The Moscow KGB and Mexico City CIA
Records on the Assassination of President Kennedy
By William Kelly
In his CAPA Sunshine Week talk at
the National Press Club in March, Judge John Tunheim, the former chairman of
the Assassinations Records Review Board (ARRB) called attention to the Russian
KGB files on Oswald that he saw in Minsk and read in part, but was unable to
obtain copies of for the JFK Collection at the National Archives (NARA).
Tunheim also said that the Review
Board was pressed by almost every agency of government to keep the records
relating to Oswald in Mexico City withheld because of the special relationship
the US government had with the government of Mexico.
As Tunheim noted, the situation has
changed considerably since the ARRB went out of business, the Cold War is over,
and President Trump’s relationship with Russia might allow for the public
release of Oswald’s extensive KGB file of his time in the Soviet Union.
America’s relationship with Mexico
has also changed, there is a new government in power and the special
relationship the US government is different than it was fifty years ago, so
there is no real reason to keep those records secret.
In his CAPA Sunshine Week talk at
the NPC Tunheim said of the KGB files:
Tunheim: “There
are some documents I want to see out - the KGB file. I was there – I came very
close to getting a copy of that file. It stands about five feet high when piled
on top of each other – they are fascinating –and detail what Oswald did when he
was in the Soviet Union. They are all in Russian but I had some read to me.
Norman Mailer was there earlier than me and had some released to him, he bought
some of them, and I offered to pay to make copies, but our relationship with
Belarus got worse and worse and I couldn’t get them out of there. I would like
to get them out. There is a full copy in the Kremlin as well. The original was
sent to Belarus – when the Soviet Union broke up the KGB files were sent to the
primary area of origin rather than kept in Moscow.”
“Speaking
of KGB files, there is a huge cache of KFB records in Moscow dealing the
assassination of President Kennedy. Back at the time the Russians were
concerned, everyone agrees there are a lot of files because there was strong
suspicions that they were involved, so they had what everyone agrees was a
pretty extensive investigation. I didn’t get any help from the State Department
despite they were required to by law, they didn’t assist us.”
“We
had some help from Vice President Gore got some records from the Prime
Minister. (But) My attempts over there didn’t work – I had the US Ambassador
with me, but there was no indication that the government supported me, so I
didn’t get the support I needed, and they knew my government didn’t support me
so they weren’t going to give me anything."
“I
often got questions in return to my question – ‘What is your time frame on the
records,’ and they would say, ‘What makes you think we have records in the
files?’ I’d got a question back from them.”
“I’d
like to see that, that will probably come out, so researchers have access to
that, we paid someone to keep negotiating that, but nothing really happened
with that, though I thought they would be very helpful.”
Of the Mexico City records Tunheim
said:
“One more example I thought of is
there’s a bunch of stuff related to Mexico City, largely related to our
relationship with the Mexican government, and we received a full court press –
not only from the State Department but the CIA and other agencies as well, not
to release because it was thought be detrimental to our relationship with the
Mexican government at the time. I guess we don’t have much of relationship with
the Mexican government today (laugh) – It doesn’t matter anymore – but the
political party in charge then is no longer the controlling party
in Mexico today.”
“So
our Cooperation with Mexican Government during that time, and intelligence
activities in the 1960s – there’s no real reason to protect that anymore. So
that is a good example of a larger group of material that should come out.”
The Soviet KGB records on Oswald in
Russia that were given to Norman Mailer are now in the possession of his former
assistant Lawrence Schiller, who refused to relinquish them or copies to the
ARRB.
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