On September 22, 1964, just a few days before the Warren Commission released its report, a CIA Bulletin titled “
Propaganda Notes” stated that the U.S. State Department would be sending copies of the Warren Commission Report to “American Diplomatic Posts” for “selective presentation to editors, jurists, Government officials, and other opinion leaders.”
The
Propaganda Notes Bulletin also states that CIA Headquarters would be sending “copies of this Government Printing Office edition” to CIA “field stations,” where “covert assets should explain the tragedy . . . and counter all efforts to misconstrue it . . . . Divisions should make bulk purchases for field use through regular channels.”
The American taxpayer would be paying various “divisions” of the Central Intelligence Agency to purchase “bulk” quantities of the Warren Commission Report. CIA “field officers” and their “covert assets” in the United States and abroad would then use the report to push the idea that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone assassin and there was no conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy.
By January 1967, less than two and a half years after the “
Propaganda Notes” Bulletin, the CIA was so concerned about people still thinking there was a conspiracy to kill President Kennedy that it issued a thirteen-page dispatch titled “Countering Criticism of the Warren Report,” stating “speculation about the responsibility” for the assassination had been “stemmed by the Warren Commission report, which appeared at the end of September 1964. Various writers have now had time to scan the Commission’s published report and documents.”
“There has been a new wave of books and articles criticizing the Commission’s findings . . . . Conspiracy theories have frequently thrown suspicion on our organization.”
Under “Action,” the dispatch instructs CIA officers to “discuss the publicity problem with liaison and friendly elite contacts, especially politicians and editors,” and tell these “friendly elite contacts” that the “charges of the critics are without serious foundation.”
It also instructs CIA officers to “urge” their contacts to “use their influence.” CIA officers were told to “employ
propaganda assets to answer and refute the attacks of the critics.” They were also told that “book reviews and feature articles” would be “particularly appropriate” for “
propaganda assets” to use.
In the end, the Warren Report was nothing but a work of
propaganda designed to relieve the CIA of culpability in their one and only successful assassination of a United States President.
In July 1968, the CIA sent a dispatch to all CIA stations and bases around the world, and it contained a nineteen-page article critical of Jim Garrison and his investigation. The dispatch states, “You may use the article to brief interested contacts, especially government and other political leaders.” It also states that the article should be used to demonstrate “that there is no hard evidence of any such conspiracy.”
After the CIA’s 1964 “
Propaganda Notes” Bulletin, and after the CIA’s 1967 “Countering Criticism of the Warren Report,” the CIA engaged in a worldwide effort to disparage a New Orleans District Attorney and his investigation.
The CIA, established for the sole purpose of spying on foreign countries, will go anywhere and do anything to get people to believe the Warren Commission Report.
The CIA does not want anyone to know that KGB officers inside the CIA killed JFK as part of a quest to control the United States government, a quest in which renegade CIA officers are still engaged. My book has all the details. Click the link.
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