The newly released documents include later testimonies from KGB officers about Lee Harvey Oswald's time in the Soviet Union. Around 97% of JFK files have now been released to the public.
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The US National Archives released 13,173 documents relating to the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy on Thursday.
The latest release means 97% of documents related to the assassination have now been made public. It follows a similar release of files by the Trump administration in 2017.
However, the White House still withheld thousands of documents at the request of unspecified government agencies.
In a memorandum on Thursday, US President Joe Biden said the National Archives and relevant agencies "shall jointly review the remaining redactions in the records that had not been publicly disclosed."
He said that "any information withheld from public disclosure that agencies do not recommend for continued postponement" will be released by June 30, 2023.
What do the new documents contain?
The bulk of the documents released on Thursday concerned Lee Harvey Oswald, who was convicted of assassinating Kennedy in November 1963.
Oswald had defected to the Soviet Union in 1959 before returning to the United States in 1962.
A 1963 document describes how CIA officials in Mexico City "intercepted a telephone call" Oswald made to the Soviet Embassy there "using his own name" and speaking "broken Russian."
Also among the newly released files was one 1990 document that recounts a debriefing of a former KGB officer. The officer said Oswald was recruited by the KGB after defecting but was considered to be "a bit crazy and unpredictable."
The officer said the KGB had no further contact with Oswald after he returned to the United States and denied any official mission to assassinate the president.
Another document from 1991 cites a different KGB source who said Oswald was "at no time an agent controlled by the KGB."
The assassination of John F. Kennedy
On November 22, 1963, US President John F. Kennedy was assassinated: for the western world, his murder was a shot through the heart.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
A shot through the heart of the Western world
At 12:31 Dallas time, several gunshots hit the US president in the heart and in the head — in front of running cameras. His wife, Jackie Kennedy, was with him at the time, as was his host, the governor of Texas, John Connally, with his wife Nellie. Connally, too, was seriously wounded. It is still not known how many shots were fired or in what order they were fired.
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A day that changed history
It was a sunny Friday morning when the US president and the first lady arrived at the airport in Dallas. It was the second day of Kennedy's election trail in the conservative state of Texas. JFK himself suggested opening the top of the limousine for the motorcade through the city.
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The president is dead
An hour after his arrival, the 35th president of the United States was hit by gunshots on Dealey Plaza. When he arrived at the Parkland Memorial Hospital, his heart was still beating, but the bullet that had pierced his head made any attempt to save him impossible. Kennedy died at the age of 46.
Image: picture-alliance/Everett Collection
Return to Washington
When Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as president on board Air Force One, Jackie Kennedy was right next to him. Kennedy's coffin was also on board at the time, since his body was returned to Washington for a post-mortem. Four days later, Johnson appointed a commission to examine the assassination. The results released by the Warren Commission have remained disputed, however.
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The suspect Lee Harvey Oswald
The shots fired at the president had apparently come from the sixth-floor window of the Texas School Book Depository. The gun belonged to Lee Harvey Oswald, who was originally arrested as a suspect in the murder of a policeman an hour and a half after the assassination. Only in the course of Oswald's interrogation did police begin suspecting him of JFK's murder as well. Oswald denied both murders.
Image: Reuters
Silenced forever
On November 24, a camera crew from a national TV station was filming Oswald's transfer to another prison when night club owner Jack Ruby appeared in front of the suspected assassin and took him down with a single gunshot. Millions of people witnessed the murder on screen. Oswald, too, was brought to the Parkland Memorial Hospital, where he then died.
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A shocked population
When the president was buried on November 25 at Arlington National Cemetery, millions of people lined the roads to accompany JFK on his final journey. The memorial service became an international media event.
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Final journey
After JFK's death, Jackie mourned her husband, while a nation mourned a politician who had inspired so many. After the memorial service in St. Matthew's Cathedral in Washington, Kennedy's two brothers and his veiled widow accompanied the president's coffin to his final resting place. Five years later, Robert Kennedy was also the victim of an assassination.
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He was a "Berliner"
Germany, too, was shaken by John F. Kennedy's death. Especially in West Berlin, JFK had become an idol after his legendary declaration of "Ich bin ein Berliner" during a speech in August 1963, in which he expressed his solidarity with the divided city. After JFK's death, thousands of people expressed their sorrow by writing in condolence books or by laying flowers or wreaths at the Berlin Wall.
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What if?
The peak of Cold War hostilities came during Kennedy's term as Democratic president from 1961-63. Those years witnessed the Berlin Wall, the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Vietnam war. A young, charismatic president, for many "Jack" — as JFK was often known — embodied a new age for the United States. His assassination was a terrible blow to US consciousness.
Image: Getty Images/Keystone/Hulton Archive
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Major bombshells unlikely
Thousands of books, articles, TV shows and films have explored the idea that Kennedy's assassination was the result of an elaborate conspiracy — all without conclusive proof.
Kennedy scholars say the latest trove of documents to be released is unlikely to reveal any major bombshells or put to rest the countless conspiracy theories surrounding the assassination.