On the afternoon of November 22, 1963, John F. Kennedy, the 35th Emperor of the United States, and his wife, Jacqueline, took a tour in an open-top car in Dallas.
Dallas, Texas' second-largest metropolis, had a light rain before JFK's departure, and the streets were washed clean and glittered in the sun.
In order to make the smile of ** brighter, the governor of Texas arranged for a large number of Dallas citizens to cheer in the front row of the convertible, and applause came and went. Nelly Connelly, the governor's wife, also deliberately turned her head and said to Kennedy, who was sitting on the right side behind her: "Sir.*, can you say that the people of Dallas don't love you!" ”
Kennedy smiled and replied, "Of course, this is indisputable. ”
In the cheering crowd, Kennedy couldn't help but wave his hands, and his gratitude to them was overflowing. However, his happiness did not last. As soon as the car drove into Elm Street, a series of bullets were fired from the library building next to it, and the youngest ** since the founding of the United States was unfortunately assassinated, leaving behind the world-renowned **.
* Kennedy's wife, Jacqueline, is frantically crawling towards the back of the car, with some speculating that she was trying to pick up her husband's skull, and others thinking she was subconsciously trying to escape.
Although we can't be sure what she really thought at the time, one thing is for sure, Jacqueline probably didn't love him as much as she loved her husband, because there were too many facts about Kennedy's affair.
Despite the multiple difficulties, Kennedy succeeded in joining the Foreign Intelligence Service of the Naval Intelligence Office in the spring of 1941 with the help of Colonel Kirk and became a lieutenant.
He was mainly responsible for collating and summarizing the information gathered, and in 1942 he was promoted to lieutenant, where he lived comfortably and comfortably. However, his comfortable life was soon shattered by the transfer, and he was sent to the Pacific theater under heavy artillery fire, and became the captain of the PT-109 torpedo boat.
Despite the challenges posed by these changes, Kennedy remained brave and determined, becoming a true "hero".
The dispatch was so sudden that Kennedy was unprepared. But he was lucky enough to survive tenaciously. Although Kennedy was brought into the battlefield by a sudden war, it also brought him great opportunities.
In August 1943, when he commanded a torpedo boat to ambush the Japanese in the Prague Strait, the ship was rammed by the Japanese destroyer "Tenkiri" due to the initial misidentification of his teammates, causing the ship to split in two.
Despite the losses, only 13 people survived, including Kennedy. He floated with the survivors for four hours to a small island called "Raisin Pudding".
There, they spent a difficult week living on a "desert island" and, with the help of local natives, managed to get in touch with the Allied naval commanders. This adventure earned Kennedy the Order of the Purple Heart and became a naval hero.
Seven months later, he returned to the United States with crutches. This heroic deed laid an important foundation for his election to the United States in 1960, 17 years later.
Despite being an acclaimed naval hero, Kennedy always had a wound in his heart: "Who sent me to the front lines?" Soon, he learned that he was sent to the battlefield "behind the scenes" FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, as well as ......His father.
Hoover had been the director of the FBI's predecessor, the Bureau of Investigation, since 1934, and had many secrets, including Roosevelt's widow
His power is too great to ignore. Although the previous ** wanted to challenge the "shadow** of Hoover", they all gave up this idea without exception.
Kennedy** was chatting with his friend Ben Bradley when he was asked what he wanted to do after becoming a **, Bradley said that he would give Hoover death**, but Kennedy warned not to offend God.
Kennedy was not afraid of Hoover himself, but of the secrets hidden in the black safe in Hoover's possession, enough for him to destroy. Back in the fall of 1941, the FBI ** Frederick Eyre was in a hotel room, listening to the ** voices of a couple of men and women in the next room through ***.
The woman in the next room, Ingo Awad, is the main target of the FBI.
Born in Denmark, Awad married into the nobility in Egypt, but the marriage did not last long. After that, she became a reporter for a newspaper in Copenhagen and was sent to Germany.
During this journey, she met Hermann Goering, who was so impressed with her that he even invited her to a party. At the party, she met Hitler for the first time, and Hitler, attracted by her beauty, called her "the perfect Nordic American".
As a result, Awad had the opportunity to interview Hitler several times, and was invited to dinner with him, and some people even photographed them drinking red wine and smiling together.
In 1936, Awad became an important guest at the Berlin Olympics, attracting the attention of American intelligence. She then immigrated to the United States, married a wealthy Swedish man, and worked for the Times Herald.
With the outbreak of World War II, the FBI stepped up surveillance of Awad because they suspected her of being a Nazi spy. A ** Frederick Eyre was sent to listen to her, and one day he heard the voice of the man in the next room, which was very familiar, and finally remembered: "Isn't that the voice of my classmate in middle school, John F. Kennedy, who later became an intelligence officer in the Navy?" ”
The FBI suspected that Awad was close to Kennedy for information, but with no evidence, it decided to stay put. To their surprise, however, Awad and Kennedy spent three days together in the room, and Kennedy inadvertently revealed intelligence about the Navy.
This was learned of by Colonel Wilson, the chief of naval intelligence, who was shocked by Awad's audacity, but did not fire Awad at the intercession of Kennedy's superior, Colonel Hunter.
Kennedy was transferred to a naval hideout in South Carolina, but he remained in touch with Awad. In 1942, Awad came to Charleston under the pseudonym White and was soon targeted again by the FBI.
According to the FBI investigation, Awad had several secret relationships with her during her time in Charleston. The elder Kennedy was enraged by his son's absurd behavior, and in desperation, he had no choice but to find his old friend Hoover and ask him to open up and let his son go overseas to "avoid trouble".
However, fate knocked Kennedy's torpedo boat over, and he himself became a "naval hero". After becoming a "Navy Hero", Kennedy's future was promising, and he asked his father for permission to marry Awad, but Kennedy Sr. adamantly disagreed, and he went to Awad's boudoir to insult his son when she was not at home.
Awad ended up marrying someone who was neither JFK Sr. nor JFK Jr. Kennedy and Awad's files were locked in a safe by Hoover, who was reluctant to give them to him, even if Kennedy went specifically to him.
Kennedy had another intimate relationship with a woman named Alicia and impregnated her. To silence her, Kennedy gave her $500,000 and wanted to remain in a relationship with her.
But Alicia ended up marrying someone else, much to Kennedy's great sadness. In order to get out of the pain, Kennedy married Jacqueline Bouvier. Kennedy's father believed that such a change would allow his son to settle down, but as it turned out, he was wrong.
Kennedy still couldn't shake off his amorous habits, which bothered his father greatly. At one point, his father said to Hoover, "If I had known it would be like this, I should have cut off his *** before he was grown up, and that might have taught him a lesson." ”
The story follows the relationship between the merry ** Kennedy and his female friends, and how his father reacts to it.
Although Jacqueline is dissatisfied with her husband's amorous personality, she can't change it. In the eyes of the public, she is a representative of the era of "sanity and chastity", but few people know her helplessness and headache for her husband.
On the night of the inauguration, people saw Mrs. ** dancing at the ball, but they didn't know that ** had gone**. It was later confirmed that under the pretext of buying newspapers, he actually went to fool around with Angie Dickingson.
In 1961, Kennedy's brother-in-law, Lawford, hosted a dinner party, where he met the well-known actress Marilyn Monroe, and the two were immediately attracted to each other. According to a private investigator who installed *** at Lawford's house, the situation was "very intense" at the time, and they even discussed a lot of ***
Marilyn Monroe was deeply in love with Kennedy, often calling **to** the office, and sometimes sneaking into the White House in the guise of a private secretary.
On May 29, 1962, at the age of 45, Kennedy** made his public debut with Monroe at a birthday party, wearing a luxurious gown worth $12,000, and Monroe sang "Happy Birthday" for him and presented him with a custom-made Rolex gold watch engraved with the words "Jack, Monroe loves you forever" on the back of the case.
At that time, Monroe was convinced of the possibility of becoming the first lady, and even took the initiative to call Jacqueline to express her desire to marry Kennedy. However, Jacqueline only welcomed it indifferently: "You can move into the White House and take on the duties of first lady, I will move out, and all the problems will be borne by you alone." ”
Although Kennedy was a well-known veteran of the love scene, he was not willing to bear the charge of "betraying his wife". He took a PR step, making it clear to the news**: "All the rumors about me and Marilyn Monroe are nonsense. ”
But White House records show multiple phone calls between Monroe and Kennedy, and the evidence pales in the paleness of Kennedy's defense. In July 1962, Hoover received a report that Monroe had asked many "important questions" during her pillow conversation with Kennedy, and that Kennedy's answers had reached the Kremlin.
Upon learning of this, Kennedy immediately severed contact with Monroe. Monroe seemed to realize that she might be in danger and desperately called her friend, saying that she knew a lot of "dangerous secrets".
A few days later, she mysteriously passed away in her apartment.
Kennedy was not alone in love with Marilyn Monroe, he also had affairs with many other women. According to him, if he does not have intimate with women for more than three days, he will feel a splitting headache.
However, such a suave ** has suffered a lot because of **. He once arranged for a ** to travel on his own special plane, but was unexpectedly framed by the co-pilot.
The co-pilot housed *** in Kennedy's bedroom and wrote a letter to extort money. Fortunately, the letter was intercepted by the FBI, and the co-pilot disappeared without a trace.
Later, it was discovered that his safe contained evidence of the JFK gang's smuggling, as well as the fact that Jacqueline knew about the matter and knew who it was. Once, during a visit to Canada, Jacqueline was furious when they found a "blonde baby" in the farewell procession, and she asked, "Isn't it enough for you to humiliate me?"
And let me shake her hand? ”
Jacqueline loved her husband dearly, and she firmly believed that if Kennedy changed his mind, their relationship would improve and they would become a true couple. However, Kennedy's behavior did not change, but continued to hurt her heart.
Perhaps after the JFK assassination in 1963, Jacqueline felt a sense of relief in addition to deep grief.