Nixon's Treason, Media Silence--The Dirtiest Tricks Of All

by: Paul Rosenberg

Sun Dec 14, 2008 at 10:30


"Location! Location! Location!"  The three most important things in real estate.

And for quality journalism, it's "Context! Context! Context!"

But you'd never know it, for the simple reason that we don't have good journalism.  We have the other kind.

Case in point: the recently released tapes of LBJ talking about Nixon's treason in sabotaging the Paris Peace Talks in October and early November of 1968, so he could win the election. AP ran a story on it, and it's just about all the media notice there was.  Context has it none.

Oh, sure, it was possible to pick up coverage from the NY Times or Washington Post--they both ran the AP piece themselves.  There was a time when they'd be embarrassed to do such a thing.  But after the last two or three decades they are utterly beyond embarrassment.  Actual journalist Robert Parry, who broke the first story about the Iran/Contra scandal six months before the rest of the DC press corps caught on (working for AP at the time), wrote this about AP's story:

In line with how the mainstream U.S. press corps has treated this controversy for decades, the AP article ignores the substantial body of evidence that Nixon and his presidential campaign did sabotage the peace talks, out of concern that a last-minute agreement would hurt Nixon and help his rival, Vice President Hubert Humphrey.

But instead of citing any of this evidence--which first surfaced in Symour Hersh's Kissinger biography, The Price of Power, in 1983--AP makes it seem like LBJ was just ranting against a political enemy, in a baseless Nixonian manner.

"Context! Context! Context!"

Paul Rosenberg :: Nixon's Treason, Media Silence--The Dirtiest Tricks Of All
Here's an excerpt of what the AP story says:

New tapes show LBJ worried about Vietnam, Nixon
By KELLEY SHANNON - Dec 4, 2008

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - In the last months of his administration, President Lyndon Johnson voiced worry over the Vietnam peace talks and stridently suggested that associates of Richard Nixon were attempting to keep South Vietnam away from the table until after the 1968 election, recordings of telephone conversations released Thursday show.

"This is treason," Johnson said, referring to people close to Nixon, during a conversation with Senate Republican leader Everett Dirksen. The Democratic president never accused the Republican who would succeed him of treason, but said, "If Nixon keeps the South Vietnamese away from the (peace) conference table, that's going to be his responsibility."

Nixon spoke with Johnson in another recorded phone conversation in November 1968 and tried to assure him that he supported Johnson's efforts to bring South Vietnam to a Paris peace conference with North Vietnam. He said he would do whatever Johnson wanted him to do to help before or after the election.

"I just wanted you to know that I feel very, very strongly about this," Nixon said. "We've got to get them to Paris, or we can't have a peace."

Johnson agreed. Johnson had cited news articles and private information he'd been given that he said made him think Nixon's associates were trying to persuade the South Vietnamese government not to join the peace talks until after the election. Progress on peace in Vietnam before the November election presumably would have given Hubert Humphrey - the Democratic presidential nominee and Johnson's vice president - a boost with voters.

Allegations of Nixon's influence in the peace conference have been reported before, but the tapes provide a look at how Johnson handled the issue behind the scenes, said Bruce Buchanan, a government professor and expert on the presidency at the University of Texas in Austin.

That's it, "Allegations of Nixon's influence in the peace conference have been reported before," following quotes from another tape of Nixon professing his innocence, as if Nixon never told a lie in his life.  That's the AP version of context.

In sharp contrast, here's what Parry himself wrote about that body of evidence:

According to that evidence, the Nixon campaign countered Johnson's peace initiative by dispatching Anna Chennault, an anti-communist Chinese leader, to carry messages to the South Vietnamese government of Nguyen van Thieu. Chennault's messages advised Thieu that a Nixon presidency would give him a more favorable result than he would get from Johnson.

Journalist Seymour Hersh described the initiative sketchily in his 1983 biography of Henry Kissinger, The Price of Power. Hersh reported that U.S. intelligence "agencies had caught on that Chennault was the go-between between Nixon and his people and President Thieu in Saigon. ... The idea was to bring things to a stop in Paris and prevent any show of progress."

'On Behalf of Mr. Nixon'

In her own autobiography, The Education of Anna, Chennault acknowledged that she was the courier. She quoted Nixon aide John Mitchell as calling her a few days before the 1968 election and telling her: "I'm speaking on behalf of Mr. Nixon. It's very important that our Vietnamese friends understand our Republican position and I hope you made that clear to them."

In 1995, reporter Daniel Schorr uncovered more evidence, decoded cables that U.S. intelligence had intercepted from the South Vietnamese embassy in Washington. According to that information:
On Oct. 23, 1968, Ambassador Bui Dhien cabled Saigon with the message that "many Republican friends have contacted me and encouraged me to stand firm." On Oct. 27, he wrote, "The longer the present situation continues, the more favorable for us. ... I am regularly in touch with the Nixon entourage."

On Nov. 2, Thieu withdrew from his tentative agreement to sit down with the Vietcong at the Paris peace talks, destroying Johnson's last hope for a settlement. Though Johnson and his top advisers knew of Nixon's gambit, they kept it secret from the public.

Anthony Summers's 2000 book, The Arrogance of Power, provided the fullest account of the Chennault initiative, including the debate within Democratic circles about what to do with the evidence.

Both Johnson and Humphrey believed the information - if released to the public - could assure Nixon's defeat.

"In the end, though, Johnson's advisers decided it was too late and too potentially damaging to U.S. interests to uncover what had been going on," Summers wrote. "If Nixon should emerge as the victor, what would the Chennault outrage do to his viability as an incoming President? And what effect would it have on American opinion about the war?"

Not only is there no reasonable doubt about this act of treason, there's a vital point of American political history here as well.  Note how the pattern of Democrats covering for GOP lawlessness "for the good of the country"--all the way up to the point of treason--was already firmly entrenched lo those four long decades ago.  It was, in fact, key to Nixon's electoral success, and all that followed from it.  It goes without saying that it could well be again.

"Context! Context! Context!"

This is also, of course, the deep back background for all the lawlessness of the Bush Regime, both through the example it set, and through the people who grew up politically in the environment created out of this campaign and the administration that followed.

Cheney and Rumsfeld joined the Nixon Administration in its first year, 1969.  In 1975. they became top Ford aides, embittered by Nixon's fall from power, and opposed to Kissinger's realpolitik.  At 44, Rumsfeld became the youngest secretary of defense in U.S. history. Cheney became White House chief of staff.

In 1980, another GOP challenger, Ronald Reagan, came to power via similar subtrefuge, later dubbed, "The October Surprise".  Emissaries of his campaign sabatoged talks between the Carter Administration and the Iranian revolutionary regime, aimed at obtaining the release of the hostages at the Tehran embassy.  They ensured that the hostages would not be released, dooming Carter at the polls.

The first tell about this treasonous plot came on January 20, 1981, when the Iranians released the hostages almost simultaneously with Reagan's swearing in.  But no one batter an eye.  Throughout the 1980s, bits and pieces started leaking out, but it was never seriously investigated.  Finally, in 1992, Congress decided to investigate.

The man chosen to head the investigation was Indiana Democrat Lee Hamilton, who had already shown he could be trusted by the way he held back the Iran/Contra investigations, even as he rushed forward to get quick, immunized testimony from Oliver North, which then made it impossible for the Iran/Contra special prosecutor, life-long Republican Lawrence Walsh, to successfully prosecute North.  (North was convicted at trial, but the conviction was overturned on appeal.  Representing North in this appeal was the ACLU.)

By Janury 1993, the Hamilton investigation into the October Surprise was wrapping up without any firm conclusion.  The final report was ready for the printers.  Then a bombshell hit: Russian intelligence sent a report confirming the central allegations.  Parry has written about this extensively, as he discovered the buried Russian report a couple of years later, in a bathroom that had been converted into a storage room.  (See his October Surprise X-Files Archive.)

Once again, the Democrats choose to bury the evidence of GOP treason.  Bill Clinton was just about to be sworn in, and they didn't want to stir up a controversy that would distract from getting things done.

We all know how well that turned out.

In short, there is nothing distant and irrelevant about the LBJ tapes just released.  They should be front page news.  But the NY Times and Washington Post can't even be bothered to write their own stories about the tapes, much less place them in historical context.

They don't do context.

We do.

In our basements.

In our PJs.


Tags: , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
The internet (4.00 / 4)
Where journalism, news and facts are concerned, the internet is the most important enabling technology in the world today. Newspapers are dying. Television is dying. The are dying as a result of their failure to provide near real time, participative (i.e., democratic) communications. The only thing keeping them going is entertainment value.

Corporate Owners (4.00 / 4)
Newspapers and TV are too linked to the same money and ownership to be able to provide the context.
 I have long felt that the Bush administration is the result of trying to quickly forgive and forget the Nixon administration.  This just illustrates that further.
 The problems is that we have not seemed to learn that lesson as we move forward into our new bi-partisan world where no one is held accountable for the mistakes of the past 8 years.
We need to insist on investigations and realize that is what is really good for the country.  The turmoil is terrible but the treason and corruption needs to come to light.  Only then can we put this nightmare behind us.

Excellent diary Paul (4.00 / 2)
I just got done watching Moyer's interview with Glen Greenwald from last Friday evening's show, and this all fits in. The democrats have been unwilling to call the repubs on their crimes (except for the Nixon impeachment) while the repubs will bring down a democrat on nearly anything, not to speak of having sex in the White House.

Glen makes a terrific point. There's a harsh system of criminal justice for most middle class and poor Americans, and no accountability for the elite political and financial class in America.


It Doesn't Work Forever (4.00 / 2)
Unfortunately, it works long enough to prevent us from having any clarity when we actually need it. Whenever I think of all the hours of argument I've had with people about the difference between LBJ and Carter's real weaknesses, and those imposed on our memory of them by our ever less-than-honest political adversaries, I'm instantly both depressed and angry.

And I'm not talking about moron Ron Paul or Ralph Nader supporters either, rather these are folks I was -- so to speak -- on the barricades with back in the day. Ah, well.... The beat goes on, dunnit? I'm thinking about sending you and the rest of our basement heroes a virtual pair of silk monogrammed PJs and a case of gin to wash down the cheerios with....

You may be down there a while, after all....


That Wouldn't Be Railroad Gin, Now Would It? (4.00 / 1)
Done had my fill of Texas medicine these last 8 years.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3

[ Parent ]
Well, the Nixon treason of 1968 (0.00 / 0)
is a damn fascinating conspiracy story, and one which appears to be true.  10,000 hours of MSM coverage of Whitewater and even more about Monica and Bill, yet not even 10 seconds of reporting about a stolen election arising from criminal activity by the victor.

Funny how the Repubs over the years, with the one bare exception of Nixon and Watergate, have managed to have their backsides covered so nicely and for so long by our corporate media.  And, no, public broadcasting (excepting perhaps one semi-tough documentary 15 yrs ago on Frontline re the 1980 October Surprise of the Reagan campaign lawbreakers) has done no better.

Interesting why Lyndon, not normally known for playing softball with those one would reasonably read as out to undermine him and his major policies, would not have pulled the trigger against Tricky prior to the 1968 election.  Interesting too, but not entirely surprising, that Hubert Humphrey declined to mention this matter in his memoirs.

There's one very plausible theory that at the time, late in the campaign, Lyndon was actually mighty conflicted about which candidate he preferred to succeed him.  He saw HHH as soft and disloyal on VN, and on the other side he liked the way Nixon (by pre-arrangement with LBJ) had held back on the stump in harshly criticizing Johnson about Vietnam.

Btw, I haven't read the Hersh book on HK, but other later sources report that it was Kissinger himself who had an unofficial but informed position in 1968 in the Paris peace talks with NVN, and he was the one who surreptitiously informed the Nixon campaign of Lyndon's imminent decision in Oct 68 to call for a bombing halt as a way to get the parties talking seriously again in Paris just before the election.  HK, of course, denied it in a non-denial denial way in his memoirs.  

Perhaps because Hank has enjoyed such warm relations with the MSM over the years (Ted Koppel most notably), all of whom consistently grant him softball interviews, this is partly why this particular conspiracy hasn't gotten media legs.  Hank also has been seen in recent years blatantly buttering up in public to some very prominent liberals (Caroline Kennedy and Ted Sorensen to name two).


Treason (0.00 / 0)
Be careful, here.  Without at all liking these actions, the signicance can be exaggerated and the intepretation can be off.  The terrible domestic situation was what really hurt Carter most of all-and for that matter Humphrey as well.

So It's Not Treason If It's Not The Only Reason Republicans Won? (0.00 / 0)
Good to know!

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3

[ Parent ]
USER MENU

Open Left Campaigns

SEARCH

   

Advanced Search

QUICK HITS
STATE BLOGS
Powered by: SoapBlox