Experts Examine Newly Released JFK Assassination Files.
The United States government has released the final batch of documents related to the assassination of President John F Kennedy (JFK), a case that has fuelled conspiracy theories for more than six decades.
The disclosure follows an executive order by former President Donald Trump, requiring all remaining unredacted files on the case to be made public. While experts are now poring over the documents, they caution that the process will take time and are not expecting any major revelations.
Over the years, US authorities have declassified hundreds of thousands of pages related to the assassination, but some had been withheld for national security reasons. Many Americans remain sceptical that the alleged assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, acted alone.
Kennedy was shot during a visit to Dallas, Texas, on 22 November 1963. Trump had previously announced that 80,000 pages would be unsealed as part of this final release.
On Tuesday, the National Archives and Records Administration made 1,123 documents available, though the extent of new material remains unclear. Many of the documents had already been released in redacted form.
“You’ve got a lot of reading,” Trump told reporters ahead of the release. “I don’t believe we’re going to redact anything.”
However, some of the files still contained blacked-out passages, while others were difficult to read due to poor-quality scans or faded text. Some documents also appeared to have little direct relevance to the JFK case, according to researchers.
Professor David Barrett of Villanova University noted that the materials may not provide any “earth-shaking information” about the assassination, while historian Alice George suggested that lingering questions may remain. “It’s much harder to find the truth when most of the people involved are dead,” she told Reuters.
The official investigation, led by the Warren Commission, concluded that Kennedy was shot by Oswald, a former Marine and self-proclaimed Marxist who had once defected to the Soviet Union before returning to the US. Despite this, public opinion polls have long suggested that many Americans doubt Oswald was the sole perpetrator.
Over the years, numerous conspiracy theories have emerged, speculating about the possible involvement of government agencies, organised crime, or other entities. However, no definitive alternative explanation has yet been proven.
In 1992, the US Congress passed a law requiring all documents related to the case to be released within 25 years. Although both Trump and President Joe Biden have previously overseen the declassification of JFK-related files, thousands of documents had remained partially or fully classified.
Trump’s recent executive order also directed government archivists to release files related to the assassinations of Robert F Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr, both of whom were killed in 1968.
The latest document release has reignited interest in one of America’s most enduring historical mysteries, but whether it will finally provide the long-sought answers remains to be seen.