#MoreDeepStateCoverUp: Twitter Blasts Trump for Holding Out on JFK Files

© AP PhotoPresident John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline Kennedy are greeted by an enthusiastic crowd upon their arrival at Dallas Airport, on November 22, 1963. Only a few hours later the president was assassinated while riding in an open-top limousine through the city.
President John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline Kennedy are greeted by an enthusiastic crowd upon their arrival at Dallas Airport, on November 22, 1963. Only a few hours later the president was assassinated while riding in an open-top limousine through the city. - Sputnik International
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The White House's decision to withhold an estimated 300 documents on the Kennedy assassination amid Thursday's dump of nearly 3,000 files has caused a backlash on social media. Sputnik takes a look at what people are saying.

The long-awaited declassified files, now added to the US National Archives JFK Assassination Records, have given historians and journalists a chance to find new insights into the president's murder in November 1963. 

However, last minute lobbying by US intelligence has meant several hundred files being withheld, pending a 180-day review to determine whether they should ever be released. That news has led to a backlash on social media, with historians, journalists, and ordinary Americans urging Trump to release the rest of the files.

Larry Sabato, American political scientist and Kennedy expert, condemned Trump for backtracking on his earlier promises to release all the files, adding that Americans could end up waiting a long time to "see the good stuff."

​From left to right, Ds, Rs, & Inds are very unhappy w/ tonight’s #JFKfiles withhold. And people said Americans would never be united again.

​A favorite JFK quote: "The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in times of great moral crisis, maintain their neutrality.'

​WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange also marked his concern, saying US intelligence agencies seemed determined to make Trump look weak by delaying the files, and adding that after so much time the delay was simply "inexcusable."

​Mark Zaid, a US attorney known for his work in helping whistleblowers, complained about how "sparse" Thursday's release was, and made sarcastic comments about some of the docs' illegibility and heavy redaction. His feelings were echoed by others.

​(7) What strikes me most is how SPARSE this release is. The GOOD stuff has absolutely been withheld as part of 180 day review. Grrr.

​Wow. Some explosive stuff in these newly released JFK documents#JFKFiles pic.twitter.com/Zv86BEjb2j

​Some users focused on just how important the JFK killing was to America, and hence the need to out the truth about his death.

​​Some of the JFK Files are being held back for review? By whom? Why can't the American people review them? We've waited 54 years.

​As expected, the delay and possible non-release of the 300 files prompted concerns from those who believe that the CIA, the FBI or other elements of the US government were somehow involved in Kennedy's death. Some angrily claimed that President Trump seems to have bowed to the interests of a "deep state cover-up."

​The CIA wants to redact 1% of of the documents, roughly 118 pages. They want to redact names, etc. The Cover Up is REAL America! #JFK

​Last paragraph, page 3, multiple shooters. Conspiracy theorists right again. Imagine what they WON'T show us. #JFKhttps://t.co/ptPmM0jBFv pic.twitter.com/d2FStLwSxm

#JFK talks about secret societies wielding undue influence before having his brains blown out. Not suspicious at all #JFKDocuments

​The redactions and withheld documents prompted even some non-conspiracy theorists to come to the conclusion that maybe the government really does have something to hide.

​Perhaps the most popular sentiment expressed thus far is the demand that the government release all the files, in full, non-redacted, and stop making excuses.

​Something that happened 54 years ago is still a national security issue? Release ALL the original files. #JFKFiles #NonRedacted 2,800 JFK

​President Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963 has been the source of considerable debate. While the US government maintains that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone, a variety of conspiracies have sprouted over the decades thanks to inconsistencies in the original investigation's conclusions. Among the theories, none of them ever officially verified, is the claim that the CIA, the FBI or other elements of the US government were behind JFK's murder. This version was popularized in the 1991 Oliver Stone film JFK. The mafia, Fidel Castro, and other actors and groups have also been accused over the years.

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