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- <text id=94TT0309>
- <title>
- Mar. 21, 1994: Perspective:Why It Isn't Watergate
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PERSPECTIVE, Page 39
- Why It Isn't Watergate
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>There is no evidence of criminality in Whitewater--but that
- doesn't mean it's trivial
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church
- </p>
- <p> Watergate. Whitewater. Both contain the letters w-a-t-e-r.
- Adopt the fashion of attaching the suffix -gate to any scandal
- whatsoever (remember Ice Cream-Gate? Doublebillingsgate? never
- mind, nobody else does either) and the second becomes Whitewatergate,
- identical to the first except for an extraneous syllable. But
- do the two share any other similarities?
- </p>
- <p> Some, certainly, and not altogether superficial ones. Both concern
- allegations of impropriety directed at a President of the United
- States (though only Whitewater also involves the First Lady;
- one would have to look very long through the mountain of Watergate
- clippings before coming across even a glancing mention of Pat
- Nixon). Both triggered probes by a special counsel, and both
- may yet lead to congressional investigations. Both touched off
- partisan howling for a President's head, and both featured official
- defenses of said President by aides who obviously had next to
- no knowledge of what had happened. George Stephanopoulos and
- Ron Ziegler might equally resent that comparison, but there
- it is.
- </p>
- <p> But what, if anything, is really similar? Right now, an honest
- answer would have to be: We don't know. The identity of "Deep
- Throat" is one of the few Watergate mysteries left. We know
- not only the details of the cover-up but what it was that was
- covered up. In contrast, probers into Whitewater have been sorely
- puzzled by the disparity between the intensity of White House
- efforts to obfuscate the matter and what can be discovered so
- far about what might have been obfuscated. So what if the failed
- Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan really was being operated as
- what Republican Congressman Jim Leach calls a "private piggy
- bank" for Arkansas politicians, including the then Governor?
- So what if Bill and Hillary Clinton did in fact take income-tax
- deductions to which they were not entitled, and underpaid their
- personal taxes? Admitting as much no doubt would be embarrassing.
- Avoiding that embarrassment, however, is so far from being worth
- all the trouble that the Clinton White House is in now as to
- stir suspicion that there must be something more waiting to
- be unearthed.
- </p>
- <p> This much, however, can be said. Whitewater has a very, very
- long way to go before it can be considered within 16 miles of
- being equal in gravity to Watergate. Memories are dimming. People
- voted in 1992 who were not yet born when the Watergate break-in
- occurred 20 years earlier, or even when President Nixon resigned
- in 1974. But it is worth recalling for one thing that "Watergate"
- pointed to a whole pattern of activity at the top of the government
- that former (later jailed) Attorney General John Mitchell referred
- to as the "White House horror stories." The rifling of the safe
- in the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist, the creation
- of the plumbers' unit, the "dirty tricks" in the 1972 campaign,
- the surveillance of anti-Vietnam War protesters, the "enemies
- list"--these things had only a peripheral relationship, if
- that, to the burglary of Democratic National Committee headquarters
- at the Watergate complex, but they were part of a pattern of
- dictatorial and in some cases criminal behavior that has not
- found even alleged parallels in the Clinton White House.
- </p>
- <p> As for "Watergate" proper, remember Richard Nixon, 37th President
- of the United States, musing on tape about how much money would
- be required to buy the silence of the burglars, and rumbling
- that he knew where to get it? Remember White House counsel John
- Dean semi-joking that Nixon's helpers were unschooled in such
- criminal activity as leaving the money for payoffs where it
- could not be traced, and one of his listeners remarking plaintively
- that Mitchell ought to know how to find somebody skilled in
- money laundering? The onetime chief law-enforcement officer
- of the country being mentioned as a conduit to recruit a successful
- crook! What comparison can be drawn between that and meetings
- concerning the Madison investigation between Treasury officers
- and White House aides that some commentators doubt can be considered
- improper at all?
- </p>
- <p> Yet if Watergate--so far--surpasses Whitewater by light-years
- in seriousness, there are disturbing parallels. Both concern
- whether what a President (and in the case of Whitewater, a First
- Lady) says can be believed. Whitewater, as Congressman Leach
- asserts, may be important "precisely because it is small [and]
- truth of character is more generally revealed in small acts
- than large gestures." It mattered that Lyndon Johnson lied about
- small things because he eventually lied (to the nation and,
- probably, to himself) about a very big thing, the Vietnam War.
- It matters if Bill and Hillary Clinton are telling the truth
- about Whitewater. How much they invested; how much, if anything,
- they really lost; whether they were actually entitled to all
- the tax deductions for interest they took. Because these things
- are very important in themselves? No. Because if their veracity
- cannot be trusted on those matters, who can believe them when
- they say their health-care plan will really cut costs, or improve
- the quality of medical care, or not lead to rationing, or increase
- rather than narrow our choice of which doctors to consult?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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