred to Oswald in Mexico City. Referring to the visit to the Soviet embassy, it was “Oswald allegedly visited the Soviet Embassy.” Referring to the visitor himself, it was “alleged to be Oswald”.

    During that House Select Committee on Assassinations inquiry, it turns out that Chief Counsel Robert Blakey made requests to the Agency for the reasons they would open a 201 file on any subject. He then asked for the Oswald file at the CIA, prior to the opening of the 201 file.

    This is indicative that Blakey was aware of the work of his investigator, Betsy Wolf. Wolf’s monumental discoveries about the Oswald file were first unearthed by Malcolm Blunt. They were not declassified by the ARRB. They were placed on a time-stamped basis and not released until the new millennium. They were featured in Vasilios Vazakas’ seven-part series “Creating the Oswald Legend”, most prominently in Part 4. (Click here for that essay https://www.kennedysandking.com/john-f-kennedy-articles/creating-the-oswald-legend-part-4)

    Wolf’s work was only released in handwritten notes form. To my knowledge, they were not typed up into official memoranda. Why they were not is inexplicable. For, as revealed in these requests by Blakey, they are of utmost importance. Therefore, it is perfectly logical as to why the MSM does not note Blakey’s requests or why he made them. Because they have no idea what Wolf was pursuing.

    Wolf was given the assignment of analyzing the Oswald file at the CIA. After requesting all the charters and taking notes on them, she figured out what the Oswald file should do. As noted above, Blakey then requested the file. Wolf was surprised to discover that it did not do what it should have. It did not go to the Soviet Russia (SR) division as, according to its own charters, it should. It went to the OS division, or Office of Security. Further, no 201 file was opened on Oswald for 13 months. This is why Blakey was asking for the reasons a 201 file is opened, because Wolf has discovered there was not one on Oswald, even though the CIA knew he had defected and had threatened to turn over radar secrets to Moscow.

    Once Wolf got this list, she determined that there should have been a 201 file opened on Oswald. She called in CIA retirees to discuss her quandary. They all agreed with her: 1.) Oswald’s file should have gone to the SR division, and 2.) There should have been no 13-month delay in the opening of the 201 file. She eventually got to the then-current OS Director, Bob Gambino. He said: It did not matter how many documents came in or if they were pre-stamped. If the client has gone to the first gate, the Office of Mail Logistics, then the papers will go there and there only.

    In other words, someone had rigged Oswald’s file from the time he went to Russia. Why? How did they even know about him? And why did Blakey not include this vital information in the HSCA volumes? He seems to have known about Wolf’s work due to these specific requests.

    Let me briefly make note of two other matters of interest. On November 23rd, 1963, the newest tanks Castro had were rolled into the area next to Havana. The information in this informant’s notes did not say if this was related to the JFK case. But it might be since Castro said in his speech that day that he thought Washington would blame the murder of JFK on Cuba. Secondly, the Warren Commission was very curious about Oswald’s activities in Helsinki, Finland. Assistant Counsel David Slawson was especially interested in how quickly he had been given an entrance visa.

    Just based on this very limited review, there should have been stories about the following:

    1. If three reconstructions, of what Oswald was supposed to do, first-rate marksmen all failed. How likely is it that Oswald was the lone assassin?
    2. Did the CIA, perhaps James Angleton, put out a false story about Oswald and Kostikov in 1963 in order to incriminate the Soviets? After all, Richard Case Nagell said that the Russians thought this would be the case. (Dick Russell, The Man Who Knew Too Much, pp. 153-54)
    3. Did the CIA itself, during the HSCA hearings, think that there may have been an impostor for Oswald in Mexico City? Let us not forget, David Phillips said words to this effect in a debate with Mark Lane in the fall of 1977. (Lane, Plausible Denial, pp. 75-87)
    4. Betsy Wolf and likely Robert Blakey knew that the Oswald file at the CIA had been rerouted almost at the time he defected to the Soviet Union. Should not a journalist have asked both Wolf and Blakey about this highly suspicious matter?
    5. Did the Warren Commission and David Slawson ever wonder how on earth did Oswald know that Helsinki was the one capital in Europe that issued Soviet visas with extreme speed? Should this question not have been in the Warren Report? (The WR adroitly avoids this question, see p. 258)

    Any interested reader can please indicate to me when the MSM addresses these matters. On past experience, I will not hold my breath for that moment.

  • Tulsi Gabbard Video at National Archives – RFK and JFK Files Mentioned

    Tulsi Gabbard visits the National Archives, talking about the release of RFK assassination files. JFK files also mentioned, along with a look at archived items such as the Zapruder camera and the shirt Oswald was wearing. View here.

  • Tulsi Gabbard Starts Release of RFK Documents

    Tulsi Gabbard, Trump administration begin releasing RFK assasination files. Read more.

  • Tulsi Gabbard Announcement Regarding RFK & MLK documents

    Tulsi Gabbard announces that the search for RFK and MLK documents and scanning them digitally is on with 100 people on the job. Read more.

  • Impact of the Luna Hearing

    Impact of the Luna Hearing

    The Impact of the Luna Hearing

    by James DiEugenio

    Oliver Stone, Jeff Morley and myself testified before congress last Tuesday before the committee helmed by Anna Paulina Luna, congresswoman from Florida.  Her committee is tasked with declassifying documents on several controversial cases from contemporary history: the murders of John Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy; plus the Jeffrey Epstein case, the origins of CV-19, files on 9-11 and UFO’s. 

    The announcement of this committee, which she call a Task Force, met with several stories in the MSM, including one in Newsweek. (2/11/25) She stated that it would not make bold promises and then fade into irrelevance.  She continued, “This will be a relentless pursuit of truth and transparency, and we will not stop until the American people have the answers they deserve.” (ibid). Luna said she will be cooperating with people like Attorney General Pam Bondi and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.  She then said the following:

    We will cut through the bureaucracy, challenge the stonewalling and ensure that the American people finally get the truth they have been denied for too long.  If we are to endure and thrive as a nation, we must restore trust, trust through transparency. (ibid)

    On January 19th, President Trump said that: 

    In the coming days, we are going to make public remaining records related to the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, his brother Robert Kennedy, as well as Dr. Martin Luther King. (ibid)

    On his third day in office, President Trump signed an executive order to that effect.  As he signed it, Trump said, “That’s a big one, huh? A lot of people are waiting for this for a long—for years, for decades.” (ibid). Luna added that, 

    The American people must be trusted to think for themselves, to form their own judgments from the truth they are entitled to know. We’ve been treated like children for too long and kept in the dark by those we elected to serve us.

    She then added that she would be calling her first hearing soon.  That first hearing was, wisely, on the JFK case.  And she managed to secure a large room with a five row gallery, that was almost full.  Oliver Stone, Jeff Morley and myself were on her first witness panel.  There were twice as many Republican in attendance as there were Democrats. And it was the GOP side which stayed longer, asked the most pertinent questions, and seemed the most interested in what happened to JFK.

    The hearing was televised by CSPAN and taped by PBS.  (One can see it here posted at You Tube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WF6qlr3KLtI)  For the first time perhaps in congressional history, the viewer was allowed to hear about the disappearing hole in the rear of Kennedy’s skull, and the spurious chain of custody concerning the Magic Bullet, Commission Exhibit 399. Jeff Morley declared that the true authors of the plot to kill JFK were likely to be found in the ranks of the CIA and Pentagon. Oliver Stone ended his evocative opening statement by quoting a very high suspect in the case, namely James Angleton  about him being fated to end up in Hades. I tried to concentrate in my opening statement about how Kennedy’s murder and the failure of the Warren Commission resulted in a loss of trust and belief by the public in their institutions of the press and the government.  The entire hearing lasted over the 2.5 hours that Luna said it would. Afterwards, Oliver, Morley and myself addressed a press gaggle.

    That was not the end of it.  Not even close.  It’s the after effects of this hearing that I wish to address here.  If one goes to You Tube you will see over thirty postings of the hearings, either in full or in part. I located most of them, for instance by Forbes, Fox, CSPAN, Global News, The Blaze and accumulated total was over 2.6 million views!  Even Joe Rogen posted a segment focusing on Oliver.

    But  in addition to that, Oliver and myself, Morley and Matt Crumpton—a co-author of The JFK Assassination Chokeholds who attended—all did appearances on TV shows.  Oliver and myself did the Jesse Waters show on Fox and two spots on the News Nation network.  Morley did Waters and Glenn Greenwald.  Matt did a spot on Newsmax.  If one adds up all of these for their average viewership, that total is about 8.95 million.  So the rolling total would be about 11.55 million.  And since You Tube would be growing daily, it will probably be 12 million by the end of this week.  Which is remarkable for a 62 year old event.

    But yet, I have not even included the newspaper and online new stories about the hearing.  It was covered by USA TodayPolitico, AP and ABC among many others.  So we can add at least hundreds of thousands more.  As I said in my opening statement, the JFK case simply will not go away.

    We all owe thanks to Congresswoman Luna and also to Oliver Stone for attending.  A lot of the publicity was caused by him.  We all await the next step in the Task Force’s inquiry.

    (Click here for an inside view of the Washington experience https://jamesanthonydieugenio.substack.com/p/jim-and-oliver-meet-the-luna-commitee)

  • New 4K Restoration of Rush to Judgment

    This is a link to the new 4k restoration of the Mark Lane/Emile D’ Antonio cinema verite film also entitled Rush to Judgment. Read more.

  • The Schlesinger Memo: JFK v CIA – Addendum

    The Schlesinger Memo: JFK v CIA – Addendum

    The Schlesinger Memo: JFK v CIA – Addendum

    by James DiEugenio

    Addendum A – Highlights of PFIAB Meeting Notes

    Researcher David Denton uncovered a sheaf of documents that show why Kennedy wanted to reform the CIA. 

    The documents are sourced from the PFIAB. Though this advisory board has changed names over the years, Wikipedia describes it as ‘an advisory body to the Executive Office of the President of the United States. According to its self-description, it “provides advice to the President concerning the quality and adequacy of intelligence collection, of analysis and estimates, of counterintelligence, and of other intelligence activities.” ’ (link to the Wikipedia PFIAB page).

    See the next addendum for the entire file.

    This first highlighted section gives voice rather dramatically about his frustration at not knowing what the Agency was doing most of the time. 

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 01

    (pp 7-8, highlight 1)

    Denton also uncovered another group which shows how those close advisors around him are also frustrated with their lack of knowledge of Agency activities and the CIA’s apparent reluctance to let them know about them.

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 02

    (p 8, highlight 2)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 03

    (p 9, highlight 3)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 04

    (p 10, highlight 4)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 05

    (p 11, highlight 5)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 06

    (p 12, highlight 6)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 07

    (p 16, highlight 7)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 08

    (p 16, highlight 8)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 09

    (p 19, highlight 9)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 10

    (p 20, highlight 10)

    DiEugenioSchles Addend 11

    (p 22, highlight 11)

    Addendum B – Raw PFIAB Meeting Notes

    The entire raw PFIAB document may be found here or in the same file with highlighting (starting at page 7) from Addendum A here.

    Addendum C – Schlesinger Memo

    Thanks to attorney Andrew Iler, please view the rarely seen 1993 5-page CIA version of the Schlesinger memo that shows desired redactions here and the 15-page White House redacted version here. The unredacted version may be found here. The first version above shows just how strongly the CIA did not want this document out there in full, unredacted form.

    It took the ARRB to get it in that form. Why? Because it would show just what JFK was upset about: how the CIA was controlling policy. And how their policy in Cuba at the Bay of Pigs–one of direct intervention–opposed his. Secondly, although the memo is admirable, Schlesinger makes an error on page one. He assumes there was no CIA involvement in the attempts to overthrow de Gaulle over Algeria, and to aid the rebel group, the OAS in doing so. In the book JFK Revisited, Oliver Stone and I found several sources that indicate otherwise. (pp. 72,73) This information was found in American, French, and British sources.   According to David Talbot, Kennedy told the French ambassador that he had nothing to do with the attempted overthrow but he could not be sure if the CIA was involved. (The Devil’s Chessboard, pp. 412-419).

    As Iler points out, multiple entities submitted different copies of the memo to the ARRB, this is why there are different RIF#s and different Originating Agencies listed. The two Originating Agencies for the documents linked above are (1) The White House and (2) The CIA. The RIF for the White House version does not appear to be a typical ARRB RIF sheet. Iler also notes that on both RIFs that there are no Opening Criteria pursuant to section 6 of the JFK Records Act. This is atypical.

    The documents may also be viewed at the Mary Ferrel Foundation:

    The White House Version (15 pages)
    RIF#: 176-10033-10145

    The CIA Version (5 pages)
    RIF#: 157-10002-10056

     

    Click here to read the main article.

  • The Schlesinger Memo: JFK v CIA

    The Schlesinger Memo: JFK v CIA

    The Schlesinger Memo: JFK v CIA

    by James DiEugenio

     

    As everyone who studies the presidency of John F. Kennedy knows, the seminal moment in his education about the treacherous ways of Washington occurred rather early.  It was in April of 1961 with his ill-fated decision to launch the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. As many commentators have said, the president had no real enthusiasm about this operation.  And even CIA Director Allen Dulles admitted as much. (Destiny Betrayed, by James DiEugenio, second edition, p. 36) When White House advisor Arthur Schlesinger asked the president what he thought about the plans for the operation, Kennedy pithily replied that he thought about it as little as possible. (ibid)

    Due to this reluctance, the CIA–in the persons of Dulles and Director of Plans Dick Bissell–had to entice Kennedy into going along with their concept. Therefore, they told him that Fidel Castro’s popularity was diminishing, that only 20 % of the public supported him, and that many native Cubans thought his regime would soon fall. The capper was this: if a rebellion would begin, the vast majority of the militia units would defect. (Peter Kornbluh, Bay of Pigs Declassified, pp. 294-95)

    But even with that, Kennedy decided to put the decision up for a vote of his advisors. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara described the scene in his memoir. As Kennedy went around the table, only one person dissented from approval.  And that person was not even a member of the administration–it was  Senator William Fulbright. (Robert McNamara, In Retrospect, pp.25-27) But everyone else, the Joint Chiefs, members of the National Security Council, Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and McNamara himself, all endorsed it. In fact, McNamara had passed a note to Kennedy saying that the Pentagon predicted that, even if the attack did not succeed, it would lead to Castro’s downfall.

    Needless to say, everyone but Fulbright was wrong. But what made it even worse was this: the CIA had deceived Kennedy.  The truth was that Dulles and Bissell knew the operation would not succeed. This was first discovered by Attorney General Robert Kennedy as part of the White House inquiry into the debacle helmed by General Maxwell Taylor.  In his interrogation of Allen Dulles, RFK was simply stupefied at some of the answers to his questions.  For instance, if the initial assault failed, the fallback plan was for the brigade to resort to guerilla tactics.  The problem with this was that when the AG went to one of the Cubans involved in the training for the operation, Manolo Ray, he said they had no training at all in those kinds of maneuvers. But further to have resorted to that, the brigade would have had to retreat into the hills, which were about 80 miles away through swampland. (Michael Morrisey, “The Bay of Pigs Revisited,” at Mary Ferrell Foundation)

    From his experience questioning Dulles, Bobby Kennedy suspected his brother had been snookered.  He decided that Dulles had to go.  So he consulted with his father, Joseph Kennedy, and discovered that Robert Lovett and David Bruce, two scions of the Eastern Establishment, had tried to dispose of Dulles years earlier. RFK brought in Lovett to join him to talk about what Dulles had done both to the Agency in general, and to him personally regarding the Bay of Pigs. (DiEugenio, pp. 48-50). President Kennedy not only terminated Dulles, but also Bissell and Deputy Director Charles Cabell.

    II

    Bobby Kennedy was correct about the subterfuge. Many years later scholar Lucien S. Vandenbroucke discovered notes that Dulles had made concerning an article that he was going to pen for Harper’s about the Bay of Pigs.  It turns out that Dulles understood that the project was fey.  But what he was banking on was that Kennedy would intervene with American might rather than face a humiliating defeat. (Diplomatic History, Fall, 1984)  When Vandenbroucke published the article, Bissell replied in a letter.  The architect of the plan said that he and Dulles, “had allowed Kennedy to persist in misunderstanding about the nature of the Cuban operation.”

    It’s clear that the president was convinced by his brother and Lovett.  He said as much to his longtime friend Paul Fay. He confided that, when he first came into office, he was shocked at what poor judgment the military had shown. Being a former Navy man, as was Fay, he looked up to high officers. He assumed they had earned their stature by wise judgment and honest achievement. He now thought he was wrong. And he would not instinctively follow their advice in the future. Alluding to the Bay of Pigs, he said:

    They wanted a fight and probably calculated that if we committed ourselves part way and started to lose, I would give the OK to pour in what was needed. (Paul Fay, The Pleasure of His Company, p. 189)

    At this point we should note that Schlesinger wrote that it was Dulles’ assurances that the brigade could go guerilla that ultimately convinced Kennedy to put the operation to a vote. (A Thousand Days, p.257) It is also through Schlesinger that we know about the Lovett-Bruce report, since he found it among Robert Kennedy’s papers when he was writing his biography of RFK.

    This is all pertinent to the complete declassification of the 16-page Schlesinger memo that he wrote up for JFK in the wake of the Bay of Pigs. As David Talbot wrote in his book about Allen Dulles, Schlesinger saw the capsizing of that operation as an opportunity to “bring the CIA under presidential control, which neither Truman nor Eisenhower had been able to do.” (The Devil’s Chessboard, p.438) As a former OSS operative, Schlesinger thought he was the man to provide Kennedy with the plan to do so.

    Schlesinger decided to strike while the iron was hot. He wanted to propose something before any kind of official committee loyal to Dulles performed an apologia. As he wrote to Kennedy in the aftermath of the disaster, “It is important, in my judgment, to take CIA away from the Club.”  (Ibid) In that regard, Schlesinger had reservations about Taylor managing the White House inquiry into the operation.  To him, he was not the kind of crusader who would capitalize on the president’s initial response to “splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces.” (Talbot, p. 439)

    Although Kennedy stayed with Taylor for the analysis of what had gone wrong, Schlesinger convinced the president that he was the right choice to pen a reorganization plan for the Agency. He told JFK that he served in the OSS during the war, and had been a CIA consultant since.  He would not call himself a professional, but an experienced amateur. (ibid)

    According to David Talbot, Schlesinger took the job quite seriously.  He consulted with senate liberals like George McGovern, and a mysterious CIA whistle-blower who told him, “The Central Intelligence Agency is sick.” He also collected critiques from left-of-center journals like The Nation and The New Republic.  He handed the memo to the president on June 30th.  Before President Trump’s executive order, we only had the memorandum in partly censored from. We now have the whole memo, unredacted.

    III

    Schlesinger began his statement by saying that the CIA had simply been caught in too many overseas disasters. They had used up their allowed quota in that area. He then wrote that the problem as he saw it was “the autonomy with which the Agency has been permitted to operate.”  He then got more specific as to the causes:

    1. An inadequate doctrine of clandestine operations 
    2. An inadequate conception of the relationship between operations and policy
    3. An inadequate conception of the relationship between operations and intelligence.

    Schlesinger said that this autonomy, and the resultant three shortcomings, were the result of lack of input from the State Department.

    When the CIA began the State Department looked on this new venture with suspicion and renounced the opportunity to seize firm control of CIA operations. It did not, for example, try to establish any effective system of clearance for CIA activities; and some ambassadors frankly preferred not to know what CIA was up to in their countries. (p. 2)

    He then noted that after 1953, when the Director of CIA—Allen Dulles– and Secretary of State—John Foster Dulles– were brothers, this made the problem even worse. (This was, if anything, an understatement.) As a result, the CIA began to grow in stature and reach. CIA paid better and also Allen Dulles had protected his employees from McCarthy’s witch hunts.  This resulted in the employment and assignment of several capable and independent-minded employees. Thus began the more active role the CIA played in foreign policy.

    Schlesinger now comments that by the time State realized just how potent the CIA had become, the cat was more or less out of the bag. The CIA had assumed control over clandestine intelligence collection and operations, and even in the realms of political reporting and diplomatic conduct. (p. 2) Therefore with this non-supervision, the CIA developed a set of parallel functions to State and even Defense.  That is it had its own political desks, and “ in effect, its own foreign services”. Schlesinger added “it even has its own air force.” (p. 3). With its large budget, “The contemporary CIA possesses many of the characteristics of a state within a state.” (ibid)

    This power had been augmented by the fact that “there is no doctrine governing our conduct of clandestine operations.”(p. 3). As a result, the CIA has used the standard that if the communists do it, then we must do it, a sort of “fighting fire with fire” ethos. At this point, Schlesinger observed that those in power have not thought through this dilemma of how to maintain an open society alongside covert activities. Since America maintained freedom of speech and press, they could comment on the covert actions of the CIA.  He now stated that covert activity was allowable when it did not corrupt the principles of a free society.

    Schlesinger categorized some areas of CIA activity and to its relationship to the problem he had outlined. Going up the ladder from intelligence collection, to espionage, to covert action.  The last he found most objectionable.  And he cogently wrote that such operations which relied 

    …on the suppression of news, of lying to congressmen and journalists, and on the deception of the electorate should be undertaken only when the crisis is so considerable that the gains really seem to outweigh the disadvantages.

    The author then said, these problems are co-existent with the size of the operation.  (As this writer would comment, obviously the Bay of Pigs would be a prime example of this.)  Schlesinger warned that before such an operation is launched the case for its overwhelming necessity must be made. (p. 4). 

    IV

    Schlesinger went on to observe that the above was not the only consideration. Another important aspect was that CIA activities should be “subordinate to US foreign policy.” Which they had not been. (p. 5) And this could be a problem at any level of Agency activity, including recruiting double agents. Because the proposed target might be leading the CIA into a trap. And since the Agency does these things by itself, the ramifications of failure are a blow to the State Department, who were unsuspecting. Schlesinger argued that State, along with the ambassador,  should be informed of the possible approach and they should be able to measure the risks and rewards, and hold ultimate veto power over the operation. (p. 5)

    Schlesinger now addressed a problem he himself encountered during the Bay of Pigs operation. Namely, that State had not cleared and did not even know who many of the operatives were. And in that operation, the CIA recruited many Cuban exiles of questionable character. (p. 6). In this memo, he refers to his experience of going down to Florida at Kennedy’s request and observing that representatives of the Cuban Revolutionary Council had been detained by Operation Forty operatives, a group of thugs with their own secret agenda who were running parallel to the main operation. This might be the first time the rubric had been used in White House memoranda. Schlesinger implies that these types of men would never have been cleared by State. (For a fuller discussion of what Schlesinger knew about Operation Forty, see DiEugenio, pp. 50-52)

    Since the CIA considered itself more or less independent of State, the latter did not find itself aware of many covert actions until they were about to be launched. Therefore this gives these projects their own momentum of inevitability. This makes the advocate appear tough and realistic and the man with reservations legalistic and soft. (p. 7). The inescapable outcome is that the CIA was creating policy. Yet this was something that Allen Dulles himself said at the inception of the Agency should not be done: “The Central Intelligence Agency should have nothing to do with policy.” (p. 7). Here, Schlesinger mentioned in passing the attempted overthrow of Sukarno in Indonesia in 1958, which was exposed as a CIA operation. Schlesinger strongly urged that this system be revised so that State can exercise control over covert actions which impact their policy.

    Schlesinger now addressed an issue that had been partly censored before the Trump order.  It is a subject he called “The Controlled American Source”. Today we call it the use of CIA employees acting under State Department cover, many of them in foreign embassies with diplomatic titles. Schlesinger pointed out that the Agency has nearly as many employees overseas under these covers as actual State Department employees. (p. 7) Again this was something Dulles had warned against.  In the Dulles-Correa-Jackson report of 1948, the authors wrote that this practice should be kept at a minimum and the CIA should find its own covers to lessen reliance on State. The reverse had happened. And at some embassies, in certain sections, the number of CIA people outnumbered the actual State Department employees. (p. 8). And at times the higher-up CIA people advocate for different policies than State;  Schlesinger mentioned Laos as an example. What made it worse was that these CIA people had access to the local presidents and/or prime ministers.

    The memo also mentions Paris as another example of this trend. There were 128 CIA people in that embassy and the Agency occupied the top floor of the building. They tried to dominate conversations with certain important political personalities. (p. 8). So far from weening itself off of this usage, the Agency was now committed to it for overseas cover. Schlesinger noted the obvious dangers in all this and strongly recommended it be curtailed. (p. 9)

    V

    Kennedy’s advisor now turned to the subject of paramilitary warfare. He began by saying, “There is almost no CIA function more peculiarly dependent on the political context than paramilitary warfare.”(p. 9) Schlesinger warned of a situation that Kennedy was familiar with: when the opposition has the support of the populace, it is much more difficult to defeat. (p. 10) So Schlesinger pointed out that this kind of low-level fighting needed a political goal for it to be successful.  And he quoted a leader familiar with all this, Mao, to back up this idea. Schlesinger concluded that this type of warfare “cannot be considered as primarily a military weapon.  It is primarily a political weapon….” (ibid)

    He then pointed out how the British model for policy control worked.  There, they kept “clandestine activity under strict Foreign Office control.” (p. 11) He then recommended this system for adaptation in the USA.  He warned JFK about the problem that State might be reluctant to do so.  He wrote that they had to overcome “inbred habits of diffusion, negativism and delay and to take a firm and purposeful grip on the situation.” (p. 12) He also pointed out that in the British system, clandestine collection of intelligence is done by the intel service. But the analysis and estimating part was in the Foreign Office. In America, the CIA did both.

    Schlesinger said that it was Dulles himself who argued for this method back in 1947.  Dulles said that facts should not be blinded by policy. The presidential advisor countered with the argument that if one is too much in favor of a covert action, one will select intelligence to support that operation. Which we have seen, and as Schlesinger wrote, was very much the case with the Bay of Pigs project. What was needed was an analysis by a joint group of authorities familiar with the aim of the project but not directly involved with it.

    In conclusion, Schlesinger states that what he was proposing was “a fairly drastic rearrangement of our present intelligence set-up.” (p. 14) He was also pleading for a stronger role for the State Department. He even suggested changing the name from CIA to National Information Service. (p. 15) And each and every covert activity would need to be cleared in advance by the Deputy Undersecretary of State for Intelligence. (p. 15). He also suggested changing the responsibility for collection and interpretation of data. He would retitle this to the Foreign Research Agency.  

    David Talbot pointed out that Schlesinger sent rough draft copies of the memo to future Defense Secretary Clark Clifford, diplomat Chip Bohlen, and speechwriter Ted Sorenson. Once it was sent to the White House, and National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy was a recipient, the Dulles forces began to organize a counterattack. Maxwell Taylor argued against it by saying this was no time for major surgery since it would hurt morale. On the same grounds, Taylor also argued against changing the title. (Talbot, p. 440)

    Two weeks after his memo was submitted, RFK told Schlesinger that his reorganization plan was on hold until they could find a proper candidate to helm the plan. That man ended up being Fowler Hamilton. Hamilton was a Wall Street lawyer, a former prosecutor in FDR’s Justice Department, and was also a bombing analyst in the Army Air Force. Schlesinger thought he was qualified. But the reaction to Fowler was very strong. So Kennedy turned to Republican John McCone. 

    Schlesinger was quite disappointed in this choice. He protested that he was the wrong man for his plan:  “He sees the world in terms of a set of emotion-charged stereotypes.” (Talbot, p. 441). Schlesinger was correct on this. But some of the reforms that he had recommended came to pass: Kennedy issued orders that ambassadors should lead foreign policy in foreign countries. He also requested that the Joint Chiefs be more vigorous and direct in advice to him on paramilitary projects like the Bay of Pigs. Third, that all paramilitary operations be presented to a Strategic Resources Group which would appoint someone to run the operation. (DiEugenio, pp. 52-53) 

    But Schlesinger’s bold and reformist plan more or less died when Fowler was rejected. Kennedy apparently did not want a full-fledged internal battle on his plate at the time. So he settled for a piecemeal reform plan. It took the 9-11 disaster for an office superseding the CIA to be created: the Director of National Intelligence. But the very fact that JFK commissioned such a study, that he seriously entertained it, and that he had someone in mind to man it, tell us how opposed he was to what Dulles had created, represented, and run.  And how it had all combined to create the Bay of Pigs debacle, or what he called, “the worst experience of my life.” (DiEugenio, p. 52) 

    Click here to read the addendum.