Authors: Lamar Waldron
Helms lied to the Warren Commission when he told them no one in the
CIA had suggested interviewing Oswald. In 1964, James Angleton and
his chief deputy were working with Helms on dealing with the Warren
Commission, and the same people and departments helped to compile
the January 4, 1967, CIA memo, furnishing “most of the themes” attack-
ing critics. Also involved in preparing the memo was the Covert Action
staff, and given the turf wars at the CIA, only Richard Helms could have
ordered such a coordinated effort.
The official who signed off on the January 1967 anti-critics memo was
Cord Meyer, the Chief of Covert Action, who reported to Helms and
FitzGerald.7 Aside from protecting CIA operations, Cord Meyer had an
additional, personal reason to stifle further journalistic prying into JFK’s
life and death. In 1967, the American public was still eight years away
from the first news reports of any extramarital affair by JFK, but Meyer’s
ex-wife had been one of JFK’s more regular mistresses.
Cord Meyer and his wife, Mary, had divorced soon after the 1959 death
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of their son. Unlike her straitlaced husband, Mary was free-spirited and
artistic. She was also the sister-in-law of JFK’s good friend,
Washington
Post
editor Ben Bradlee. According to historian Richard Reeves, JFK’s
affair with her lasted from February of 1962 until his death. Among
Washington’s social set, their liaison had not been that unusual.
In 1964, Mary Meyer was shot and killed during an apparent
robbery.8 By 1967, Cord Meyer had no desire to see the press dredge
up his wife’s death or affair with JFK, so he would have been glad to
help Helms clamp down on Warren Commission critics.9 While Cord
Meyer’s actions in 1967 have not been declassified, a later example
shows what he probably did if information embarrassing to the CIA
threatened to become public. In 1972, Meyer tried to suppress the
publication of
The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia
by Alfred McCoy,
which noted the drug trafficking of Santo Trafficante and associates of
Manuel Artime.10
The CIA’s January 4, 1967, memo encouraged the CIA “Chiefs, [of] Cer-
tain Stations and Bases,” to have their personnel attack critics of the
Warren Report, as well as to disseminate helpful information and propa-
ganda supporting the Report’s conclusion that Oswald acted alone. The
memo opens with a four-page overview, supplemented by forty-nine
pages of articles and additional information.
The CIA memo often does the same thing it accuses the Warren Report
critics of doing: distorting the truth. Some of its claims are misleading or
simply false, as is clear from reading all of the relevant books and articles
the CIA memo refers to. The memo also ignores the fact that Helms and
other top officials had withheld massive amounts of crucial information
from the Warren Commission.
At times, the CIA memo resorts to McCarthy-esque Red baiting,
smearing critics as being under the sway of communists. Those claims,
along with others the memo details, would continue to be used against
Warren Report critics (including members of Congress and government
investigators) for decades to come, and even today. That’s not because
current authors who support the Warren Report are working for the
CIA, but because the CIA’s arguments and claims (some gathered from
the press) were codified and recycled back to the press and then to the
public, where they continue to keep resurfacing.
The title of the January 4, 1967, CIA memo is “Countering Criticism
of the Warren Report.” The CIA department that sent it was named
“WOVIEW,” a code name that has not previously appeared in any book.11
The memo’s aim “is to provide material for countering and discrediting
the claims” of Warren Report critics, whom the memo calls “conspir-
acy theorists.” Many mainstream journalists still use that term today to
describe anyone who disagrees with the Warren Report. To provide legal
cover for a document that was distributed relatively widely within the
CIA, the agency claims the memo’s purpose was “to inhibit the circula-
tion of such claims in other countries,” even though the CIA’s earlier
action in regard to
Ramparts
and
The Invisible Government
illustrates that
the US was a primary concern. CIA Station Chiefs were told to
discuss the publicity problem with liaison and friendly elite contacts
(especially politicians and editors), pointing out that the Warren
Commission made as thorough an investigation as humanly pos-
sible, that the charges of the critics are without serious foundation,
and that further speculative discussion only plays into the hands of
the opposition. Point out that parts of the conspiracy talk appear to
be deliberately generated by Communist propagandists.12
The CIA station chiefs were ordered “to employ propaganda assets
to answer and refute the attacks of the critics. Book reviews and fea-
ture articles are particularly appropriate for this purpose.” Among the
attacks to be used against critics were claims they were “wedded to
theories adopted before the evidence was in,” and were “hasty and inac-
curate in their research.” The opposite was true in many cases, since the
Warren Commission had to complete its inquiry in a matter of months,
and the FBI admits essentially completing its own investigation in four
days, while the critics had years to pore over material before arriving at
conclusions of conspiracy. The memo says critics should also be derided
as being “financially interested.”13 The CIA seems to resent that “Mark
Lane’s
Rush to Judgment
, published on 13 August 1966, had sold 85,000
copies by early November,” and suggests using his lucrative sales to
claim that all conspiracy writers were motivated by money—despite
that fact that several of the books cited by the CIA had sold only a few
thousand copies.
CIA personnel are told that “in private or media discussion,” they
should claim that “no significant new evidence [underlining in original]
has emerged which the Commission did not consider.” The CIA memo
does not acknowledge any possibility that journalists or investigators
might turn up information that was overlooked by, or unavailable to,
the Warren Commission or the FBI. It does not state that such evidence
should be evaluated or considered; it notes only that anyone disagreeing
with the “lone nut” conclusion should be countered and discredited.14
The CIA memo accurately observes that in the recent flurry of articles
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and books, “no new culprits have been convincingly identified.” Helms
and the FBI had withheld so much information from the Warren Com-
mission that the Mafia was almost never mentioned, and the critics could
mount only vague theories about the possible involvement of Cuban
exiles or CIA personnel. The CIA memo is less accurate when it claims
that “critics . . . place more emphasis on the recollections of individual
eyewitnesses . . . and less on ballistic, autopsy, and photographic evi-
dence.” The Warren Commission’s own twenty-six supporting volumes
show that the Commission (and FBI) often cherry-picked witnesses and
parts of their statements to support the Commission’s case, and several
of the critics’ books did, in fact, make extensive use of “ballistic, autopsy,
and photographic evidence.”15
CIA personnel are told to point out to media assets “that Robert Ken-
nedy, Attorney General at the time and John F. Kennedy’s brother, would
be the last man to overlook or conceal any conspiracy.” It’s sadly ironic
that at the very time when the CIA memo was being issued, Bobby
was getting ready to reactivate his own private investigations into his
brother’s murder. Plus, as Bobby had stated in Congressional testimony
before JFK’s assassination, the top men in the Mafia always insulate
themselves in the case of mob hits, and prosecuting such a criminal
conspiracy is almost impossible.16
The CIA memo makes a valid point regarding the overly large “mys-
terious death” lists some writers were using at that time, prior to the
flurry of murders in the mid-1970s, the victims of which would include
Giancana, Hoffa, Rosselli, and Nicoletti. It also tells CIA Station Chiefs
that when they release propaganda supporting the Warren Report,
they should emphasize the fact that “the Commission staff questioned
418 witnesses [and] the FBI interviewed far more people, conducting
25,000 interviews and reinterviews.” (The fact that none of those inter-
views involved Cuban exile leaders working for the CIA or the Mafia is
ignored.) CIA personnel are told that “reviewers of other books might be
encouraged to add to their account the idea that, checking back with the
Report itself, they found it far superior to the work of its critics.” How
many reviewers obeyed the CIA’s directive, and how many of those
reviews were placed by E. Howard Hunt, we can only wonder.17
It should be noted that the CIA’s anti-critic memo was only a supple-
ment to whatever efforts Helms, FitzGerald, and Hunt were pursuing
as part of their usual contacts with publishers and the press. While pro–
Warren Commission books would start appearing within months of the
CIA memo’s release, what role, if any, the CIA played in their production
or promotion is impossible to discern. Those questions can be answered
only when the files of Hunt, WOVIEW, and others are declassified.
The CIA memo’s lowest point is when it helpfully details how Nazi
files can be used to discredit author and Holocaust survivor Joachim
Joesten, author of
Oswald: Assassin or Fall Guy
and other works criticizing
the Warren Report. Bernard Fensterwald and Michael Ewing point out
that “Helms’ aides had used data on Joesten which had been gathered
by Hitler’s Chief of S.S. on November 8, 1937.” The CIA’s January 4,
1967, memo lists three places, including the National Archives, where
CIA personnel or friendly journalists can obtain the Nazi information
to use against Joesten.18 The effort to discredit Joesten was part of a CIA
approach to demonstrate that “some writers appear to have been pre-
disposed to criticism [of the Warren Report] by anti-American, far-left,
or Communist sympathies.” Included in the list to smear are notables
like England’s Bertrand Russell.19
Helms succeeded in getting the CIA, as an organization, behind the
cover-up he needed to conceal his own misjudgments and unauthorized
activities, but the effects of Helms’s effort would persist for decades:
When Watergate triggered a series of Congressional inquires that started
to expose the CIA’s extensive use of the press, some of Helms’s former
subordinates and successors (including George H. W. Bush) used the
press as part of a strategy to subvert and shut down those investiga-
tions. That allowed CIA manipulation of some press assets to continue
during the Iran-Contra scandal, the first Iraq War, and the run-up to
the second Iraq War. Helms’s and Hunt’s actions in the late 1960s mir-
ror today’s problems with news coverage of issues ranging from Iran
to North Korea, where CIA “black propaganda,” ostensibly targeted
overseas, is widely reported in the American press.
As if the January 4, 1967, memo is still in force today, the CIA even
now officially acknowledges only the Warren Report’s findings, and
ignores the conspiracy conclusions of Congress. Unofficially, a few for-
mer CIA officers tell journalists about the discredited “Castro did it”
theory. Peter Dale Scott observes that only journalists who support the
Warren Commission or “Castro did it” theories are treated by the CIA
as “privileged authors, those who (unlike the rest of us) are able to inter-
view CIA officers and quote from unreleased classified documents.”20
The CIA and FBI were not alone in their effort to support the Warren
Report and attack its critics. Both the Secret Service and the Defense
Intelligence Agency may have made similar efforts to protect their
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reputation and operations, but their files in that regard have never been
released. The bottom line is that many US agencies and officials had a
variety of reasons to avoid reopening the JFK investigation in 1967, as
well as in the aftermath of the 1968 assassinations of Martin Luther King
and Bobby Kennedy, and in the years that followed.
Chapter Thirty-one
On January 3, 1967, Jack Ruby died at Parkland Hospital, three weeks
after being diagnosed with cancer. His death, which occurred the day
before the CIA issued its internal memo attacking Warren critics, was no
doubt a relief to Richard Helms, since it eliminated the chance of any CIA
secrets coming out at Ruby’s new trial. Ironically, Ruby’s death shared
the front pages with bigger headlines about Rolando Masferrer’s failed