President Trump declassified the JFK assassination files.
But there was one bombshell not in the documents.
And the CIA, the mob, Cuban exiles. JFK’s secretary says one of them gave the kill order.
As American Patriot Daily reports:
Evelyn Lincoln volunteered for John F. Kennedy’s first Senate campaign in 1952 and worked her way up to the position of his personal secretary.
Lincoln was so close to Kennedy that Kennedy discussed dumping Vice President LBJ from the ticket in 1964 with her.
An 11-page addendum to an unpublished third memoir from Lincoln, entitled “I Was There,” contained Lincoln’s belief that Kennedy was the victim of a “political hit.”
‘From the catbird seat that I had during my 12 years as John F. Kennedy’s Personal Secretary, I would have to say that, in my opinion, President Kennedy’s death in Dallas, Texas, was a deliberate professional political murder, planned by a group in government who wanted him removed from office,’ Lincoln wrote.
Jefferson Morley, editor of JFK Facts, told the Daily Mail that Kennedy and Lincoln were so close that Lincoln’s view on the assassination likely reflected Kennedy’s view about who was after him.
Lincoln described just how close she was to Kennedy in the book.
‘He (President Kennedy) insisted that I know exactly where he was and with whom at all times,’ she wrote. ‘I became the one link to whom everyone turned, the family, the friends, the important people, if they wanted to talk to him or leave messages for him,’ Lincoln stated.
‘It, therefore, became very important that I know his whereabouts. I always had the telephone number where he could be reached, and he had a telephone number in case he wanted to call me,’ Lincoln added.
She was a very loyal person. She had turned her mind and her work to him; she served him. And so, yes, I think this thinking does reflect how he would think about this event himself,” Morley declared.
‘She wrote this at the end of her life and never published it; it’s not quite clear why, so I think it’s valuable testimony from somebody very close to JFK,’ Morley continued.
Lincoln listed the various suspects who wanted Kennedy dead – the mob, Cubans, Russians, the Ku Klux Klan, and the FBI.
‘It is ironic, I feel, that so many of these factions, who felt so strongly against the President, had their people in or around Dallas at the time of the assassination,’ Lincoln went on to write.
‘Any one of these factions, I reasoned, could have hired a hit man. I have heard that they come dime a dozen. Likewise, the atmosphere in Dallas at the time was filled with hatred and suspicion. The time was ripe to pull this off,’ Lincoln said.
Lincoln settled on angry Cuban exiles still furious over the Bay of Pigs operation.
‘The President, when it became apparent that the plan would fail, unless there was American military intervention, called the operation off,’ Lincoln wrote.
Lincoln explained that Kennedy’s refusal to order a military operation infuriated the Cuban exiles and their CIA allies.
‘He antagonized the Cuban exiles and the CIA by his refusal to go along with the plan, and the CIA was likewise infuriated when the President said he would like to blow the CIA to pieces because they mishandled the plan,’ Lincoln revealed.
Kennedy’s failure to oust Castro, Lincoln went on to say, created the motivation among the Cubans, the mob, and the CIA to kill Kennedy.
‘Thus a linkage grew between the Mob, the CIA and right-wing extremists over what they felt was the President’s moderation toward Castro, his civil rights proposals, his drive for peace and the Kennedys’ crusade against organized crime,’ Lincoln wrote.
‘Therefore, it is logical to conjecture that these elements could have formed a conspiracy to assassinate the President,’ Lincoln stated.