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Eagleton
Digital Archive of American Politics
Watergate
Early
in the morning on June 17, 1972, after being alerted by a building
security guard, police arrested five men who had broken into the
headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate
office complex. According to subsequent accounts, the
burglars were there to adjust bugging equipment they had installed
during a prior May break-in and to photograph documents in the Democrats'
files. The participants in the burglary were soon connected to E.
Howard Hunt, a former White House aide, and to G.
Gordon Liddy, general counsel for the Committee for the Reelection
of President Nixon. Three months later, Liddy, Hunt, and the five
burglars were indicted by a federal grand jury. Despite the ties
to his campaign, President
Nixon repeatedly denied any involvement in the incident. In
subsequent testimony, Nixon campaign director and former Attorney
General John
Mitchell, in admitting his own authorization of the burglary
at Liddy's behest and his knowledge of the later efforts to cover
it up, said that he did not inform President Nixon "...so he
could go on through the campaign without being involved." While
the Watergate incident attracted relatively little public notice
during the remainder of the 1972 campaign season, two
reporters from the Washington
Post, Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein, played key roles in pursuing the
story, with their reports aided by tips form their informant, later
popularly called "Deep
Throat", whose identity remains a point of speculation.
President
Nixon went on to win a landslide re-election victory over Democratic
candidate George
McGovern, with the Republican ticket gaining 520 of the 538
Electoral
College votes.
The
Watergate burglars first refused to talk about the reason for their
burglary, but five of the break-in defendants entered guilty
pleas, and E.
Howard Hunt and James
McCord, the security director of the Committee for the Reelection
of the President who had formerly worked as an officer in the CIA
and FBI, were convicted by a federal court jury for their part in
the burglary conspiracy. The defendants were placed under
severe pressure when federal Judge
John Sirica announced in court on March 23, 1973, that the severity
of sentences for the five defendants who had pled guilty would depend
on their cooperation in implicating those higher up in the conspiracy.
He also read in open court a letter he had received from McCcord
charging that witnesses in the burglary trial had committed perjury
and that the White House was involved in a cover-up of its connection
to the break-in.
A special prosecutor, Harvard Law School Professor Archibald Cox,
was appointed to look into Watergate and a special Senate Investigative
Committee, chaired by North Carolina Democrat Sam
Ervin, undertook its own probe. At the commencement of the hearings,
the committee's ranking Republican, Howard
Baker of Tennessee, focused the issue with one simple question:
"What did the President know and when did he know it?"
Despite denials they had anything to do with it, four top Nixon
aides were forced to resign.
On
July 13, Alexander
Butterfield, a deputy assistant to the President and secretary
to the Cabinet, disclosed in a private interview with the Senate
committee staff that the White House had a tape recording system.
The committee and the special prosecutor subpoenaed the tapes, but
the President refused on the ground that they were covered by executive
privilege, contending that a president had a right to keep confidential
any White House communication, whether or not it involved sensitive
diplomatic or national security matters. Archibald Cox also persisted
in demanding the tapes, and the White House ordered Attorney General
Elliot Richardson to fire Cox. Both Richardson and his assistant,
William Ruckelshaus, refused and resigned. Ruckelshaus's assistant,
Robert Bork, then fired Cox, but Congress forced Nixon to name a
new special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski.
Political investigations
began in February 1973 when the Senate established a Committee to
investigate the Watergate scandal. The public hearings included
the testimony provided by John Dean, Nixon's former White House
Counsel, that he had warned the President that the scandal involved
key members of the Administration.
The decision
in United
States v. Nixon issued July 24 by the Supreme Court ordered
the White House to hand over more tapes, rejecting the Ptresident's
claims of executive privilege. Released August 5, the most damaging
tape, to become known as the
'smoking gun' tape, showed that on June 23, 1972, only six days
after the Watergate break-in, Nixon had suggested in a conversation
with his Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman that the Central Intelligence
Agency be used to block the Federal Bureau of Investigation's work
on the burglary. On July 27, 29 and 30, the Judiciary Committee
approved three Articles of Impeachment for referral to the full
House charging Nixon with obstruction of justice and misue of his
office.
The calls for
Nixon to resign increased, and many of his Republican defenders
in the Congress announced either publicly or privately that they
would no longer oppose impeachment. On August 7, Republican Congressional
leaders, including Senator
Barry Goldwater, visited the President in the White House to
advise him that his conviction on the impeachment charges was inevitable.
At 9 pm on the
evening of August 8, 1974, President Nixon delivered a nationally
televised speech
in which he announced his intention to resign . The next morning,
he made his final remarks to the White House staff before sending
his formal resignation
letter to Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The
"Smoking Gun" conversation
President Nixon and his Chief of Staff
H.R. Haldeman met on June 23, 1972 to discuss the progress of the
FBI's Watergate investigation, especially the tracing of the source
of money found on the burglars. The President suggests having the
CIA ask the FBI to halt their investigation of the Watergate break-in
by claiming that the break-in was a national security operation.
Excerpts
from transcript of meeting between President Nixon and Chief of
Staff H.R. Haldeman in the Oval Office on June 23, 1972
Source: National Archives and Records Administration
HALDEMAN:
okay -that's fine. Now, on the investigation, you know, the Democratic
break-in thing, we're back to the-in the, the problem area because
the FBI is not under control, because [FBI Director] Gray doesn't
exactly know how to control them, and they have, their investigation
is now leading into some productive areas, because they've been
able to trace the money, not through the money itself, but through
the bank, you know, sources - the banker himself. And, and it
goes in some directions we don't want it to go. Ah, also there
have been some things, like an informant came in off the street
to the FBI in Miami, who was a photographer or has a friend who
is a photographer who developed some films through this guy, [Watergate
burglar] Barker, and the films had pictures of Democratic National
Committee letter head documents and things. So I guess, so it's
things like that that are gonna, that are filtering in. [Campaign
Director John] Mitchell came up with yesterday, and [White House
Counsel] John Dean analyzed very carefully last night and concludes,
concurs now with Mitchell's recommendation that the only way to
solve this, and we're set up beautifully to do it, ah, in that
and
that...the only network that paid any attention to it last night
was NBC...they
did a massive story on the Cuban...
PRESIDENT:
That's right.
HALDEMAN:
thing.
PRESIDENT:
Right.
HALDEMAN:
That the way to handle this now is for us to have Walters call
Pat Gray and just say,
"Stay the hell out of this...this is ah, business here we
don't want you to go any further on it." That's not an unusual
development,...
PRESIDENT:
Um huh.
HALDEMAN:
...and, uh, that would take care of it
PRESIDENT:
When you get in these people when you...get these people in, say:
"Look, the problem is that this will open the whole, the
whole Bay of Pigs thing, and the President just feels that"
ah, without going into the details...don't, don't lie to them
to the extent to say there is no involvement, but just say
this is sort of a comedy of errors, bizarre, without getting into
it, "the President believes that it is going to open the
whole Bay of Pigs thing up again. And, ah because these people
are plugging for, for keeps and that they should call the FBI
in and say that we wish for the country, don't go any further
into this case", period!
PRESIDENT:
What about Pat Gray, ah, you mean he doesn't want to?
HALDEMAN:
Pat does want to. He doesn't know how to, and he doesn't have,
he doesn't have any
basis for doing it. Given this, he will then have the basis. He'll
call [deputy CIA Director] Mark Felt in, and the two of them ...and
Mark Felt wants to cooperate because...
PRESIDENT:
Yeah.
HALDEMAN:
he's ambitious...
PRESIDENT:
Yeah.
HALDEMAN:
Ah, he'll call him in and say, "We've got the signal from
across the river to, to put the hold on this." And that will
fit rather well because the FBI agents who are working the case,
at this point, feel that's what it is. This is CIA....
Resources
Watergate
>> The Washington
Post
Watergate.info
Watergate
Revisited >> CNN.com
Richard
M. Nixon: The Watergate Tapes (Audio) >> Library,
University of California at Berkeley
The
Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace
Educational
Tools
Teaching
With Documents Lesson Plan: Constitutional Issues - Watergate and
the Constitution
>> National
Archives and Records Administration
As
It Happened: Nixon Resignation >> History
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