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C-U-R-S-E of the PRESIDENCY
By Robert Scheer
Love him or hate him, there was a grandeur to the Richard Nixon he permitted the public to know.
Awkward perhaps, but still masterful at defining the historical moment and placing himself at the
center of it. That is the Nixon honored by four presidents and most of the world's top leaders at the
time of his death. But it is a Nixon in whom it is no longer possible to believe having read this
astonishing and revealing book made up of transcripts of 200 hours of secretly recorded White
House tapes.
No wonder Nixon fought so hard -- until the end of his life -- to keep them forever from public
view. They are devastating to the memory of a man who for reasons both good and bad was one of
our most important presidents. Devastating not merely for revealing definitively that Nixon was in
on the cover-up of the Watergate break-in from the very first hours after the burglars were caught,
that he obstructed justice by bribing witnesses and that he all too easily betrayed even those closest
to him. We already knew that. What is startling about the cumulative impact of these transcripts,
unrelieved as testaments to treachery both petty and large, is the inescapable conclusion that
mendacity was the man. How else to explain these tapes, in which the 37th president of the United
States never once utters a principled comment on any subject that is unencumbered by self-serving
deceit and the incessant attempt to manipulate others?
Nor can this material, nearly 650 pages of transcripts, be dismissed, as were early fragments of the
Watergate tapes, as the mad ramblings of a man beseiged. This section of the tapes (there are still
more than 1,000 more hours to come) begins a year before the 1972 Watergate break-in with news
of Daniel Ellsberg's release of the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times. Nixon is at the height
of his popularity and as secure in his power as he had ever been. Yet for the next year leading up
to Watergate, the president is heard ordering up some of the more fanciful of the dirty tricks that
are his enduring shame.
During the very first hour of these recordings, Nixon talks about blackmailing ex-President Lyndon
Johnson by releasing secret documents on the Vietnam War, as well as breaking into the Brookings
Institution, the Washington think tank: "Bob [Haldeman]? Now do you remember [presidential
aide Tom Charles] Huston's plan? Implement it," the president says, referring to a bizarre plan for
spying on American citizens that J. Edgar Hoover scotched and Nixon later denied ever hearing
about.
The contrived innocence of Henry Kissinger is also swept away from the start, for it is Kissinger
who encourages Nixon in his effort: "Now Brookings has no right to have classified documents."
Nixon gets even more agitated and repeats, "I want it implemented...Goddamnit, get in and get
those files. Blow the safe and get it." The hate and paranoia are evidenced on almost every page.
Take the matter of Nixon's extreme anti-Semitism, which appears early with the drumbeat
regularity of a true fanatic. There is a persistent insistence that Jews control all the centers of
power in society: the IRS, the banks, the law firms and, of course, the media.
"The Jews, you know, that are stealing everything." "...Bob [Haldeman], please get me the names
of the Jews, you know, the big Jewish contributors of the Democrats... All right. Could we please
investigate some of the [expletive]?... What about the rich Jews... You see, IRS is full of Jews..."
Even though he relied heavily on such Jewish advisors as Kissinger, Murray Chotiner and Leonard
Garment, Nixon was convinced that, as a group, Jews could not be trusted. Oddly, the press
reports on the tapes have barely touched on what is an obvious and indelible stain on the Nixon
psyche.
By extension, the New York Times, the Washington Post and the Council on Foreign Relations, all
thought to be heavily Jewish influenced, became targets of choice. Of Katharine Graham,
publisher of the Washington Post: "Screw around with her television license." And in another of
his frequently testy asides, "I'm going to get that Council [on] Foreign Relations. I'm going to chop
those bastards off right at the neck." Nixon was constantly checking out Kissinger for leaks and
thought he was working with Max Frankel of the New York Times. Nixon: "Henry is compulsive
on Frankel. He's Jewish." On the other hand, they considered bringing in former Supreme Court
Justice Abe Fortas to front an investigation, because, as Nixon puts it, "I'll tell you why he would
be good. He's a Jew [unintelligible] and he's got business with the government."
Nixon was haunted by the phobias of small-town America toward the Eastern establishment, and
his obsession seems to be rooted in the treatment accorded him back in the time of the Alger Hiss
case. Hiss, a respected former State Department official, was a favorite of the establishment, and
Nixon was forever stigmatized as having been an irrational McCarthyite because he had pushed for
a congressional investigation into Hiss' actions. This perplexed him no end, for in Nixon's mind he
had tried mightily to prove his worth to the same folks who attacked him. As vice president, he had
done battle with Sen. Joseph McCarthy in defending then-President Dwight Eisenhower and, after
losing races in 1960 for president and in 1962 for governor of California, Nixon relocated to a
prestigious Manhattan law firm. During that period, he worked hard at becoming an accepted
member of the establishment that he came to believe would never accept him.
Ironically, Nixon's great foreign policy achievement, the opening to China, had been inspired by a
lengthy Council on Foreign Relations study project. And in his choices of William Rogers for
secretary of state and Kissinger for national security advisor, he certainly picked well-known
members of that establishment. But in his rambling conversations with trusted aides Haldeman and
John Ehrlichman, Nixon revealed an abiding mistrust of those he presumed to be at the center of
real power in America. The odd thing revealed in these tapes is that even though Nixon was the
president of the United States and re-elected by a commanding majority, he was never secure in his
ascension to power. (Is any president really securely in power? WFI Editor) So much so that he
easily unraveled at the slightest presumed indignity or act of betrayal by those well-connected.
The most striking example of how that insecurity fed his paranoia was proved early in his
administration, when Ellsberg turned over the secret Pentagon Papers to the New York Times.
Even though Nixon well understood that the Pentagon Papers' history of U.S. involvement in
Vietnam dealt with the record of Democrats, he nonetheless became convinced that the publication
of the documents was intended as an attack on him. Indeed, what these tapes reveal is that the
entire Watergate fiasco was the result of a preoccupation with Ellsberg and not with anything to be
found at Democratic Party headquarters.
There is no evidence here that Nixon knew in advance of the Watergate break-in, although there is
also no question that he was up to his eyeballs in the cover-up from the day the burglars were
caught. But what fueled his paranoia was his awareness that he had authorized a break-in at the
California office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist led by E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy and
carried out by the same Cubans who broke into the Watergate Hotel. Nixon was well aware that at
his instigation, those "plumbers," as they were called (because they fixed "leaks"), had engaged in
other bits of chicanery, including a nine-month surveillance of the private life of Sen. Edward
Kennedy (D-Mass.).
Nothing was beneath Nixon; anything could be turned to advantage. When George Wallace was
shot by Arthur Bremer, Nixon asked his trusted aide Charles Colson, "Is he [Bremer] a left
winger? right winger?" and Colson replied,"Well, he's going to be a left winger by the time we get
through." To which offer of deception Nixon answered, "Good. Keep at that, keep at that."
Colson replies, "Yeah. I just wish that, God, that I'd thought sooner about planting a little
literature out there." And the president of the United States just laughs and says, "Good!"
It was Colson to whom Nixon turned to develop an enemies list of people to be "destroyed" as well
as to build a counter-Washington establishment. Nixon instructs Haldeman to "Give Chuck
[Colson] access to the IRS stuff... the FBI stuff. You let him go ruthless until you kill these
people." Haldeman suggested that longtime Nixon aide Chotiner could do the job of building a
"Nixon-Washington establishment," but Nixon, in a rambling response, rejects Chotiner: "Maybe
he is not -- Judaism. It's Jew." Haldeman agrees that Chotiner is not up to the task and Nixon
adds "Yep, it's the Jew business." Colson is the guy because, as Nixon points out, he is possessed
of a "killer instinct." Haldeman adds that, with that indispensable quality, Colson "can build
himself into a damn good position as the kingpin of the power structure."
As the paranoia thickens and intrigues abound, a lyrical madness seems to seize the Nixon inner
circle, feeding first on imagined and then, after the defection of John Dean, Howard Hunt and
others, real betrayal. Enemies are everywhere. The entire personnel of the CIA and the FBI are
suspect. At one point, Nixon threatens, "I'll fire the whole Goddamn Bureau." He is particularly
after one Mark Felt, who is in a top position at the FBI and is thought to be Nixon's nemesis and
the source of unflattering leaks. "Is he a Catholic?" Nixon asks Haldeman, who replies that Felt is
Jewish. "Christ, put a Jew in there?" Nixon exclaims, and Haldeman adds, "Well, that could
explain it, too." The rambling dialogue continues, with Nixon saying, "It could be the Jewish
thing. I don't know. It's always a possibility." Nixon adds another target: "We've got to go after
Common Cause." When Haldeman suggests that the Ford Foundation is worse because it funds
Common Cause, Nixon agrees, and Haldeman responds, "Rip in there, scare the shit out of them."
Dean had warned them that many of these activities were illegal, as he would soon tell the
prosecutors. The tapes leave no doubt about the persistent obstruction of justice using private
slush funds to pay off Hunt and the others. Dean tells Nixon that Hunt is involved in continual
blackmail and at one point that he wanted $122,000 "by the close of business yesterday" or as
Dean quotes Hunt, "I will bring John Ehrlichman down to his knees and put him in jail. Uh, I have
done enough seamy things for he and [Egil] Krogh [another of the "plumbers"], uh, that they'll
never survive it." Dean states clearly to the president,"That's an obstruction of justice." But Nixon
tells him to pay anyway.
Nixon raised the money from private sources, including Thomas Pappas, a Greek American
businessman who was linked closely to the fascist generals ruling Greece at the time. Haldeman
tells Nixon that Pappas is "one of the unknown J. Paul Gettys of the world right now." Nixon
says, "Great. I'm just delighted," and Haldeman adds: "And he's able to deal in cash." Dean warns
Nixon that that's the sort of thing the Mafia can do, "washing money," but "we are not criminals."
Nixon's answer is a classic: "That's right... how much money do you need?" An ever-helpful
Haldeman advises Dean that "the easy way is to pay it to Vegas and run it through the [casinos?]
out there and it gets lost pretty easily." Of course, there was always money to be made by selling
ambassadorships, as Nixon reminded his staff: "My point is that anybody that wants to be an
ambassador, wants to pay at least $250,000."
At almost every meeting, presumed enemies are targets with the random ordering of a shotgun
blast, with Nixon doing the shooting. When the IRS wouldn't cooperate, he says of the top men:
"Out with them, every one of those bastards... They're probably on the take..." "I want a list of all
their [McGovern campaign's] contributors and supporters and I want some investigations made..."
"I don't want him [the investigator] to be soft on the Jews." "Plant one. Plant two guys on him
[Ted Kennedy]. This will be very useful. Just might get lucky and catch that son-of-a-bitch and
grill him for '76." I wouldn't want to be in [Washington Post lawyer] Edward Bennett Williams'
position after this election." And Haldeman adds, referring to Williams, "That's the guy we have to
ruin."
Nixon was forever convinced that the national security argument would provide cover for all of
these mad antics. But Colson is pessimistic, telling Nixon the Watergate case has to be kept out of
the Senate hearings "It's gotta be kept in the grand jury... You could declare war on Cambodia or
Thailand or Mexico, but it's not going to divert attention from this son-of-a-bitch." The national
security gambit is not working to chill the Senate investigation, perhaps because the opening of
China has taken the sting out of the Cold War. Hoisted on his own petard, Nixon is left to defend
secrets that the senators do not believe relate to valid security matters. But it's all unraveling too
fast.
Ehrlichman tells Nixon that Watergate burglar James McCord testified to the U.S. attorney that he
and Hunt went to Las Vegas with motors left running on the plane on the ground to race over and
bust in Las Vegas Sun Editor Hank Greenspun's safe. Ehrlichman adds: "Sometime between now
and 2:00 o'clock Monday afternoon [when Hunt testifies], you have to sink [Attorney General
John] Mitchell and that every minute counts." Nixon: "I have to sink Mitchell? How do I do it?"
Nixon adds that he can count on Mitchell not to "piss" on the White House: "This is a decent
man," one of the few instances in which that word is employed.
One of the more pathetic moments in "Abuse of Power" occurs the night after Nixon gives his big
speech announcing the firing of Haldeman and Ehrlichman. He waits patiently for the calls to
come in, and none is received, probably because of a miscommunication with the switchboard.
Finally Haldeman calls and Nixon, in a slurring conversation, says to the man he has dumped, "But
let me say you're a strong man, Goddamnit, and I love you." But being Nixon, he suddenly breaks
the mood and asks Haldeman to check reactions to the speech: "I don't know whether you can call
and get any reactions and call me back -- like the old style. Would you mind?" Haldeman says he
can't. Nixon seems genuinely moved by his firing of Haldeman, who had been with him for
decades. But later that same night in another phone call, Nixon is told, "Well, you're going to miss
them," and Nixon responds: "Oh, well, the hell with missing them. You can fill any position."
Nixon soon has a problem with Haldeman's lawyer, who turns out -- what else is new? -- to be an
anti-Semite who will not work with Nixon's lawyer Garment: "Bob's lawyer, basically, is anti-
Semitic. That's part of the problem," reports Alexander Haig, who has replaced Haldeman.
Garment is pulled off the case but never told why and remains a Nixon apologist even in his recent
memoir. Clearly, Jews like Garment were shielded from the anti-Semitism that runs through the
Nixon of these tapes, but it is difficult to imagine how. It infects everything that comes up, even,
for example, in the Robert Vesco scandal that engulfs Nixon toward the end. Nixon's own brother
and nephew had worked for Vesco, who was indicted on perjury charges for denying he gave an
illicit $200,000 contribution to the Committee to Re-elect the President (CREP). Mitchell and
Secretary of Commerce Maurice Stans are indicted along with him, and all Nixon can say is,
"Vesco is a cheap kike, it's awful."
Nor does this anti-Semitism seem to have been noticed by Kissinger, who emerges as a major kiss-
up, constantly telling Nixon that Watergate doesn't matter and will soon be forgotten: "Well, Mr.
President, no one can undo achievements, none of these packs of jackals." Kissinger relies on his
trademark realpolitik to assure the president that the damage from Watergate "can be contained":
"I grant you that the people who did the bugging are bad guys. That's why they need protection."
That that protection involves an obstruction of justice does not trouble the still highly regarded
former secretary of state.
But Nixon can't resist pulling Kissinger's chain and reminding him of his own complicity: "Now,
there's one area, of course, where you and I have to be concerned about it and where we've got to
stand firm as hell. As you know, Henry, we did do -- we did do some surveillance with the FBI on
those leaks, you remember?" At another point, Press Secretary Ron Zeigler tells Nixon that
Kissinger is distancing himself from responsibility for the plumbers, and Nixon replies, "Bullshit!
He knew what was going on in the Plumbers' activities. Don't let him give you that crap. He was -
- he was clear up to his ankles himself... Look, I... I don't like these activities as much as Henry.
Henry was the one that was, Christ, pounding the desks, squealing about it and so forth." But in
the end, Nixon resolves to save Kissinger, believing that his secretary of state will preserve Nixon's
foreign policy legacy. To Kissinger's protestations, he offers up his own basic ethical code: "I
think any individual would do anything to save himself."
But it's not working, and Nixon mentions that even longtime spiritual advisor Billy Graham "is
jumping ship." In the waning hours of these taped sections, Nixon's depression spirals out of
control, relieved, or perhaps more accurately accentuated, by ever more disparate figments of good
news. One break is that Seymour Hersh of the New York Times, perhaps the most gifted, even
left-wing, investigative reporter in the mass media, is going after John Dean's finances. As Nixon
puts it: "I just don't know whether the press will go after it, although this fellow Hersh has been
digging." And most bizarre of all, Kissinger attempts to cheer up Nixon with the news that
Norman Mailer is doing an article on Watergate... "Well, he says... for the first time in his life,
he's beginning to like you." Mailer must have smelled blood.
After reading "Abuse of Power," you wonder: Why did this have to happen? Richard Milhous
Nixon has been the subject of countless portraits, but none is more compelling than the one that
emerges from these grotesque and riveting pages: Nixon raw, in his own words, a president
unmasked. Here is a man who was popular as a leader, successful in his politics, facing only
imagined enemies, with no objective basis for his fears and mistrusts, no real justification for the
pornography of his words and deeds. You are forced to conclude that what we are confronted with
is a fundamentally flawed human being whose obsessions began to eat away at all that was decent
and responsible. Unfortunately, his tragedy was not merely personal. It was ours as well.
SOURCE: Article by Robert Scheer, author of numerous books, including "America After Nixon." He is a Los Angeles Times contributing editor and was project consultant on the Oliver Stone movie "Nixon." Reprinted from the Book Review section of the Sunday, 9 November, 1997 edition. This article is reprinted here because it is in the national interest of the American people.(WFI EDITOR: The process of electoral and party politics in America always ensures that men of integrity never reach high office. Integrity is a character trait that guarantees that its bearer will be a problem for a system that is corrupt. When asked years later what he might have done differently, Nixon's only response was that he would have "burned the tapes." Among political pros, it is widely known that Nixon's only mistake was to GET CAUGHT. The notion that only Nixon was immoral is disproven by the most casual review of the many men who have graced the Oval Office). RETURN TO NEWS INDEX |