US declassified documents on Kennedy assassination, finding “Soviet trace” in them

The White House has declassified new details regarding the assassination of 55th US President John F. Kennedy – one of the most mysterious crimes of the twentieth century. Almost 1,500 investigative reports and other documents are posted on the website of the US National Archives and Records Administration and are available for public viewing.

One of the documents just released is the testimony of a CIA informant who goes by the name of “the Polish driver of the Soviet embassy.” He said that the government of the USSR was allegedly involved in financing the assassination of the president, who had been in office for less than three years.

John F. Kennedy, a representative of one of the most influential families in the United States and a hero of World War II, was one of the most popular US presidents in our country. His name is associated not only with the improvement in relations between the two countries following the particularly tense moments of the Cold War (such as the Berlin and Caribbean crises), but also with the sale of grain to the USSR, which was experiencing the consequences of a serious crop failure at that time, as well as an attempt to organize a joint Union flight to the moon. At the same time, there are many alternative versions of the Kennedy assassination, accusing both American and Soviet special services of involvement in this crime, but none of them has been confirmed.

Source: Rosbalt

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