Kennedy
In a couple of days we will have the 50th
anniversary of the assassination of President Kennedy. I was in the eighth
grade. I remember they dismissed school early in the afternoon, or at least I
think they did. One stunned kid was upset because he had said something jokingly
about Kennedy maybe getting shot early in the morning. I told him not to worry
about it, that what he had said had nothing to do with what had happened. After
school I went to a barbershop and got a haircut. There were only three networks then, and all
of them went to full time coverage of the events. There was nothing else on TV in our town,
and I got tired of it after a while. I think I saw the coverage of Ruby
shooting Oswald live two days later, but I am not sure. I’ve seen it so many
times since.
Over the years I’ve read a fair amount about the
assassination, from the Warren report to some fairly wooly conspiracy
theories. After all that I have no
definite opinion about what happened. I believe the official version that
Oswald killed the president and acted alone in doing so is probably the most likely single explanation.
That’s where I’d place my bet, if I had to bet. However, if asked to make odds, I’d assign it a probability under 50% because there are so many other reasonable
hypotheses and so many loose ends and puzzling
facts including the magic bullet, the handling and mishandling of forensic
evidence, the testimony of Governor Connally about the number of shots fired,
the testimony of witnesses in Dealey
Plaza, the circumstances of Oswald’s arrest, some of the events at Parkland
Hospital, the behavior of the Dallas police after they had Oswald in custody, the
histories and associations of Oswald and Ruby, and the apparent bias of those
on the Warren Commission toward a particular conclusion.
Oswald was a self proclaimed Marxist and a defector to the
Soviet Union. He certainly had contact with Soviet intelligence people while in
Russia and probably later. He was involved in various pro-Castro activities in
the months before the assassination, and was in contact with officials at the
Cuban embassy in Mexico City a couple of months before the assassination. None
of this proves that either the KGB or Castro’s intelligence service was running
Oswald as an agent and/or was involved in the assassination. However, in
seeking to explain something, it often helps to see who benefits from it. Both Castro
and the Soviets had strong reasons to want Kennedy dead. For the Soviets his death would eliminate a charismatic and committed anti-communist who was immensely
popular throughout the world and would give them revenge for his thwarting them in the recent missile crisis. For Castro
it would mean the end of the attempts by the CIA under the Kennedy brothers’
direction to have him killed. Over the years several defectors from the
Soviet bloc have offered evidence and testimony suggesting Castro or the Soviets were behind the assassination.
(The Soviets are said to have been worried enough that they might be blamed
that they began a disinformation campaign claiming the president was killed by American
intelligence or security agencies. This absurd tale was disseminated in the
United States through the usual pro-Soviet conduits in the media and the culture and entered the folklore
through various sensational books,
magazine articles, and bad movies and TV
shows. It is not mentioned much these
days and, as far as I know, no serious people take it seriously.)
Just as Oswald’s background points to Castro and the Soviets,
Jack Ruby’s points to the mafia. Ruby
was a strip club operator who had at least some association with
important gangsters in Dallas and perhaps other cities. People who believe the mafia ordered the
assassination of the president often cite these connections of the man who silenced
Oswald as evidence for their opinons. I am aware of no evidence that Ruby was
an important gangster or that he had been used as a hit man before he killed
Oswald. Still the mafia had its good
reasons for wanting Kennedy dead. There
is some evidence that gangsters in Chicago and other places helped Kennedy win
both the nomination and the general
election in 1960. If this is true, they might have felt they had been double
crossed when Kennedy’s administration took vigorous actions against organized
crime. Irrespective of that, some gangsters
certainly had reasons to want Kennedy dead in the hope that a new
administration would be less hostile.
Then there is the person who benefitted most
obviously from Kennedy’s death – Lyndon Johnson who became president because of
it. Johnson was an especially unscrupulous, corrupt, and ruthless politician
whose career before 1963 had been full of stories of rigged elections,
scandals, and suspicious deaths of witnesses.
People who think he was involved in the assassination have pointed out
that, because of his political connections in Texas and the power of the
presidency, he would have been more able than either the Soviets or the mafia
to cover up a conspiracy. Given his loathsome
character, it is hard to dispute the claim that Johnson would have been capable
of conspiring to kill Kennedy, and he surely had a motive, but, as far as I
know, no one has produced any strong evidence that he did.
So I don’t know what to believe, and don’t expect ever to
know. There is no explanation that is fully convincing, and the government has done
little to clear things up. Besides the official conclusions of the Warren
Commission that there was not a conspiracy, we have the at least once official conclusions of a
committee of the congress that there probably was a conspiracy. Besides the
plausible or semi-plausible stories, we have the implausible or even nutty ones
muddying things. My mother once told me
that every deadbeat in the state of Texas will tell you he was in Billie Sol
Estes’ living room the night he was arrested. I don’t know about that, but
sometimes it may seem that every nut case living in north Texas in 1963 claimed some connection to Kennedy’s
assassination. A number of years ago, but over twenty years after the assassination, a colorful character,
whose application for a loan had been rejected by the Dallas-based company where I worked,
sent our CEO a letter of complaint explaining that he was too important a
person to be turned down for a loan
because he had been a major figure in the assassination of John Kennedy. I don’t
think the guy was unique.
As an aside, people who think the disgraceful behavior of
those in the traditional media during Obama’s campaigns and administration is
something new should look back at what was going on in the early 1960’s. Sober, self-important journalists referred to
Kennedy’s administration as “Camelot” without an observable trace of irony.
After the assassination, establishment journalists blamed the killing on a “climate
of hate” in Dallas because the city had been a source of criticism of Kennedy’s
foreign policies by conservatives. How
criticism by conservatives that Kennedy was too easy on the communists would
inspire a pro-communist (especially a pro-communist who is said to have
earlier taken a shot at one of those
conservative critics) to take a shot at
him was never explained. The dodge did, however, serve the purpose of allowing
those in the traditional media to avoid blaming communists or their
sympathizers for what happened. It was a commonplace for years after the event.
Some people still say it.
Labels: Castro, Jack Ruby, John Kennedy, Kennedy assassination, Lee Oswald, media, Soviet KGB
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