JFK assassination: Thousands of files released
Media captionWhat will top-secret JFK files tell us about Kennedy's killer?
The US government has released 2,800 previously classified files on the assassination of President John F Kennedy in 1963.
President Donald Trump said the public deserved to be "fully informed" about the event, which has been the subject of various conspiracy theories.
But some documents have been withheld at the request of government agencies.
One memo revealed that the FBI had warned police of a death threat against the assassin Lee Harvey Oswald.
"We at once notified the chief of police and he assured us Oswald would be given sufficient protection", writes the FBI director J Edgar Hoover.
Oswald was shot dead in the basement of the Dallas Police department two days after President Kennedy was killed.
As the documents are pored over and analysed, other findings include a 1964 FBI memo in which Cuban exiles debate how much an assassination of Fidel Castro would be worth. "The $150,000 to assassinate Fidel Castro plus $5,000 expense money was too high," it says.
Another memo showed that Soviet officials feared an "irresponsible general" would launch a missile at the USSR in the wake of President Kennedy's death.
US President John F Kennedy and first lady Jacqueline Kennedy arrive at Love Field in Dallas, Texas, less than an hour before his assassinationImage copyrightREUTERS
Image caption
The president and first lady in Dallas less than an hour before his assassination
A 1992 law passed by Congress required all records related to the assassination of President Kennedy - around five million pages - to be publicly disclosed in full within 25 years.
The deadline was Thursday.
More than 90% of the files were already in the public domain.
Allegations of a government cover-up are unlikely to be assuaged by reports that the CIA, FBI, Department of State and other agencies lobbied at the last minute to keep certain documents under wraps.
JFK assassination: Questions that won't go away
In a memo directing heads of executive departments to release the files, Mr Trump said the American public deserves to be "fully informed about all aspects of this pivotal event".
"Therefore, I am ordering today that the veil finally be lifted," the president wrote.
Some redacted documents are undergoing a further six-month review, but it is possible those records could stay secret after the deadline on 26 April next year.
The president, according to White House officials, was reluctant to agree to agency requests to hold the remaining documents.
"I have no choice - today - but to accept those redactions rather than allow potentially irreversible harm to our Nation's security," Mr Trump added in his memo.
The records are being released on the National Archives website.
What happened?
President Kennedy was shot dead on 22 November 1963 as he travelled through Dallas in an open-topped limousine.
Texas Governor John Connally, who was sitting in front of the president, was wounded. Police officer JD Tippit was killed shortly afterwards.
Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested and charged with killing Kennedy and Tippit, but he denied this, saying he was "just a patsy".
On 24 November, Oswald was shot dead in the basement of the Dallas police department by Jack Ruby, a local nightclub owner.
Vice-President Lyndon Baines Johnson (C) is sworn in as JFK's stunned widow stands by just two hours after he was shot
What was the official explanation?
The Warren Commission's report, published in September 1964, said that Lee Harvey Oswald had fired the fatal shots from the Texas School Book Depository building.
There was "no evidence that either Lee Harvey Oswald or Jack Ruby was part of any conspiracy, domestic or foreign", the commission said.
A 1979 investigation by the House Select Committee on Assassinations said there was a "high probability" that there had been two gunmen.
The life and death of JFK (R) continues to fascinate Americans more than half a century later
Who was Lee Harvey Oswald?
A former Marine and self-proclaimed Marxist, he travelled to the Soviet Union in 1959 and lived there until 1962.
He worked in Minsk in a radio and TV factory and met his wife in the city.
The Warren Commission found that he visited the Cuban and Russian embassies in Mexico City two months before Kennedy was shot.
What other theories are there?
Some people suggest there may have been a second shooter, while others say it is more likely the fatal shot came from in front of Kennedy and not behind.
A paraffin test on Oswald's cheek after he was arrested suggested he hadn't fired a rifle, although the test's reliability has been questioned.
Mr Connally has said he was not hit by the same bullet as Kennedy, contradicting the Warren Commission's findings.
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