Additional information
Weight | 0.284 kg |
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Dimensions | 12.9 × 19.8 × 2.5 cm |
£10.99
Paperback | 368 pages, 8 Maps
129 x 198 x 25 | 284g
The killing of US President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas, in November 1963, sent a shockwave around the world. The charismatic young Democrat was seen as a beacon of hope in the West, but his liberal reforming policies had made him many powerful enemies at home.
For sixty years, numerous theories have swirled around this key event in American – and world – history. Yet whatever the conclusions of the official Warren Report – that the President had been assassinated by a lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald – many people doubt that to be true. Indeed, President Nixon later admitted on tape that the report was ‘a hoax committed on the American people.’ John Hughes-Wilson, a former colonel in British Intelligence, has sifted through the millions of words and thousands of pieces of evidence, to put together an intelligence assessment of what really happened that dreadful high noon in Dallas in 1963.
Reading this astounding book, no one can be in any doubt that JFK’s death was not at the hands of a lone deranged gunman, but a deadly plot to remove a President who threatened vested interests at home and abroad.
Weight | 0.284 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 12.9 × 19.8 × 2.5 cm |
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