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180-10145-10205 JFK Assassination Records Archives 1 (00/00/0000)

handle is hein.jfk/jfkarch82816 and id is 1 raw text is: 2022 RELEASE UNDER THE PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY ASSASSINATION RECORDS ACT OF 1992

SECRET
BACKGROUND
In April, 1976, the Senate Select Committee to Study
Government Operations With Respect to Intelligence Activities
(SSC) published their Final Report (Book V) which in essence
faulted the CIA for its errors of ommission in not informing
the Warren Commission of the Agency's on-going plots against
the revolutionary government in Cuba and its attempts on the
life of the premier, Fidel Castro. The Committee's rationale
is detailed on pages 6-7 of its Findings, but one paragraph
succinctly sums up their position.
Senior CIA officials also should have realized that
their agency was not utilizing its full capability to investi-
gate Oswald's pro-Castro and anti-Castro connections. They
should have realized that CIA operations against Cuba, par-
ticularly operations involving the assassination of Castro,
needed to be considered in the investigation. Yet, they
directed their subordinates to conduct an investigation with-
out telling them of these vital facts. Those officials, whom
the Warren Commission relied upon for expertise, advised the
Warren Commission that the CIA had no evidence of a foreign
conspiracy.  (p. 7, Book V)
Stung by the Senate criticism and the rippling effect
that Book V occasioned in the media, the CIA prepared a com-
prehensive report in 1977 designed to answer, at least within
the Agency, the critical questions posited in the SSC Final
Report. However, even the CIA's 1977 Report tacitly recognizes
the inadequacy of the CIA's narrow   response to the Warren
Commission's quest for all possible relevant information.
(Relevancy is, of course, the buyword upon which both
the Senate and Agency each base their position on the importance
of the anti-Castro plots to the Commission' s work.) On page
10 of the Agency's conclusions, the 1977 Report acknowledges
that:
While one can understand today why the Warren Com-
mission limited its inquiry to normal avenues of in-
vestigation, it would have served to re-inforce the
credibility of its effort had it taken a broader view
of the matter. CIA, too, could have considered in
specific terms what most saw in general terms -- the
possibility of Soviet or Cuban involvement in the
assassination (JFK) because of tensions of the time.
....The Agency should have taken broader initiatives,
then, as well.  (p. 10, 1977 Report)
rECRE'T
0002149     .
Ic- 10So5

1180-10145-102051

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