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- NATION, Page 29American NotesWASHINGTONWhat Did He Really Think?
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- In a decision that could throw a President's records into
- the courtroom for the first time since Watergate, U.S. District
- Court Judge Harold Greene ruled last week that Ronald Reagan
- must turn over portions of his private diaries to his onetime
- National Security Adviser John Poindexter. In Greene's view,
- 29 of the handwritten entries could "contain information of
- significance" to Poindexter's defense in the Iran-contra trial.
- Greene, who has viewed transcripts of the journals, says they
- hold no bombshells that will refute the former Commander in
- Chief's claims that he neither "knew of nor authorized" a
- diversion of Iranian arms-sale profits to help Nicaraguan contra
- rebels. However, the judge allowed that at least one entry is
- "ambiguous."
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- Reagan's lawyers are likely to resist turning over the
- diaries by citing the doctrine of "Executive privilege," which
- protects the Chief Executive's private communications.
- Curiosity abounds in the capital as to precisely what the
- former President recorded each day. Said a former
- Administration official: "I recall occasions when I was in the
- White House when people seemed to be insinuating that `diary'
- was an overstatement of what we were really talking about."
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