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WATERGATE Essay Research Paper WATERGATESex drugs money

WATERGATE Essay, Research Paper


WATERGATE


Sex, drugs, money, power, you name it and there is a scandal for it, but


look back and you will see that from all the scandals there have been,


Watergate was among the worst. The Watergate scandal had everything.


From Nixon disgracing the presidency by lying to the country and abusing


his power, to his committees being involved in illegal acts and a big cover up.


All leading to little side roads of corruption and lies. Watergate is by far one


of the worst presidential scandals in the history of the United States.


In the story of Watergate, five burglars were found breaking into


democratic offices at the Watergate complex in Washington DC. The


break-in was passed off as just another burglary, but when the burglars were


found to have connections with the CIA, questions were starting to be asked.


Then when the phone number of Howard Hunt was found in one of the


burglars phone books, it made people think, ?Why would one of the burglars


have the phone number of one of the presidents men?? Then there is Richard


Nixon, the man of the hour, plays the role of the president of the United


States of America. The man that was voted into office by the people, and the


man that swore to serve the people. When Watergate was uncovered, it


revealed that the president was a liar and a cheat. The president lied to our


country, lied about his involvement, concealed self incriminating evidence,


abused his power, and planed to have the CIA stop the FBI investigations.


He was also deeply involved with the cover up and still lied about his


involvement.


During the times of the unraveling of Watergate, questions were asked


about connections with the White House and the president, but when the


president was asked about it at a press conference he assured Americans that


?The White House has no involvement whatever in this particular incident.?


He was lying to the country like it was part of his job (Dorman 158). The


lying did not end there, it went on and on for months, and as the scandal kept


unraveling, ?President Nixon and White House, and creep officials were


deliberately misleading the public about the significance of the Watergate


affair? (158). As Watergate was becoming a front-page article in the


newspapers, new evidence was being uncovered. One piece of evidence that


changed the peoples ideas of our president was the tapping of every


conversation in the oval office ?since about the 18th month of president


Nixon?s term? (Kutler 368). Those tapes would soon prove that the president


was deeply involved in the scandal. During the trials, ?the Nixon


administration claimed that the March 21st, 1973 meeting was the first Nixon


had heard of the cover-ups?, but after the tapes were heard it was discovered


that Nixon was involved from the beginning (Heritage 36). The Nixon tapes


brought out much controversy. The tapes alone could prove the president


innocent or guilty, whichever one it was, Nixon refused to hand over the


tapes. the courts then demanded the tapes, and Nixon still would not give


them up.


After much struggle Nixon agreed to give a transcript of the tapes.


The transcripts brought to light a significant amount of evidence against


Nixon. The transcripts revealed payoffs, affiliation with the burglaries, and


the OK?s to the cover-up, But most important ?the transcripts showed that


Nixon had lied repeatedly after he had denied knowing anything about the


conspiracy? (27). After much struggle, the courts finally got the tapes from


Nixon, It was Archibald Cox that issued the subpoena for the tapes, and that


started the bloodbath we now know as the Saturday night massacre. ?The


night of October 20,1973, possibly the most tumultuous in American political


history, when the special Watergate prosecutor and the nations two top law


officers lost their jobs within the space of an hour and a half.? (Heritage 38).


Soon the country would find a new problem with the tapes. ?When the


presidents lawyers were going over the tapes, they came along an 18 minute


gap during a conversation with Nixon and Haldman? (34). Three weeks later,


the gap was discovered,


Rosemary Woods (Nixon?s secretary) testified that while


transcribing the tape, she had accidentally erased perhaps five


minutes when interrupted by a phone call, she said she had


pressed the ?Record? button instead of the ?Stop? button and


then kept her foot on the machines control pedal while speaking


into the phone. (34)


?Not everyone accepted this explanation; The maneuver would have been


difficult to perform because of the distance between the recording machine


and the telephone in her office? (34).


Watergate was unraveling, and the story kept getting bigger. Nixon


was just having to much fun in the white house. Before he was busted, ?He


ordered the FBI to place wire taps on the phones of thirteen government


officials, and four prominent reporters? (Fremon 28). Nixon was abusing his


powers to the extent, and to him there seemed to be nothing wrong with it.


Nixon needed the FBI to stop the Watergate investigation.


Former attorney general John Michell knew that the FBI had a


long-standing agreement with the CIA that neither agency would


jeopardize the other?s operations. If the FBI could be convinced


that the CIA had somehow been involved in financing or


carrying out the Watergate burglary, the investigation could be


curtailed on the ground of protecting ?national security.?


Dorman 159)


Nixon then told the chief of staff:


You call them [the CIA director, Richard M. Helms, and his


deputy, Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Walters] in. . . . Play it tough. That?s


the way they play it and that?s the way were gona play it. . . .


Say: ?Look, the problem is that this will open the whole, the


whole Bay of Pigs thing. . . . 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! (Heritage 27)


President Nixon was also deeply involved with the cover-up. When he


was told about the burglary, he gave his full support to the cover-up plan.


?On March 21, 1973 the president had a meeting with John Dean, and the


president agreed that one million dollars should be raised to silence the


burglars? (Kutler 247-257). The president also agreed in a March 21, 1973


meeting with John Dean, to get money to payoff Mr. Hunt (Heritage 34).


President Nixon also made some statements to the public, saying that there


was no White House involvement with Watergate. In one statement he said:


Within our own staff, under my direction, Counsel to the


president, Mr. Dean, has conducted a complete investigation of


all leads which might involve any present members of the White


House or anybody in the government. I can say categorically that


no one in the White House staff, no one in this administration,


presently employed, was involved in this very bizarre incident.


(Dorman 167)


Actually, Dean had conducted no such investigation and had given him no


such assurances (168).


Without question, the most notorious examples of dirty politics


in the nations history occurred during president Nixon?s 1972


re-election campaig

n. An astonishing array of illegal and


unethical activities was carried out on Nixon?s behalf.


(Dorman 112)


Nixon, having a high role in the scandal, was nothing compared to his


committees. Nixon?s committees were deeply involved with the whole


scandal and other unethical acts. During the 1972 election, they were


involved in illegal acts like, smear campaigns, and they attacked and harassed


political enemies, and they were involved in the famous Watergate break-in.


Also the committees had a great role in the cover-up. They destroyed


evidence, paid people off, and lied to the country. It could be said that


Nixon?s committees were more corrupt than him.


When Nixon was running for president in 1972, ambitious plans were


prepared for spying on the democrats. ?For four years the White House used


the power of the presidency to attack on political enemies. They spied on &


harassed anyone who did not agree with Nixon?s policies? (Heritage 32).


Nixon also had an enemies list that included the names of about 21


organizations and some 200 individuals (32). Someone had to take care of


these people, so ?CREEP ordered the establishment of several secret teams


assigned to carryout political espionage and harassment operations against the


democrats. Placed in charge of one such team was a young California lawyer


named Donald H. Segretti? (Dorman 113). Segretti himself signed up some of


his own men, one was Robert M. Benz, who hired seven others to help him


out, one of his helpers was Douglas Kelly (114). Douglas Kelly helped handle


a big political enemy by the name of, Senator Edmund Muskie, of Maine.


Senator Muskie got it pretty bad from CREEP.


?At a Florida rally for Democratic contender George Wallace of


Alabama, they distributed more than one thousand anti-Wallace


cards that purported to come from the Muskie Camp. One side,


the cards read, IF YOU LIKED HITLER, YOU?LL JUST


LOVE WALLACE. On the other side, they read, CAST


YOUR VOTE FOR SENATOR EDMUND MUSKIE.? (116)


When in fact the Muskie organization had nothing to do with the cards.


During another occasion, ?Kelly sneaked into a Muskie news conference and


released two white mice whose tails were bedecked with ribbons reading,


MUSKIE IS A RAT FINK? (115). ?Kelly also once hired a young woman


to run naked outside Muskie?s hotel room while shouting, ?I love Ed


Muskie? ? (115). The attacks didn?t stop there. they went on and on. Segretti


and Benz even got Senator Humphrey one good time. They went and


distributed phony invitations, to black communities in Milwaukee, to a free


all you can eat lunch with beer and wine, and several special guests. when in


fact the supposed lunch was non existent (118).


Nixon?s committees were also deeply involved in the cover-up and


destroyed allot of evidence. ?Within hours of the burglars? arrest, G. Gordon


Liddy showed up at the CREEP office and began destroying his confidential


files on the political-spying operation? (150). Also, Howard Hunt?s safe in his


office was drilled open and it contained, among other things, bugging


equipment, a revolver, a psychological profile of Daniel J. Ellsberg, leakier of


the pentagon papers, a state department cable that had been faked to make it


appear that president John F. Kennedy had ordered the murder of president


Ngo Dinh Diem of South Vietnam (Heritage 30). John Ehrlichman (the


presidents chief domestic affairs advisor) told John Dean to throw the


?sensitive materials? over the Potomac river and at night to shred the


paperwork (30).Also, L. Patrick Gray, acting FBI director destroyed the


documents from Hunts safe and withheld word of there existence (Dorman


157). Nixon?s chief aid, H. R. Haldman, also destroyed files which might


prove to be potentially dangerous (157).


As more problems came along, more pressure was being put on the


men in jail to keep quiet. CREEP agreed to pay the men about 400,000


dollars total, after a five month period, of hush money. CREEP did not have


that much money, so they put a down payment of 40,000 dollars, which was


to be divided amongst the men (170).


Although Hunt was incensed at receiving only partial payment,


he made no new threat to expose the cover-up. The day after the


payment was made, Mitchell met at the white house with Dean,


Haldeman, and John Ehrlichman. he told them that Hunt was


?not a problem any more? (192)


The Nixon committees also repeatedly lied to the country. John


Mitchell issued a statement and flat out lied to the country.


We have learned from news reports that a man identified as


employed by our campaign committee was one of five persons


arrested at the Democratic National committee headquarters.


The person involved is the proprietor of a private security


agency who was employed by our committee months ago to


assist with the installation of our security system. He has, as we


understand it, a number of business clients and interests and we


have no knowledge of those relationships. we want to emphasize


that this man and the other people involved were not operating


either in our behalf or with our consent. (158)


The lies went on and on, and the truth kept leaking out. The president


and his comities were being exposed, and the presidency was disgraced and


all trust in the government was lost. Some say, ?Had a uniformed officer in a


marked car appeared and Hunt gotten the warning earlier, he probably would


have been able to alert McCord and the Miamians in time for them to


escape. The Watergate scandal–and its subsequent enrichment of our


language–would never have happened.? (Heritage 42).


However, it did happen, and anyone old enough to read at that time, will


never forget the story of Watergate. The story of lies and corruption in the


government. The scandal that will forever be known as by far one of the


worst scandals in the history of the United States Of America.


Dorman, Michael. Dirty Politics, from 1776 to Watergate. I Dag


Hammarskjold Plaza. New York, NY 10017; Delacorte press, 1979.


Ehrlichman, John. Witness to Power, The Nixon Years. 1230 Avenue of the


Americas, New York, NY 10020; Simon & Schuster, 1982.


Fremon, David K. The Watergate Scandal in American History. 44 Fadem


Road. Springfield, NJ 07081; Enslow publishers, inc. 1998


Heritage, American. ?The words of Watergate.? October, 1997; 48/6.


Jaworski, Leon. The right & the power. prosecution of Watergate. Toronto,


Canada; Fitzhenry & Whiteside limited, 1976.


Kutler, Stanley. Abuse Of Power. 1230 Avenue of the Americas. New York,


NY 10020; Simon & Schuster, 1997.


— The Wars Of Watergate. 1230 Avenue of the Americas. New York, NY


10020; Simon & Schuster, 1990.


?Looking back at Watergate.? USA Today. November, 1994; v123 n2594


p.90(4).


Lukas, J. Anthony. Nightmare. The underside of the Nixon years. New York,


NY; The Viking Press, 1976.


Schell, Jonathan. The Time of Illusion. Toronto Canada; Random House,


1976.


Sirica, John. To set the record straight. W.W. Norton & company. New York,


London.


Ungar, Sanford J. FBI, An uncensored look behind the walls. Boston,


Massachusetts; Little Brown & Company, 1976.

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