March 26, 2025 — Washington, D.C.
By: James Thompson

In a move stirring renewed debate and suspicion, the National Archives last week released a long-awaited batch of previously classified documents related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. While some hoped the final files would close the chapter on one of America’s most haunting mysteries, the opposite has occurred. Many of the newly declassified records appear to bolster arguments long made by conspiracy theorists — that the full truth about JFK’s death has been obscured by powerful forces within the U.S. government.
The 2025 release, part of a decades-long process mandated by the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992, includes more than 1,400 pages of CIA, FBI, and State Department documents. While heavily redacted files have been released in waves since the 1990s, these new records are the most complete to date, shedding light on shadowy intelligence operations, foreign entanglements, and internal government concerns — some of which suggest foreknowledge or complicity in the events surrounding November 22, 1963.
Key Revelations:
1. CIA Surveillance of Oswald Before the Assassination
One of the most explosive findings centers around the CIA’s surveillance of Lee Harvey Oswald prior to the assassination. A formerly top-secret memo reveals that the CIA had opened a 201 file on Oswald in 1960 — well before his defection to the Soviet Union and his subsequent return to the U.S. in 1962.
New details show that Oswald was under active surveillance during his visit to Mexico City in September 1963, where he attempted to obtain visas from both the Cuban and Soviet embassies. Phone intercepts and photos of Oswald — some previously withheld — now confirm that U.S. intelligence agencies had real-time information about his movements. Yet, there is no evidence they acted on these warnings.

Critics argue this undermines claims by the Warren Commission that Oswald was a “lone nut” who escaped the radar of federal agencies. Instead, the picture that emerges is of a man of interest whose activities were well known — and possibly manipulated — by intelligence officials.
2. Questions Around “The Mexico City Tapes”
The new files also provide fresh insight into the mysterious “Mexico City tapes.” For decades, controversy has swirled around audio recordings from the CIA’s wiretaps in Mexico City, where an individual claiming to be Oswald contacted the Soviet embassy. The problem? U.S. officials who listened to the tapes after the assassination said the voice did not match Oswald’s.
Previously redacted memos now confirm that CIA officers raised concerns in real-time about this discrepancy — yet the tapes were conveniently “erased” before they could be analyzed further. The documents suggest that senior officials, including then-CIA Deputy Director Richard Helms, were involved in decisions to suppress or ignore contradictory evidence.
3. Possible Cuban and Mafia Connections
The newly released records reignite long-held suspicions about the intersection of organized crime, anti-Castro Cuban exiles, and U.S. intelligence operations. A declassified memo from 1962 reveals that the CIA was actively pursuing assassination plots against Fidel Castro using Mafia intermediaries — including notorious figures like Sam Giancana and Johnny Roselli.

Another document refers to a “contingency” discussion within the CIA’s Western Hemisphere Division about how to handle “blowback” if such operations were exposed — including the possibility that rogue agents or criminal elements might redirect violence toward U.S. leaders.
One memo, previously hidden under national security exemptions, describes concerns that “individuals involved in Cuba-related operations may possess both the motive and the means” to target American officials seen as “soft on communism.” JFK’s decision to shut down certain anti-Castro missions after the Cuban Missile Crisis caused deep resentment among exiles and operatives alike.
4. Internal Doubts About the Warren Commission
Perhaps most damning are several documents revealing skepticism within the government about the Warren Commission’s lone gunman conclusion. A memo dated 1964 from FBI Assistant Director William Sullivan warned that “the public will not believe Oswald acted alone,” citing conflicting ballistic evidence and the implausibility of Oswald’s shooting accuracy.
An internal CIA communication also reveals that high-ranking agency figures were concerned that the Commission’s work would “open doors best left closed” — particularly regarding covert operations in Latin America and Oswald’s associations with intelligence-linked entities like the Fair Play for Cuba Committee.
Public Reaction and Expert Analysis
In the days since the release, historians, journalists, and citizens have pored over the documents with both fascination and fury. Jefferson Morley, a leading researcher on the CIA’s role in the JFK saga, told The Washington Independent that “this is the most significant release in decades — not because it provides a smoking gun, but because it confirms patterns of deception and obfuscation that can no longer be dismissed.”
Author and former prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi, before his death, maintained that the evidence overwhelmingly supported Oswald acting alone. But critics argue that the new files render such confidence untenable.
Social media has exploded with new theories, drawing connections between names and timelines. Grassroots efforts to build open-source databases are underway to comb through the files for undiscovered threads.
The Lingering Questions
While no single document in the 2025 release definitively proves a conspiracy, the cumulative effect of these revelations paints a picture far more complex than the official narrative of a lone gunman with a mail-order rifle. They raise the possibility — even likelihood — of a broader web of negligence, manipulation, or even cover-up.

If Oswald was being watched so closely, why was no action taken? If key tapes and memos contradicted the lone gunman theory, why were they destroyed or buried? And if government insiders harbored doubts about the official story, why were those concerns never shared with the public?
A Closing Chapter, or a New Beginning?
President Biden, in a brief statement following the release, acknowledged “the public’s right to transparency” while emphasizing “national security concerns that still persist.” Some documents remain redacted or delayed, leading to calls for full disclosure.
For now, the assassination of John F. Kennedy remains a wound in the American psyche — one layered with secrecy, shadows, and unanswered questions. With each release, the official story becomes harder to defend, and the call for a reckoning grows louder.
Whether these new files bring us closer to the truth or simply widen the space for speculation, one thing is clear: the story of JFK’s death — and the power struggles it exposed — is far from over.
By James Thompson. James Thompson is an author and ghostwriter, and a political analyst.
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