How RFK Could Have Saved
His Life, and His Country
In our previous article on the subject, we
explained why it was absolutely essential to the plotters of the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy that Vice President Lyndon Johnson and FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover be involved in the plot at the very least to the point
that they would have given it the green light. We also pointed out that they would have
to have been assured of the complete cooperation of the American press. How that was so might be explained by a
combination of my two poems, ÒSpook News and ViewsÓ and ÒMister Big.Ó
Another key actor in the drama had to be, at the
very least, neutralized. That was
President KennedyÕs brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. My best guess is that a combination of
methods was used to keep the younger Kennedy from upsetting the applecart. The most effective was probably just
overwhelming him with the display of united power that was arrayed against him
in the government and the press. And FBI Director Hoover would hardly have
been above playing one of his favorite cards, blackmail. Just recently, new evidence hardly
reported by the American press has come to light suggesting that Bobby really
did have an affair with actress Marilyn Monroe. Hoover would certainly have made it his
business to know about that. Monroe,
herself, died very suspiciously on August 5, 1962.
In fact, Bobby KennedyÕs behavior in the wake of
his brotherÕs assassination was very much like that of the title character in
William ShakespeareÕs Hamlet. One can easily make the case that he
was just biding his time until he could set things aright by attaining the
presidency when the opportunity arose.
He was still young. We
explore that question to a degree in our 2014 article, ÒDid Lyndon Step Down So Bobby Could Be Killed?
Timing, it has been said, is everything in
politics. Perhaps Bobby simply waited
too long to make his move. He
resigned as attorney general on September 3, 1964. The Warren Commission submitted its
report to President Johnson on September 24, and it was made public three days
later. Let us suppose that Bobby
had postponed his resignation until some time after the commission had finished
its work and then decided that it was time that he act more like Mark Antony in ShakespeareÕs Julius Caesar than like Hamlet. He might have requested national airtime
for a speech, indicating to the powers-that-be that the blackmail had taken and
that his intention was to put his seal of approval upon the Warren CommissionÕs
conclusions. Even had his request
been denied, had he made the following speech at a press conference, it is
likely to have had a very great effect:
The Speech
My fellow Americans, I come before you tonight
to speak about the great efforts that your president and his appointed
commission have made to lay to rest all the suspicions that have been raised
about the death of my brother, John.
As you have no doubt heard, many, if not all of the spectators who were
present at Dealey Plaza in Dallas on that fateful day
believe they heard shots fired from the front, or front-right of the
presidential motorcade; the Secret Service driver of my brotherÕs limousine
temporarily brought it to a virtual halt, as though he feared proceeding into
the hail of bullets. But the
presidentÕs commission, led by the esteemed Chief Justice Earl Warren has
assured us after very careful examination of the facts that the witnesses were all
mistaken and that all the shots were fired from above and behind the car by a
single gunman, and they are all very honorable men.
You might have heard as well that initially all
the doctors at Parkland Hospital who treated my stricken brother described the
bullet wound in his throat as an entrance wound. Early news reports explained that John
must have turned his head to look to the rear at the crowds, and it must have
been at that instant that the sniper high in the building to his right rear
shot him. However, a film of the
event came to light showing that the president was looking forward the entire
time, and the doctors, doubtless with the encouragement of the outstanding
agents of our Federal Bureau of Investigation, have changed their minds and
have concluded that the wound in the throat was from the exiting of a
bullet. Those doctors and those FBI
agents, I can assure you, are all very honorable men, and there is little chance
that the doctors have changed their stories because of pressure that might have
been brought upon them.
Some people who would undermine confidence in
our chosen leaders have been spreading the word that the rifle that was found
near assassin Lee Harvey OswaldÕs perch on the 6th floor of the Texas
Schoolbook Depository was a 7.65 mm German Mauser,
not the 6.5 mm Italian Mannlicher Carcano
that Oswald had obtained by mail order and used to shoot my brother with. While it is true that initial reports
said the rifle was found on the 5th floor, not the 6th,
and that Dallas police officer Seymour Weitzman, who discovered the rifle,
described it as a 7.65 German Mauser in an affidavit,
we were later assured by District Attorney Henry Wade that Weitzman was
mistaken and that it was a Mannlicher-Carcano that he
found (Wade, himself, was mistaken, Dallas authorities have told us, when he
reported to the newspapers that a map had been found in OswaldÕs room showing
the motorcade rout, with a dotted line from the sniperÕs perch to the
presidential limousine. There never
was any such map, they now say.) I
am sure that any mistakes that officer Weitzman or District Attorney Wade might
have made were honest ones. Mr.
Wade spent many years working for the FBI, the finest law enforcement
organization in the world, before assuming his current post, and he is an
honorable man.
Though others might have changed their accounts,
bringing them into closer accord with the objective findings of the commission,
a key witness who has not done so is the fine governor of the state of Texas, John Connally, who was gravely
wounded in the assault that killed my brother. To his credit, he has steadfastly
maintained that he heard the initial shot, the one that struck my brother in
the neck, and turned around to see John grasping his throat with both
hands. At that point, he says, he
felt a powerful blow to his back from the next shot, and, indeed, in the film
of the event one can see his cheeks puff out as the second shot collapses his
lung. One gunman with a bolt-action
rifle could not have fired two shots so quickly, however, so the presidentÕs
commission has concluded that the bullet that struck my brother in the neck is
the same one that passed through Governor ConnallyÕs body. Although he stands by his story,
Governor Connally has assured us that the members of
the commission are all such honorable men that it is their conclusions rather
than his experience that must be believed.
And Governor Connally, at least by his lights,
is himself an honorable man.
Someone else who apparently stuck by his story
to the end is the young man, Oswald, who was arrested shortly after my
brotherÕs murder. Even though he
was interrogated for two days without a lawyer present, he apparently never
wavered from his initial claim that he was just a patsy. Before he was able to defend himself in
court, a man with many connections to the organized crime network that our
administration had been vigorously pursuing killed him. Certain members of that crime network
have also worked in close cooperation with our Central Intelligence Agency, and
there is an abundance of evidence that Oswald was a relatively low level CIA
operative. He had been allowed back
into the country with a minimum of debriefing that we know of after he had
defected to the Soviet Union. He
had announced there that he would share important state secrets with his new
host country, secrets that he had learned while stationed at a very sensitive
U.S. Marine base in Japan. Not only
was he never charged with any crime but he even found
work in Texas that required a federal security clearance.
I have brought with me tonight
another young man who will be available to answer your questions. As a PFC in the U.S. Army, he worked as
a cryptographic clerk in Metz, France. His name is Eugene B. Dinkin. In October, the month before my
brotherÕs trip to Dallas, he decoded messages between members of the CIA and
organized crime that laid out specific plans for an assassination of the
president. At great personal risk,
he attempted to alert me of the plans by sending me a letter describing what he
had heard of the plot. That letter,
unfortunately, was intercepted, but after the assassination his mother informed
me of what he had done and of the persecution that he has suffered for his
futile attempt to change the course of history.
Not only did Private Dinkin
attempt to warn me about the assassination plans, but he also attempted to warn
the public by telling what he had learned to members of the American news
media. He had no more success than
I have had in alerting them to the cover-up of the murder plot that is taking
place. That is why I am addressing
you directly tonight.
So now, my fellow Americans, I ask you to support
my office as we open a truly independent investigation, one that will bring all
the perpetrators of this heinous crime to justice, from the lowest to the
highest. The course of our nationÕs
history must be changed from its current detour into the abyss. If we allow this horror, this affront to
the fundamental tenets of truth and justice, to stand we invite even worse
horrors to follow. Leader after
leader could be struck down and our country and its people could be led off into
one bloody foreign adventure after another on the most transparent of phony
pretexts.
I am confident that you will do your duty.
Virtually all the information that is in the
hypothetical speech was widely known at the time for anyone willing to navigate
the thicket of propaganda. See
Bertrand RussellÕs Ò16 Questions on the
AssassinationÓ
published on September 6, 1964. PFC
DinkinÕs experience was not known at the time, and we
do not know if either he or his mother was successful in making contact with
Robert Kennedy. We do know that
they tried. See my ÒAbuse of Psychiatry in the Kennedy
Assassination.Ó
The speech would have been almost as effective
even without bringing in Dinkin. Furthermore, in his position it is
highly likely that Bobby would have learned of testimony by other inconvenient
witnesses such as Ralph Leon Yates, whom we talk about in ÒMore Abuse of Psychiatry in the JFK Cover-up,Ó Richard Case Nagell, revealed by Dick Russell in his book, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Beverly Oliver, Mary Pinchot Meyer, or quite likely
someone that we have never heard of even to this day. Even more likely is that other people
with incriminating information would have emerged in the days after the speech
with Bobby, at last, having given them someone to whom they could safely come
forward.
Bobby Kennedy had the cards, but he waited too
long to play them. He might have
made such a speech as he accepted the nomination for president at the
Democratic Convention in 1968 with the eyes of the nation upon him. We will never know, because it was not
permitted to happen.
David Martin
February 6, 2017
Addendum
I have received this very incisive observation
by Constitutional scholar
Edwin Vieira:
At the moment of JFK's assassination, RFK became
potentially the most powerful man in this country. No one could have denied him
his right, as Attorney General, to head up the investigation of the
assassination, and to bring it to a satisfactory conclusion. Would Johnson have
dared to "fire" him? But, notwithstanding how "ruthless" he
had been portrayed as being, RFK turned out to be a fool who lacked the insight
and foresight to see that, if he failed to use the power he then had,
"they" would deny him access to a new position of sufficient power
later on. When he walked away from his duty as Attorney General, and to his own
brother, and to his country, he sealed his own fate.
Vince Foster death case expert Hugh Turley, however, in response has suggested that Vieira
reckons without the power of the press, which did its best from the very first
day to persuade the public that Oswald was the lone assassin, and the limited
time Bobby had as Attorney General to make his move. Lyndon Johnson established the
PresidentÕs Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy by executive
order exactly one week after the assassination to investigate the murder,
superseding the authority of the Justice Department. To be motivated to assert his own
authority Bobby also would have to have seen quickly and clearly that he was
dealing with a massive plot that included Johnson, J. Edgar Hoover, the CIA, key
elements of the military, and the press.
The power struggle that he would have faced would have been daunting,
and it would have been very difficult for him to know whom around him he could
trust.
One thing is certain. Any speech that he would have given
under the Vieira scenario would have been very different from the one that I
have imagined here.
David Martin
February 11, 2017
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