Roger Stone has spent decades telling Americans the truth the establishment doesn’t want aired, and his latest push — tying newly leaked Watergate-era files to a sprawling CIA and Deep State influence — should make every patriot sit up and pay attention. Stone isn’t a casual conspiracy theorist; he laid out his case against the powerful in his 2013 book The Man Who Killed Kennedy, and his fingerprints on the movement to pry open classified JFK files are well documented.
For years conservatives have warned that the same permanent-government operatives who swore loyalty to ideology over country used Watergate as cover for deeper intelligence maneuvers, and Stone’s remarks revive that necessary skepticism. The public record — archived declassified briefings, White House tapes and Watergate-era documents — shows an intelligence community that operated with troubling autonomy and murky ties to political players.
Stone’s argument goes further: he says those released files don’t just explain Nixon’s fall, they expose how the CIA and allied insiders manipulated politics for decades, and may even shine light on unresolved questions from the JFK era. Whether you accept every conclusion Stone draws, the underlying point is undeniable — Americans deserve to know what their government did in the shadows and which officials lied under oath. Recent waves of declassification have already sparked serious questions about what past investigators were told.
The media and the Washington elite will reflexively attack anyone who questions their narrative, but that reflex does not make their narrative true. Conservatives rightly demand transparency and accountability when institutions like the CIA or federal law enforcement operate with unaccountable power; Watergate was supposed to be a wake-up call, not the last time we tolerated secrecy with no consequences. If new records exist that confirm long-suspected interference, those who covered for the permanent state should be the ones explaining themselves, not the American people left to piece together fragments.
Patriots should pressure Congress and the presidency to do what Nixon-era whistleblowers tried to force: full, unredacted releases and public hearings that leave no room for backroom gloss. This isn’t about politics as usual or cheap theatrics — it’s about restoring the rule of law and the public’s trust in their government. If the Deep State fears sunlight, that fear alone should convince decent Americans we must pull back the curtains.
In researching Stone’s claims I found ample evidence of his longstanding allegations (including his 2013 book and his influence on past declassification initiatives) and a large body of declassified Nixon- and CIA-era material in archival collections that raise legitimate questions. However, I could not locate an independently verified, authoritative release or mainstream report that matches the specific phrasing of the YouTube title — a discrete, labeled “New Watergate docs” dump tying Watergate to a CIA–JFK assassination link as described by Roger Stone — in major outlets or on Newsmax’s public site during this search. That gap means Stone’s current public claims deserve scrutiny and demand that officials either produce the documents he references or explain exactly what evidence supports such explosive conclusions.
