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Crossfire in Dallas
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235227873
- EAN9798235227873
- Date de parution07/07/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
On November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was murdered in broad daylight as his motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza. Within hours, police arrested Lee Harvey Oswald. Two days later, nightclub owner Jack Ruby shot Oswald on live television, silencing the only man charged with the crime before he could stand trial. The official investigation concluded that Oswald acted alone. Millions of Americans never believed it.
In Crossfire in Dallas, historian Elias Warren Hale reconstructs the Kennedy assassination from the political tensions that preceded it to the enduring controversies that followed. Drawing on government investigations, declassified intelligence records, witness testimony, medical evidence, films, photographs, and decades of scholarship, Hale examines the central figures and competing explanations surrounding one of the most scrutinized murders in modern history.
The book explores Kennedy's battles with organized crime, the CIA, anti-Castro Cuban exiles, military leaders, and political rivals; Oswald's defection to the Soviet Union and mysterious journey to Mexico City; the disputed medical and ballistic evidence; Jack Ruby's connections and motives; and the failures, omissions, and secrecy of the agencies charged with finding the truth. It also tests the major conspiracy theories-including Mafia involvement, rogue intelligence officers, Cuban or Soviet responsibility, a second gunman, Lyndon Johnson, the military-industrial establishment, and claims of evidence alteration-without treating suspicion as proof or official conclusions as unquestionable.
Neither a defense of the Warren Commission nor a catalogue of speculation, Crossfire in Dallas is a rigorous investigation into what the evidence establishes, what remains uncertain, and why the assassination continues to haunt the American imagination.
In Crossfire in Dallas, historian Elias Warren Hale reconstructs the Kennedy assassination from the political tensions that preceded it to the enduring controversies that followed. Drawing on government investigations, declassified intelligence records, witness testimony, medical evidence, films, photographs, and decades of scholarship, Hale examines the central figures and competing explanations surrounding one of the most scrutinized murders in modern history.
The book explores Kennedy's battles with organized crime, the CIA, anti-Castro Cuban exiles, military leaders, and political rivals; Oswald's defection to the Soviet Union and mysterious journey to Mexico City; the disputed medical and ballistic evidence; Jack Ruby's connections and motives; and the failures, omissions, and secrecy of the agencies charged with finding the truth. It also tests the major conspiracy theories-including Mafia involvement, rogue intelligence officers, Cuban or Soviet responsibility, a second gunman, Lyndon Johnson, the military-industrial establishment, and claims of evidence alteration-without treating suspicion as proof or official conclusions as unquestionable.
Neither a defense of the Warren Commission nor a catalogue of speculation, Crossfire in Dallas is a rigorous investigation into what the evidence establishes, what remains uncertain, and why the assassination continues to haunt the American imagination.






