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JFK Assassination

New batch of JFK assassination files: Oswald in Mexico City and the Watergate burglars

How much did the CIA know about Oswald’s intentions before the assassination?

Jefferson Morley, one of a handful of experts who has closely tracked the Kennedy records for many years, believes one of the more interesting documents to emerge involves a CIA cable about Oswald’s contacts in Mexico City that had up until Friday been partially redacted. The Oct. 8, 1963 cable discussed Oswald’s interactions with a Soviet consular official named Valery Kostikov, the reputed head of the KGB’s assassinations operations. On Friday, the CIA cable’s slugline was finally declassified. The title: LCIMPROVE.

LCIMPROVE was the CIA’s code name for counter-espionage involving the Soviet intelligence services. The agency’s man in charge of LCIMPROVE? James Jesus Angleton, the CIA’s legendary chief of counterintelligence.

“What the Mexico City cable illuminates is the failure of a senior CIA official to preempt Oswald as he made his way to Dallas,” Morley wrote on his web site, JFKFacts.org. “Now we know that Angleton also knew Oswald had been in contact with a KGB officer who some said was a KGB assassin. After receiving the October 8 cable, Angleton could have asked the FBI to locate and interview Oswald to explain his contacts with Kostikov. The FBI located him but Angleton is not known to have taken any action.”

Other previously secret CIA files reveal the “involuntary” 1970 retirement of McCord and Hunt’s frustration with being consigned to a desk job after covert anti-Castro operations.

The latest document dump was set in motion by the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992, which stipulated that the government had to release all remaining assassination records by Oct. 26, 2017. In the days leading up to the deadline, President Trump announced on Twitter that he was allowing “the long blocked and classified JFK FILES to be opened.” But on Oct. 26, Trump bowed to pressure from the CIA, FBI and other agencies by releasing only 2,800 records and withholding 30,000 others. Trump issued a memo saying he would delay making a decision on those files until April 26.

But over the next two days, Trump issued a series of tweets that suggested he wanted to release the remaining documents much sooner. “After strict consultation with General Kelly, the CIA and other Agencies, I will be releasing ALL #JFKFILES other than the names and addresses of any mentioned person who is still living. I am doing this for reasons of full disclosure, transparency and . . . in order to put any and all conspiracy theories to rest.”

Trump himself floated a conspiracy theory during the presidential campaign in 2016 that the father of his primary opponent, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), was somehow involved in the assassination.

So far, there have been no bombshells in the new files released, and experts did not expect any to shake the conclusion of the Warren Commission that Oswald acted as the lone gunman in Dealey Plaza. A majority of Americans believe others were involved, according to several Gallup polls taken over the years. And some Kennedy experts and historians have concluded that the CIA and other intelligence agencies impeded the Warren Commission’s investigation.

One long withheld FBI file released Friday is a March 12, 1968 analysis of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., whom former director J. Edgar Hoover had long sought to discredit. It includes salacious details about wild parties and sexual indiscretions by King, who was assassinated just weeks later.

Other records include hundreds of pages on the Watergate burglars, including some CIA internal papers praising the skills that would later be used in the infamous 1972 break-in. It wasn’t clear why McCord’s retirement from the agency was labeled “involuntary.”

“In a variety of assignments, both domestic and abroad, Mr. McCord has displayed unusual imagination, ingenuity, and effectiveness in accomplishing his assigned tasks,” wrote one CIA official of the man who would, two years later, use those skills to break into the National Democratic Party’s headquarters in the Watergate. “His achievements in the fields of audio-countermeasure techniques and physical and technical security are particularly noteworthy…”

Then-CIA director Richard Helms wrote to McCord to commend him and wish him a happy retirement “filled with enjoyment and satisfaction.”

“Your faithful and loyal support has measured up to the high ideals and traditions of the Federal service,” he wrote.

McCord even got an award: the Certificate of Distinction for his 20 years of service.

Three years later, a jury took just 90 minutes to convict McCord of eight counts, including conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping the Democrats.

In a January 1965 CIA file, E. Howard Hunt complained that he had developed a duodenal ulcer from tedious assignments following the excitement of anti-Castro operations, known as Project JMATE, that culminated in the Bay of Pigs invasion.

The ulcer, he wrote, resulted from “three years of work frustration and professional dissatisfactions occasioned by (a) Agency failure to assign me to an appropriate post abroad following my participation in Project JMATE, and (b) the passive, non-challenging nature of the domestic work I was given.”

Hunt had hit a “professional dead-end,” he wrote, “without hope of promotion or foreign assignment, a situation which preoccupied my mind and in due course found physical reflection in duodenal hemorrhage.”

A 1969 fitness report by Hunt’s boss, the CIA’s chief of operations in Europe, concluded that Hunt was “a very competent, tough-minded senior professional.” But a “reviewing officer’s comment” attached to his fitness report recommends that his overall performance be rated as “highly proficient” rather than “strong” because “this officer has had a series of personal and taxing problems, beyond his control, which have tended to dull his cutting edge just enough to be noticeable.”

Hunt retired in 1970 and later organized the Watergate break-in and dirty tricks that ultimately brought down the Nixon presidency. He was convicted of burglary, conspiracy and wiretapping and served 33 months in prison.

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*** This article has been archived for your research. The original version from The Washington Post can be found here ***