Why Was JFK Murdered?
by Donna Coe
A few years ago while traveling to Connecticut
I came across a book written by James W. Douglass, "JFK and The Unspeakable,
Why He Died and What It Matters".
At the time I thought it was just another book with more of
the same worn-out conclusions. I had no interest in reading it. It wasn’t until
recently when I came across an interview given by Lew Rockwell, that my
interest in this book reached a renewed level of curiosity. Reading JFK
and The Unspeakable prompted me to write to you today.
Mr. Douglass taps into an entirely different approach. His
approach is less about "who" pulled the trigger and more about "why" citizen
denial overwhelmingly took hold of our nation’s mindset, in addition to
the role of government’s plausible deniability, and how these elements
allowed the unspeakable to occur.
Before I continue some of the terminology and
circumstances Mr. Douglass discusses will need a brief explanation:
Citizen denial is a term that should be easy to
understand. The difficulty is to determine whether citizen denial was the
mindset in 1963 and whether it is our mindset today.
Plausible deniability is a term coined by the CIA
during the Kennedy administration. It is a term used to describe the
withholding of information from senior officials in order to protect them from
repercussions in the event that illegal or unpopular activities by the CIA
became public knowledge. Does the lack of evidence make the denial plausible,
meaning that it then becomes, credible? Is plausible deniability a tactic
used by the CIA today?
The explanation of the unspeakable is perhaps the
most interesting, yet it might also be the most difficult to grasp. It should
be noted that Mr. Douglass developed a deep admiration for the writings of
Father Thomas Merton. Father Merton was born in France
in 1915; he was a Trappist Monk, a poet and spiritual writer, social
activist, and student of comparative religion. It was
Father Merton who coined the phrase "The Unspeakable" that Mr.
Douglass uses in the title of his book. "The Unspeakable" as defined
by Father Merton and as it is understood by Mr. Douglass is, "an evil
whose depth and deceit seem to go beyond the capacity of words to
describe."
Mr. Douglass wants us to consider whether
the unspeakable succeeded due to citizen denial, because the truth
was hidden from us due to plausible deniability by government agencies. He
presents a compelling argument that President Kennedy was assassinated
by unspeakable forces, and he provides highly detailed and
intricately linked evidence based on his own research and a vast array of some
of the best scholarship.
In some ways Mr. Douglass actually extends the borderline
and opens news paths. One of the things that makes this book instructive and
worthy of reading is that Mr. Douglass is able to achieve an amazingly
different view through the use of new sources, or through sources that were
never used, underused, or simply not available. His years of scholarship,
along with fresh interviews and access to White House memos only released in
the mid-1990’s, prompted Gaeton Fonzi, former staff investigator for the U.S.
House Select Committee on Assassinations, to write that JFK and The Unspeakable
is "by far the most important book yet written on the subject." Mr.
Douglass meticulously documents his sources. There are nearly 100 pages of
documentation.
While it is important to examine the terminology and circumstances
that Mr. Douglass talks about, at the crux of his book is the sequence of steps
that transformed JFK from a Cold Warrior to someone determined to pull us back
from the brink of nuclear war. Even today, too few of us realize that President
Kennedy was fully immersed in a perilous battle toward peaceful negotiations
with all nations, including a back-channel dialogue with Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev. Every hypothesis, particularly when it is backed by recently
released information needs to be considered. Unmasking the truth is crucial.
Otherwise, we run the risk of not considering this tragic event in relation to
current events, regardless of who sits in the White House.
Historical truth is essential to our understanding, but
equally important is Douglass’ dissection of the actions of those in power
during the 1950’s and ’60’s in both domestic and international politics.
Kennedy, he posits, began as a Cold Warrior committed to Pax Americana secured
through superior nuclear military might. But the near cataclysmic disaster of
the Cuban Missile Crisis and the isolation Kennedy experienced from his own
military advisers forced him to reach out for help both publicly and in secret
back-channel memos to his greatest enemy: Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev.
Kennedy had what some leaders might call a conversion. He
turned toward peace. When the enemy is seen as human, everything changes. This
conversion locked Kennedy into a death spiral with the military industrial
complex and the CIA . They now considered JFK
a traitor because he reached out to Khrushchev in peace, and because
the CIA and the military industrial complex
were fanatically committed to what General Curtis E. LeMay described as,
"Pax Atomica," the annihilation of America ’s
enemies through nuclear war.
Kennedy showcased his new vision in June 1963 during a
speech at American University in
Washington , D.C. ,
by advocating the absolute necessity for nations to choose peace.
"What kind of peace do I mean?" asked
Kennedy. "Not a Pax Americana enforced on the world by American
weapons of war. Not the peace of the grave or the security of the slave. I am
talking about genuine peace, the kind of peace that makes life on earth worth
living ..." He spoke of his intentions to establish a Nuclear Test
Ban Treaty and he acknowledged the Russian people wanted peace as much as the
American people.
It was this speech, Mr. Douglass says, that prompted
"The Unspeakable" in the form of people within the U.S. intelligence
and the military industrial complex to act.
Mr. Douglass tells us that Kennedy was well aware of his
enemies and he was well aware of the dangers facing him. He tells the story
that, until now, I don’t think America
was ready to hear. It’s an old story of "prophets, kings and
consequences". It’s a story of how President Kennedy nearly started a
nuclear war then turned toward peace with the enemy who almost started it with
him. It’s our story, it desperately needs to be remembered and never forgotten.
Donna Coe [donnajeancoe@comcat.net ].
As I read this post, Douglass's book is on the table beside me. I've read it twice in the past month, as well as Douglass's "Gandhi and the Unspeakable: His Final Experiment With Truth."
ReplyDeleteDouglass has opened a particularly important window into the deaths of M.K. Gandhi, John F. Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther KIng, Jr., Malcolm X and Robert Kennedy.
With the death of Bobby Kennedy, the road to peace, justice and truth was closed in the United States, at least until the present regime falls. The US experienced a rolling coup d'etat, that changed this country, and the world, moved it into the direction of war, and foreclosed the avenue to peace.
The Unspeakable is so much in control, it seems that nothing can be done, except to await the inevitable decline and fall of the American Empire. We see the crumbling columns now, the grass growing in the cracks, the tree roots tearing apart the walls. It's only a matter of time.
Thought provoking books such these two will help provide the push to speed the process.