Re-Open RFK assassination
by Michael Carmichael
Global
Research, November 22, 2006
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=CAR20061122&articleId=3947
Planning
to write a film script about the case, Shane O’Sullivan, an independent
researcher, investigated the assassination of RFK. But, O’Sullivan
found much more than he had hoped.
On Monday night, the BBC broadcast
O’Sullivan’s report on their high-profile programme, Newsnight.
O’Sullivan’s findings shocked many people. Working through an
exhaustive analysis of videotapes made at the Ambassador Hotel on the
night of RFK’s assassination, O’Sullivan identified three figures as
former agents of the CIA. Two of the agents O’Sullivan identified could
be seen moving away from the hotel pantry shortly after the shooting of
RFK.
Following his preliminary
identifications, O’Sullivan presented the video images to more
authoritative sources, men who knew the three agents personally. While
there was a slender degree of uncertainty (circa 5-10%) the men in the
videos were positively identified as the former CIA agents:
David Sanchez Morales,
Gordon Campbell,
George Joannides.
Morales was known to be involved in
coups d’etats throughout Latin America and he had a reputation of a
dangerous man with an explosive temper who was capable of violence. To
entertain his friends, Morales would tell stories about his involvement
in the killing and capture of Che Guevara, coups in Latin America and
other nefarious covert activities.
Two of the CIA agents in the
Ambassador Hotel: Morales and Joannides are now dead, while the
whereabouts of the third, Campbell, are presently unknown.
O’Sullivan interviewed Bradley
Ayers, US Army Captain retired, who had been stationed at JM-Wave, the
Miami base for the CIA. In 1963, David Morales was the Chief of
Operations at JM-Wave. Ayers and Morales trained Cuban exiles in the
arts of sabotage to be deployed in covert action against the regime of
Fidel Castro. On camera, Ayers identified Morales and Campbell with
what he described as 95% accuracy. Following that positive
identification, Ayers introduced O’Sullivan to David Rabern, a
freelance mercenary who had been contracted by the CIA to participate
in the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961. Rabern had been in the ballroom of
the Ambassador Hotel on the fateful night in 1968.
While Rabern did not know Morales
and Campbell by name, he had noticed them talking to each other in the
hotel lobby prior to the assassination. Earlier in the same year,
Rabern had noticed Campbell in and around several police stations. If
true, this report is rather odd considering that the CIA has no
jurisdiction on US soil. Another bizarre fact: Morales was officially
stationed in Laos in 1968.
O’Sullivan found video images of
Campbell with another figure who has now been identified as George
Joannides, a pivotal figure in the CIA and the re-investigation of the
assassination of JFK.
Joannides had been the Chief of
Psychological Warfare Operations at JM-Wave. He had retired from his
CIA post, but in 1978 he returned to active duty, as it were, as the
liaison between the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA)
during its re-investigation of the assassinations of JFK and Martin
Luther King.
Puzzling, perplexing and
problematic, Joannides failed to inform his colleagues at the HSCA that
he had ever worked at JM-Wave. This is a troubling enigma for it
suggests that he intended to maintain his covert identity – a fact that
would compromise his involvement in the HSCA and jeopardize the entire
congressional investigation.
A former researcher with the HSCA,
Ed Lopez, identified Joannides as the person in the Ambassador Hotel
video with what he described on camera as 99% accuracy. More. Lopez
recalled Joannides obstructive practice of denying the HSCA access to
crucial documents in the re-investigation of the assassination of JFK.
O’Sullivan did not stop there.
Moving to Washington, he met Wayne Smith a veteran State Department
official who worked with Morales at the US embassy in Havana in the
final year of the Batista regime through the Cuban Revolution in 1959
and 1960. When O’Sullivan asked him to respond the Ambassador Hotel
video, Smith immediately stated, “That’s him, that’s Morales.” From a
conversation in 1975, Smith recalled that Morales stated that JFK
deserved to be assassinated. From Smith’s testimony, O’Sullivan learned
that Morales “hated the Kennedys” – because of their cancelling the air
support for the failed Bay of Pigs invastion of 1961.
In a hotel near the CIA
headquarters (now named the George H. W. Bush Center for Central
Intelligence) in Langley, Virginia, O’Sullivan met with a former agent,
Tom Clines who said that all of the men in the Ambassador Hotel videos
had been misidentified as former CIA agents. When O’Sullivan informed
him that Ayers and Smith had positively identified the men as Morales,
Campbell and Joannides, Clines became “disturbed,” and he refused to go
on camera for the interview.
Following his interview of Clines,
senior journalists in Washington advised O’Sullivan to take his
testimony with a grain of salt as he was known to “blow smoke”
deliberately as a routine function to dissemble facts for the press and
public.
Gaeton Fonzi was the lead
investigator of the HSCA investigation of the assassination of JFK. In
his book, The Last Investigation,
Fonzi reported the testimony of Bob Walton, a man who met Morales and
discussed JFK with him. According to Fonzi’s account, Morales asserted
his direct involvement in the assassination of JFK as revenge for the
Bay of Pigs.
On the Watergate tapes, Richard
Nixon always referred to the assassination of JFK as, “the Bay of Pigs
thing.” During Eisenhower’s presidency, Nixon served as the White House
liason with the CIA. As Vice-President Nixon worked directly with Allen
Dulles and other senior staff at the CIA on the planning of the Bay of
Pigs operation. It should be noted that George H. W. Bush has been
known to have been integral to the Bay of Pigs operation since the
publication of the enormously popular bestselling book of 1991, Plausible
Denial, by Mark Lane.
During his campaign for the
presidency in 1960, Nixon was shocked that JFK made public the contents
of his top-secret intelligence briefings – and had moved to Nixon’s
right to advocate overt military intervention against Cuba. The CIA
planned to overthrow Castro in an invasion manned with exiled Cubans
trained by the staff at JM-Wave. From our perspective today, it is
perfectly understandable why JFK would have been compelled to make this
policy position public in his presidential campaign. Had he not done
so, JFK could have been tarnished with a charge of being, “weak on
communism,” by Nixon who had been one of the leading witch-hunters of
the disgraceful McCarthy Era.
Upon his inauguration as president,
JFK continued to support the plans to attack Cuba with the force of
exiled Cubans – a project that Nixon had nurtured, supported and
managed for the Eisenhower White House. However, JFK decided to
withhold US air support in order to maintain an arm’s length separation
from the Cuban invasion.
The Bay of Pigs became a fiasco.
JFK accepted the blame, and he immediately ordered a thorough-going
reorganization of the CIA. A few months later, Allen Dulles, who had
been a free-wheeling manufacturer of coups d’etats while serving as
Director of Central Intelligence (DCI), ‘retired’ after a formal
conversation with JFK. JFK promptly named a new director, and John
McCone who had been the director of the Atomic Energy Commission soon
took Dulles’s place as DCI.
JFK’s reorientation of the CIA did
not stop there. Recognizing that the agency’s mission to wage a covert
Cold War was dangerously counterproductive, JFK ordered the CIA to make
nuclear non-proliferation its top priority. Eventually, JFK would
successfully negotiate the Test Ban Treaty with Nikita Khruschev in the
aftermath of the Cuban Missile Crisis - by far the most significant
strategic confrontation of the entire Cold War.
While rogue elements in the US
intelligence community have long been suspected of meddling in his
assassination and those of his brother and Martin Luther King, Shane
O’Sullivan’s identification of three CIA agents in the Ambassador Hotel
on the night of the assassination of RFK suggests strongly that the
case should be reopened. The third agent in the Ambassador Hotel,
George Joannides, now appears to have been engaged in a sabotage
mission during the HSCA investigation of JFK’s assassination.
The assassination of JFK would seem
to be an eternal mystery that has long since passed into the realm of
myth, however that is not the case for today, technology has provided a
wealth of new tools with which to examine evidence in criminal cases –
even cold cases over forty years old.
While O’Sullivan is calling for a
re-opening of the case of RFK, it is only reasonable to re-open JFK’s
case, as well.
In 1968, I was in my final year at
the University of North Carolina. From my meeting with a close
associate of RFK, I worked as a college and university organizer in his
presidential campaign. At the time of his assassination, RFK was the
leading candidate for the presidency – far ahead of his nearest rival
in the polls and definitely on track to win the November election.
Seeing the BBC broadcast of video
tape evidence of three unassigned CIA agents in the Ambassador Hotel
Ballroom at the time of RFK’s assassination shocked me. The federal
government, Congress and the criminal justice system of the United
States failed to protect the president of the United States and its
leading presidential candidates. Worse. They have failed to tell the
truth to the American people.
Today, on the anniversary of one of
the most tragic dates in American history – I propose that he cases of
RFK and JFK should be re-opened in either the 110th or the 111th
Congress.
We must follow the evidence
exhaustively and relentless, leaving no stone unturned and no document
unexamined regardless of its current status: Sensitive; Secret, Top
Secret or Above Top Secret. To do any less would be to become complicit
in the lies and cover-ups that have denied the American people of the
truth.
References
CIA
role claim in Kennedy killing
Did the
CIA kill Bobby Kennedy?
DID
CIA KILL RFK? - Screenwriter Finds Evidence Implicating 3 CIA Officers
David
Morales/spartacus