Anonymous ID: 8b099c March 19, 2025, 9:14 p.m. No.22792236   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2240 >>2360

George Joannides

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Joannides

 

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George Joannides

Joannides in 1963

Joannides in 1963

Born George Efythron Joannides

July 5, 1922

Athens, Greece

Died March 9, 1990 (aged 67)

Houston, Texas, U.S.

Occupation Intelligence officer, Lawyer

Education City College of New York

St. John's University School of Law, LL.B.

George Efthyron Joannides (July 5, 1922 – March 9, 1990) was a Central Intelligence Agency officer who in 1963 was the chief of the Psychological Warfare branch of the agency's JMWAVE station in Miami, and in 1978 was the agency's liaison to the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations.

 

Early life and education

Joannides attended the City College of New York and St. John's University School of Law.[1][2]

 

Career

Before 1949, he worked for the Greek diasporic newspaper National Herald. From 1949 to 1950, he worked in the press office of the Greek Embassy in Washington. In 1950, he joined the Central Intelligence Agency.[2]

 

By 1963, he was chief of the psychological warfare branch of Central Intelligence Agency's JMWAVE station in Miami under then-Deputy Director of Plans Richard "Dick" Helms,[3] with a staff of 24 and a budget of $1.5 million (equivalent to $15 million in 2024).[4][5] In that role, he was also known as "Howard", "Mr. Howard", and "Walter Newby".[6][7]

 

Joannides directed and financed Directorio Revolucionario Estudantil (DRE), or Student Revolutionary Directorate, a group of Cuban exiles whose officers had contact with Lee Harvey Oswald in the months before the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963.[8][9][10] By some accounts, fashioned with the "plausible deniability" typical of CIA operations, the plan was designed to link Oswald to Castro's government, without disclosing the CIA's role. He left the agency in 1976 to start an immigration-law practice in Washington, DC.[1]

 

In 1978 the CIA summoned Joannides to serve as the agency's liaison to the United States House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA), in specific regard to the death of President Kennedy. Washington Post reporter Jefferson Morley wrote that, "the spy withheld information about his own actions in 1963 from the congressional investigators he was supposed to be assisting. It wasn't until 2001, 38 years after Kennedy's death, that Joannides' support for the Cuban exiles, who clashed with Oswald and monitored him, came to light."[11] G. Robert Blakey, the Chief Counsel and Staff Director of the HSCA, later said that Joannides "obstructed our investigation" and that if he had known about Joannides' Cuban operations he would have "demanded that the agency take him off the job" and "sat him down and interviewed him. Under oath".[12][13] Joannides retired permanently from the CIA in November 1978.[1] In July 1981, he was awarded the Career Intelligence Medal.[14]

 

In 2013, John R. Tunheim and Thomas E. Samoluk wrote in the Boston Herald:

 

There is a body of documents that the CIA is still protecting, which should be released. Relying on inaccurate representations made by the CIA in the mid-1990s, the Review Board decided that records related to a deceased CIA agent named George Joannides were not relevant to the Kennedy assassination. Subsequent work by researchers, using other records that were released by the board, demonstrates that these records should be made public.[15]

 

In 2022, the Mary Ferrell Foundation filed a lawsuit in an attempt to secure the release of the Joannides files.[16]