Kennedy assassination: the obvious at last
In the documentary “Encounter with Death” (P.S. The film was NEVER screened in the USA), director and journalist Wilfried Huismann, after five years of research, shows that the assassination of John F. Kennedy could only have been ordered by a single mastermind: Fidel Castro.
This hypothesis has always been the most plausible, since Lee Harvey Oswald had been an agent of the Cuban secret service since at least November 1962 and returned to the USA after having lived in the Soviet Union for many years. The connection is even too obvious, but that is why there was so much excitement in the media and political ambient to stifle it as quickly as possible and replace it with a dizzying wave of absurd conjectures. I wonder if anyone would be looking for alternative constituents in the event that Fidel Castro was killed by a CIA agent.
The reason given by the film is also more than enough to explain the murder. According to the documentary, Kennedy and Castro spent years plotting each other's deaths: “It was a duel that, as in a Greek tragedy, left one of the duelists dead,” says Huismann.
But perhaps the most amazing thing in history is not even that. Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig appears in the film saying that, shortly after the assassination, President Lyndon B. Johnson received information that led him to conclude that Fidel Castro was indeed responsible for the crime: “Johnson was convinced that Castro had killed Kennedy, but he took that secret to the grave.” At the time he told Haig that it was necessary to avoid spreading the truth at all costs: “He feared that if the American people knew the name of the real culprit, there would be a turn to the right and the Democratic Party would be out of power by many years.”
[Translated from here]