Authors: Lamar Waldron
began to be linked to JFK’s assassination in the press by the late 1970s.
As the rest of the story unfolds, the significant weight of the evidence
argues against Helms’s knowing participation in JFK’s murder. As a
Washington insider, Helms would have known that JFK’s murder would
at least severely delay, and probably end, any chance for a coup with
Almeida. Helms knew that LBJ hated Bobby, who had kept LBJ out of
the loop about the coup plan, and that there would be little chance LBJ
would continue Bobby’s pet project. Also, as of November 22, Helms
had everything he wanted from the Kennedys. They had bought his
story of Cuban weapons being found in Venezuela, reducing any chance
of a breakthrough with the secret peace initiatives of William Attwood
and Jean Daniel.
Memos from Bobby’s Cuban subcommittees show that Helms was
not in favor of the peace feelers to Castro, but he didn’t have to kill JFK
to ensure that those efforts failed. These memos say that if there had
been a next step in the Attwood peace process, it would have involved
Attwood’s going to Varadero Beach to meet with Fidel. That would
have given Helms a prime opportunity to have Castro assassinated. In
the spring of 1963, Helms had already shown a willingness to endanger
JFK’s emissaries in his quest to assassinate Fidel. These included not
only the exploding seashell he considered, which would have also killed
JFK’s representative James Donovan, but also in his actual attempt to
assassinate Fidel with guns while Donovan was in Cuba, negotiating the
release of several prisoners (including four CIA men) with Castro.
It’s difficult to envision a scenario in which it would have made sense
for Helms to have JFK assassinated when the JFK-Almeida coup plan,
and even his own unauthorized Castro operation, were so close to frui-
tion.22 The same is true for Desmond FitzGerald, who was closer to, and
sometimes socialized with, Bobby Kennedy. Additionally, neither man
had been involved with the Bay of Pigs, so they lacked bitterness over
that failure as a motivating factor. The same can’t be said, however,
for David Morales and some others. Additionally, one can ask whether
Helms trusted his protégé Hunt too much, or if Hunt trusted some of
those he worked with too much. Did Helms come to suspect any of
them in the JFK assassination? Helms cleaned house of only a few, start-
ing with Tony Varona; others continued working with him until the
time of Watergate and even beyond. Certain Cuban exiles, and others
in positions to know about Helms’s unauthorized operations, contin-
ued to receive CIA support for years, sometimes decades, despite their
committing other crimes, and even spectacular terrorist acts, against
innocent civilians. Was this part of the price Helms and others paid to
keep their secrets from being exposed? (Many of Helms’s secrets, from
AMWORLD and the JFK-Almeida coup plan to Artime’s involvement
in the CIA-Mafia plots were not publicly exposed until after Helms’s
death in October 2002.) The rest of the book will help to answer those
questions.
Even without being involved in JFK’s assassination, Helms still had
plenty of motivation for cover-ups afterward: to protect the viability of
the coup plan with Almeida, to prevent a crisis with Russia over Cuba,
and to block the exposure of his own unauthorized operations. These
cover-ups would help him rise in power, which allowed him to cover
up even further. As his biographer said, “when Helms said secret, he
meant
secret
—in the words of Lyman Kirkpatrick, secret from inception
to eternity.” 23 Starting on the afternoon of November 22, Helms would
spend the rest of his life making sure that was the case.
Helms’s early background as a journalist helped him continue to
expand his influence in media circles, which in turn allowed him to
influence their coverage of him and the CIA. His biographer writes
that “Helms’s reputation for integrity extended to the Washington press
corps. . . . He lunched frequently with reporters like the Alsop brothers,
James Reston, and C. L. Sulzberger of the
New York Times,
Hugh Sidey
of
Time,
[and] Chalmers Roberts of the
Washington Post.”
They saw him
as “well wired in the Washington establishment and one who could be
trusted not to mislead.” 24 In light of the many CIA operations, autho-
rized and unauthorized, that we now know Helms kept secret, as well as
his later conviction for lying to Congress, the media’s view of Helms as
truthful seems incredible, to say the least. Yet it goes a long way toward
explaining how he was able to keep so much about JFK’s assassination
so secret for so long.
The change in presidents also allowed Helms to keep his secrets from
146
LEGACY OF SECRECY
being exposed. LBJ would learn much about the anti-Castro operations
in the coming days. But Helms wouldn’t inform him of some aspects
until 1967, and other parts Helms would never reveal to either LBJ or
his successor in the White House, Richard Nixon.
Other CIA officials involved in the unauthorized operations heard the
news in different ways. Desmond FitzGerald was said to be having
lunch with an aide in Georgetown, a short drive from the site where
Harry had been meeting with CIA officials until they took a lunch break.
The aide said that after FitzGerald got a call about what had happened in
Dallas, FitzGerald was “white as a ghost.” After FitzGerald told the aide,
“The President’s been shot,” the aide said, “I hope this has nothing to do
with the Cubans.” 25 Also in Washington, the CIA’s Counter-Intelligence
Chief, the spectral James Angleton, was also having lunch when he got
the news. Angleton probably knew about some of Helms’s unauthorized
operations, since the safe houses where Artime and other exile leaders
working for Bobby and Helms stayed were sometimes bugged, because
Counter-Intelligence was supposed to make sure Castro’s agents didn’t
infiltrate exile operations.26 Angleton was meeting at a restaurant with a
colonel in the French Secret Service (the SDECE, the same organization
Michel Victor Mertz sometimes worked for). Ironically, the restaurant’s
owner was linked to the French Connection heroin bust that eventually
sent Mertz to prison.27
Miami Station Chief Ted Shackley didn’t deal with the day of JFK’s
assassination in his 2005 autobiography, which avoids many sensitive
topics. Shackley did write that many months before JFK’s death, his
operations chief “Dave Morales and I spent many a Miami evening by
my swimming pool, discussing the problem” of Bobby Kennedy’s pres-
sure to do more about Cuba.28 Shackley surely knew about the actions
of Rosselli with Morales in terms of the unauthorized Castro assassina-
tion plot. How much Shackley knew, suspected, or came to learn later
regarding Morales’s work with Rosselli on the JFK hit may never be
uncovered.
A far more objective book about Shackley, by
Nation
writer David
Corn, accurately notes that “in the fall of 1963, Shackley had a lot to
track. His own officers were planning attacks. Artime’s forces were
building up, [as was] the CIA-backed JURE of Manolo Ray.” 29 We have
examined much of the raw cable traffic—at least, those cables that have
been released—that went from or to the CIA’s huge Miami station in
the weeks before and after JFK’s assassination. The number of ongoing
operatives and operations was staggering at a time when the general
public—and, even later, Congressional investigators—had been told
that the CIA’s Cuban operations had been practically eliminated. Some
of the cables are completely coded, some partially, and others are still
censored. While few operational cables have been released, CIA infor-
mants were often talking about Harry Williams, Bobby Kennedy, Man-
uel Artime, Manolo Ray, Eloy Menoyo, and Tony Varona, with hints of
the impending coup.
Clearly, Shackley had a lot to keep under control on November 22,
ranging from AMWORLD to whatever he had been told about the JFK-
Almeida coup plan to Helms’s unauthorized plots. It’s important to
keep in mind that even though cables might appear to have been sent
from Shackley to CIA Director McCone, they usually went to Helms,
who decided which cables to show or tell McCone about. As David
Corn later wrote, for Shackley’s actions in the immediate aftermath of
JFK’s murder, “in 1979, the House Select Committee [on Assassinations]
judged Shackley harshly. . . . His station, its report declared, ought to
have debriefed thoroughly all its sources to determine if there were any
links between Oswald and Havana, and it should have swept fully its
contacts to see if any anti-Castro partisans possessed knowledge per-
taining to the murder of the President.” 30 What the Committee didn’t
realize then was the extent to which Shackley had been at least aware
of unauthorized operations, like the use of Rosselli, and operations that
were still being withheld from the Committee in 1979, like Phillips’s use
of Joannides to run the DRE exile group that had contact with Oswald.
As detailed in Chapter 64, in 1978 Shackley was still a high-ranking CIA
official when Joannides was assigned to be the CIA’s liaison with the
Committee—and Joannides told the Committee he couldn’t locate the
CIA man who had run the DRE.
As CIA Director John McCone sped toward Bobby’s Virginia estate, he
later told author William Manchester he was thinking, “You wonder
who could be responsible for a thing like this? Was this the result of
bigotry and hatred that was expressed in certain areas of the country,
of which Dallas was one? Was this an international plot?” In the CIA’s
copy of the original transcript of Manchester’s interview with McCone,
declassified in 1998, McCone admitted that “this was a question that
plagued us day and night for a long time.” In stark contrast to the lone-
assassin story that Hoover presented in private within hours, and to
the public by the following morning, McCone said, “I don’t recall that
148
LEGACY OF SECRECY
I reached an immediate judgement.” McCone said that after Oswald
surfaced as the prime suspect, “we went to work in depth on this thing to
determine whether Oswald had any association [with] or was receiving
direction from any external [source]. And there were days there where
we didn’t know. There were of course conflicting reports.”31
This situation worsened after Oswald (whom McCone called “the
main source of information”) was murdered, because “nothing could
be proven, nothing could be checked, so people get so convinced them-
selves that something is a fact that they feel that they must convey
them.”32 McCone appears to be addressing the situation in the days and
weeks after Dallas, when he received many disturbing reports—which
turned out not to be true—linking the Soviets or Fidel to JFK’s murder,
and McCone apparently didn’t consider the possibility that the false
information had been planted deliberately.
Of course, McCone didn’t know that Helms was withholding a wealth
of critical information from him. And when McCone met with Bobby
Kennedy at Hickory Hill, he was talking to someone else who’d had
much of the same important information withheld from him. Their lack
of knowledge prevented both of them from realizing that the individu-
als originating or pushing some of those “conflicting reports” may have
had ulterior motives, designed to deflect attention from themselves or
their associates.
When McCone arrived at Bobby’s mansion, the Attorney General and
his wife “were alone . . . in the library of the second floor.” Earlier, Bobby
had placed calls to Parkland Hospital in Dallas. Not long after McCone’s
arrival, Bobby received a call from Secret Service Agent Clint Hill tell-
ing him his brother was dead. McCone described Bobby as “being just
aghast, as though he had received unbelievable news.” But McCone
said that Bobby was initially stoic, and though “obviously shaken to an
unbelievable degree [he] retained his composure in a most remarkable
manner” as he called his brother Edward and family members to deliver
the devastating news.33
McCone later told Manchester that “the Attorney General and I then
went out into his yard and we walked for a long time and talked about
a great many things.” Manchester interviewed McCone for his book
Death of a President
just months after JFK’s death, so it’s not surprising
that McCone would have been vague about some of the “great many
things” he talked about with Bobby. To Manchester, McCone focused on
things like whether Bobby should fly to Dallas. Bobby’s initial impulse
was to head to Dallas and “return with the body and Mrs. Kennedy.”
McCone says that he “urged that he not do that” because it would take