>>519036907
>>519045837
>>519045837
>>519036907
>Auto] [Sound] 15
had it sifted through paid AI for new emergent details or anything considered latent. Absolutely nothing. Reads like a diplomat from an enemy Nation publicly putting through his passport papers for renewal.
>Overview
>RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT RELEASE – OCTOBER 2025
Subject: Archival documents concerning President John F. Kennedy’s assassination
Source: Russian State Archive of Contemporary History
>OVERVIEW
This publication compiles Soviet diplomatic and government materials related to U.S.–Soviet relations in 1963–1964 and the assassination of President Kennedy.
It includes internal communications about Soviet reactions, cooperation with the U.S. investigation, and Lee Harvey Oswald’s stay in the USSR from 1959–1962.
The editors emphasize that many of these records were previously inaccessible and that this release fills archival gaps.
>PART I – CONTEXT AND PURPOSE
The editors note that earlier research lacked key Soviet documents.
This new release aims to show, on a documentary basis, how the USSR reacted to the assassination and assisted the U.S. investigation.
References are made to both Russian and American archives, including:
The U.S. National Archives JFK Records Collection
The John F. Kennedy Presidential Library
>PART II – EVENTS OF NOVEMBER 22–23, 1963
Nikita Khrushchev was informed of the assassination shortly after it occurred.
He ordered immediate condolences to be sent and personally decided that Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan would represent the USSR at Kennedy’s funeral.
This decision was intended to show high respect.
It also introduced a new diplomatic custom: condolences were sent to Jacqueline Kennedy jointly from Khrushchev and his wife, which was unprecedented in Soviet protocol.