89 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
89 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
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JFK and the popular mind
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Robin Ramsay.
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There are certain events in American history which serve as the focal
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points of ideological struggle between left and right: the 1930s
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depression, the entry of the USA into World War II, the guilt or innocence
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of Alger Hiss - and the Kennedy assassination . Take the massive
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Anglo-American media attention devoted to Edward J. Epstein's book Legend
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in 1973. In that Epstein sought to re-establish the Warren Commission's
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verdict that Lee Harvey Oswald alone did the dirty deed; but adding to it
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the suggestion t hat he had been got at by the KGB. Oswald was still a
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'lone nut' but somehow the KGB's 'lone nut'. In fact, despite spending a
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great deal of Readers=D5 Digest research money, Epstein found no evidence
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that Oswald was KGB, and his rehash of the Warren Comm-i ssion's version
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of the shooting in Dallas was as inept as its progenitor. Why did he do
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it? Epstein was by then the spokesman for James Jesus Angleton, the
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paranoid former head of CIA Counter Intelligence who had been sacked in
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1974. Angleton believed that Oswald was KGB because a KGB defector to the
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CIA called Nosenko had sai d that he (Oswald) wasn=D5t KGB, and Angleton
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believed that Nosenko was a false defector. Angleton had also been very
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close to the Israeli government since the late 1940s and in 1978 the
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Israeli government - and the Israeli lobby in the United States - were
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enthusiastic supporters of the Second Cold War then being cranked up in
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the United States. The logic of the position looked like this: Israel
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needed continued U.S. support, and that support had been waning ever since
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the OPEC oil price rise of 1973. Such support could best be ensured by
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presenting Israel as the United States' most reliable, ant i-Soviet ally
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in the Middle East. (There are the occasional hints that Israeli
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intelligence had a hand in the Italian 'strategy of tension' simply to
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help undermine U.S. confidence in Italy, Israel's main regional rival in
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the Friends-of-the-USA contest.)
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But the Israeli role was only plausible if there actually was a perceived
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Soviet 'threat'. Epstein's repackaging of Oswald as KGB was a handy,
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bite-sized piece of psychological warfare in that campaign. If we add the
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final pieces; that the CIA seems to have had some kind of relationship
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with the Reader's Digest - who funded Epstein's 'research' - since the
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early years of the First Cold War; that Epstein's book appeared in time to
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pre-empt the report of t he House Select Committee on Assassinations, then
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you have the pieces in a puzzle to which only Epstein knows the solution.
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Fourteen years and three disastrous terms of infantile rightwing
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Republican government later, Oliver Stone reworks the shooting in Dallas
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from a (vaguely) left perspective. And - to no-one's surprise - where
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Epstein's version got oceans of sycophantic att ention in the
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Anglo-American media, Stone gets hammered before the film has even been
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shot. At the centre of the Stone movie are Jim Garrison, the New Orleans
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DA, and Clay Shaw, the gay businessman Garrison charged with conspiracy to
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kill the President. How things change. . . Two years ago issue 20 of
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Lobster included a long analysis of the UK n ames in Clay Shaw's address
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book. It evinced one letter, from a Daily Mirror journalist, who described
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the piece as 'quintessential Lobster'- i.e. of interest to few,
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fascinating nonetheless, and unlikely to find a publisher anywhere else.
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When Stone's mo vie was released here he rang to ask if he could use the
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Shaw material in a piece he thought he had sold to the Sunday Times. (The
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story didn't appear, in the end.) But Shaw had gone from being
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ultra-obscure to mainstream in about 3 months - thanks to JFK . When did a
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cultural event change the climate so fast and so permanently in this
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country? 'Cathy Come Home' in the mid sixties? I liked Stone's film,
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despite its sentimentality, the soapy domestic scenes chez 'Garrison' and
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the preposterous closing speech. It is a remarkable piece of mainstream
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narrative cinema (with one dazzling cameo from Ed Asner as Guy Bannister).
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My only mino r quibble would be that missing from Stone's narrative are
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the people who published criticisms of the Warren Commission Report before
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Jim Garrison began in 1967. Credit where credit is due: that the Warren
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Commission didn't get away with their snow job ab out Oswald, is down to
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the work of the assassination buffs. In 1964 virtually the entire U.S.
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establishment - media, politicians, U.S. state authorities, CIA etc. -
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agreed on the 'lone nut' solution. Against them were ranged a handful of
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Americans - a goo dly proportion of them women, Mae Brussel and Sylvia
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Meagher, for example - who knew they were being sold a pup and refused to
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buy it. Facing massive hostility, ridicule and, in some cases, harassment
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from the state authorities, the JFK assassination buff s persisted and
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eventually overturned the official version of reality. This is a
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remarkable achievement that Stone might just have nodded towards. Finally,
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the impact of the film illustrates the problems for the security apparatus
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of the nation state now represented by the global media. Twenty or thirty
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years ago it was possible for the National Security apparatus to put out a
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line to its agents of influence inside the mass media - as the CIA did
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against Jim Garrison, Mark Lane and other critics of the Warren Commission
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- and what was called 'the mighty Wurlitzer' of CIA propaganda would crank
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into action. These days it is more difficult to rubbish a book or film out
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of existence. The pre-release assaults on Stone in the U.S. media served
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simply as global PR for the film. The U.S. government has not yet learned
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the lesson the British state learned during its attempts to suppress Spy
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Catcher.=20
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