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JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters Paperback – October 19, 2010
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At the height of the Cold War, JFK risked committing the greatest crime in human history: starting a nuclear war. Horrified by the specter of nuclear annihilation, Kennedy gradually turned away from his long-held Cold Warrior beliefs and toward a policy of lasting peace. But to the military and intelligence agencies in the United States, who were committed to winning the Cold War at any cost, Kennedy’s change of heart was a direct threat to their power and influence. Once these dark “Unspeakable” forces recognized that Kennedy’s interests were in direct opposition to their own, they tagged him as a dangerous traitor, plotted his assassination, and orchestrated the subsequent cover-up.
Douglass takes readers into the Oval Office during the tense days of the Cuban Missile Crisis, along on the strange journey of Lee Harvey Oswald and his shadowy handlers, and to the winding road in Dallas where an ambush awaited the President’s motorcade. As Douglass convincingly documents, at every step along the way these forces of the Unspeakable were present, moving people like pawns on a chessboard to promote a dangerous and deadly agenda.
JFK and the Unspeakable shot up to the top of the bestseller charts when Oliver Stone first brought it to the world’s attention on Bill Maher’s show. Since then, it has been lauded by Mark Lane (author of Rush to Judgment, who calls it “an exciting work with the drama of a first-rate thriller”), John Perkins (author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, who proclaims it is “arguably the most important book yet written about an American president), and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., who calls it “a very well-documented and convincing portrait…I urge all Americans to read this book and come to their own conclusions.”
- Print length560 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTouchstone
- Publication dateOctober 19, 2010
- Dimensions6 x 1.4 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101439193886
- ISBN-13978-1439193884
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Customers find the book well-researched and informative. They describe it as an engaging read with a compelling narrative. Readers appreciate the historical context and religious content. Many consider it a valuable addition to their collection. However, some feel the book is too long and repetitive.
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Customers find the book's research quality good. They appreciate the thorough recollection of important events and the author's presentation of sufficient evidence. The book provides insightful information and is well-reasoned, detailed, and documented.
"...important aspect that Douglass brings to light is the now well-documented rapprochement which JFK initiated with Castro via the latter's aide-de-camp..." Read more
"...The Unspeakable” by James Douglas, and I find it deeply moving and informative as well as completely relevant to the current moment in US politics,..." Read more
"...'s recent fictional paperweight is a perfect example of the plausible deniability that allows the Unspeakable to thrive.)..." Read more
"...Because it is the detailed and well-documented story of how and why the CIA murdered our greatest president and how they got away with it...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They recommend it as a great read for history students and an essential read for Americans. The book is described as a remarkable achievement and a beautiful masterpiece.
"...Here, I want to digress and say the best accompanying book one can have to read along with this book is Military Science Professor John Newman's: '..." Read more
"...The JFK letters paint an amazingly brave and poignant picture of these men as they come to terms with the dangers of Nuclear War...." Read more
"...This is an exceptional book that will be used by future historians to determine the truth about the assassination and how it changed America...." Read more
"...So this is an important and valuable book...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and believable. They appreciate the author's objective narration and great stories well-told. The writing style is superb and easy to read, with a spiritual tone that keeps readers interested throughout.
"...You will be especially impressed with how the various narratives, interviews are intertwined and integrated to make the connections that need to be..." Read more
"...[peace into a remarkably compelling narrative...." Read more
"...Because it is the detailed and well-documented story of how and why the CIA murdered our greatest president and how they got away with it...." Read more
"...riveting in both the nature of its content, and the dramatic way in which the story unfolds. The book is separated into six distinct, long chapters...." Read more
Customers find the book informative and well-documented. They appreciate its chronology of events and insightful account of JFK's legacy. The book provides a full view of the time period and the forces involved, making historical characters more relatable.
"...Chiefs, and the entire upper echelon of the CIA, various military intelligence organizations, and hundreds of anti-communist individuals in all..." Read more
"...research balanced with a creative perspective of factual, historic reasoning...." Read more
"THE GOOD... - Presents a chronology of events before Douglass presents his research in 6 sections/chapters, which I believe is important..." Read more
"...This book gives specific details from all historical sources to really build the case for conspiracy fact and yes I say fact...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's religious content. They find the author's moral perspective insightful and great. The book provides a different perspective from other books, with eyewitness accounts from different angles. Readers enjoy reading about how the two men intertwined.
"...be especially impressed with how the various narratives, interviews are intertwined and integrated to make the connections that need to be made...." Read more
"...The book is a combination of first hand interviews and research into recently released documents, as well as the categorisation of the number of..." Read more
"There seems to be an assumed, albeit unnatural, dichotomy between spirituality and historical/sociological issues...." Read more
"...Now here was a chance to re-connect with this insightful theologian-activist...." Read more
Customers find the book a good value for money. They describe it as first-rate scholarship, stunning, and an outstanding read. The book is described as a rare masterpiece that reveals the truth.
"...All in all, great book, great buy...." Read more
"The fact that mainstream media has ignored this wonderful, inspiring book by a truly gifted researcher and writer, while heaping praise upon Vincent..." Read more
"...included in any way in the final Warren Commission report is worth the cost of the book...." Read more
"...that fascinates you, as it does me, this one makes a good addition to the collection. Just be prepared to skip sections." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's scariness level. Some find it disturbing, frightening, and tragic. Others describe it as unsettling and depressing.
"...This is a haunting book. It makes it clear that something fundamentally changed with JFK's death...." Read more
"...In toto, when read right through, this book is absolutely terrifying...." Read more
"...The good: It tells a fascinating and deeply disturbing story of JFK's assassination...." Read more
"...Chilling! Shocking! and absolutely Tragic...." Read more
Customers find the book repetitive and boring at times. They mention it rambles and repeats facts and justifications too often, which can put them to sleep. The same subjects are mentioned constantly, leaving readers confused about why they're reading about them.
"...The bad: The book could have used a robust edit. It is too long and repetitious. The book is not particularly well written or well organized...." Read more
"...Very Repetitive and Too Long I have never read a more repetitive book both in terms of individual quotes and wholesale arguments...." Read more
"...Other reviewers have said it's disorganized and repetitive. I believe the same amount of information could have been conveyed in a book half as long." Read more
"The problem with this book is what I term, "poorly written." Too much useless (page after page) repetition...." Read more
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JFK, The CIA, Implications for all of us Richard Helms, Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders, Tulsi Gabbard.
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 30, 2009(Possible Spoiler Alert for 2nd Part)
In more than 37 years spent as a researcher into the JFK assassination, and having read more than four dozen books, this is the first time I have ever written a review. The reasons mainly boil down to one: with each book I always found some manner of untied up loose string, or defect that rendered my judgment tentative. I simply didn't feel it worth the time, or energy to invest in writing something I didn't accept completely.
I confess I was also very skeptical of Douglass' book to start. I worried he'd go over the same well-trod ground as others, merely regurgitate many of the same issue with no new insights, while repeating most of the mistakes.
I am happy to report I was wrong on all counts. When I finished Douglass' book I had the sense (that I had received from few others) that this 46 year mystery and all the attendant, ambiguating "Operation Mockingbird" tricks, pseudo-evidence and propaganda that engulfed it,were finally finally unravelled. And not only unravelled, but the new story woven into a credible and coherent narrative. More importantly, using a key criterion (how much it dovetailed with the other most serious books I have read), I score it a '10'.
Here, I want to digress and say the best accompanying book one can have to read along with this book is Military Science Professor John Newman's: 'Oswald and CIA'. Important because while Douglass makes the coherent anecdotal case for Lee Harvey Oswald being an intelligence operative, Newman proves it using his insights, and vast troves of FOIA -released documents. In fact, I'd go so far as to say that one cannot fully appreciate Douglass' achievement here, without first reading Newman's book.
Okay, why have I never done a review of Newman's? Probably because, while worthwhile, I beheld one or more reviews that already said pretty much what I would have. There was nothing new to add.
In reading the book, I strongly advise people not to immediately skip to the end and Douglass' assassination scenario. I believe it is much more important to first: read his Introduction (and the basis for the definition of the "unspeakable" predicated on Thomas Merton's insights) then the Chronology of Events: 1961-63 and then the first three chapters: 1) A Cold Warrior Turns, 2) Kennedy, Castro and the CIA, and 3) JFK and Vietnam. These comprise 134 pages, but every page is essential to the overall picture Douglass is portraying.
The reason for the first two is to get into the context in which the author is placing his book. Without the context, it will be difficult to appreciate what he puts forth as relevant. People will become too impatient for the "meat" and neglect the "veggies".
The first three chapters proper lay the moral perspective for how and in what deep ways JFK altered his stance from being a cold-warrior ab initio. What threads and dynamics turned him? These are critical to grasp, if one is to understand who had the means, motive and opportunity to kill him.
In (2) the most important aspect that Douglass brings to light is the now well-documented rapprochement which JFK initiated with Castro via the latter's aide-de-camp, Rene Vallejo. Peter Kornbluh, of the National Archives, has done yeoman work in making the series of events known, via a book as well as NA documents - and terrific articles in The Baltimore Sun wherein I first became aware of it. It is essential more people know about it to understand how it may well have been the key and final "nail" in JFK's coffin, after his withdrawal of air cover for the Playa de Cochinos debacle (finally fessed up and owned by the CIA itself in its secret report on the events, made public some ten years ago), his reluctance to use aggressive force (invasion, bombing) during the October, 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis (I lived in Miami at the time), and his NSAM-263 to remove all personnel from VietNam by 1965.
Another reason the Cuban-CIA link is so meaningful to me is personal. Many of the same CIA-trained elements that were causing problems for Kennedy ca. 1961-63 (via Operation Mongoose, etc.) re-emerged years later in the right-extremist group "Alpha 66" - which also was responsible for the worst act of terrorism in the hemisphere before 9/11. That, of course, was the bombing of the Cubana Airlines Flight 455 over BARBADOS on Oct. 6, 1976 - resulting in the deaths of all 73 on board.
I saw the plane explode then break up in the sea while swimming at Paradise Beach, Barbados, with my nieces- visiting in Barbados at the time from Trinidad. To this day, they still have terrible nightmares driven by those grotesque images - and they are now all grown women. My wife, who worked at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital as a radiographer at the time, was there when the hundreds of body parts were brought in.
Anyway, there is still an immediacy there, and the pain and horror from that bright, clear skies day remains with me, and why I still have trouble understanding why people (trapped in denial and the "unspeakable") are more attuned to blaming the "left" for assorted horrors than the extremists of the Right. (Just look at the recent faux outrage that erupted when the Right's terrorists were being noted by the Justice Dept. for extensive scrutiny. Weeks after the Dept. relented an abortion provider was murdered- then people were shot at- 1 killed- in the Holocaust museum by another loonie)
But I digress. Once the potential reader has covered the chapters above, it is okay to plow full steam ahead with the rest. You will be especially impressed with how the various narratives, interviews are intertwined and integrated to make the connections that need to be made.
Among these, the interviews with Thomas Arthur Vallee's sister is critical - along with other documents Douglass has - to show how an early assassination attempt was originally scheduled for Nov. 2, 1963 in Chicago - the same day the Diems were to be offed in Vietnam. As fortune transpired, an operative named "Lee" phoned in to Chicago FBI HQ and gave the heads up, whereby the hit was thwarted. Also thwarted, was the effort to trot out the first patsy or scapegoat, who was to be Thomas Arthur Vallee, another former Marine like Oswald. In any case, it all became academic as plans to go to the football game at Soldier Field were cancelled.
Douglass makes the excellent case that it was none other than Lee Oswald who alerted the feds in Chi-town, but in so doing he placed himself in the cross-hairs, as the next patsy- but now in Big D. One omission I am having trouble processing is that there was no mention by Douglass of the next attempt on JFK's life in Miami, on Nov. 18. I lived in Miami and to all intents, the motorcade went off uneventfully. However, years later undercover FBI tape recordings (of a Joseph Milteer) were released of the plan to shoot Kennedy from a tall office bldg. Some of these recordings were presented in the A&E Special: 'The Men Who Killed Kennedy' - but I have not seen or heard of this program since last shown in 2002.
The other most critical interview is that with Sgt. Robert Vinson, who on Nov. 22 was tring to get home to Colorado Springs. He took a bus to Andrews AFB in Washington, DC, and got on a C-54 (the first available flight to "the vicinity" of COS is what he wanted, and was informed it was about to depart for Lowry AFB near Denver.
What Vinson recalled most about this particular flight, is that it had no crew chief or manifest. (Usually the crew chief always asked him to sign a manifest). The flight itself didn't land at Lowry, but in Dallas, as Vinson made out the skyline. Vinson noted a lot of dust blew up as the craft landed near the Trinity River.
Two men boarded, just after 3:30 p.m. central time, one a "Latino", 6' or 6'1" weighing 180-190 lbs. and wearing a mustache, the other 5'7" to 5'9" and Caucasian, 150-160 lbs. Only later, when press photos materialized and circulated in newspapers, did Vinson realize the latter guy was the spitting image of Lee Harvey Oswald.
I don't wish to give any more of the Vinson narrative away here -especially as it connects to other critical segments, but suffice it to say many researchers (including me) had always suspected an Oswald double may have been employed to paint the necessary patsy. The process itself is known in CIA lingo as "sheep dipping". While the patsy was being marched through Dallas Police HQ, one of the actual mechanics - an Oswald lookalike, was making his getaway from the airfield near the Trinity River.
Needless to say, when the authorities found Vinson had been on this flight (by mistake), they put the guy through the wringer. Including making him work as a covert operative to keep him under close scrutiny, and on a short leash in case he might have tempted to blab.
Now, some aspects of the latter part of the book, nailing down the time frames and personnel for the assassination, that I found credible and compelling:
1) No where is any mention made of "James Files" or the Files claimed-evidence that he was the Grassy Knoll shooter. It is clear from this that Douglass is either leery of the evidence put forth, or of the credibility of Files. This discloses a caution that is redeeming, especially for many new readers to the literature- who might at first balk at "Oswald doubles" and earlier patsies set up for earlier assassination attempts.
2) There is no attention whatever to the claimed "Murchison Party" - ostensibly held the night before to "sign all parties onto the deed". The Murchison party, at the home of oil tycoon Clint Murchison, has figured prominently in the online research community and also certain books (e.g. 'Killing the Truth', By H.L. Livingstone)
3) There is no attempt to pinpoint the number or timing of the shots, or diagnose the magic bullet and its "evidence" or the autopsy photos, or the x-ray images. Again, this is heartening and discloses that Douglass is only content to deal with he believes is most credible and which backs up other facets of his presentation, and propositions.
4) The personal notes and effects that showed Lee "loved and respected JFK", totally dovetail with interviews Marina Oswald gave for the 30th anniversary, which I still have on tape. In one particularly intense altercation with Tom Brokaw, she makes clear that the Warrenites twisted her arm (and testimony) in not so subtle ways, threatening deportation if she refused to play ball.
In toto, when read right through, this book is absolutely terrifying. It reveals the unspeakable still in our midst, especially amongst those who would still defend the Warren Commission's version of history, despite the fact it is now essentially consigned to the dustbin. Douglass - as well as Newman, cited earlier- give numerous examples of outright fraudulent or manipulated evidence.
In short, this is the best book I have ever read on this topic. For the first time it powerfully shows the moral force and character in Kennedy, even - following the past ten years or more- numerous cowards have sought to make their names and profits off the stories circulating about a dead man, who can no longer defend himself.
None of this is "Kennedy worship" it is important to grasp, since as author Michael Parenti (The Dirty Truth) has noted, the error of all who claim it is that they typically conflate the low political value of the victim with the high political value of the assassination".
Thereby effectively deflating the widely held perception amongst media mavens that people so worshipped JFK and "Camelot" it was unfathomable he could be offed by a lone loser....WRONG.
What we, including Douglass, want - is for the nation to finally face this tragic event without pretense for the first time. NO denials, no subterfuge, no deflections.
We do so not to try and "run from reality" but to face it. As Michael Parenti notes (op. cit. p. 186), we are citizens who are effectively:
"raising grave questions about the nature of state power in what is supposed to be a democracy."
It is more than past time those questions got answered, and Douglass' book is an excellent start.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2020I am about 100 pages into “JFK And The Unspeakable” by James Douglas, and I find it deeply moving and informative as well as completely relevant to the current moment in US politics, particularly the last 3 years. Mr Douglas weaves political intrigue, nuclear politics, assassination expose and the search for lasting [peace into a remarkably compelling narrative.
We see the development of JFK from neophyte cold warrior to a soldier for peace. Part of the story is a review of personal letters between JFK and Khrushchev and JFK and Castro after the Bay of Pigs and after to Nuclear showdown between the US and Russia. I imagine many, particularly many who did not live through that era would benefit immensely from reading this book. There are also letters between Monk Thomas Merton to many influential people, including letters to Ethel Kennedy, RFK’s wife.
The JFK letters paint an amazingly brave and poignant picture of these men as they come to terms with the dangers of Nuclear War. Into the mix is the intense pressure each man felt from their military and intelligence adversaries. I call them adversaries, because they were consistently advocating and planning to begin wars with nuclear weapons.
And just like now, members of the intelligence and military communities found willing partners in the main stream press. The pressure that JFK felt from those adversaries made him negotiate mostly secretly with his “opponents”. One could not even discuss treaties and peace with Russia or Cuba without being called a traitor.
Does this begin to ring a bell?
The second and most disturbing part of the story is the plots within the CIA aimed at forcing JFK to engage in war, which he refused to buckle under to. And of course, the successful plot to assassinate JFK and later others was the part that is referred to in the title of the book, “The Unspeakable”. Richard Helm and his allies in congress have created a legal second and secret government with plausible deniability, gas-lighting and a variety of strategies.
If you look through these lenses, you can make sense of the last few years, with Russia hysteria and even the events or plots to unseat President Trump. And certainly, you can see what Bernie and Tulsi have been up against.
You don’t have to turn a blind eye to Donald Trump’s many faults to see his battle with these forces.
His calling out of the Intelligence Community and the Fake News Main Stream Press are the two aspects of his presidency that warrant praise, perhaps the only two. You can not find impartial news on MSNBC and CNN. Even Fox news allows Tulsi Gabbard’s message for peace to be heard; but not MSNBC and CNN.
And hardly anyone of the people I grew up with, or newer friends or family understand what is at play here. If you don’t speak of Trump as the incarnation of Evil, you invite pity and disdain. One does not need to turn a blind eye to Trump’s invocation of all sorts of prejudice and hate, to understand that almost anything Trump does gets fed into the propaganda machine. For example, and I don’t pretend to know all the facts of this, but remember all the headlines about Trump wanting to cut social security. Do you actually know the details of what he proposed?
The point is that no matter what the subject is, truth takes a back seat to propaganda. And that propaganda has history and context going back at least to the Kennedy era.
You must know the world you live in; comprehend, without blinders or prejudice and see the forces at play. A world where advocates for peace and justice, including presidents, are assassinated is the very world we live in.
The Intelligence community, DNC, and its friends at MSNBC and CNN; as well as the RNC and its allies at Fox news have been waging a non-stop war, with America as its enemy. They do this is to keep you focused on personality and not systemic inequities and evil forces.
5.0 out of 5 stars JFK, The CIA, Implications for all of us Richard Helms, Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders, Tulsi Gabbard.I am about 100 pages into “JFK And The Unspeakable” by James Douglas, and I find it deeply moving and informative as well as completely relevant to the current moment in US politics, particularly the last 3 years. Mr Douglas weaves political intrigue, nuclear politics, assassination expose and the search for lasting [peace into a remarkably compelling narrative.
Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2020
We see the development of JFK from neophyte cold warrior to a soldier for peace. Part of the story is a review of personal letters between JFK and Khrushchev and JFK and Castro after the Bay of Pigs and after to Nuclear showdown between the US and Russia. I imagine many, particularly many who did not live through that era would benefit immensely from reading this book. There are also letters between Monk Thomas Merton to many influential people, including letters to Ethel Kennedy, RFK’s wife.
The JFK letters paint an amazingly brave and poignant picture of these men as they come to terms with the dangers of Nuclear War. Into the mix is the intense pressure each man felt from their military and intelligence adversaries. I call them adversaries, because they were consistently advocating and planning to begin wars with nuclear weapons.
And just like now, members of the intelligence and military communities found willing partners in the main stream press. The pressure that JFK felt from those adversaries made him negotiate mostly secretly with his “opponents”. One could not even discuss treaties and peace with Russia or Cuba without being called a traitor.
Does this begin to ring a bell?
The second and most disturbing part of the story is the plots within the CIA aimed at forcing JFK to engage in war, which he refused to buckle under to. And of course, the successful plot to assassinate JFK and later others was the part that is referred to in the title of the book, “The Unspeakable”. Richard Helm and his allies in congress have created a legal second and secret government with plausible deniability, gas-lighting and a variety of strategies.
If you look through these lenses, you can make sense of the last few years, with Russia hysteria and even the events or plots to unseat President Trump. And certainly, you can see what Bernie and Tulsi have been up against.
You don’t have to turn a blind eye to Donald Trump’s many faults to see his battle with these forces.
His calling out of the Intelligence Community and the Fake News Main Stream Press are the two aspects of his presidency that warrant praise, perhaps the only two. You can not find impartial news on MSNBC and CNN. Even Fox news allows Tulsi Gabbard’s message for peace to be heard; but not MSNBC and CNN.
And hardly anyone of the people I grew up with, or newer friends or family understand what is at play here. If you don’t speak of Trump as the incarnation of Evil, you invite pity and disdain. One does not need to turn a blind eye to Trump’s invocation of all sorts of prejudice and hate, to understand that almost anything Trump does gets fed into the propaganda machine. For example, and I don’t pretend to know all the facts of this, but remember all the headlines about Trump wanting to cut social security. Do you actually know the details of what he proposed?
The point is that no matter what the subject is, truth takes a back seat to propaganda. And that propaganda has history and context going back at least to the Kennedy era.
You must know the world you live in; comprehend, without blinders or prejudice and see the forces at play. A world where advocates for peace and justice, including presidents, are assassinated is the very world we live in.
The Intelligence community, DNC, and its friends at MSNBC and CNN; as well as the RNC and its allies at Fox news have been waging a non-stop war, with America as its enemy. They do this is to keep you focused on personality and not systemic inequities and evil forces.
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Top reviews from other countries
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MakiReviewed in Mexico on May 23, 20235.0 out of 5 stars Cumplió en tiempo y forma
Es para información y conocimiento del contenido del libro, muchas gracias
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MarlonReviewed in Germany on December 10, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Bewegend
Es ist ein Weltsicht änderndes Buch. Es ist teilweise schwer zu lesen da es teils nicht chronologisch erzählt wird sondern nach Personen Sichten. Nachdem lesen dieses Buches wird man eine andere Sicht auf Politiker Geheimdienste und Militärische Positionen haben.
JReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 29, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Perhaps the most important book of all time.
Amazon has failed to list some of the most important endorsements for this book, to be found on the publishers' website. Namely:
"In JFK and the Unspeakable Jim Douglass has distilled all the best available research into a very well-documented and convincing portrait of President Kennedy's transforming turn to peace, at the cost of his life. Personally, it has made a very big impact on me. After reading it in Dallas, I was moved for the first time to visit Dealey Plaza. I urge all Americans to read this book and come to their own conclusions about why he died and why--after fifty years--it still matters.”-- Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
"An unfamiliar yet thoroughly convincing account of a series of creditable decisions of John F. Kennedy--at odds with his initial Cold War stance--that earned him the secret distrust and hatred of hard-liners among the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the CIA."--Daniel Ellsberg, author, Secrets: A Memoir of the Vietnam War and the Pentagon Papers
"Douglass writes with moral force, clarity, and the careful attention to detail that will make JFK and the Unspeakable a sourcebook for many years to come, for it provides us with the stubborn facts needed to rebuild a constitutional democracy within the United States."--Marcus Raskin, co-founder, Institute for Policy Studies
Marcus Raskin was JFK's top nuclear advisor.
This book proves without a shadow of a doubt that JFK was assassinated by the CIA as part of a wider conspiracy due to his planned withdrawal from Vietnam, concerted efforts to thaw the Cold War and improve relations with the Soviet Union and Cuba (to the point of establishing a secret back-channel between both himself and Khrushchev and himself and Castro, and with plans, believe it or not, for a joint moon mission with the Soviet Union).
Its nearly 3000 academic citations, interviews with crucial figures and witnesses to the JFK assassination, precise and compassionate tone, make it stand out as one of the greatest books of all time. It has been recognised as such by important figures and historians as the endorsements show. All that remains is for people to read it, and the world can finally move on from its stagnant state, in which the vast majority of the population are totally unaware of the power their President lacks, which the shadow government and the CIA commands instead, on behalf of Wall Street banks and oligarchs. Only then, should such a time occur, can any change hope to occur in this world.
Worth mentioning then that this is one of the most censored shows of all time, with RFK Jr being censored off the Charlie Rose show for bringing up the book, and Alec Baldwin losing his regular show on MSNBC entirely (!!) for filming a three hour documentary based on the book. Baldwin has been denied access to the footage filmed at the time of his dismissal. Further, much like RFK Jr.'s recent memoir "American Values: Lessons I Learned from My Family" the book has received no coverage whatsoever from mainstream media, even being omitted from the best-selling charts on which it should rank. As such, it is our duty as citizens to promote this superlatively important book wherever possible. I encourage all to forward the book's endorsements from figures the whole world respects to everybody they know. Anyone who knows this book exists, and knows who people like Daniel Ellsberg and RFK Jr. are, will want to read it.
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Obedient CustomerReviewed in Australia on May 12, 20245.0 out of 5 stars Insightful
Douglas explains that JFK had to die because his foreign policy stood in the way of powerful commercial interests.
Kennedy was trying to make peace with Kruschev and Castro behind the scenes. But both Kennedy and Kruschev were opposed by their military leaders who were hell bent on war.
The secret correspondence and dialog between these three is revealed by Douglas to paint a fascinating portrait of how possible world peace was in the 1960's. Kruschev, Castro and Kennedy reveal themselves to be intelligent, empathic leaders all capable of considering the needs of the other sides and willing to negotiate a de-escalation of the cold war in ways the lead to better outcomes for all countries.
But that was anathema to the business interests who wanted to exploit Cuba, South America, Asia, and Africa, and which didn't want to compete against Russia or China in international markets or for resources.
And so world peace didn't happen.
How didn't it happen? James W Douglass takes us through it.
PlaceholderReviewed in India on February 20, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Superb.



