We all know how the Deep State, with all its machinery, tries to cover up all its evil. From toppling governments to taking down government officials, these corrupt democrats have a lot of secrets they want to be buried.
But the truth has its way of coming out, and Donald Trump has long campaigned to declassify CIA documents, including the JFK files, which the deep state tries so hard to keep locked away.
The question is, what is in the files, and what are they trying to hide?
In a bombshell interview with Tucker Carlson, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said that the former CIA director Mike Pompeo pleaded with then-President Donald Trump not to declassify documents related to the assassination of his uncle, President John F. Kennedy.
RFK Jr. recalled how Pompeo told Trump that releasing the remaining files would be ‘catastrophic.’
The former independent presidential candidate relayed to Carlson his earlier frustration that Trump failed to follow his promise during the campaign. However, during their recent discussion, the Republican nominee was able to clear all that.
RFK Jr said, “I talked to President Trump for the first time about that this week. He said that Mike Pompeo begged him not to declassify the files. I don’t think I’m telling tales out of school here. But he said Mike Pompeo called him and said, ‘It would be a catastrophe to release this.’”
Meanwhile, Carlson called Pompeo a “criminal” and questioned how presidents before Trump have kept those files locked.
The former Fox News anchor also remarked, “Why would the CIA be trying to keep these files classified if they had nothing to do with the murder? I don’t really get that.”
The two were also able to discuss the possibility of RFK Jr. leading the CIA, with the Kennedy heir revealing that he would not hesitate if offered but took note of the political hurdles he would have to go through to secure Senate confirmation.
RFK Jr. lamented that these intelligence agencies were closely guarded by powerful committees in both Houses, who protects the interests of the intelligence community.
“Yes, I would, but I would never get Senate confirmation. As you know, the intelligence agencies are protected by very, very powerful committees in the Senate and in the House that are already into the project. The people who serve on those committees are safeguarding that directorship, and I would be very dangerous for those committees,” Kennedy noted.