This isn't just speculation anymore. For decades, anyone who questioned the Warren Report was dismissed as a fringe believer. But now, we have the ultimate insider source—the Kremlin itself—saying they never bought the "lone gunman" story. The highest levels of the Soviet government, with full access to their intelligence on Oswald, were immediately convinced it was a plot. If the Cold War enemies of the United States looked at the evidence and reached the same conclusion as American conspiracy researchers, perhaps it's time we finally acknowledge a terrible truth: the most powerful conspiracy theory in American history might just be a conspiracy fact.
The following report ref the JFK assassination was delivered to me by the Ambassador from Russia and is now made accessible to the American public at the link below. These documents have not been edited, redacted or tampered with but appear in their original form as delivered to…
— Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (@RepLuna) October 16, 2025
Key
Revelations:
- Khrushchev's Personal Shock and
Suspicion: Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev was personally and visibly shaken by the news.
More importantly, he was immediately convinced it was a plot. He is quoted
as stating, "For the mind of Lee Oswald this is too complex a crime.
A whole group of people acted here according to a pre-designed plan."
He believed people with "great material and financial
capabilities" were behind it and were muddying the investigation.
- Total Disbelief in the Warren
Report: The
Soviet establishment never bought the official U.S. story. From the KGB to
the diplomatic corps, they saw the Warren Commission's conclusion as a
cover-up. Their documents show they believed the truth was being hidden to
protect powerful domestic interests within the United States.
- Suspicion Pointed at CIA &
FBI: The
dossier shows that Soviet intelligence and diplomats seriously entertained
theories of a high-level U.S. conspiracy. Their reports from Washington
cite rumors circulating among American political insiders that the
assassination was a plot by "ultra-right forces" within the
American establishment. They suspected elements of the CIA, hostile to
Kennedy after the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis, were likely
involved or were at least engaged in a cover-up.
This dossier seems to definitively clear the USSR of direct involvement, portraying a Kremlin panicked that a lone, unstable former resident of theirs could trigger a world crisis. But its real bombshell is the revelation that at the highest levels, the Soviets were the first powerful entity to dismiss the lone gunman theory and point the finger at a conspiracy deep within the American power structure—specifically suspecting the CIA and FBI of either involvement or a cover-up.