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- <text id=93HT0398>
- <title>
- 1970s: Fighting to Be Believed
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1970s Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- May 14, 1973
- THE ADMINISTRATION
- Nixon's Nightmare: Fighting to Be Believed
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> He had made his move. He had cleaned out his staff. He had
- faced the nation on TV. But Watergate still kept growing like
- a malignancy. Within less than a week after Richard Nixon had
- solemnly denied any personal involvement and promised to see
- justice done, one of his ousted aides threatened to implicate
- the President himself in a conspiracy to conceal White House
- involvement. The charge, whatever its ultimate authenticity and
- force, was only the latest of an incredible series of
- revelations and accusations that clouded the President's ability
- to govern and produced an unprecedented moral crisis for his
- Administration.
- </p>
- <p> But first there came a remarkable and revealing interlude.
- On the day after his TV speech, the President strode solemnly
- into a meeting of his Cabinet. The members of his official
- family rose as one and applauded him. "I know that the American
- people are with you," said Secretary of State William Rogers.
- Added Republican National Chairman George Bush: "I want you to
- know that Republicans everywhere are strongly supporting you."I
- want you to know that Republicans everywhere are strongly
- supporting you." White House Counsellor Anne Armstrong, the
- highest-ranking woman in the Administration, spoke up: "The
- people understand and appreciate what the President is doing."
- </p>
- <p> Shambles. Fatigue lines marring his California-Florida tan
- ("he has aged ten or 15 years." said one dismayed adviser), the
- President expressed a mixture of gratitude, anger,
- determination.
- </p>
- <p> He praised two of his missing, newly removed aides, White
- House Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman and Domestic Affairs Adviser
- John Ehrlichman, as "dedicated people." Looking at former
- Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, who also lost his job in
- the Watergate scandal shuffle. Nixon said, "We are going to
- miss you. Kleindienst replied, "It has been a privilege to serve
- with Richard Nixon--and he left the room to more applause.
- Then the President's mood darkened and the old Nixon emerged.
- He assailed the partisan attacks from both the press and the
- Congress. "Their target was not Haldeman or Ehrlichman. I know
- well who their target is." Though did not identify himself as
- the target, everybody in the room fully understood.
- </p>
- <p> He took a vindictive shot at Republican Senator Charles
- Percy for leading the passage of a Senate resolution urging the
- appointment of an independent prosecutor to dig into the
- deepening mess of Watergate. "Percy--his target is running
- for President," Nixon said. "will never be as long as I'm
- around. Dry chuckling rose through the room, and one or two
- present clapped in approval. More calmly, the President
- concluded. "We have much to do. We must get on with it.
- </p>
- <p> That meeting showed again the Nixon Administration's great
- capacity for self-deception, its strange isolation from
- reality. In the eyes of the country, the White House is a
- shambles. In a parliamentary democracy, the scandal would have
- toppled the government. The President's closest advisers were
- revealed as amoral men who considered themselves above the law
- in what they conceived to be their service to Richard Nixon.
- Arrogant for years with the Congress, with the bureaucracy, with
- the press, they were suddenly toppled from power in a sort of
- Gotterdummerung on the Potomac.
- </p>
- <p> By last week, 17 of Nixon's associates and employees (see
- page 22 were under investigation by the Justice Department, the
- FBI, a federal grand jury or the U.S. Senate. The list will
- undoubtedly grow, and many could wind up behind bars for
- criminal activities committed while working for the President.
- These men had been selected by Nixon, helped lift him to power,
- took their ethical cues from him--and he had not yet publicly
- chastised any of them.
- </p>
- <p> Every day brought new details that beggared the suspicions
- or fantasies of Nixon's enemies. Nothing seemed unbelievable
- any longer.
- </p>
- <p>-- John W. Dean III, who had been fired by the President
- as his chief counsel--ostensibly because he seemed hopelessly
- enmeshed in the Watergate concealments--told federal
- investigators that Nixon had personally congratulated him for
- helping cover up broad Nixon Administration involvement in the
- wiretapping. Dean claimed this had happened when he was called
- to Nixon's office last September, shortly after indictments
- were returned by a federal grand jury against only the seven
- men arrested at the time of the Watergate break-in. Dean
- described the meeting--in one version also attended by Bob
- Haldeman--as one full of smiles. He said that Nixon remarked
- to him, "Bob here tells me you've been doing fine work." If
- accurately reported by Dean, the meeting has grave implications.
- It means that Nixon knew some eight months ago that his high
- aides had worked to obstruct the various investigations in the
- case--and the President has been lying to the public about
- Watergate at least since that time. Dean's motives were
- certainly cloudy, and his story very much remains to be tested.
- </p>
- <p>-- Men on the White payroll and directed by an assistant
- to Ehrlichman had broken into a psychiatrist's office with CIA
- equipment to obtain the psychiatric records of Daniel Ellsberg
- in order to find out about his "moral and emotional problems."
- "The information, if not the method, had been specifically
- ordered up by the President. When Ehrlichman found out about the
- break-in, he claims he merely told the burglars: Don't do it
- again. His legal duty was to report the crime.
- </p>
- <p>-- Even more unbelievable, Ehrlichman only five weeks ago
- offered the job of FBI director to the judge presiding over the
- Ellsberg case, with the President himself making a brief
- appearance during the meeting.
- </p>
- <p>-- As previously reported (TIME, March 5), the FBI had
- tapped telephones of reporters and White House aides at Attorney
- General John Mitchell's direction in seeking leaks of
- Government information to the press. Last week Nixon ordered his
- aides not to answer any questions about those taps. The grounds
- for the gag: national security.
- </p>
- <p> The episode of the Ellsberg psychiatrist raised
- particularly frightening questions. What kind of ethical climate
- does the President of the U.S. create when he orders his highest
- aides to pry into the morals and the state of mind of a man
- accused of stealing Government documents Should the Government
- emulate the tactics of the accused? If the White House condoned
- that kind of treatment of a defendant, why would any Nixon aides
- expect him to object if they stooped to similar tactics against
- the men who more directly challenged Nixon's power, such as his
- potential opponents for President, or perhaps his critics in the
- Senate? Who might be next? Where does it stop? Declared one of
- the highest Administration officials last week: "When the
- Watergate bugging business came out, felt moral indignation. But
- this stealing records from a man's psychiatrist--that is
- beyond indignation. It makes me physically sick.
- </p>
- <p> The dominant question remained. How much did Nixon know
- about Watergate? The prevailing, serious answer more than he
- has yet revealed.
- </p>
- <p> Even many Nixon critics are willing to believe that the
- President did not know in advance about the political-disruption
- campaign and the plans to bug the Democratic headquarters. But
- at the very least he created an atmosphere in the White House
- that led zealous aides to believe that they could go beyond the
- bounds of propriety and the law.
- </p>
- <p> It is far harder to believe that after the Watergate
- arrests the President did not have at least a suspicion of the
- cover-up. If he was not suspicious, he knew even less about some
- of his own aides than the press did. How could so many of his
- loyal men lie to him so long? Why did Nixon wait until March
- to start a tough investigation of his own? And if Dean is
- right, of course, Nixon knew all about the concealment.
- </p>
- <p> Over the weekend preceding the TV speech, Nixon retreated
- to the solitude of Camp David in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains
- accompanied by his Irish setter, King Timahoe, and his equally
- faithful speechwriter, Ray Price.
- </p>
- <p> The dismissal of Haldeman and Ehrlichman, those two dour
- Germanic guardians of the Oval seemed mandatory. Neither wanted
- to quit. Haldeman, a former Walter Thompson ad agency vice
- president from Los Angeles, had participated in all of Nixon's
- campaigns since 1956, when he was an advanceman for Nixon's re-
- election as Vice President. He had become probably the second
- most powerful man in the Government because he determined just
- who could see the President or whose memos would reach Nixon's
- desk. Ehrlichman, a Seattle bond lawyer who had been a U.C.L.A.
- classmate of Haldeman's, had joined the Nixon team as an
- advanceman in the 1960 campaign against John Kennedy. He had
- become almost the equivalent in domestic affairs of Henry
- Kissinger in foreign policy.
- </p>
- <p> The pair's involvement in the Watergate case and related
- skulduggery could no longer be ignored. Haldeman was said by
- some federal investigators to control a secret cash fund, which
- was used to pay off the seven men arrested in the Watergate
- headquarters of the Democratic National Committee, to
- keep them from implicating higher officials. He also was
- reported to have authorized a covert dirty-tricks" drive against
- Democratic presidential candidates. As for Ehrlichman, in
- addition to his actions in the Ellsberg case, he had condoned
- the destruction of some files taken from the office of one of
- the Watergate wiretappers.
- </p>
- <p> On Friday night, April 27, as Nixon gazed gloomily at the
- distant lights of Washington from the rustic presidential cabin
- in Camp David, Md., he knew his two longtime servants had to be
- sacrificed. He summoned Presidential Press Secretary Ronald
- Ziegler on Saturday and asked him to help prepare their
- resignation statements. Probably his closest remaining confidant,
- William Rogers, arrived to help advise him.
- </p>
- <p> On Sunday, both Haldeman and Ehrlichman asked to see
- Nixon, still resisting the idea of quitting. Nixon said he had
- no choice. The meeting was intensely emotional. Explained one
- White House aide: "That was a traumatic thing to do. The
- President had seen more of them than he had of his own family.
- And they had seen more of him than they had of their families."
- </p>
- <p> Attorney General Richard Kleindienst was also summoned to
- Camp David. Though he had not been implicated in the Watergate
- scandal, many of his associates had been--so many that he
- had, properly, withdrawn from the investigation. Also, under
- his direction, the original Justice Department investigation
- and prosecution of the Watergate wiretappers had been lax and
- limited. No serious attempt had been made to find out who had
- ordered the wiretappers to break into and bug the Democratic
- National Headquarters last June, who had paid them, or who had
- approved the whole operation. Kleindienst offered his resignation
- voluntarily, but he was dismayed when Nixon insisted that his
- departure be announced at the same time as those of Ehrlichman,
- Haldeman and John Dean.
- </p>
- <p> Dean, handsome and a smooth operator, had risen to his
- high-level post with virtually no experience as a practicing
- attorney, but with frequent demonstrations of loyalty to Nixon.
- But when his name became deeply involved with Watergate, he
- started scurrying for self-protection. He went to Justice
- Department prosecutors and told about the meetings he had
- attended at which the Watergate wiretapping plans were discussed.
- He revealed that former Attorney General had attended the
- meetings. Dean has asked for immunity against prosecution from
- the Justice Department in return for telling all he knows. So
- far, it has not been granted. He now could be making his
- sensational charges in an attempt to convince prosecutors that
- the knowledge he has would be worth their giving him the
- immunity.
- </p>
- <p> The Speech. On Monday, Ziegler announced the stunning
- staff changes in Washington. Nixon remained at Camp David to
- craft his TV speech with Writer Price. He arrived at his just
- 90 seconds before air time, looking and sounding nervous. A bust
- of Abraham Lincoln and a photo of Nixon's family had been placed
- within camera range. The occasion was reminiscent of Nixon's
- celebrated Checkers speech of 1952, in which he admitted that he
- had drawn on a secret $18,000 campaign fund almost touchingly
- modest figure by current measurement that had been donated by
- California political supporters, but denied using it for any
- personal, nonpolitical purpose.
- </p>
- <p> The Watergate speech was disconcertingly ambivalent. Nixon
- resorted to an odd and habitual rhetorical device, explaining--as he often has done in his past speeches on Vietnam he was
- rejecting "the easiest course" and pursuing the more difficult
- one. In this case, "the easiest course would be for me to blame
- those to whom I delegated the responsibility to run the
- campaign." Placing the entire blame on subordinates, however,
- would not have been the easier course--because it would not
- have washed. To avoid accepting responsibility for the actions
- of so many men acting in his name would have been impossible.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, Nixon proceeded, in effect, to blame others
- by distancing himself from their activities. He had been
- preoccupied during the 1972 campaign, he said, with his "goal
- of bringing peace to America, peace to the world. He had "sought
- to remove the day-to-day campaign decisions from the office and
- from the White House."
- </p>
- <p> Yet whatever his aides did, Nixon seemed to understand.
- They were men, he said, "whose zeal exceeded their judgement,
- and who may have done wrong in a cause they deeply believed to
- be right--meaning his re-election. He implied that they may
- have acted in response to "the ugly mob violence" and "the
- excesses or expected excesses of the other side...claimed that
- it can be very easy under the intensive pressures of a campaign
- for even well-intentioned people to fall into shady tactics...and both of our great parties have been guilty of such
- tactics."
- </p>
- <p> This was an offensive attempt to portray the Democratic
- campaigners--and indeed all U.S. politicians--as being
- guilty of the same kind of improper and criminal activity as
- that of his adherents. No "mob violence was evident when the
- Watergate bugging was planned or carried out, nor was there much
- reason to expect any as a result of Democratic tactics: even
- if there had been such an expectation, it would hardly have
- justified the Watergate or related enterprises. While there
- obviously is plenty of political corruption on all sides, there
- is no evidence that Democrats--or Republicans--burglarized
- offices, tapped telephone, kept huge caches of secret campaign
- funds to finance the disruption of opponents' campaigns, or
- tried to obstruct the judicial system's attempts to punish the
- offenders.
- </p>
- <p> The President never did say flatly that he had not heard
- of plans in his Administration to bug the Democratic
- headquarters. He said that he first learned that such a break-in
- had occurred at the Watergate apartment and office complex when
- he read news reports. "I was appalled at this senseless, illegal
- action and was `shocked' to learn that members of the
- re-election committee were apparently among those guilty." That
- does not explain why he authorized Press Secretary Ziegler, just
- two days after the June 17 break-in, to dismiss it as a
- third-rate burglary attempt.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon said he received repeated assurances from his aides
- that no one in his Administration had been involved. He
- contented that it was not until March that he began to suspect
- that there had been an effort to conceal the facts both from
- the public--from you--and from me. Now, he vowed, "I will
- do everything in my power to ensure that the guilty are brought
- to justice. We must maintain the integrity of the White House.
- There can be no whitewash at the White House." Nixon urged
- both parties to join in seeking a new set of standards, new
- rules and procedures to ensure that future elections will be as
- nearly free of such abuses as they possibly can be made.
- </p>
- <p> Deadline. In fact, there are a number of laws against all
- the practices that men fell into. There is obvious need for
- the reform of campaign funding, but the reform of campaign
- funding, but the Nixon officials flagrantly violated the
- fund-disclosure and reporting laws already on the books. Nixon's
- chief fund raiser, former Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans, in
- fact, had furiously tried to beat the deadline before a tighter
- disclosure law went into effect on April 7. He collected some
- $6,000,000, often in cash, in just the two days before the
- deadline, from men who did not want to reveal their identities.
- He did so even after Nixon had praised the new law as giving the
- American public full access to the facts of political financing"
- and thus building public confidence in the integrity of the
- electoral process.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the people apparently have remained unconvinced by
- his TV speech. A quick Gallup poll disclosed that 50% of his
- audience believed that Nixon was personally a party to the
- attempts to conceal White House involvement in the Watergate
- wiretapping conspiracy. Forty percent also believed he knew
- about the bugging all along. On the other hand, in a rather
- disturbing display of cynicism about Government, 58% said the
- Nixon Administration had done no worse than previous postwar
- Administrations.
- </p>
- <p> Professional Republican politicians expressed delight that
- Nixon had at last spoken up, but were agonizing over what
- Watergate had already done to their organization's morale, fund
- raises and prospects in near-future state and local elections.
- Many Republican student activists who campaigned for Nixon last
- year felt betrayed. The ultraloyalist Chicago Tribune
- editorialized: "If a President as politically astute as Mr.
- Nixon is deceived by his appointees, one may suspect that in
- some measure at least he wanted to be deceived by them."
- </p>
- <p> The intensity of verses interest in Nixon's Watergate
- speech was exemplified by the British Broadcasting Corporation's
- TV network--it stayed on the air more than two hours later than
- usual for his appearance, at 2 a.m. British time. The BBC
- estimates that more than 2,500,000 Britons stayed up, glued to
- the telly. Said a British Foreign Office spokesman, "Nixon says
- he would like to get on with the job. But can he do it. And
- contending with a hostile Congress, his power to fulfill his
- commitments will surely be limited."
- </p>
- <p> Others considered this view to be overly negative. Moscow
- and example, did not let their controlled press or radio report
- any of the latest, most sensational developments. Moscow's
- reasoning undoubtedly was that it had too heavy an investment
- in friendly relations with Nixon, in view of upcoming East-West
- state visits, to risk smirching his image.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon moved quickly to fill some of the gaping holes
- created in his staff. He named General Alexander M. Haig Jr.,
- Army Vice Chief of Staff, to take over Haldeman's duties
- temporarily; Leonard Garment, a White House aide, to replace
- Dean; and Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson to succeed
- Kleindienst as Attorney General. Former Deputy Secretary of
- Defense David Puckered was, said Ziegler, the most likely choice
- to fill Richardson's spot as Defense Secretary. By week's end
- no one had yet been assigned the full range of Ehrlichman's
- chores, but Kenneth R. Cole Jr., another J. Walter Thompson
- product and top Ehrlichman assistant since 1969, will take on
- added duties.
- </p>
- <p> The sensibilities in the Administration have become so
- bruised in the infighting that another interim replacement,
- William Ruckelshaus, is already in trouble as acting director
- of the FBI. He replaced L. Patrick Gray III, who had resigned
- after being hopelessly compromised by destroying evidence and
- cooperating with the White House to protect high officials in
- the Watergate scandal. Although no one assailed Ruckelshaus
- personally, the tough former head of the Environmental
- Protection Agency became the target of a revolt within the FBI
- against any more political appointments. All but one of the
- FBI's 59 field-office heads joined in a telegram to the
- President demanding that "qualified executives within the FBI
- be considered for the top spot. Ruckelshaus, who does not want
- the permanent directorship, tried to calm the top FBI officials
- in a 20-minute meeting. But after he left, they met for two
- hours and still insisted that someone whom the White House could
- not control be named to head the bureau.
- </p>
- <p> On the sound theory that the Administration simply cannot
- be trusted to investigate itself, no matter how independent
- Attorney General Richardson may prove to be, a bipartisan clamor
- arose for him to name an outside prosecutor in the Watergate
- case. Nixon said Richardson was free to do so, and the Attorney
- General-designate indicated that he will.
- </p>
- <p> The stage is thus finally set for a full and hard-hitting
- inquiry in which any protection of the men around Nixon--or
- of the President himself--will be most unlikely. The federal
- grand jury in Washington, which has been looking into the
- Watergate case since last summer, will continue to take testimony
- from all the suspects and from other witnesses. Senator Sam
- Ervin's Select Committee on Campaign Practices expects to begin
- televised hearings next week on Watergate and Republican
- campaign-disruption tactics.
- </p>
- <p> The most potentially explosive witness, Counsel Dean,
- talked privately to one Senate committee member last week,
- Connecticut Republican Lowell Weicker. Some lawyers suspect that
- Dean hopes to air his testimony publicly before the committee,
- then plead that the widespread publicity would make it impossible
- to find an unbiased jury for any trial on criminal charges.
- Others too might try this tactic, or seek immunity from the grand
- jury, creating something of a marketplace for officials trying to
- avoid jail.
- </p>
- <p> Dean, who remarked to associates that he feared for his
- life, took away from his office nine documents that he says are
- marked secret and shed light on the Watergate hearing. He said
- that he removed them to prevent "illegitimate destruction and
- then stashed them in a bank deposit vault; he gave the keys to
- Federal Judge John Sirica, whose pressure on the convicted
- wiretappers helped release new disclosures.
- </p>
- <p> How could such pervasive corruption of ethics start in an
- Administration of such seemingly square-shooting disciples of
- law and order? Some of Nixon's critics contend that he set the
- general pattern in the earliest stages of his political career,
- when he used some questionable tactics. More important, the
- closeness of Nixon's first two presidential campaigns, against
- John Kennedy in 1960 and Hubert Humphrey in 1968, bred an
- almost paranoid insecurity among Nixon's campaign workers. The
- slim win over Humphrey was a special shock.
- </p>
- <p> Once he gained the presidency, Nixon became unusually
- obsessed with protecting Administration secrets. The
- Administration's appalling willingness to spy, snoop and
- wiretap can be traced as far back as 1969, when Nixon became
- furious over leaks to the press and determined to find out how
- newsmen were learning of various military policy discussions
- within the Government.
- </p>
- <p> The President at first asked that the FBI tap the
- telephones of several reporters, including two at the New York
- Times, and of at least four of his own White House aides. FBI
- Director J. Edgar Hoover resisted, on the grounds that the
- practice would be indefensible if discovered. Hoover would order
- the tapping, he said, only if Attorney General John Mitchell
- gave him written authorization. Mitchell did. Recalls one
- Government official: "It was essentially a fishing expedition."
- Though little was learned from the taps, they resulted in one
- official's being shifted from a sensitive Pentagon post and the
- transfer of another out of the State Department. The FBI taps
- on reporters continued at Mitchell's direction through much of
- 1970 and 1971, as Nixon became angry about press disclosures of
- American U-2 spy flights over China.
- </p>
- <p> As Hoover became more irascible and seemed a political
- liability to the Administration, the Justice Department moved
- tentatively to pressure him out of office. Kleindienst, who was
- Deputy Attorney General in 1971, publicly suggested that
- Congress investigate the operation of the FBI. Angered, Hoover
- telephoned Kleindienst and threatened to reveal those
- embarrassing taps. No further move against Hoover was made by
- either Nixon, Mitchell or Kleindienst. Explained a Justice
- Department official, "Hoover used those wiretap authorizations
- to blackmail the Nixon Administration. As long as he had the
- papers (documenting the tapes), they couldn't get rid of him."
- </p>
- <p> In the late spring of 1971, Hoover suddenly discovered
- that all of his records on the taps had disappeared. He ordered
- W. Mark Felt, now the bureau's No. 2 man to investigate. Felt
- could not find out who had carried out what agents all "a bag
- job"--a burglary--on the FBI's own files. Felt asked Robert
- C. Mardian, then an Assistant Attorney General, if he knew who
- had taken the documents. Replied Mardian: "Ask the President.
- Or ask Mitchell."
- </p>
- <p> Nixon ordered a crash effort to find the source of more
- leaks in the summer of 1871. The U.S. position at the SALT
- talks with the Soviets had begun leaking into the newspapers,
- and Daniel Ellsberg released the Pentagon papers to the New
- York Times and other newspapers. Nixon demanded that Mitchell
- plug those leaks within two weeks. The President apparently
- asked no questions about the tactics to be used.
- </p>
- <p> Mitchell was reluctant to ask Hoover to do this type of
- snooping again. That led White House aides to set up their own
- spying operation. They recruited G. Gordon Liddy, a former FBI
- agent, and E. Howard Hunt Jr., who had worked for the CIA and
- had written dozens of mystery novels. The hiring of Liddy had
- been suggested by Egil Krogh, Deputy Assistant for Domestic
- Affairs, that of Hunt by Presidential Special Counsel Charles
- W. Colson. Liddy and Hunt became known in the White House as
- "the plumbers," because they were hired to plug leaks. They
- later became an integral part of the Watergate crew. This team
- promptly began tapping telephones, including those of New York
- Times reporters.
- </p>
- <p> At first the plumbers worked out of the office of David
- Young, a staff assistant to the President. Young's boss was
- Krogh, who reported to Ehrlichman. At the same time, Liddy
- coordinated his spying activities with the Justice Department
- by keeping Robert Mardian informed. The whole arrangement
- bypassed the FBI.
- </p>
- <p> The spying apparatus sprang readily into action in
- September 1971 when Nixon ordered his own White House
- investigation into Ellsberg's entire background. Ehrlichman
- admits that he assigned the Hunt-Liddy team to the task. In
- testimony before the Washington grand jury, released last week
- by U.S. District Judge William Matthew Byrne Jr. at the Ellsberg
- trial, Hunt told an intriguing story of being aided by the CIA
- in the burglarizing of the Beverly Hills office of Psychiatrist
- Lewis Fielding.
- </p>
- <p> Hunt testified that he worked out of what he called "Room
- 16" in the Executive Office Building next to the White House.
- He first asked Liddy why the Secret Service could not handle
- the burglary to get Ellsberg's records. Liddy told him, as Hunt
- reconstructed it, that "the White House did not have sufficient
- confidence in the Secret Service in order to entrust them with
- a task of this sort." But the White House clearly did have
- faith in Liddy and Hunt. At Krogh's direction, the pair flew to
- Los Angeles on Aug. 25, 1971, registered in a hotel under false
- name (George Leonard and Ed Warren), to make what Hunt grandly
- called "a preliminary vulnerability and feasibility study"--meaning that they cased and photographed Fielding's office
- building and located his house. They used an experimental
- miniature camera supplied by a CIA operative and hidden in a
- tobacco pouch. (The agency last week denied any advance
- knowledge of this burglary, but federal prosecutors demanded a
- full explanation.)
- </p>
- <p> Returning to Washington, the spooks wrote a memo
- suggesting that the burglary could be done, and submitted their
- photographs--all, Hunt said, going to Ehrlichman's deputy,
- Krogh. Hunt said that he reported regularly to Krogh and took
- orders from Krogh. The CIA, added Hunt, also supplied him with
- a "sterile" phone number, meaning that it was unlisted and there
- were no billing records. In addition, the CIA gave Hunt and
- Liddy disguises when they needed them, and a "safe house" in
- which to meet undetected in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> Fizzle. After getting approval from Hunt flew to Miami to
- enlist help in the Ellsberg bag job. He hired Bernard Barker, a
- former CIA agent (later part of the Watergate wiretapping
- operation), and two refugees. They all met in Los Angeles on
- Labor Day weekend.
- </p>
- <p> Two of the Cubans, dressed in deliverymen's uniforms,
- entered Fielding's office building on the night of Sept. 4,
- while Hunt watched the doctor's home and Liddy maintained
- walkie-talkie contact with the Cubans from a cruising car. The
- Cubans carried a suitcase with air-express invoices addressed
- to Dr. Fielding, and thus persuaded a cleaning lady to admit
- them to Fielding's office. They left the suitcase, containing
- a CIA camera, then punched the "unlock" button on the office
- door before leaving. When they returned later, they found the
- door relocked and had to break in. The operation fizzled,
- however, when they could not find any file with Ellsberg's name
- on it.
- </p>
- <p> Back in Washington, Hunt told Krogh that "it was a clean
- operation--there were no fingerprints left behind--but it
- had failed to produce." They later considered returning to
- California to search Fielding's house for Ellsberg's records,
- but decided that was too risky. Hunt said he tried to tell
- Colson about the unsuccessful search, but Colson refused to
- listen, saying: "I don't want to hear anything about it." Hunt
- also testified that his group later gathered FBI records on
- Ellsberg's personality, and these were used to help the CIA
- compile "a secondhand psychiatric profile" of Ellsberg.
- </p>
- <p> The unfolding of Hunt's testimony in Judge Byrne's
- courtroom was only one of a series of startling developments
- there. The judge opened the week's proceedings with astonishing
- testimony of his own from the bench: he had been summoned to an
- April 5 meeting with John Ehrlichman at the Western White House
- at San Clemente. Ehrlichman brought up the possibility of
- Byrne's becoming permanent director of the FBI. Byrne said he
- had replied that he would discuss no federal appointment while
- the Ellsberg case was being tried. He also had had a formal,
- handshake meeting, "lasting probably less than a minute," with
- President Nixon himself. Defense counsel erupted and filed a
- formal motion for a mistral on the basis of what they called
- "possibly an attempt to offer a bribe to the court--an
- attempt made in the virtual presence of the President."
- </p>
- <p> Byrne took that motion under advisement. Later,
- incredibly, he announced that he had had a second meeting with
- Ehrlichman on April 7 and had reaffirmed his refusal to consider
- a new appointment at that time. He failed to make clear why
- this second meeting was necessary.
- </p>
- <p> Defense lawyers moved again for a mistrial, and further
- for dismissal of all charges against Ellsberg and Anthony J.
- Russo, "with prejudice"--meaning that the Government could
- never reopen the case against them. The White House interference
- was, so far as legal historians could recall, without precedent.
- Defense counsel, their score of legal assistants and the
- defendants decided to take no further part in the proceedings.
- When Byrne opened court next morning he saw the defense table
- was bare--no papers, no files, not even a pencil. In effect,
- the defense boycotted the trial by refusing to examine
- witnesses. Byrne insisted: "I am convinced beyond any doubt at
- all that nothing has compromised my ability to act as a fair and
- impartial judge in this case." With that, he chose to sit
- tight, at least over the weekend.
- </p>
- <p> Byrne continued to order the prosecution to reveal all the
- sources of its evidence, so he could judge whether any had been
- obtained illegally. The Government's case would thereby be
- "tainted." It seemed that he was thus establishing a basis for
- dismissing the case on technical grounds. Alternatively, if the
- Government refused to disclose sources (because of possible
- embarrassment to the highest federal offices), the prosecution
- itself might move for dismissal. The judge complained, in fact,
- that some Government officials were refusing to talk to the
- FBI. Either way, the Government would be humiliated and
- Ellsberg vindicated.
- </p>
- <p> Leaks. Acting Presidential Counsel Garment last week
- released guidelines for all Administration officials who might
- be called to testify about the Watergate-related cases--and
- these seemed to explain the spreading Government silence in the
- Ellsberg case about telephone taps and burglaries. One
- guideline said that officials should not answer any questions
- "relating to national security--e.g., some of the incidents
- which gave rise to concern over leaks." This could block more
- revelations about the White House "plumbers." But were the
- guidelines released because national security was really
- involved or because investigation of the activities could lead
- directly to the President? Nixon also reasserted, through
- Garment, earlier restrictions against officials' divulging any
- conversations with the President on grounds of Executive
- privilege.
- </p>
- <p> Even before the burglary of the psychiatrist's office, the
- White House had begun to shift its clandestine activities
- toward the effort to re-elect Nixon. In 1971, Nixon's prospects
- for re-election were not promising. A Harris poll in May showed
- Muskie with an eight-point lead over the President, assuming
- Alabama Governor George Wallace would run. Nixon, who had
- declared that "when I'm the candidate, I run the campaign," did
- not trust the Republican Party professionals to handle his
- reelection drive. He wanted a separate organization. A group of
- admen and pollsters were consulted: they found Nixon's personal
- popularity was so low that they advised that he stress the
- office rather than his name. Thus his organization became the
- Committee for the Re-Election of the President. It was largely
- composed of Administration officials, who were relatively
- inexperienced in politics but who had demonstrated their total
- loyalty to Nixon.
- </p>
- <p> The first Nixon aim was to knock down the chances of
- Muskie's or Senator Edward Kennedy's becoming his opponent and
- to build up McGovern, who was rightly considered the easier man
- to beat. This tactic of interfering in the Democratic campaign
- was approved by Haldeman. Hunt began probing the intimate
- backgrounds of the potential Democratic candidates. He
- investigated Kennedy's accident at Chappaquiddick Island. Hoping
- to further discredit him, Hunt fabricated a State Department
- cable falsely stating that President John Kennedy had ordered
- the assassination in 1963 of South Viet Nam's President Diem.
- Liddy also joined the sabotage operations.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time in 1971, Dwight L. Chapin, the
- President's appointments secretary, arranged for Donald Segretti
- to set up a team of infiltration and sabotage agents. Segretti
- was paid by the President's personal lawyer, Herbert W.
- Kalmbach. The agents reported to Gordon Strachan, an assistant
- to Haldeman, while Haldeman apparently was the top supervisor.
- By March 1972, the loose network had at least 30 agents.
- </p>
- <p> Muskie's campaign was plagued by mysterious problems,
- though there is no proof that the Nixon operators cause all of
- the. As early as August 1971, someone reprinted on his
- stationery a Harris poll dealing with Chappaquiddick. This
- mailing went Democrats in Congress, raising complaints that
- Muskie was campaigning unethically. Schedules and poll data
- vanished from desks. As Muskie recalls: "We were convinced that
- there was a spy in our campaign headquarters."
- </p>
- <p> Before the first primary in New Hampshire on March 7, many
- white residents of that state complained of telephone calls
- late at night from people claiming to represent the "Harlem for
- Muskie Committee." The callers urged them to vote for Muskie
- because "he's been so good for the black man."
- </p>
- <p> In Florida, shortly before the March 14 primary, Muskie
- stationery was used for an unsigned letter, mailed to thousands
- of Floridians, falsely charging Democratic Candidates Hubert
- Humphrey and Henry Jackson with sexual misconduct. (Last week
- a federal grand jury in Orlando indicted Saboteur Segretti,
- charging him with conspiracy in the mailing.) Muskie finished
- a poor fourth in that primary, behind Wallace, Humphrey and
- Jackson.
- </p>
- <p> Next, Muskie had surprising problems in California:
- trouble with flood-lights that disturbed his delivery: his
- stationery was used again to tell potential large donors to keep
- their cash because he preferred to get a lot of collections from
- less affluent givers. Given the normal chance for foulups in
- any political campaign, it would be absurd to suggest that all
- of these incidents were the result of sabotage. But Segretti's
- activities provide ample reason for suspicion.
- </p>
- <p> The Nixon men, meanwhile, were also looking ahead to the
- contest with whoever the Democratic candidate might be. As
- early as February, Plumber Liddy was again promoting wiretapping
- plans. He had charts drawn up illustrating how to organize an
- eaves-dropping campaign against the Watergate headquarters of the
- Democratic National Committee and the Miami Beach convention
- headquarters of the Democratic candidates.
- </p>
- <p> Liddy and Hunt later helped carry out those bugging plans
- at the Watergate in at least one wiretapping break-in before
- they were arrested after the second foray in June. Investigators
- are trying to determine whether the two men were still working
- under the same officials as in their Ellsberg-psychiatrist
- burglary. If so, Young, Krogh and Ehrlichman also might have
- known about the Watergate plans. Krogh said last week that he
- intends to tell whatever he knows to the grand jury.
- </p>
- <p> While it is not yet clear how many Nixon officials knew
- about the Watergate plans ahead of time, there is no doubt that
- after the burglars were arrested, a broad conspiracy was
- quickly created to conceal the extent of the involvement of the
- White House and the Nixon committee. The New York Times reported
- last week that federal investigators have discovered that the
- principal cover-up conspirators were Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Dean,
- Mitchell, Magruder and LaRue. Each one, the investigators
- contend, has lied to either the prosecutors, to federal
- investigators, or to other White House officials.
- </p>
- <p> The lies were designed, first, to conceal just how much
- money was paid to Wiretapper Liddy in advance of the Watergate
- bugging, as well as to hide the real purpose of the payments,
- and second, to cover up the fact that the arrested men were
- receiving monthly payments of between $1,000 and $3,000 each to
- keep quiet about the involvement of anyone else. According to
- the newspaper account, the former Nixon committee treasurer,
- Hugh W. Sloan Jr., tried to warn the President, but was cut off
- by Ehrlichman.
- </p>
- <p> A minor White House official, TIME has learned, has told
- Justice Department investigators that even he was part of the
- extensive cover-up. Herbert L. Porter, an assistant in the White
- House communications office last year, said that he had
- initially lied to the grand jury about payments to Liddy.
- According to sources close to the investigation, Porter said
- that he and Magruder had agreed on a story about having given
- Liddy $100,000 to hire ten routine intelligence-gathering
- helpers at a salary of $1,000 each a month for ten months. He
- and Magruder thus substantiated each other's accounts before the
- jury. Porter reported meeting Magruder on April 14 and claimed
- that Magruder told him: "It's all over, I perjured myself
- twelve times."
- </p>
- <p> Even by chance, some observers ran across traces of that
- Watergate bugging operation before it was revealed. John Lofton,
- editor of the Republican National Committee's publication,
- Monday, told FBI agents that he visited Magruder's office at the
- Nixon committee shortly before the June 17 arrests. He noticed a
- file on Magruder's desk labeled "Gemstone I." Without mentioning
- any spying activities, Magruder cited some gossip about National
- Democratic Chairman Larry O'Brien. Lofton asked if he could use
- it in Monday, "Absolutely not," Magruder cautioned. After he
- read about Watergate, Lofton phoned Magruder and joked
- innocently: "Well, there goes Gemstone I." There was dead silence
- from Magruder, then the cold warning: "Don't ever use that name
- again." Gemstone was the code word used on the typed summaries
- of the illegally acquired telephone conversations of the
- Democrats.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the degrees of guilt in the scandal, Watergate
- is, of course, a tragedy for the men involved and for their
- families. As a friend of John Haldeman explained: "There is no
- way to measure the toll. She is about as strong as he is. She'll
- be all right. But it's a problem for the kids. There's no way
- around it at school." The Haldemans have four children. Jeanne
- Ehrlichman, a very private woman, said firmly, "I just know my
- husband is going to be proved innocent." Clutching a childhood
- Bible, Martha Mitchell attracted a press throng as she appeared
- in a Manhattan law office to give a deposition in a Watergate
- civil suit. But she disappointed everyone by confessing that
- she had no personal knowledge of the affair. She said that
- Husband John had always assured her he had not been involved,
- and "I trust and pray to God" that he was not.
- </p>
- <p> The personal suffering would readily give way to a far
- greater public trauma if the President were proved to be
- implicated. Everyone on Capitol Hill dreads the very thought of
- impeachment, but it is being openly mentioned for the first
- time in memory. Barry Goldwater conceded last week: "If it
- were shown that he was in this, there's no question at all that
- there would be impeachment proceedings."
- </p>
- <p> Nightmare. The procedure, used against only one President
- in U.S. history, Andrew Johnson in 1868, would require any member
- of the House to offer a resolution to investigate grounds for
- impeachment. It would be referred to either the House Judiciary
- Committee or a special committee, which would take evidence in
- full-dress public hearings. If the committee decided on the basis
- of the hearings that there is sufficient evidence to support the
- charges, an impeachment resolution would be sent to the House. By
- majority vote, the House could approve it.
- </p>
- <p> The Senate would then be notified, as would the President,
- and he would be given a chance to file written answers to the
- charges raised by the House. The Chief Justice of the U.S. would
- then preside over the Senate, which would convene as a court of
- impeachment. There would be a trial, with witnesses, cross-
- examination and court rules. The President could appear or be
- represented by attorneys. After all witnesses had been
- questioned, the Senate would vote on each charge. A two-thirds
- vote against the President on any charge would result in his
- removal and disqualification for any other federal office. The
- Vice President would become President.
- </p>
- <p> Any such action would, as one Congressman describes it,
- "rock the world." Practically no one expects it to happen. There
- is in tact a nightmarish quality to all such speculation. How
- could a "third-rate burglary" grow to these monstrous
- proportions?
- </p>
- <p> From the beginning, Watergate has been, of course, a far
- more serious matter than that. All of the political and official
- spying and deception that preceded it, as well as the lying and
- shredding of evidence that followed it, represent to a fearsome
- degree lawlessness at the highest levels of Government. Whatever
- may yet be revealed about Richard Nixon's complicity, in a sense,
- he already stands impeached, by a growing consensus, for an
- appalling failure of responsibility. He selected the men, set the
- standards, and more than anyone else allowed Watergate's muddy
- waters to engulf his Administration.
- </p>
- <p>What the President Had to Say Before
- </p>
- <p> In the months between the time that the Watergate burglary
- was first revealed in the press (June 17) and the time when
- Nixon announced (April 17) that he had learned of new "serious
- charges," it was mostly presidential surrogates who issued the
- denials of White House involvement. The President himself said
- remarkably little about the affair. Here are his principal
- statements:
- </p>
- <p>-- On June 22, five days after the Watergate break-in,
- Nixon said at a news conference that such an act "has no place
- whatever in our electoral process, or in our government process,"
- and added that "the White House has had no involvement whatever
- in this particular incident."
- </p>
- <p>-- On Aug. 29, at a press conference Nixon "categorically"
- denied that anyone on the White House staff or at that time
- employed anywhere in his Administration was involved in what he
- called "this very bizarre incident." He blamed the break-in on
- "overzealous people" and promised that there would be no attempt
- to cover up the facts, saying, "We want the air cleared. We want
- it cleared as soon as possible."
- </p>
- <p>-- On Oct. 5, Nixon denied that he knew anything about the
- break-in and told the press that he was pleased with the FBI's
- investigation. "I wanted every lead carried out to the end
- because I wanted to be sure that no member of the White House
- staff and no man or woman in a position of major responsibility
- in the Committee for Re-election had anything to do with this
- kind of reprehensible activity."
- </p>
- <p>-- On March 2, Nixon said that Executive privilege would
- apply to John W. Dean III, and that he would not permit his
- counsel to testify before the Senate select committee
- investigating Watergate. Said Nixon: "No President could ever
- agree to allow the counsel to the President to go down and
- testify before a committee."
- </p>
- <p>-- On April 17, Nixon reversed field. He told reporters
- that he had begun "intensive new inquiries" into the Watergate
- affair, as a result of "serious charges which came to my
- attention." He said no one in the Administration should be
- given "immunity from prosecution," adding: "I condemn any
- attempts to cover up this case, no matter who is involved."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-