Watergate at 40: So many ‘what ifs’
By Mark S. Smith
Topics: From the Wires, News
WASHINGTON (AP) — In the perfect hindsight of history, Watergate’s “what ifs” are still tantalizing.
What if a security guard hadn’t noticed tape on a door latch outside Democratic headquarters at the Watergate office building.
What if a calculating president hadn’t taped his private words for posterity?
And perhaps most intriguing: What if Richard Nixon had simply come clean about the break-in and cover-up and apologized?
Forty years of investigation, reporting, trials, debate and historical research have yielded no simple answer to the central riddle of how a clumsy raid that Nixon’s spokesman termed a “third-rate burglary” became a titanic constitutional struggle that ultimately expelled him from office.
“The shame of it all is that it didn’t have to be,” Stanley Kutler, the dean of Watergate historians, told The Associated Press in an interview. “Had he been forthcoming, had he told his men, ‘This is crazy, who ordered this?’ … (He) wouldn’t have had this problem.”
Of course, Watergate would never have happened had officials at Nixon’s re-election campaign committee not responded to his ceaseless demands for dirt on the opposition by hiring E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy. The ex-CIA and ex-FBI operatives presented an outline —codenamed Operation Gemstone — that included bugging and rifling the files at Democratic National Committee headquarters.
“I was one of those who tried to throw cold water on Gordon Liddy’s plans to break in — and thought I had done so,” recalled former White House counsel John Dean. “But I hadn’t killed the plans. It came back to haunt us.”
Liddy and four others were caught red-handed early on the morning of June 17, 1972 — actually, the second of two break-ins at the DNC — when security guard Frank Wills, seeing the taped latch, summoned police.
“The insanity of it and the stupidity of it have never ceased to amaze me,” Dean, who’s now 73, said in an AP interview. Hunt died in 2007. Liddy, now a conservative radio host, declined an interview request.
While there’s no evidence Nixon knew of the burglary plot beforehand, within days he was neck-deep in a conspiracy to hide the burglars’ ties to his campaign and the White House. Meeting with top aides, he readily agreed to paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in hush money and urged that the CIA intervene to block an FBI investigation.
Following the money trail eventually led investigators to the truth — and began a more than two-year legal war involving grand juries, Congress and the Supreme Court and ending when Nixon, facing certain impeachment, resigned from office on Aug. 8, 1974.
With the remove of four decades, it’s hard to remember or even imagine the hysteria and high drama of those months, with each twist and turn unleashing a flurry of subpoenas and headlines. One highlight: Nixon telling a news conference “I’m not a crook.” Another: the day a White House aide told a televised congressional hearing that Nixon had a recording system that taped phone calls and meetings in the Oval Office and elsewhere.
Former Watergate prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste says if Nixon hadn’t been forced by the Supreme Court to hand over his tapes, with their “smoking gun” of self-incrimination, things might have turned out differently.
“The system worked,” Ben-Veniste said. “But the system would not have worked had not the president taped himself.”
Why did he do it? In his memoirs, Nixon said he wished his administration to be “the best chronicled in history.” But without doubt he also wanted evidence in case someone attacked his decisions or motives.
What the system did, however, is capture him ordering Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman to get CIA Director Richard Helms to claim national security grounds in blocking block the probe. “Play it tough,” Nixon instructed.
The president spent months battling disclosure of conversations like that. But Kutler wonders what if instead, early on, he had adopted a different strategy and made a clean breast of things. Might America have forgiven him?
“One of the mysteries of Watergate is why didn’t Richard Nixon come on television, look the camera in the eye — he was a master of that — and say, to us, the American people, ‘Yes, I had knowledge of this?’,” said Kutler, who, after Nixon’s death, won a lawsuit for the release of thousands of hours of tapes.
Dean, not knowing he was being recorded, confronted Nixon over the cover-up, warning of a “cancer” devouring the presidency. He cited escalating money demands from the burglars, perhaps $1 million.
“I thought that would stun him. It didn’t at all,” Dean recalled. “He said I know where we can get that.” Dean threw up his hands and went to prosecutors.
In the end, 43 people, many of them senior officials, were either indicted, tried or went to jail because of Watergate. The roster included Nixon’s attorney general, chief of staff and domestic policy chief.
Yet the political criminality under Nixon went far beyond the break-in and cover-up. It included enemies lists, tapping the phones of aides and reporters, campaign dirty tricks and even a break-in at the psychiatrist’s office of Daniel Ellsberg, leaker of the “Pentagon Papers” study of official lying over the Vietnam War.
Egil “Bud” Krogh Jr., who led the White House “Plumbers” unit and did jail time for the 1971 Ellsberg caper, is convinced that break-in (also carried out by Hunt and Liddy) was the real secret Nixon sought to cover up during Watergate. In retrospect, Krogh wishes that on hearing about Watergate he’d shown “the moral courage … to go and tell the president what had happened the year before.”
“It was a major breakdown in integrity,” he said.
Indeed, looking through history’s lens it’s astonishing that so many top officials, many of them lawyers, did so many illegal things. Burglary. Theft. Conspiracy. Obstruction of justice. “We got across the line not really noticing it,” said Dean. Asked what he’d do differently, Dean said he never had a criminal lawyer on his White House staff — and should have. Every administration since Watergate has.
Yet would any of these roads not taken have saved Nixon? Kutler has his doubts.
In the end, the best — and only — explanation for why Watergate led to his downfall may be the president’s brooding personality.
“When all the journalists, all the president’s men and even the president’s enemies fade into the mists of history, we have Richard Nixon left,” he said. “That’s what we remember.”
___
Associated Press writers Bill Gorman in Washington, Carrie Antlfinger in Verona, Wis., and John Mone and Ryan Pearson in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
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