The Dark Continuum of Watergate
Special Report: The 40th
anniversary of the Watergate break-in has brought reflections on the
scandal’s larger meaning, but Official Washington still misses
the connection to perhaps Richard Nixon’s dirtiest trick, the torpedoing
of Vietnam peace talks that could have ended the war four years
earlier, Rober Parry reports.
By Robert Parry
The origins of the Watergate scandal trace back to President Richard
Nixon’s frantic pursuit of a secret file containing evidence that his
1968 election campaign team sabotaged Lyndon Johnson’s peace
negotiations on the Vietnam War, a search that led Nixon to create his
infamous “plumbers” unit and to order a pre-Watergate break-in at the
Brookings Institution.
Indeed, the first transcript in Stanley I. Kutler’s Abuse of Power,
a book of Nixon’s recorded White House conversations relating to
Watergate, is of an Oval Office conversation on June 17, 1971, in which
Nixon orders his subordinates to break into Brookings because he
believes the 1968 file might be in a safe at the centrist Washington
think tank.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment