RFK Jr. says CIA ‘definitely involved in the murder, 60-year coverup’ involving his uncle JFK

Democrat presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said last week that he personally believes the CIA was involved in the assassination of his uncle, former President John F. Kennedy.

He made the remark on the “All-In Podcast” after host Jason Calacanis asked him point-blank, “Do you believe they were involved in the murder of your uncle?”

Listen:

“Yes, they were definitely involved in the murder and, you know, the 60-year coverup. They’re still not releasing the, you know, the papers that legally they have to release,” Kennedy promptly replied.

As proof that the CIA was involved, he pointed to mountains of evidence.

“I don’t think there’s any doubt if you look at this huge, you know, mountain of evidence and confessions and, you know, so many people have confessed to their involvement. … I mean, for anybody who has doubts about that, I would recommend a book by Jim Douglas called ‘The Unspeakable,'” he said.

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“[B]ecause I think he’s done a better job than anybody else at kind of assembling and distilling all of the millions and millions of documents that have been released over the past 50 years. And these things, these revelations are released incrementally, and so nobody really takes notice of them. When you put them all together, the story is very clear,” he added.

Surprisingly, or perhaps not, many seemed to concur with his speculation:

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Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson said on his show back in December that a source confirmed the CIA played a role in JFK’s death.

“We spoke to someone who had access to these still hidden CIA documents, a person who was deeply familiar with what they contained. We asked this person directly, ‘Did the CIA have a hand in the murder of John F. Kennedy, an American president?’ And here’s the reply we received verbatim. Quote, ‘The answer is yes. I believe they were involved. It’s a whole different country from what we thought it was.'”

Kennedy was assassinated reportedly a bit after noon on Nov. 22nd, 1963, as he was riding in a motorcade through downtown Dallas.

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“Kennedy was shot in the neck and head as the motorcade passed the Texas School Book Depository. Texas Governor John Connally, who was also in the car with Kennedy, was shot in the back, but survived,” according to USA Today.

“A week later, President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed what would come to be known as the Warren Commission – named after its chairman, Chief Justice Earl Warren – to investigate Kennedy’s assassination.”

It took nearly a year, but the commission concluded on Sept. 24th, 1964 that the person responsible for JFK’s assassination was a man named Lee Harvey Oswald, and that he’d acted alone and wasn’t part of a conspiracy.

However, since JFK’s assassination, multitudes of critics have claimed that the evidence incriminating Oswald and Oswald only is off. This viewpoint has been backed up by some events — such as the claim lodged last year by JFK expert Jefferson Morley that Oswald had been involved with a CIA operation prior to Nov. 22nd.

“Morley said the operation, which sought to blame Cuban leader Fidel Castro for an act of violence that could be used as a pretext for a full-scale invasion by the US, would fundamentally alter the accepted history of the presidential assassination,” The Independent reported at the time.

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“The CIA knew far more about the lone gunmen than they are even admitting today,” he said in his own words:

There’s also been controversy over the fact that there was very little time to really thoroughly interrogate Oswald, as he himself was murdered by local nightclub owner Jack Ruby just a couple days after the JFK assassination.

Ruby attributed his own behavior to being overcome with grief over JFK’s untimely death.

Vivek Saxena

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