The JFK files released on March 18, 2025, consist of approximately 80,000 pages of previously classified documents related to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. These files were made public under President Donald Trump’s directive issued on March 17, 2025, in accordance with Executive Order 14176, and are now accessible through the National Archives, either online or in person at their College Park, Maryland facility. Based on initial reviews and expert commentary, here’s what appears relevant from the release:
- No Major Revelations on the Assassination Itself: Scholars and historians, as reported across multiple sources, indicate that these documents do not contain groundbreaking evidence that fundamentally alters the established narrative from the Warren Commission—that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in assassinating Kennedy on November 22, 1963. The files do not seem to provide definitive proof of conspiracy theories, such as direct CIA involvement or a second shooter, despite long-standing public speculation.
- Context on Oswald’s Activities: The documents shed additional light on Oswald’s movements and interactions prior to the assassination. This includes details about his visit to Mexico City in September 1963, where he contacted the Soviet and Cuban embassies, as well as CIA surveillance of those activities. While this adds context to his profile, it does not appear to contradict the lone gunman conclusion.
- Cold War Intelligence Insights: A significant portion of the files relates to intelligence operations during the Cold War, including CIA efforts to monitor Soviet and Cuban activities, assassination plots against Fidel Castro, and propaganda operations. Some documents reveal previously redacted names of CIA sources and methods, such as the use of fluoroscopic scanning to detect listening devices, but these are more relevant to historical intelligence practices than to the assassination itself.
- Agency Dynamics and Communication Failures: The files highlight communication breakdowns between agencies like the FBI and CIA, which were previously noted but are now further documented. For example, an FBI memo from J. Edgar Hoover on November 24, 1963, shortly after Oswald’s death, reflects the chaos and urgency of the moment but does not shift the core findings.
- Kennedy Family and Public Reaction: The release has drawn mixed responses. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. praised it as a step toward transparency, while Jack Schlossberg, JFK’s grandson, criticized it as politicizing his grandfather’s legacy without adding meaningful insight. Public sentiment, as reflected in some commentary, sees it as a “nothing burger” in terms of resolving conspiracy theories.
- Scope and Limitations: While billed as a “full release” of previously withheld records, some caveats remain. About 2,400 newly identified FBI documents were included, but roughly 500 records (e.g., tax-related or court-sealed documents) were not subject to this declassification. Additionally, not all files are fully digitized yet, meaning analysis is ongoing.
In summary, the relevance of the March 18, 2025, JFK files lies more in their historical detail—offering a deeper look at Cold War-era intelligence and Oswald’s background—than in providing a dramatic rethinking of the assassination. For those expecting bombshells, the consensus so far is that the release reinforces, rather than challenges, the official account, though researchers will continue to sift through the voluminous material for subtler insights.
So, look at the left hand with the shiny, but pay no attention to the right hand.
Better yet, look at the left hand of the driver of the car.
I can see it now new books hitting top sellers as a reassessing the Kennedy assassination.,….
Basically no earth shattering revelations . Warren report still hold basic no truth status. Let’s focus on the Cold War….!!!! By now all true information has been altered or destroyed. We are left with our own gut feelings, Oswald wasn’t the shooter, Johnson was the one that ordered shooting.
A Big Nothing Burger!
Look For The Same With RFK Files.
or maybe, the Warren report is correct, Oswalt did act alone, and it is you who are unable/unwilling to accept the truth.
Yes, belief in the “magic bullet”, that zig-zagged its way through the vehicle hitting two people and ending up in pristine condition on the bed next to Kennedy’s corpse. /smh
You need to research and if you believe Oswald was the long gunman(who wasn’t a marksman according to records) so happens to have a gun that was modified to curve after hitting its target upward and back. After your comment I better understand how the sheep got applied to certain class of
Society.
Last evening the self-described “most transparent administration ever” released the JFK files on the National Archives website, except that instead of the 8,000 documents, only 1,000 were actually “declassified.”
The most damning documents were conveniently and unsurprisingly omitted, while many important pages remained redacted; for example:
https://www.2ndsmartestguyintheworld.com/p/jfk-assassination-document-declassification
These”files” were thoroughly “sanitized” decades ago. The same will be true for any files on RFK and MLK. I also have no doubt the Epstein files have been equally corrupted. There is NO WAY IN HELL the criminals in power would have allowed any meaningful information to survive and see the light of day.
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