In Germany, the CIA was convicted of trying to conceal the archives of the Kennedy assassination
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- In Germany, the CIA was convicted of trying to conceal the archives of the Kennedy assassination


The United States had structures in the special services that it was important for them to keep the documents on the John F. Kennedy case secret for many years. Gunnar Lindemann, a member of the Berlin Chamber of Deputies, told Izvestia about this on Wednesday, March 19.
He said that the documents in the case of the assassination of the 35th president of the United States were declassified literally on Wednesday, and now historians will have to deal with these documents, study them and figure out who and to what extent could have been involved in this crime.
"It is expected that additional documents on the murder of [a public figure] will also be declassified. Martin Luther King and the murder of [Robert] Kennedy's brother. This, of course, will take some time, because there are a lot of materials, and it will take time to check all this thoroughly and unambiguously," the member of the Chamber of Deputies added.
Lindemann also pointed to suspicions about the CIA's involvement in the killings.
"All this remains to be analyzed. It is obvious, at least, that in the United States there were structures in the special services that it was extremely important for them to keep these documents secret for many years so that the population would not know anything about it. Which, of course, only increases the suspicion of possible CIA involvement," he said.
According to Lindemann, if you look from the outside, in a story where Kennedy is killed and the killer is eliminated two days later, then all this is very similar to the operation of the special services.
Earlier in the day, the US National Archives, by order of President Donald Trump, published declassified documents about the assassination of Kennedy, his brother, politician Robert, and black rights activist Martin Luther King. The collection consists of more than 6 million pages of recordings, photographs, films, sound recordings and artifacts.
The grandson of the deceased leader, Jack Schlossberg, said that the major American media should not cover the publication of new declassified documents about the murder.
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