Showing posts with label John Dean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Dean. Show all posts

Saturday, January 28, 2017

John Dean's tired act


Good read here:

Why The Press Needs To Stop Comparing Everything To Watergate
By now, John Dean’s pronouncements on the scandals du jour have become one of the most predictable tropes in political journalism.

While Dean did some laudable things to expose Watergate, we’re going on year 42 of his 15 minutes of fame. McKay Coppins is a talented and creditable reporter, and he’s hardly the first to shoot the breeze with Dean in search of a drive-by byline. By now, Dean’s pronouncements on the scandals du jour have become one of the most predictable tropes in political journalism.
More on Dean:

Watergate: The Dean Story and the Standard Account

Watergate and the True Believers

Watergate Curiosity Shop (II)
I whole-heartedly agree with this:

(God forbid we all acknowledge that the only truly, sincerely repentant Nixon aide was Chuck Colson, who spent the rest of his life ministering to prisoners after he became one.)
Related:

Facts are stubborn things

Watergate and history


Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Watergate Curiosity Shop (II)


Politics was a Washington blood sport long before the Clintons moved into 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. During Watergate even the ‘good guys’ played the game.

Len Garment relates a particularly nasty episode in his book Crazy Rhythm.

In late 1973 someone from the Watergate Special Prosecutor’s office leaked a transcript of a White House tape to Sy Hersh of the New York Times. According to Hersh, Nixon had discussed an SEC investigation with John Dean. In the course of the conversation Nixon called two of the SEC investigators “Jew boys.”

That night a furious Nixon summoned Garment to the White House. He vehemently denied using the slur. He ordered Garment to listen to the tape and then demand a retraction from the Times.

The next day a dubious Garment listened to the tape. He was surprised to find that Nixon was right: the phrase “Jew boys” never occurred. The men from the SEC were described as “Jewish boys”but not by Nixon.

It was John Dean who said it.

Garment called Clifton Daniels, the Washington Bureau chief of the Times. He offered to let him hear the tape so that he could run a retraction. Daniels delayed and negotiated but never attempted to verify Garment’s claims. Nor did the Times ever correct their false story.

It is a small incident, not even a footnote in the conventional histories of Watergate. Yet it is telling.

Someone in the righteous band of Watergate prosecutors saw fit to doctor a transcript and leak it to Sy Hersh with the obvious intent to libel the president. Had one of Nixon’s men done something like this, it would have made it into the Articles of Impeachment. But because one of the ostensible ‘good guys’ pulled this dirty trick, the New York Times did not care.

BTW, I’m sure that the fact that Clifton Daniels was Harry Truman’s son-in-law had nothing to do with how Gray Lady handled this.

Related:

Watergate Curiosity Shop (I)


Saturday, August 16, 2014

Watergate: Beyond the Standard Version


A couple of interesting items on Watergate.

Unified Theory on Watergate

The 40th anniversary of President Richard Nixon's resignation just passed. The myths around the Watergate scandal are many and deep. Like all bits of American history, there is the official version and the truth. We will never know the truth, but the official version looks shakier with each year. The reason for pushing him out looks quaint as our elected and unelected elite commit far more heinous acts and far greater abuses of power. Members of his team bugged an office? Heh, how simple. Bug the world like Bush-Obama.

John Dean: Behind the Mask of Sanity
It is really rather astonishing. We are 40 years past Nixon's resignation and yet the MSM is still promoting the crude "first draft of history" crafted by Woodward, Bernstein, and Redford.

The MSM does not just ignore the many interesting questions surrounding Watergate, they actively work to shutdown discussion of them.

Related:

An inconvenient book (Part One)

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Why the Watergate narrative remains frozen in 1973

Watergate Figure John Dean Threatens to Sue Historian Over Damaging Tape Recordings


Love this quote from Fox News's James Rosen:

My book speaks for itself, and I think it's noteworthy that Dean has entirely avoided engaging its substance. Dean himself is well aware that his historical reputation has suffered enormously in the last two decades, and so he resorts to frivolous litigation and bullying tactics to rehabilitate himself. Not since Albert Speer [a Nazi minister convicted at the Nuremberg Trials] has a historical figure so assiduously used his post-prison writings to muddy and distort the historical record of the events in which he was culpable.

Monday, June 30, 2008

Watergate and the True Believers


I just came across this outstanding piece by Jim Hougan:


On the New Inquisition

It is a wonderfully scathing and perfectly on-point indictment of the MSM and Watergate:


The real issue, which in the end may be even more important than the who-shot-who of Watergate, concerns the arrogance of media such as the Washington Post, which pretend to an infallibility they do not have. For decades, the Post and its cousins have refused to tolerate (much less undertake) a re-examination of the Watergate affair---or any other major story in which they may be said to have a stake.

Watergate, after all, was journalism's finest hour. Courageous editors and intrepid young reporters risked everything in a brave effort to save America from a White House ruled by Sauron and the hordes of Mordor. To question the received version of the story is, therefore, a kind of heresy. And so the Post becomes the Inquisition, labelling its critics "conspiracy theorists" while warning the public against the "danger" of such thinking. Clearly, the Post would rather its readers let the newspaper do their thinking for them
.


RTWT.

Hougan’s point was on display a few days back on CSPAN. They rebroadcast a 1994 panel discussion put on by the Discovery Channel to promote a five hour mini-series on Watergate and the companion book by Fred Emery.

Among the participants was John Dean, James McCord, and Daniel Schorr. The documentary hewed carefully to the Standard Account (i.e. John Dean’s story) and the discussion initially followed this well trod ground.

Before too long, unexpected challenges appeared. Critical questions were raised. Each one of them threatened to undermine the documentary and the narrative it promoted. In each case, the questions were not answered; they were simply brushed aside.

The most electric moment occurred when a gentleman in the audience introduced himself as John Barrettone of the police officers who arrested the burglars in the DNC’s offices. He could not understand why the documentary made no mention of the key that one of the burglars, Eugenio Martinez, tried to hide during the search. Barrett stated that he had photocopies of the key, the notebook it was hidden in, and FBI reports that confirmed that the key opened the desk of Ida “Maxie” Wells, a DNC secretary.

As readers of Silent Coup or Secret Agenda know, Wells is central to the revisionist accounts of Watergate which all posit that John Dean was involved in the break-in as well as the cover-up. (See Hougan’s article for a concise synopsis).

Barrett’s question pointed to a grievous hole in the documentary. How could it ignore such an important item?

Norma Percy, one of the producers, blithely dismissed his concerns. “We looked into that” and “Martinez does not corroborate your story”. The panel quickly moved on.

It was a stunning demonstration of how the True Believers do history. Percy clearly believed that she debunked a pernicious myth. Her evidence, however, was the word of a convicted felon. Moreover, her team seems not to have spoken to a critical witness (Barrett) or to have looked at his evidence. For all her cool confidence, her work sounds less like research and more like grasping at straws.

Of course, Barrett’s question had to be ignored. It completely undercut the documentary’s status as the “definitive history”.

The next two challenges came from one of the panelistJames McCord. Both were pointed comments to John Dean that were ripe with hidden meaning.

McCord’s first question related to the promise of presidential pardons. All the defendants came to believe that they would receive them. However, the Nixon tapes show that the president was only willing to consider a pardon for Hunt.

As McCord emphasized, it was the phantom promise that convinced the burglars to shut up, plead guilty, and receive long prison sentences.

Daniel Schorr, who moderated the session, was completely uninterested in this subject and moved on before McCord received a satisfactory answer.

The question is potentially explosive. If we accept McCord’s version of the story, someone at the White House pushed the cover-up far beyond what Nixon authorized. It would be good to know who this eager beaver was and what motivated his lies.

Again, the True Believers were uninterested in enlightening the public and simply repeated their catechism: “Nixon bad, Nixon bad.”

The final, and funniest moment of the discussion, came in response to the great, unanswered Watergate question: What were they looking for?

The consensus answer was the same old same oldcorrupt paranoid Nixon was worried that the DNC had damaging information about Nixon’s dealings with Howard Hughs. (NB: A panel that began by praising the documentary for its meticulous and exhaustive search for the facts was now proffering only theories, speculation and rumor.)

Dean, however, had to answer and answer carefully. Twice questions from the audience had hinted that he might be responsible for instigating the break-in. His response was solemn and judicious and artful.

Of course he had no inside knowledge and he could only answer as an honest truth-seeker: “talking to people after the fact.” He then gave a tremendous non-answer- “they” (who?) “were on a fishing expedition.”

If Dean had offered a motive, then some one might have wondered if his own motive was a better explanation than Mitchell’s or Colson’s or Nixon’s. But Dean’s answer is that there is no answer. If there is no answer, then we should just forget the question.

Then, Dean tried for a bridge too far. “Jim McCord,” he informed the audience, told him that Spencer Oliver’s office was just “a target of opportunity.” The team had an extra bug; they had to put it somewhere; and Oliver’s office was nearby.

Brilliant! McCord’s own words get Dean off the hook. If Oliver’s office was not targeted, then there is no reason to ask what happened in that office.

And then Honest Jim McCord, the man who blew the lid off the cover-up, slapped John Dean silly.

Instead of supporting Dean’s recollections, he almost blew derailed the proceedings.

“John, you have an interesting memory.” McCord described it as “slippery”. It slides over things” and “omits things that are key.”

He went on to describe how Dean once offered to testify on his behalf in a civil trial if McCord would give him dirt on CIA.

We never got to hear all of what McCord had to say. Other panelists intervened and herded the discussion back to safe topics like Nixon’s paranoia and the righteous work of the Ervin Committee.

Our loss; Dean’s gain. Par for the course in Watergate history.

Some might ask if any of this matters. The break-in happened over 36 years ago. Nixon is gone and so are most of the other principals.

The simplest answer goes back to Solzhenitsyn’s admonition: “Live not by lies.” Watergate triggered the greatest constitutional crisis since the Civil War. Our understanding of it should be based on the “best obtainable version of the truth” rather than self-serving stories by interested participants.

An event as big as Watergate should be a fertile subject for historians. By now, there should be competing schools interpretation, relentless digging in the archives, and a bookshelf of heavily-footnoted monographs examining every angle of the affair.

Instead, what we see are historians mechanically ratifying the first rough draft of a narrative set down in 1973-74.

James Rosen, now of Fox News, was present at the conference and tried to get the producers explain why they backed away from the Silent Coup thesis. He did not get a respectable answer then but he has never stopped asking questions. He just recently published his biography of John Mitchell which adds to our understanding of the break-in and its cover-up.

In a recent interview with Hugh Hewitt, Rosen underlined a gross dereliction of both journalists and historians:

What I did want to mention was two sets of archives that no other researcher had every before asked to see, which I was quite shocked. One was the internal files of the Watergate special prosecution force.


This is a terrible indictment of both the MSM and professional historians. Here we have two groups who pride themselves on their curiosity and skepticism. Yet both are almost willfully blind when it comes to researching one of the most important events in our past. But, as Hougan points out, that does not prevent them from telling us how we should think about Watergate.





Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Further evidence of the pointlessness of public editors

I have to admit that the ESPN ombudsman sometimes makes a lot of sense. Le Anne Schreiber told the Southern Pines Pilot

One of the most satisfying things about being the ESPN ombudsman is that it provides a very good perch for watching what is happening to journalism in general.
She is on to something there. I had the same thought and was going to use the Mike Gundy/ Jenni Carlson dust-up to illustrate the pernicious attitudes that hurt the Dinosaur Media. The public editor, though, beat me to it in her most recent letter.


The instigator of Gundy's Saturday rage was an opinion column couching itself as fact. I am not ombudsman for the Oklahoman, but through a week's ridicule of Gundy on ESPN, I never heard or read a clear account of the column that ticked him off. In what was supposed to be a balanced, give-both-sides-of-the-story report on ESPNEWS, I saw the full three-minute, 20-second videotape of Gundy's news conference for the umpteenth time, followed by a videotape of reporter Jenni Carlson's response on "Good Morning America," in which she says, calmly, "I stand firmly on the facts of the column." He looked bad. She looked good.

"What facts?" somebody at ESPN should have asked before ridiculing the coach while giving the columnist a pass. In building her case against the benched quarterback, Carlson introduces her evidence of his no-can-do attitude with these phrases: "If you believe the rumors and the rumblings …", "Tile up the back stories told on the sly over the past few years …", "Word is …" and "Insiders say …". In my book, those are not phrases from the realm of fact; they barely count even as speculation by anonymous sources.

Several commentators faulted Carlson for criticizing an amateur athlete so harshly, and ESPN.com columnist Gene Wojciechowski raised questions about the accuracy of her observations But why did I hear no one at ESPN explicitly note that the column that so enraged Gundy was based on rumors and rumblings and the sayings of "insiders"? Because they want to be allowed to take those same liberties? Because they didn't bother to read the column? Because all that mattered was milking that videotape for a week's worth of commentary? Because the boundaries between fact, opinion and rumor have become so porous that nobody noticed rumor crossing the border with a fake passport
?
All of this is true. Moreover, it came from ESPN’s internal conscience. How can a mere blogger compete?

Actually, it’s pretty easy. Schreiber comments on espn.com and my non-post on an unread blog had exactly the same effect on the World Wide Leader:

ZERO. Nada. Zip.

Despite Schreiber’s trenchant criticism, the same clueless blowhards hold forth on ESPN. Bayless, Lupica, Forde, et. al. still cough up their fact-lite punditry on subjects they are too lazy to study.

It’s a perfect case study of corralled rebellion.

Thursday, June 23, 2005

Watergate: The Dean Story and the Standard Account


In the spring and summer of 1973, Watergate reporters knew that the big stories were going to come from John Dean. Liddy was reveling in his Spartan silence. Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Colson, and Mitchell were hanging tough with their modified limited hangout. McCord, Sloan, and Magruder were not high-ranking enough to shed much light on what had happened inside the Oval Office. Dean's story was the only game in town for those who wanted the next front page headline.

Even before Dean went on the record before the Ervin committee, he and his lawyers were using reporters to get their spin on the story. They were in a strong bargaining position. They could pick and choose among reporters. Those they liked got just enough facts to break a story. Obviously, they had no incentive to select journalists who asked too many hard questions about Dean's role or who tried to verify his account by going to 'hostile' sources.

In his book The Powers that Be , David Halberstam details how this worked. This incident is typical:
[Dean] was very good with the Washington Post. He cut out the New York Times for quite a while because the Times seemed to him to be reflecting the Chuck Colson anti-Dean line. Finally there was a breakfast between Scotty Reston and Bob McCandless [Dean's lawyer]. Reston wanted to know how the Times could get back in on the John Dean industry and it was decided that if the Times did not actually call for immunity for dean, it would nonetheless say that people should start listening to him. Shortly after that, Seymour Hersh was assigned Dean by the Times and soon after that, the Times's coverage was right up there with that of the Post.

Maybe I am naïve, but this sounds like the Times willingly, eagerly participated in discussions with John Dean that were part of John Dean's personal cover-up. In their pursuit of a "big story" the Times agreed to vouch for a Watergate conspirator before they could check his story.

The Times was not alone in this. As Halberstam makes clear, all the big dogs on the Watergate beat played this game. The Watergate narrative that took shape was compromised by their reliance on John Dean. The reporters and their editors had been co-opted. The outlines of the Standard Account of Watergate had to follow John Dean's story.

The co-option, in some cases, was severe and persisted long after the Summer of '73. In the acknowledgments for All the President's Men , Woodward and Bernstein include Taylor Branch among those who "contributed their time, energy and counsel to the preparation of this book". Branch was also the co-author of Dean's first Watergate book, Blind Ambition . Hays Gorey, who was a key reporter for Time magazine on Watergate was the ghostwriter for Maureen Dean's memoirs. The Dean camp not only manipulated the first draft of history in 1973, they managed to shape the second draft as well.

In 1973-74, the pace of events made it impossible to revise the evolving narrative. The reporters who were the "Watergate experts" were locked into the Dean version of the crime and the coverup. No untainted outsider had time to master the details and independently verify them. Moreover, some of the most crucial facts were unavailable. Dean did not admit that he destroyed the Hunt notebooks until after the Ervin hearings were finished. Liddy did not tell his story until 1980.

By the time new evidence became available, Watergate was old news. Even worse, it had acquired the mythic properties. The David and Goliath story of Nixon versus Woodward and Bernstein (better yet, Redford and Hoffman) was more than mere history. It was too powerful to be analyzed and too well known to be investigated anew. There was also the undeniable fact that Nixon had committed crimes and deserved to be impeached. What did the why's and how's matter?

Of course, the same case could be made for teaching the fables of Parson Weems to our junior high students. After all, George Washington was a great man, so what does it matter if he never said "I cannot tell a lie" after chopping down a cherry tree? The pundits of the MSM would pour scorn on any school board that made such a ridiculous argument. So why are they so happy to repeat the Watergate fables?

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Woodstein gets played: Deep Throat, Gray, and Hunt's notebooks

In light of the previous post, you have to wonder: How did L. Patrick Gray get tagged as a big fish in the Watergate cover-up?

It turns out that John Dean lied about him to divert attention form dean's own involvement in the Watergate burglary and cover-up. Deep Throat helped by feeding incorrect information to Woodward when the story broke.

After the arrest at the Watergate, Dean went through Howard Hunt's White House safe. He eventually turned over most of the material to FBI investigators. He gave two folders to Acting Director Gray. He himself kept two notebooks in which Hunt recorded the details of the spying operations and his covert career.

In October 1972, Hunt's lawyers filed a motion for the government to produce the notebooks. The prosecutors and FBI did not have them and feared that their disappearance could result in a dismissal of the case against Hunt.

In December, the prosecutors met with Dean and pressed him about the contents of hunt's safe. He pleaded poor memory when it came to the specific items found there, but insisted that he turned everything over to the FBI.

In the middle of the meeting, Dean pulled Assistant Attorney General Henry Peterson aside and told him that he gave the most sensitive items directly to gray. "If there are missing documents, he's got them."

This is from Dean's own account in Blind Ambition.

At a stroke, Dean (falsely) implicated Gray in the Watergate cover-up. He bought himself time and turned attention away from his own actions.

Dean claims that he destroyed the notebooks in January 1973.

What Gray actually received from dean were two pieces of "research" Hunt had worked on at the White House. One concerned JFK and the Diem assassination. (Hunt may have been trying to forge cables that would implicate JFK in the assassination of Diem.) The other was a dossier on ted Kennedy. They were sensitive because they were proof that Hunt was involved in political intelligence for Nixon and may have been gearing up for some very dirty tricks. However, neither file related to the Watergate burglary.

In December, 1972 Gray burned them.

On 26 April 1973, the New York Daily News broke the story of Gray's destruction of the files. By this time Dean had cut a deal with prosecutors and his narrative was the impetus for the "revelation". He did not mention at this time that he had retained the notebooks and destroyed them himself.

Woodward reports that he called Deep Throat soon after he heard about the Daily News story. Deep Throat confirmed it was true. He added that gray had been warned by the White House that the material was "political dynamite" and "could do more damage than the Watergate buggings themselves". He also stated (inaccurately) that Gray destroyed them within a week of receiving them.

It is impossible to determine how much of the distortion in Deep Throat's account was from Dean and how much was Felt putting the knife to the hated outsider who was his boss. In any case, Gray had the misfortune to wind up in the crosshairs of two willful men with personal agendas and a deficit of character. Woodward, Bernstein, and the rest of the press ended up carrying water for the bad guys in this case.
Dean did not admit that he destroyed the notebooks until after he cut his deal with prosecutors and became their star witness. This was after he testified to the Ervin committee. His gripping testimony in the summer of 1973 was a part of his own, personal, cover-up.

The April revelations were a deathblow to Gray's chances of being confirmed to head the FBI. With the fate of Hunt's notebooks still a mystery, his destruction of the two files seemed more sinister than it was.

Felt, however, did not gain from Gray's troubles. Nixon nominated another outsider to be FBI Director (William Ruckelshaus) and Felt would soon leave the bureau.