
Sirhan was not only anti-Semitic in his political views but believed in violent action as a political tool.

By Mel Ayton
Author and Historian
Renewed interest in the Robert Kennedy assassination flourished on the 50th anniversary of his assassination in 2018 and the following year with the publication of two books about the assassination, A Lie Too Big to Fail by Lisa Pease and The Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy by Tim Tate and Brad Johnson. Both books allege RFKโs assassin was a hypnotised assassin manipulated by the CIA and had no real motive thus innocent of the crime.(1)
The falsehoods promoted by Pease, Tate and Johnson โ a โgirl in a polka dot dressโ controlled Sirhan, misinterpretations of the ballistics evidence, the creation of suspicion around LAPD crime scene mistakes, multiple teams of CIA-controlled assassins skulking around the Los Angeles Ambassador Hotel, allegations that Sirhan was never close enough to RFK to fire the fatal shot, allegations of Sirhan firing โblanksโ, accusations against an innocent security guard Thane Eugene Cesar – have all been addressed and debunked over the years (most recently here: https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/169208 and here: https://www.moldea.com/RFKcase.html)
The authors of the books were given moral support of late by a group of Hollywood celebrities including Oliver Stone, Alec Baldwin, Martin Sheen, Rob Reiner, David Crosby, Mort Sahl, and two Kennedy family members – Robert F. Kennedy Jr.and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend. Following publicity about the books the group called for a new investigation of the assassination. (The group also alleged that other political assassinations of the 1960s, JFK, MLK and Malcolm X, involved government malfeasance and cover-up and wanted the government to also re-investigate those crimes). (2)
It is no mystery why some Hollywood celebrities support the notion of an innocent Palestinian refugee railroaded into a notorious murder case. Many in Hollywood have endorsed and embraced the Palestinian cause mimicking the American leftโs decades-old support. Unable to gauge Sirhanโs true character by reading the recent conspiracy books they would naturally assume Sirhan mysteriously acted without a motive.
The recent conspiracy authors adopt the modus operandi of previous RFK conspiracy authors in the way they attempt to portray Sirhan as a young man who had no real political agenda or any fanaticism. Tate and Johnson inform their readers that, โSirhanโs closest friend, Ivan Garcia, had explicitly told them that, โSirhan did not appear to be particularly aware of any political party, was not interested in groups or being a leader and was not openly fanatical about politics.โโ (3) Lisa Pease cites acquaintances of Sirhan who described him as polite and non-violent; โโฆ. nearly everyoneโ, she writes, โdescribed Sirhan as polite, respectful and friendlyโฆSirhan did not appear to be particularly aware of any political party, was not interested in groups or being a leader and was not openly fanatical about politicsโ. (4)
Although many falsehoods about the case have been debunked over the years this crucialexamination of Sirhanโs motives has been largely ignored or overlooked by the mainstream media โ motives which convincingly and conclusively show that not only was Sirhan a political fanatic but he also embraced the concept of violent solutions to political problems.
Although some acquaintances of Sirhan said he was โpleasant and well-manneredโ and โnon-politicalโ it is not the lasting impressions of those who knew him best. His brother Munir said Sirhan was โstubbornโ and had โtantrumsโ(5)William A. Spaniard, a twenty-four-year-old Pasadena friend of Sirhanโs, said the young Palestinian was โa taciturn individual.โ(6) Fellow students characterized Sirhan as not only โtaciturnโ but also โsurlyโ, โhard to get to knowโ, โwithdrawn and aloneโ. (7) One of his professors saw Sirhan and another student have an argument that, โalmost became a fist fightโ. He said Sirhan had, โan almost uncontrollable temperโ. (8)
Sirhan also revealed the violent side of his character when he was employed as an exercise boy/ trainee jockey. According to two exercise girls who worked at the Grande Vista Ranch Sirhan treated the horses โcruellyโ. Del Mar Race Track foreman Larry Peters sawSirhan kick a horse in the belly and after he remonstrated with him he was taken aback at the vitriol which emanated from the young employee. Peters said Sirhan’s temper had been unusually violent when he was told he would never become a jockey. (9)
Additionally, a horse trainer at the Grande Vista Ranchranch saw Sirhan mistreat a horse, โโฆkicking and hitting it with his fistsโ. Sirhan, he said, โโฆwas in a rage of temperโ. By way of explanation Sirhan told him the horse โprovoked himโ. (10) In fact, Sirhan had used this excuse at his trial when he testified that Robert Kennedy, by his support of Israel, had โprovokedโ him which led to his decision to assassinate the senator. (11)
As a young adult, Sirhan sought meaning to his increasingly hopeless life by embracing anti-Semitism, anti-Americanism and Palestinian nationalism. Sirhanโs parents taught him the Jews were โevilโ and โstole their homeโ. They also taught him to hate, despise and fear Jews. As a part-time gardener Sirhan came to hate the Jews whose gardens he tended. (12)
Amongst the many descriptions of Sirhan by those who knew him well include his friends Walter Crowe, Lou Shelby and John and Patricia Strathmann, as well as his former boss John Weidner. They all agreed that Sirhan hated Jews and been intense and emotional whenever he discussed the Arab-Israeli conflict. They all agreed he was vehemently critical of American foreign policy regarding Israel.
Walter Crowe had known Sirhan from the time they were young adults and also during a short period of time when Sirhan was a Pasadena College student. Crowe said Sirhan was virulently anti-Semitic and professed hatred for the Jews and the state of Israel. He believed Sirhanโs mother Mary propagated these views to Sirhan. (13)
Lou Shelby, the Lebanese-American owner of the Fez Supper Club in Hollywood, knew the Sirhan family intimately. He described Sirhan as, โintensely nationalistic with regard to his Arab identityโ. According to Shelby, โWe had a really big argument on Middle East politics…we switched back and forth between Arabic and English. Sirhanโs outlook was completely Arab nationalist – the Arabs were in the right and had made no mistakesโ. (14)
John and Patricia Strathmann had been โgood friendsโ with Sirhan since High School. According to John, Sirhan was an admirer of Hitler, especially his treatment of the Jews, and was impressed with Hitlerโs Mein Kampf. John also said Sirhan became โintenseโ and โmadโ about the Arab/Israeli Six Day War. Patricia said Sirhan became, โburning mad . . . furiousโ about the war. (15)
Sirhan discussed politics, religion, and philosophy with his boss, John Weidner, a committed Christian.Weidner was honoured by Israel for his heroism in saving more than 1,000 people from the Nazis.Sirhan worked for Weidner from September 1967 to March 1968. According to Weidner Sirhan, โhated Jewsโ. (16)
Sirhan was not only anti-Semitic in his political views but believed in violent action as a political tool. He admired the Black Panthers and even wanted to join their organisation. According to his brother Munir, Sirhan also became enamoured with the Black Muslims, who โwere like him culturallyโ. Sirhan attended the Black Muslim Temple in Central Los Angeles until he was told he could not join the organization because he was not black. (17)
The notion that Sirhan never held any animus towards Robert Kennedy is also entirely without foundation as friends and Sirhan himself have revealed. Sirhan said he believed Robert Kennedy listened to the Jews, and he saw the senator as having sold out to them. (18)
Sirhan also expressed hatred for Robert Kennedy to John Shear, an assistant to trainer Gordon Bowsher at the Santa Anita Racetrack. Shear recalled that the newly hired Sirhan heard a co-worker read aloud a newspaper account of Robert Kennedy recommending the allocation of arms to Israel. โSol (Sirhan) just went crazy,โ Shear said. โHe was normally very quiet, but he just went into a rage when he heard the story.โ (19)
Sirhan thought RFK would be, โlike his brother,โ the president, and help the Arabs but, โHell, he fโฆ.. up. Thatโs all he did. . .. He asked for it. He should have been smarter than that. You know, the Arabs had emotions. He knew how they felt about it. But, hell, he didnโt have to come out right at the fโฆโฆ time when the Arab-Israeli war erupted. Oh! I couldnโt take it! I couldnโt take it!โ (20)
Despite protestations to the contrary Sirhan had clear and defined motives in wanting to murder Robert F. Kennedy and the hatred that spewed forth from his gun can ultimately be traced back to one cause – Palestinian nationalism.
Notes
1. The Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy by Tim Tate and Brad Johnson Thistle Publishing 2018
A Lie Too Big To Fail by Lisa Pease Feral House 2018
2. Kennedy, King, Malcolm X relatives and scholars seek new assassination probesBy Tom Jackman, 25 January 2019 https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/01/25/kennedy-king-malcolm-x-relatives-scholars-seek-new-assassination-probes/?utm_term=.3ff4a5a06d2a
3. Tateand Johnson, Kindle edition.2018, location1678
4. A Lie Too Big To Fail by Lisa Pease, Feral House, 2018, 126-127
5.Houghton, Robert A. Special Unit Senator: The Investigation of the Assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy. Random House 1970 New York,181
6 .Francine Klagsbrun and David C. Whitney, eds., Assassination: Robert F. Kennedy, 1925โ1968 ,New York: Cowles, 1968, 109
7. Godfrey H. Jansen, Why Robert Kennedy Was Killed: The Story of Two Victims, New York, Third Press, 1970,121โ123
8.FBI Airtel To LA From San Francisco Kensalt, Interview with Assistant Professor Lowell J Bean, 21 June 1968
9. Houghton, 191
10. FBI Kensalt Files, Interviews, 7 June 1968, Inglewood, Ca LA 56- 156 and 8 June 1968, Corona, Ca LA-56-156
11. John Seigenthaler, Search For Justice, Aurora, 1971 Seigenthaler, 256
12. See: The Forgotten Terrorist, Chapter 3, Sirhan and Palestine)
Klagsbrun and Whitney, Assassination, 110
13. Houghton, 165
14 Jansen, 138/139
15.Houghton, 231- 232
16.Jansen, 135
17. Kaiser 214
18. Seigenthaler, 295
19. Larry Bortstein, โGuard Has a Leg Up on Opening Day,โ OC Register, December 24, 2006,http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/sports/other/article_1397207.php
20. Robert Kaiser, RFK Must Die, E P Dutton 1970, 270
Originally published by History News Network, 03.31.2019, reprinted with permission for educational, non-commercial purposes.

