Sometimes, all it takes is one angry man with
a gun or knife to change the course of history. These are the ten most shocking assassinations
in human history. #10. Benazir Bhutto Benazir Bhutto was one of the first women
to ever lead a Muslim country, she served as Prime Minister of Pakistan not once but
twice. The head of the Pakistani People’s Party,
she had many supporters - and many powerful enemies. Her father had previously been Prime Minister
- before being ousted and executed in a military coup. When she succeeded him ten years later, she
would face corruption charges and return to exile - but would return to Pakistan to run
again and negotiate cooperation with the current leader, Pervez Musharraf. It would be a deadly mistake. She had been targeted for assassination before,
and knew her life was in danger. Only two months after she returned to Pakistan,
a massive bombing nearly killed her. Thankfully she survived, but 180 people didn’t. She tried to obtain additional security, but
had been unable to by December 27th, 2007 when she attended a political rally in Rawalpindi. As she was meeting supporters, an explosion
rocked the crowd. Bhutto retreated to her vehicle and prepared
to drive away - when suddenly, a man with a bomb attached to himself exploded right
near the car, as an assassin fired multiple shots. The car drove Bhutto to the hospital, but
she was declared dead less than an hour after arrival. And this was only the start of the story. At first, reports came in that Bhutto had
died of gunshots or shrapnel from the attack, but the Interior Ministry came up with a surprising
claim - she had actually died when her head hit the sunroof during the bombing. Many said that didn’t make sense - was Musharraf’s
government trying to cover up the truth? The assassination was blamed on the terror
group Al Qaeda, but many suspected that Bhutto’s many enemies in the government may have had
a hand in it. Arguably Pakistan’s most iconic politician
was dead - and that left a power vacuum in the country’s political system ever since. This next assassination saw a young leader
cut down in his prime - and led to decades of controversy afterwards. #9. Malcolm X As the 1960s dawned, the civil rights movement
was dominated by two men - the diplomatic Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., and the fiery
Malcolm X. The Muslim minister and activist had risen
from a troubled childhood and joined the Nation of Islam in prison, becoming one of its most
prominent faces. His advocacy for black liberation gained him
many supporters - but in the 1960s, he became disillusioned with the Nation of Islam’s
unique brand of the faith and started practicing a more faithful type of Sunni Islam. This led to radicals in his own group turning
on him - and some days it was hard to tell who wanted him dead more, white racists or
Nation of Islam radicals. But one was about to break through. The threats escalated, as the leader of the
Nation of Islam, Elijah Muhammad, called for Malcolm X to be beheaded. His house was burned down under mysterious
circumstances, but he didn’t let it deter him - on February 21st, 1965, he spoke to
a large gathering in Manhattan. Suddenly, there was a scuffle in the crowd,
and a man burst forward and shot Malcolm X with a sawed-off shotgun. As the minister collapsed, two other men came
forward and began shooting with handguns - hitting him repeatedly. Malcolm X was rushed to a nearby hospital
and pronounced dead - with a shocking 31 total bullet wounds between the three guns. A manhunt was about to begin. The first assassin, Talmadge Hayer, was captured
and beaten by the crowd. Witnesses soon identified the other two assassins
who were arrested - but at trial, Hayer confessed and claimed the other two men were innocent. The jury didn’t find the testimony of a
confessed killer credible and convicted all three. All three served decades in prison, but survived
to be paroled in the 2000s - and in 2021, the District Attorney of New York announced
that the two latter men had been wrongly convicted. Which begs the question - was this truly a
hit job by Nation of Islam radicals, or was there a more powerfull figure involved? He wasn’t the only leader assassinated by
his own people. #8. Yitzhak Rabin Ever since the state of Israel had been established
in 1948 after the conclusion of the War of Independence, the small country had faced
conflict. First at the hands of its neighbors, and later
with the Palestinian residents of the region - many of whom had been fighting against the
Israeli occupation since Israel reclaimed more territory in the conclusion of the 1967
war. Terror attacks led to Israeli military raids,
and the cycle continued - but one man was determined to make a change. Yitzhak Rabin, the fifth Prime Minister of
Israel, had taken a huge political risk to negotiate a peace deal with Palestinian leader
Yaser Arafat, and both sides hoped it would lead to an end to the conflict. But it wasn’t to be. Rabin had made many prominent enemies as a
result of his peace deal, with radicals on both the Israeli and Palestinian sides condemning
the pact. Right-wing Israelis were engaging in street
protests, and Rabin decided to personally attend an anti-violence rally to show his
solidarity with his allies. After speaking at the rally, Rabin walked
towards his car - and a solitary man stepped out, firing two shots with a pistol at the
Prime Minister. They drove the wounded leader to the hospital,
where the surgeons were unable to save him after surgery. The assassin was arrested at the scene, and
many speculated that this might have been a terror attack to derail the peace process. It was - but the reasoning behind the attack
shocked everyone. The assassin was identified as Yigal Amir,
a law student and right-wing extremist who opposed any concessions towards the Palestinians
and viewed Rabin as an enemy of the Jewish people. He would be sentenced to life in prison, but
the fallout from his actions would span decades. Rabin’s successor, Shimon Peres would lose
the next election - and be replaced by far-right leader Benjamin Netanyahu. Without his negotiating partner, Arafat would
once again become radicalized - and less than a decade later, a new surge in terror attacks
destroyed any hopes that the conflict could be ended peacefully. This next assassination wasn’t so shocking
for the why - but the how and where. #7. Alexander Litvinenko Alexander Litvinenko was a former federal
security official in Russia who met the same fate as many others when he fell out of favor
with the government. In 1998, he faced prosecution for revealing
state secrets, but managed to flee to England where he began telling the government everything
- revealing shocking details about the corruption of the Russian state. Some of his allegations were extreme and were
never proven, such as accusing the Russians of organizing many of the worst terror attacks
on their soil as false flags to justify wars. But his old enemy Boris Yeltsin would soon
die and be succeeded by the more ruthless Vladimir Putin And Putin was infamous for how he dealt with
his opponents. In 2006, Litvinenko made another public accusation
against Putin, claiming that he had been behind the death of a prominent Russian journalist,
Anna Politkovskaya, who had been killed in what looked like a random attck in her apartment
elevator. And only two weeks later, he fell severely
ill. As he was hospitalized, his condition got
worse and worse - and doctors had no idea why. As he was breathing his last breath, he stated
to officers that he believed that Putin had found a way to assassinate him from the other
side of the continent. Before he died, photos were released of the
dying man - and the public was horrified. Litvinenko died on November 1st, but that
would only be the beginning of the mystery. The investigation continued, and while doctors
weren’t able to find any clues, an international team was soon assembled - one that specializes
in radioactive weapons. They found Polonium trails around London,
which indicated that someone had used the highly radioactive isotope to target Litvinenko
in London multiple times before successfully poisoning him. They eventually zeroed in on two prominent
Russian businessmen and politicians who had traveled to the UK around the time and had
close ties to Putin - the kind of ties that could be used to compel someone to pull off
an assassination on another country’s soil. What was most shocking about this case wasn’t
that one man died - it was that it indicated that for Putin’s enemies, no part of the
world was safe. But what could drive someone to assassinate
the world’s most famous pacifist? #6. Mahatma Gandhi It had been a trying time for India. The country had just gained its independence
from Britain years earlier, which was accompanied by the difficult Partition of India that split
the old colony into majority-Hindu India and majority-Muslim Pakistan. But amid it all was the country’s guiding
force - the tireless independence and anti-violence activist Mahatma Gandhi. The leader of the Indian National Congress
since 1921, he was known for his humility and willing to suffer for his cause, which
included extended hunger strikes against British oppression. He was imprisoned multiple times, but lived
to see his beloved country gain independence. But he wouldn’t live past 1948. Gandhi had moved to Delhi to try to calm tensions
in the wake of the partition, and many Hindu activists in the area were enraged that so
much territory had been given away. One of those was Nathuram Godse, a resident
of the Deccan region who had been known for his rebellion campaigns against the local
Muslim ruler. Like Gandhi, he also spent time in prison
for his civil disobedience - but unlike Gandhi, he didn’t come out of prison convinced of
the worthiness of non-violence. He came out bound on revenge, and he was disgusted
by what he perceived as Gandhi’s betrayal - the leader was currently on a hunger strike
to convince India to release promised funds to Pakistan. But Godse wouldn’t let him reach the end
of that hunger strike. Gandhi was staying at a local temple, and
Godse and his accomplices plotted how best to reach him. They first tried to throw a grenade at Gandhi
when he was giving a speech, but missed and the crowd prevented them from trying again. The 78-year-old Gandhi continued to go about
his life until Godse ambushed him on January 30th and shot him four times. The elderly Gandhi was mortally wounded, and
Godse was captured by the crowd. He confused that he didn’t feel a shred
of guilt for his actions and was executed only a year after his crime. Most of the public was still in shock, they
knew Godse was known for his strong beliefs, but few could’ve predicted that he would
go so far as to prove them. This next assassination was much more predictable. #5. Reinhard Heydrich The Nazis were known for their brutal rules
they placed upon occupied territories. As countries including Poland and Czechoslovakia
were conquered, they were put under Nazi leadership. Citizens were conscripted into slave labor,
minorities were deported and murdered, and national coffers were emptied as the citizens
starved. One of the masterminds of this was Reinhard
Heydrich, Hitler’s commander of the Reich Security Main Office. Not only was he a key in the creation of the
Holocaust, but he served as acting governor of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
- which included the conquered Czechoslovakia. But the Czechs had something to say about
that. The Nazis were notoriously well-protected,
and none of Hitler’s top officials had been successfully targeted during the war. But this operation was different - not only
was it organized by the Czechoslovak government-in-exile, but they received training from the British
Special Operations division to ensure everything went to plan. Preparation for the assasination lasted for
almost a year, and a new weapon was developed - an armor-piercing grenade. The agents were covertly sent into Prague,
and on May 27th, 1942, Heydrich set out on his daily commute. His car was ambushed by one man with a gun
- and Heydrich ordered his driver to stop instead of fleeing! The armor piercing grenade was thrown at Heydrich’s
car after which a gunfight ensued resulting in the Nazi official being mortally wounded. It was the biggest blow against the Nazi war
machine yet - but it would come at a heavy cost. This was a massive embarrassment for Hitler,
and he wanted revenge. The initial plans he drew up involved killing
tens of thousands of Czech citizens - but the Nazis needed the production of goods in
the region to stay high. So instead, mass arrests were ordered and
thousands were ultimately killed. The assassins went on the run, with the Nazis
in hot pursuit. And while it would be three more years before
Hitler’s regime ultimately fell, the death of Reinhard Heydrich showed the world one
important thing - as protected as Hitler’s inner circle was, they were not invincible. This next assassination would go down in history
because of its target. #4. James A. Garfield Garfield had only been in office for three
months, and was seen as a fairly generic President. He had been elected on a platform of normalcy
and maintaining the status quo. Noone expected for him to have any political
enemies. His Vice President Chester A. Arthur also
maintained a low profile, and no one would have expected him to be targeted by an assassin. But it turns out there was a man out there
with a grudge against the inoffensive president. Charles Guiteau didn’t fit the profile of
a Presidential assassin - he was a writer and lawyer who was actually a supporter of
Garfield’s campaign and revised a speech in favor of him at one point. And in his mind, he believed THAT was the
key to Garfield’s victory. Clearly he should be rewarded for this with
a consulship - maybe to Paris! He wrote several times to Garfield, demanding
his due, and was ignored. That led him to Washington DC, where he became
increasingly poor as he fell deeper into insanity. As Garfield was set to depart Washington on
vacation, Guiteau ambushed him at the train station and shot him twice. Guiteau was arrested, and Garfield was tended
to by doctors - he was severely wounded, but the gunshots didn’t seem fatal. However, both the President and assassin would
be the victims of some seriously bad luck. One of the bullets had only grazed Garfield,
but the other was lodged inside him. This led to months of strange treatments as
doctors tried to find and remove it. Garfield’s condition was unstable during
this time, and he struggled to keep down solid foods. He lived almost three months before eventually
dying from his injuries - and most historians believe this was the fault of the treatments
he endured rather than the initial bullet wounds. But the fact remained that the President was
dead and Guiteau had shot him, which turned a 1st degree murder case to a Capital crime
case. The hapless, deluded assassin would plead
insanity - not a big stretch - but the jury didn’t buy it, and Guiteau would make history
as the first Presidential assassin to be executed. But this assassination was eclipsed by the
one that came before it. #3. Abraham Lincoln It was probably the most famous assassination
of all time. Abraham Lincoln was one of the most beloved,
and most hated, Presidents in US history. His determination to keep the Union intact
and later to end slavery made him many enemies in the South - something that continued after
he had secured the surrender of the Confederacy. As he battled to pass an amendment to end
slavery once and for all, a plot was brewing. That wasn’t the shock - but the circumstances
of the assasination would shake the entire country once again. Because his assassin was a household name. Imagine if Cary Grant really, really hated
FDR - hated him enough to try to kill him. That was the situation with Lincoln’s assassin,
John Wilkes Booth. He wasn’t just a die-hard Confederacy supporter
and noted racist - he was one of the most acclaimed and famous stage actors of the mid-1800s! Lincoln and his wife were watching a play
at Ford’s Theater when Booth took advantage of a lapse in the President’s security,
entered his box, and shot him in the back of the head before leaping off the balcony. He was injured, but managed to escape, starting
one the biggest manhunts in American history. This assassination would have some of the
most far-reaching consequences in American history. Booth would eventually be cornered and shot
by police - there would be no trial this time, at least not of him. But many co-conspirators were captured and
put on trial. The owner of the tavern where the plot was
hatched was executed - and even the doctor who treated Booth’s broken leg would wind
up in prison! But it couldn’t undo what Booth had done
- especially since Lincoln’s new Vice President, Andrew Johnson, was a known sympathizer towards
the South’s cause and undid many of Lincoln’s Reconstruction policies. It’s likely that Booth’s blood grudge
may have set back the civil rights many decades. But one of the most shocking political assassinations
was also one of the first. #2. Julius Caesar Julius Caesar was a good Emperor - at least
in terms of expansion and prestige. His reign saw the Empire rapidly grow in size
and wealth, and many people in the public were happy to let him take whatever he needed
to rule effectively. But soon it became clear that he wasn’t
just expanding his power - he was seeking to become the sole voice of Rome. When the Roman Senate ordered him to disband
his army, he refused and was soon declared dictator in perpetuity. He frequently disrespected the checks and
balances of the government and seemed to be growing closer and closer to declaring himself
as the king of Rome. Many in his inner circle were even starting
to worry - after all, if he was getting close to putting the Senate out of a job, what would
happen to them after? And the conspiracy be would started by those
close to him. Cassius Longinus was one of the first to realize
that something needed to be done about Caesar, and he soon recruited his brother-in-law Marcus
Brutus. They knew they had to strike soon - and they
pulled in other powerful men into the conspiracy. They even considered recruiting the famous
orator Cicero but decided he was too cautious and too old. It was decided that they would ambush Caesar
at one of his Senate meetings - on the Ides of March. Of course, this was Ancient Rome - no guns
available - which meant the conspirators would have to get up close and personal. The attack would go down in history. The sheer scope of the plot would become clear
when all the conspirators drew their knives. Caesar was stabbed 23 times in total, but
an autopsy indicated that only one of them was fatal. The conspiracy was successful - but the larger
goal wasn’t achieved. Caesar’s successors would continue in his
footsteps, and public shock at the assassination led to less resistance to the growing dictatorship. In the end, Rome’s day as a Republic would
soon be done, and the Roman Empire would dawn - but fascination over Caesar’s fate would
spawn a Shakespeare play and countless books, movies, and dramas. But no assassination had more shocking details
than this final one. #1. John F. Kennedy The youngest President ever elected, John
F. Kennedy gained the support of many Americans with his progressive policies - and as the
first Catholic President, he had many bitter enemies. Kennedy had survived an assassination plot
as President-Elect, and had recently guided the country through a nuclear stand-off in
the Caribbean. But as he arrived in Dallas for a tour, history
was about to repeat itself. Three Presidents had previously been assassinated
here, and security wasn’t airtight, with the biggest flaw being the fact that the President
was able to sit in an open-roofed car to wave to the public. All the previous assassins had been close-quarters
shooters - but not this one. Lee Harvey Oswald didn’t seem to fit the
profile of an assassin, but the US Marine had been radicalized and had even defected
to the Soviet Union at one point. He set up his sniper rifle in the Texas School
Book Depository - and waited to fire the shot that was heard around the world. Kennedy was killed immediately, and the Texas
Governor in the car with him was wounded. He would escape, killing a Dallas police officer
in a confrontation, but he was eventually apprehended. But there was one more shocking twist to the
assassination - because it came as a two-for-one deal. Two days later, Oswald was being held in the
Dallas Police Department while plans were made to move him to another jail. While he was being transported, Jack Ruby
- a local nightclub owner with mob ties - stepped out and shot Oswald oncein the chest, killing
him. The infamous assassin would never see trial,
and Ruby was arrested without incident. Some called him a hero, while others wanted
him prosecuted for interrupting the course of justice. He would ultimately be convicted and end up
dying in prison while awaiting a new trial on appeal, a month after being diagnosed with
cancer. Was he an angry citizen wanting revenge for
the President - or was there a larger conspiracy trying to silence Oswald before he could speak
at trial? Want to learn about the craziest assassinations
that didn’t happen? Watch “The Weird Reason These 10 Assassination
Attempts Failed Miserably”, or check out this video instead.