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- <text id=94TT0515>
- <link 94XP0548>
- <link 94TO0159>
- <title>
- May 02, 1994: Victory in Defeat
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 26
- VICTORY IN DEFEAT
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Richard Nixon failed more spectacularly than any other U.S.
- President, yet by sheer endurance he rebuilt his standing as
- the most important figure of the postwar era
- </p>
- <p>BY JOHN F. STACKS
- </p>
- <p> The significance of any person in history, no matter how complex,
- can be captured in one sentence, Clare Booth Luce once told
- Richard Nixon. "You will be summed up: He went to China," she
- declared.
- </p>
- <p> Her estimation came before Watergate. "Now," Nixon said a few
- years ago, "historians are more likely to lead with `He resigned
- from office.' The jury has already come in, and there's nothing
- that's going to change it. There's no appeal. Historians will
- judge it harshly."
- </p>
- <p> He was right of course, as hard-eyed and tough about himself
- as he had been about other people all his life. It was the same
- sort of ruthless judgment he had applied to opponents as well
- as friends, to opportunities and risks, to domestic politics
- and international diplomacy.
- </p>
- <p> But by last week, as he lay dying in a stroke-induced coma,
- the verdict on his life and career was becoming, if not softer,
- at least more complicated. Messages from around the world poured
- into the hospital in New York City from the statesmen who admired
- his reach and strength, from the politicians he had dominated
- and from the citizens who loved him despite his gaping flaws.
- By the time he died at 9:08 Friday evening, something close
- to affection, born of such long familiarity, could be discerned,
- even from his enemies.
- </p>
- <p> Other politicians came and went, but Nixon was always coming
- back. By sheer endurance, he was the most important figure of
- the postwar era. Nixon put the country through some of its worst
- times, leading the red-scare politics of the 1950s, escalating
- the war in Vietnam in order to end it, trying with all his enormous
- energy and guile to defeat the legal processes that closed in
- on him during the Watergate scandal. Yet an outsize energy and
- determination drove him on to recover and rebuild after every
- self-created disaster that he faced.
- </p>
- <p> To reclaim a respected place in American public life after his
- resignation, he kept traveling and thinking and talking to the
- world's leaders. After leaving the White House nearly 20 years
- ago, he produced nine books. Just a month before his death,
- he was in Russia trying to get a current sense of the bizarre
- politics of the nation he fought against for so long. On his
- return from that trip, he stopped in Washington, where he lectured
- a room packed with members of America's foreign policy establishment.
- He spoke for 90 minutes without notes and drew a standing ovation
- for his lucid presentation. On the day that an embolism struck
- him mute, page proofs for his last book arrived at his office.
- </p>
- <p> In this issue TIME publishes excerpts from that book, titled
- Beyond Peace. It is a kind of last testament from Richard Nixon.
- It is a tartly apt critique of American foreign policy. His
- timing was uncanny. The book arrives just as a welter of post-cold-war
- crises, from Bosnia to Korea, have thrown American policies
- into deepening disarray. And, as always, his focus on foreign
- affairs was designed to draw attention to the area of his presidency
- in which his accomplishments outweighed his failures.
- </p>
- <p> Still, Watergate was the dark monument Richard Milhous Nixon
- built for himself. No other President in American history had
- been forced to resign the office. No other President in American
- history had been revealed to be so cynically, so selfishly breaking
- the law to preserve his own power. Other Presidents may have
- acted as ignobly, but none was caught so nakedly. More than
- 30 of the men who were closest to him went to jail for their
- roles in Watergate. Nixon himself was pardoned by his successor.
- But John J. Sirica, the judge who presided over much of the
- Watergate case, concluded later that Nixon too should have gone
- to jail.
- </p>
- <p> It was always easy to be angry with Richard Nixon. He had an
- unerring instinct for the divisive thrust in politics. He succeeded
- over and over again by making personal attacks on those who
- opposed him. His own childhood sufferings were transposed into
- a powerful need to win at all costs. It began with his first
- campaigns in California and ended with his famous enemies list
- when he was President.
- </p>
- <p> The anger that trailed after him, which always intensified after
- his victories because he was rarely a gracious winner, obscured
- his accomplishments. He was perhaps the most practiced American
- statesman to occupy the White House in this century. He understood
- the world in a deep and subtle way. He also had a fine sense
- of his own country, exploiting the disgust of the "silent majority"
- as the social and intellectual elites turned first against the
- war in Vietnam and then against anything vaguely bourgeois.
- </p>
- <p> For a man who used ideology early and often in his political
- career, he was an astonishingly pragmatic domestic leader. He
- loathed the Eastern monied establishment that ran the Republican
- Party as he was rising in it, but his presidential agenda was
- quite moderate by contemporary G.O.P. standards. He realized
- that the Great Society programs of the Lyndon Johnson era had
- failed, but he believed that they were aimed at real problems
- and that the government should try to solve them.
- </p>
- <p> When he left Washington in disgrace, Nixon retreated to his
- home in California. It is almost impossible to imagine the pain
- of his fall, and equally impossible to imagine the strength
- that kept him going. He nearly died after an attack of phlebitis
- and thought of taking his own life. Instead, he began a patient
- and calculated climb back to respectability. When he was still
- too much the pariah to be seen with sitting Presidents, he consulted
- quietly with their aides. And by the time Bill Clinton came
- to the White House, Nixon had virtually cemented his role as
- an elder statesman. Clinton, whose wife served on the staff
- of the committee that voted to impeach Nixon, met openly with
- him and regularly sought his advice. After his death, Clinton
- agreed to speak at the 37th President's funeral in California.
- It was a generous act. Nixon had been pardoned again.
- </p>
- <p> To the end, it pained Richard Nixon that his ideas and advice
- were always diluted by the shame of his fall. "Oh, they say,
- this is the Watergate man and we're not going to pay any attention
- to him," Nixon lamented. But America had always paid attention
- to Nixon. For good and ill, he defined American politics and
- policy for a half-century, defined it by his successes and by
- his failures.
- </p>
- <p> In the author's note to Beyond Peace, Nixon recalls that he
- told former Russian Vice President Alexander Rutskoi that politics,
- like war, could be hell. When Rutskoi was released from prison
- in February, where he had been held following his failed putsch
- against Boris Yeltsin, Nixon thought perhaps Rutskoi had learned
- "that, for some, there can be life after hell."
- </p>
- <p> History will judge Richard Nixon as much more than the Watergate
- man. And he leaves another, brighter monument: his own superhuman
- determination and stamina. It seems almost impossible that he
- has finally been defeated.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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