May 3-5, 1974
  • A friend in power is a friend lost.
    --Henry Adams (1838-1918)


    John Connally leaned back in his chair on the veranda and grinned. The veterans in the press, you can still manipulate them to get what you want. It was a trick that went back four decades, to Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He was the first president who really understood how to harness the power of media to shape the opinions of others. He also had a keen sense of the weaknesses of others, and was able to manipulate those around him with frightening ease. Connally was not at all related to the 32nd president, but he shared that ability, and had just demonstrated it again. By framing his words to sound like those of White House aides, the Times reporter had taken all of Connally’s dirt and disguised it well. The Vice-President briefly wondered if Abe Rosenthal, the executive editor, knew it was the Veep cutting Nixon off at the knees. Probably not. Jim Naughton wants to be The Man. Having the next President as your source is a great way to do it, even better if you control access to the source. Connally took a big sip of his coffee and a bite of his toast. Wonder if Dick’s broken any dishes this morning.

    At the White House, dishes had not been broken, but Nixon had woken Ron Ziegler at home and summoned him in. Haig was already in, having forsaken any sense of family life to serve his President during this moment of supreme political warfare. Nixon raged at Ziegler for his inability to control the press, then raged at Haig that he had no control, no loyalty from the staff. The President demanded that Haig have his military assistant and former subordinate officer, Major George Joulwan, conduct interviews of every staffer who had access to the information. Haig coolly replied that doing such a thing would violate the Military Code of Conduct for serving in a civilian location. Nixon grumbled his assent and said, “Fine, have Buchanan do it.” Haig thought to himself that it could’ve been worse, Nixon could’ve picked Otto Skorzeny instead. Patrick J. Buchanan had the reputation of being Nixon’s in-house fascist extraordinaire. Having left the St. Louis Globe-Democrat in 1967 to become the very first hire of the Nixon for President campaign, Buchanan had gone on to be a speechwriter/strategist for both Nixon and Agnew before the latter’s resignation. He did everything from preparing the President’s Daily News Summary each day to doggedly researching political opponents so he could then devise a strategy to destroy them. One Democratic strategist called Buchanan “a sentient Agent Orange—his job is to literally burn everything to the ground to save Nixon.”

    If Connally was pleased by the morning’s news and Nixon was furious with it, F. Lee Bailey fell decidedly into the category of “oh shit.” The Times, the Post, and the Boston Globe were all delivered to his suite at the famed Hay-Adams Hotel and billed to Nixon as “required informational research.” Nixon, being a legendary penny-pincher with his own money, in turn used the White House and their discounted bulk subscription rate and simply paid the difference for the extra editions, using a courier to send them over to Bailey instead of the newspapers’ own delivery boys. As it was with most arrangements between Nixon and other schemers, Nixon always found a way to get one over (except Henry, that German bastard). Bailey read through the story carefully. He was new to Washington, but not to media manipulation. While the story cited White House sources, he felt it had to have been someone from the Hill. They’ve got the most to gain from this, Bailey thought. Midterms coming later this year, they’re cutting Nixon loose and justifying a conviction vote. Damn, this is going to make it a lot harder to get an acquittal now.

    On the above-mentioned Hill, the top aides for Ford, Goldwater, and Percy were meeting, trying to decide how to handle the fallout and, especially for Goldwater and Percy, how to keep it from irrevocably dividing the Republican caucus in the Senate. Minority Leader Hugh Scott, for one, was peeved at having been left out of the mission—his vanity was precisely why Goldwater and Percy had agreed to go with Ford, they felt Scott was too pliable and gentlemanly for a mission that required a tough stance. Scott was barely born in the 20th century, ten years older than Goldwater, thirteen more than Ford, and almost 20 years older than Percy. There was also the question of who leaked. This had been a quiet plan, with barely ten people knowing about its very existence. That meant, to them, that it was someone in the White House who leaked, wanting to make it look like a quasi-coup were underway to remove Nixon. It wasn’t entirely subtle, but Nixon had, from the start of Watergate, taken an uncharacteristic brute force approach to dealing with it. Well, that was that, then. The President wasn’t going to be reasonable, so they were going to have to convict him to drive home the point that a president couldn’t break the law with impunity. Their bosses had already come to that conclusion, but the aides, party men all, had been a step slower to get there. Richard Nixon, however, had left them with no choice.

    By that afternoon, Scott had been placated by Ford, with whom he had a solid friendship, built on a mutual love of pipe-smoking and Midwestern conservatism. Ford’s top aide, a former reporter named Robert Hartmann, made calls to former colleagues trying to ascertain the source of the Times story, to no avail. Naughton hadn’t told anyone who didn’t work on W. 43rd Street in Manhattan, and Hartmann was not so foolish as to call Naughton directly to find out. In the current climate, protecting one’s sources had become a far more serious matter than it ever had been in the past. Without any idea of who was responsible, the GOP leadership was convinced Nixon was trying to blackmail them with veiled primary threats, using what leverage he retained amongst the Republican rank and file to prevent his conviction.

    The following day, Joulwan reached out to the secretive NSA office at AT&T’s newest switching building, 33 Thomas Street, known to the telecommunications giant as “Project X” and designated TITANPOINTE by the NSA. Designed to withstand nuclear attack on New York City of up to five megatons, it hosted switching equipment for every phone line in America plus international connections. It took advantage of the recently created TCP/IP protocol to improve its ability to facilitate calls (and also, for the NSA to spy on those calls). Within hours, Joulwan had a telexed log of all calls to Naughton’s home and office over the past ten days. None of those, however, lined up with either the home or office phone numbers of White House aides. For safety’s sake, Joulwan also checked against Henry Kissinger’s various phones, knowing from long experience that Henry loved to gossip with reporters on the phone (and at Georgetown cocktail parties). That, too, was a dead end. It was now late Saturday night, and there was roughly 36 hours until the impeachment trial began in earnest. The major would keep looking, but it appeared that whatever discussion happened between Naughton and his source didn’t take place on a telephone. Not that Joulwan could blame the leaker. Who’d use a phone now after knowing they’d all been bugged to hell and back?

    John Connally certainly hadn’t used a phone. He knew how bug-happy Dick and Henry had been when he was SecTreas. The Secret Service reported to him, after all, so he’d known all about the taping system. It was a damned fool thing to do, of course, but Connally went along, knowing that it was a valuable piece of information he could barter if needed one day. He kept his mouth shut, made sure he watched his words in the Oval as much as possible back then, and after Watergate started, he’d written a letter obliquely to Nixon telling him he should replace his existing memorandum records system. Nixon, everyone knew by now, had disregarded all advice about his tapes, putting himself in the position he was currently in. When Sunday morning dawned without a peep from Nixon or Haig about the story to him, he knew he was in the clear. The trial would begin without a hitch tomorrow morning, and within two weeks, he, John Bowden Connally Jr., would become the 38th President of the United States.

    It was time to get things going. There was one man most fit to help him. The Vice-President dialed the phone number from memory. “Barnes residence, may I ask who’s calling?” “Yes, ma’am, tell Mr. Barnes that Mr. Connally would like to speak with him.”
     
    May 6, 1974
  • Ben Barnes, the former lieutenant governor of Texas, woke up before dawn, driving his new Lincoln Continental Mark IV convertible across Austin to the Robert Mueller International Airport south of the city so he could catch a flight to Washington D.C. in time for his lunch meeting with the Vice-President. As Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives while Connally was governor, the two had grown a close bond together. The Sharpstown scandal had forced a Texas-sized housecleaning (despite Barnes’ protests that he knew nothing about what those state senators had done), and incumbents got wiped out in 1972. Leaving office in early 1973, Connally and he had formed a real-estate partnership to take advantage of the growth of Texas. A trustee had claimed Connally’s share of the partnership when he became Vice-President, and Barnes had been doing quite well in the past few months with investors happy to join a company co-founded by the expected next President of the United States. Well enough to buy his new convertible, well enough to fly first-class with ease on a Braniff International Airlines Boeing 727 tri-engine jet to Dulles International Airport in Washington, D.C. Braniff had the only direct flight to D.C. from Austin, and Connally didn’t want Barnes losing any time. Something big must be in the offing, he mused as he took his Bloody Mary from the stewardess and looked around the cabin. Whoever designed this interior must’ve really wanted to proclaim Braniff was Texas-born and bred, because burnt orange was the dominant color throughout. Should I yell out “Hook ‘em Horns?” That’d probably get a laugh or two….nah, too early, and I don’t want to draw attention to myself. The breakfast service arrived soon after, southwestern omelettes with coffee, orange juice and toast. Barnes was fortunate that there was nobody in the seat next to him, so he was able to take advantage of both tray tables, making notes to himself with one hand while he ate his toast and drank his coffee with the other.

    I need you to form a team for me. We have to move quickly.

    Barnes knew there was only one “team” that the Vice-President could be talking about—a presidential administration. He imagined that Big John would want to clean house of most of the Nixon acolytes, both inside 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue and at the various Cabinet departments. Keeping things to shorthand to minimize anyone realizing what he was doing, Barnes began sketching out the presumed Connally Administration, doing his best to create options for the Vice-President that he could select, so Barnes could start making calls and feeling people out as to their willingness to serve.

    DoD—Richardson? Admiral Burke? Nitze? Gavin?
    SecState—Keep Henry, has public trust
    Commerce—Valenti?
    NSA-Marvin Watson? DoD list?
    AG—Ruckelshaus stays, best approval ratings of anyone right now in admin
    Treas—ROCKY, must convince him (Shultz planning to leave this month)
    Interior—Leave Morton, good team player
    Agriculture—Fire Butz
    CoS-Barnes
    HEW-Move Weinberger? Keep him?
    GHWB—Deputy CoS? Deputy SecState?
    Labor—Merge with Commerce as a cost saver? Dept of Labor & Commerce?


    While Barnes made his way to the capital, someone already living there had made a decision. George Herbert Walker Bush, 36 days shy of his 50th birthday and chairman of the Republican National Committee, had spent his weekend agonizing over his position. Part of him felt he needed to stay to try and salvage the party’s electoral prospects from Richard Nixon’s gross stubbornness, the rest felt that it was hopeless and that staying meant he was somehow demonstrating approval of Nixon’s continued battle. The Times piece from Friday was what set all of this in motion. If the President wouldn’t listen to the most respected people in his own party, then nothing would make him quit. He had to be forced to stop. Bush picked up the phone in his study and called the RNC communications director, Peter Roussel. “Call a press conference for 9:30 am. Yes, it’ll be short, just a statement I’ve written to express support for President Nixon and the Constitution before this trial starts. No, Pete, I don’t need you to read it over, I know I mangle a few words from time to time but I can do this. It’s important that it sounds heartfelt. We need people to feel like this party still stands for something. Don’t tell them the subject, otherwise, nobody will come. Just say I’m making a statement about the trial. Alright, thanks, Pete.”

    About an hour later, Bush was in the backseat of his car, being driven to the RNC offices near Capitol Hill. It was an auspicious location, one that was sure to pique the curiosity of some reporters currently waiting around at today’s main event in the Senate chambers. When the Texas Yankee arrived at the old stone building housing the offices of the Republican Party, he was gratified to see that a number of print and radio folks had made it, along with the local ABC affiliate’s reporter. That meant radio and television coverage, the better to get the attention of the audience his statement was aimed at. Bush straightened his tie, got out of the car, and walked directly to the podium that Roussel had expertly positioned so that the dome of the Capitol was behind the party chairman (a move that required blocking off the street with traffic cones stored in a foyer closet for just this sort of reason). Bush got the thumbs-up from Roussel, and began speaking.

    “Good morning, and thank you all for coming on such short notice. In just one hour from now, the impeachment trial for the President of the United States is going to begin in that august building two blocks from where we stand right now. It will be a demonstration of our commitment to the rule of law in America, that no matter who you are or what position of power you hold, if you are charged with a crime, you will face a trial. Obviously, impeachment is somewhat different than what I have just described, but I believe the principle holds all the same.” Bush paused, the silence so distinct that he could hear birds chirping in the trees. “Since June 17, 1972, this nation has been suffering one long, collective nightmare. I spent the vast majority of that time, as did millions of ordinary Americans, believing the President, believing that he had no involvement in the Watergate “caper,” as my predecessor Senator Dole put it. I was instilled with values as a child by my parents, including that of loyalty, honesty, and courage. I have been loyal, as the chairman of the Republican party, to our President, a Republican with a long record of service. I have been honest in my dealings as a congressman, as Ambassador to the United Nations, and in this role, as well as with the press. And, like our President and so many in the Congress, I believe I demonstrated courage by serving in the war in the Pacific.”

    Another pause. “There was another moment of courage, too, that my father showed. It’s one that was lost in the proverbial shuffle, but it was on my mind last night as I was writing this statement. During the censure hearing for Senator McCarthy in 1954, my father, who’d only served for a little over a year in the Senate, said this, “Senator McCarthy caused dangerous divisions among the American people because of his attitude and the attitude he has encouraged among his followers: that there can be no honest differences of opinion with him. Either you must follow Senator McCarthy blindly, not daring to express any doubts or disagreements about any of his actions, or, in his eyes, you must be a Communist, a Communist sympathizer, or a fool who has been duped by the Communist line.” That statement, coming from a fellow Republican, even then, reverberated around that chamber for its forthrightness. During the past two years, this has, unfortunately, often been the opinion of many in my party, that we must stand by the President, no matter what, or the liberals and the Communists will win. It saddens me that, even in the face of overwhelming, concrete evidence, the President, a man who has done well by me in my political career, refuses to accept responsibility for his actions. He refuses to recognize that what he has done was not legal, broke the trust placed in him by a landslide majority of voters, and when asked by his fellow leaders in this party to step down honorably, Richard Nixon has refused, and so now, today, his trial will begin in the United States Senate. Before it begins, though, I am announcing, effective at the end of today, my resignation as chairman of the Republican National Committee, in hopes that the President understands the damage he is causing by his fight to the bitter end.”

    George Herbert Walker Bush, thirty-six days short of his fiftieth birthday, walked away from the podium with a lightness of heart he had not experienced in a very long time.
     
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    May 6, 1974 (part II)
  • F. Lee Bailey and Herbert Brownell exited Room S-207, a multipurpose room near the Senate Chamber that had been divided up to give working space for both the House managers and the President’s lawyers, and walked towards the Chamber for opening statements. They were near the door when Helen Thomas from UPI grabbed Bailey’s arm and asked, “Mr. Bailey, what did you think of Chairman Bush’s resignation statement?” The famed litigator was caught off-guard, as he had no clue who Thomas was talking about, having chosen to not familiarize himself with any Republicans that did not serve in the Senate. Brownell leaned in and said, “No comment, Helen. We’ve got a trial to start.” Bailey took the hint and walked away with Brownell. The former Attorney General leaned in the ear of the nation’s most celebrated trial lawyer and said, “George Bush is the chairman of the Republican National Committee, but I take it he just resigned, and Helen there wouldn’t have ambushed us out here unless it was a doozy. We’ll have one of the paralegals go make a call and find out what the hell happened, Lee. God knows how this might influence the senators.” Indeed, as they took their seats at the defense table in the well of the Senate, Brownell could see a number of GOP senators in huddles. Jacob Javits, Edward Brooke, Richard Schweiker, and Lowell Weicker, the liberal northeastern crowd, were in the back of the chamber, and Weicker could be seen talking animatedly, his hands moving about to emphasize whatever he was saying. Much closer to the front, the Western hardcore conservatives like Barry Goldwater, Paul Fannin, Clifford Hansen, and James McClure were having their own discussion. Brownell knew two things: first, that Goldwater had gone to Nixon and indeed told him he should quit; second, the other three senators in that group were not big fans of the liberals (Bush and Brownell included) and had more or less stood by Nixon so far. Would they follow Barry’s lead or stubbornly hold the line for the President?

    The chief justice of the United States Supreme Court, Warren Burger, entered the chamber, interrupting Brownell’s reverie, and the senators took their seats. Burger read his notes, then gazed over to the House managers and nodded. “You may proceed.” The choice for the first manager to speak had been the subject of numerous (and furious) debates. Peter Rodino, as chairman, wanted to go first, but others on the committee knew he was not the most charismatic of speakers, and wanted someone more able to capture the attention of the senators and of those watching on television. While Barbara Jordan might’ve been the choice under other circumstances, the men believed that a black female would not be able to win any hearts and minds amongst those they needed, like the Dixiecrat caucus. With that consideration in mind, Jack Brooks was chosen to open. The straight talker from Texas was such an interesting product of a generation that had produced many impressive men. A Texan who served in World War II as a Marine, then became a lawyer and a constitutional law expert, all while serving in the House of Representatives. He’s like John Wayne with brains, a DNC staffer had sniggered when hearing that Brooks would open.

    “Mr. Chief Justice, distinguished members of the Senate jury, I am honored to be here before you today. We are taking part in a rare, yet vital part of our democracy—an impeachment trial. The Founders made impeachment a part of the Constitution because they understood that a nation of laws is governed by man, and men are fallible. It is because of that fallibility that we needed a procedure to be able to cleanse our government of those who have acted so egregiously against the national interest that they simply could not remain in their office. That is why we are here today. We are faced with a president who has repeatedly and willfully chosen his personal interests over that of the nation. We are faced with a president who has violated his oath of office. We are faced with a president that does not believe in an honest democratic process, for if he did, he would not have sought to subvert that process with his actions. Wiretapping without court orders, burglaries of private offices, forged documents, use of government assets to conceal his own criminal behavior, campaign contributions so massive that they cannot be conceived as anything else but a bribe, and finally, the lowest of the depths, being so inebriated at times that he could not perform the function of his office!” Brooks barely got that last syllable past his lips before Bailey jumped up and yelled, “Objection, Mr. Chief Justice!” There were snickers amongst the many lawyers that made up the Senate, as objections during opening arguments in any trial are rare and especially so here. Burger frowned, asked for the parliamentarian, and whispered a question as to the ability of counsel to object to a statement. The parliamentarian informed Burger that yes, counsel could object, as no rule existed in the Senate’s procedures to bar objections.

    Burger pondered it for a few seconds. “Mr. Brooks, as the charges brought by the House do not include drunkenness, I’m going to instruct the Senators to disregard that last statement and instruct the House managers to not refer to that again.” Of course, the Senators had heard whispers of an incident last year, and most of them knew Richard Nixon was incapable of holding his liquor, having witnessed many a dinner where a mere couple glasses of wine made Nixon become a slurrer of words. Brooks resumed his opening statement. “President Nixon has committed documented, verifiable crimes. We had copious amounts of evidence to that effect, thanks to the excellent work performed by the Select Committee chaired by Senator Ervin last year, and also thanks to the admission by former White House special counsel Leon Jaworski, who informed the House Judiciary Committee of the President’s destruction of evidence. Finally, we have the Nixon tape transcripts, a means of avoiding the subpoenas issued by the former Watergate special prosecutor’s office and later the Judiciary Committee. Despite his best efforts, those transcripts contain damning references to a coverup of the Watergate affair, and certainly punch holes in his explanation that he had no idea about any of the actions of his subordinates prior to his meeting with John Dean on March 21, 1973. Quite simply, an innocent man does not behave as Richard Nixon did. We have the evidence, and we shall prove our case here before you. We have no wish to belabor this process, so we will limit the witnesses we call, since nearly every relevant witness has already given sworn testimony to this august body last year.

    There has been partisan activity in this city since its earliest days. We have seen many presidents bend, twist, and mold the law to suit their purposes. We have seen many officials abuse their power, and many of those officials were caught and forced out of power. Regardless, those of us in this chamber, the House managers, you, the Senate jury, and the defense counsels, all swore an oath to the law, and I believe that each and every one of us meant it. The rule of law is what has separated America from nations ruled by monarchs and despots. It makes us unique. It makes immigrants want to become Americans and it gives us special standing around the world. We cannot maintain that standing, and remain a nation of laws, if Richard Nixon is not found guilty for his actions and removed from office. I thank you, and yield the balance of my time.”

    Brooks returned to his seat, and Chief Justice Burger summoned Herbert Brownell to make his opening statement. Brownell opened his binder, looked out at the senators, and began. “Distinguished members of the Senate, Mr. Chief Justice, I am honored to be here today as a representative of the President of the United States, Richard M. Nixon, in this most serious matter, that of impeachment. The President has been charged with one article of impeachment, alleging the crimes of bribery, obstruction of justice, abuse of his office, and the destruction of evidence in the Watergate investigation. These charges are premised upon the following: the hearsay of Leon Jaworski and the biased interpretation of the audio transcripts by the Judiciary Committee; the letter of James McCord, a convicted felon; the Senate testimony of John Dean, the former White House counsel who admitted to being a criminal in his own right by destroying evidence and conspiring with other White House aides—this is the evidence with which the House of Representatives wishes this Senate jury to remove the President from his office! The charges are severe and if proven, would certainly justify the removal of the President, but this evidence simply does not meet that burden of proof.”

    Brownell took a sip of water, letting that thought swirl in their heads for a minute. He continued, “There has been much scandal in this city in recent years. The fates of Bobby Baker, Walter Jenkins, and even the Vice President, Mr. Agnew, are cautionary tales of how public servants can be corrupted in some fashion. However, in all of their cases, there was hard evidence of their moral and legal failings. One could feel for Mr. Jenkins, of course, his failing was of the flesh and hurt nobody but himself and his family. The Vice President, on the other hand, was literally given bulging envelopes filled with cash to sway government contracts to those who bribed him. That, members of the Senate jury, is hard evidence, and it is why the Vice President pled guilty and resigned his office.” Watching at home in Ocean City, Spiro Agnew threw his tumbler of scotch against the wall in a rage at this public humiliation. “Now, does such hard evidence exist against the President? As I’ve already stated, it does not. There is no tape where the President explicitly says to cover up a crime. There is no testimony that says the President ordered the break-in. There is a lot of hearsay, recollections of conversations, most given by those already implicated in crimes themselves. Without hard evidence, can this body really remove a President from office? Can you each vote to convict on such unsubstantiated claims? What is seen in these transcripts,” and here Brownell picked up one of the bound volumes, “is difficult for many to read. It shows the humanity of our leaders, both good and bad, and we are not accustomed to that. We want to believe the best in our leaders, and when we hear crass language or crasser political calculations, it causes us to wince, to turn away. Yet, while that language may be crass, it also supports the President’s claim that national security was on his mind when he found out who had been arrested and implicated. James McCord was a CIA technical services man. E. Howard Hunt was the operational officer for the Bay of Pigs invasion. Their involvement would have given any President pause. A rogue operation was something not unknown to Richard Nixon—Allen Dulles did such things more than once, as some in this room are aware.” This was a bombshell to most, one large enough that it would nearly overshadow much of the other bombshells from this day. Since most senators did not know of the deeds of Dulles, there would be a spirited full Senate meeting after adjournment for the day. That was yet to come, though. “So, yes, our President made inquiries to the CIA and the FBI, asked them to hold up the investigation, only so that a proper inquiry could be made into what, if anything, elements at the CIA had to do with this.” A few faces twitched at this, including Ted Kennedy and Alan Cranston. “It did not sound that way, in the plain way of speaking that the transcripts revealed, but that was his intent, and that was the proper and correct thing to do.”

    Turning to his final page, Brownell concluded, “If the Senate deems it necessary, we will be happy to have the President answer, in a sworn statement, any questions that they may have for him to clarify these matters. We have nothing to fear from the truth in this trial, and we believe that at its conclusion, the Senate will acquit him of these charges.” With that, Brownell stepped away from the podium, and Chief Justice Burger gaveled the first day to a close.
     
    May 7, 1974
  • The closed-door Senate meeting that followed the first day of opening statements was, in a word, contentious. The great bulk of the senators were unaware of the many CIA shenanigans over the years, and now the price of that ignorance came due. The Appropriations Committee chairman, the Armed Services chair, and the leadership were the only ones clued in to the details of the yearly budget requests of the Central Intelligence Agency. It would then be voted on, not as line items, but as a single amount. The votes, of course, would be predetermined, and there weren’t many who dared vote no. These senators feared that somewhere, the Agency had its own “Grey Files,” much as Hoover had his at the FBI for decades, ready to strike out at anyone who dared prevent him from doing as he wished.

    Now, of course, the veil had been lifted, the Agency’s failings laid bare in Vietnam. Dulles and McCone were dead, Helms was in exile in Iran, and Bill Colby, the operations chief, was now Director, but the rumors were flying already that his days were numbered because he was too amiable, too cooperative with the media. Nixon had no capital to replace him, but John Connally, should he ascend to the top slot, would readily dispose of the man, or so the stories went. More importantly, the fear of crossing the Agency had dissipated. This meant that, when Mike Mansfield and Hugh Scott, the Senate Majority & Minority Leaders, convened the meeting, the other senators were in high dudgeon. The questions began flying around. Who knew? Who was briefed on the actions of the CIA and the details of its budget? Everyone knew that the leaders were, and old Hubert, the former Vice President, knew even more. Stu Symington, ex-Air Force Secretary, also would be in the loop because of U-2 and other joint programs he’d overseen in that role. Ancient John Stennis, who chaired Armed Services, must know, and his counterpart on Appropriations, John McClellan, definitely knew. Bill Proxmire, who sat on Appropriations and had ears everywhere, was the absolute bane of the national security apparatus and their budgets, and surely he knew where the CIA’s bodies were buried. Finally, the patron saint of Boeing, Scoop Jackson, was in the loop because Scoop could always deliver votes and got the briefings he wanted in return for delivering votes. Currently, he had Nixon’s free trade agreement with the Soviets tied up in knots over the question of Jewish emigration, despite all the efforts of Henry Kissinger, Ted Kennedy, and others, a cudgel he was wielding with near-sadistic glee. Scoop wanted to be President, and 1976 was shaping up to be a pretty good year to run as a Democrat, wasn’t it?

    The shouting was pretty significant from some quarters – Ted, of course, was both angry and defensive (the former because he didn’t know about the worst excesses and the latter because he feared it’d be tied to his deceased brothers); Mark Hatfield and George McGovern, because every worst belief they’d had about the CIA was true and had been kept from the Senate; John Tunney, the California freshman, was worried that their proceedings would be wiretapped by the CIA – he’d become increasingly concerned with illegal wiretaps during his time in the Senate. After a few minutes of bedlam, Mansfield banged his gavel repeatedly to bring silence. “Gentlemen, gentlemen, look. I understand the frustration and the anger in this room. I’ve never been comfortable with how these budgets were required to be passed, never been comfortable that the circle of senators informed about CIA operations has been so small. Regardless, this is not the question we need to be handling right now. Unless actual evidence is produced by the President’s team to prove that was his state of mind at the time – and remember that the President’s own tape transcripts do not back up this claim – then we will not consider this claim as evidence.” Grumbling from some of the fervent Nixon defenders followed. James Eastland, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, stood up and asked, “Mike, are we giving the President a fair trial if we do as you say here? Because I think he deserves the benefit of the doubt in such a situation.” “Jim, as I said, unless they present actual evidence, then all his lawyers have done is to throw a bomb in our midst. I cannot and will not tell you how to vote, but if you still think the President is worthy of being trusted when the House has been told he destroyed evidence, that is your affair,” Mansfield replied.

    Hubert stood up, speaking in the flat, nasal Midwestern voice that had been known around the nation for nearly fifteen years now. “I firmly believe that there have been many illicit acts perpetrated by the CIA, for it is part of the world of intelligence to do things that are shady and immoral. However, I can say without hesitation that I know there are times where the CIA crossed the line, violating presidential directives and taking initiative to do things it should not have done. Director Dulles gave orders for U-2 flights to be undertaken into the Soviet Union without President Eisenhower’s authorization, for example. Director Helms ran a program called Project Phoenix in Vietnam that, quite frankly, was nothing more than an appalling assassination unit. So, what I propose is that we agree to table this issue while the trial proceeds. After the trial concludes, we can convene a select committee to investigate the CIA and hopefully expose all of the rogue elements that are present. We cannot get distracted while dealing with the issue in front of us—that of the President’s behavior and lawlessness.” Majority Whip Robert Byrd jumped to his feet. “I think we need to put this to a vote. All in favor of Hubert’s plan, say aye.” A resounding Aye echoed through the room. “Alright, gentlemen, shall we resume this trial?”

    *****

    Dan Rather sat down in the armchair across from John Connally while the cameras from CBS were set up in the office of the Vice President. They were filming a segment for a special edition of CBS Reports: The Impeachment of Richard Nixon. Getting the segment approved by Ron Ziegler had been an ordeal, especially as the President had vacillated back and forth on the issue. On one hand, Connally was telling Nixon that it would be a sober defense of his actions, and the other, Ziegler said that Rather couldn’t be trusted to portray the White House’s side fairly. Connally won the day, but knew that he’d have to walk the razor’s edge throughout the interview to avoid creating a new public maelstrom. Should be easy enough if I give Dan something juicy off-camera.

    “Mr. Vice President, thank you for your time tonight. You are in an unusual position right now, the first Vice President to be in office while the President was standing trial in the Senate. How do you see your role right now? Is it to defend the President? Is it to stay neutral so as to not poison your relations with Congress? Or is there, perhaps, an instinct to nudge senators quietly towards conviction so you can become President?” Rather had thrown a haymaker to start this interview. “Dan, I am the Vice President, and I will serve the President as best I can so long as he is the President, and I expect he will be the President all the way until January 20, 1977. If that changes, then I will adapt and adjust as I always have.” “Okay, Mr. Vice President, that does not answer the question, not really. You have much to gain if President Nixon is convicted. You’ll get to be President. Does that not influence your actions at all?” Rather volleyed the question right back at Connally. I’m not letting you off that easy.

    Connally smiled. “Dan, I appreciate that you have to ask that question, so I’ll just say this. Loyalty is one of the most prized possessions in politics—my old boss, Lyndon Johnson, said that all the time. I believe in its importance as much as he did, and I’d be a hypocrite if I didn’t show that same loyalty to President Nixon while he goes through this trying time.” Nice try, Dan.

    “Okay, moving on. You were Secretary of the Treasury a couple of years ago, helped bring America off of the gold standard and into the world of a floating currency. At the time, it helped stave off a financial crisis, but now, the dollar is suffering against other currencies and the economy is suffering shortages, inflation, and rising unemployment. What can this administration do to help stem that tide and potentially reverse it?” Here’s your make or break question, SIR.

    “Well, Dan, we have a number of issues all happening at the same time. Inflation is occurring because of the artificial price controls that the President and I imposed a couple of years ago during a crisis where inflation would harm the President’s efforts to secure peace in Vietnam. If everything were to go up in cost when we wanted to provide additional aid in exchange for removing our soldiers from South Vietnam, we would not be able to provide as much as we wanted to. Now, we’ve withdrawn from Vietnam, and as you’ve seen, the North Vietnamese have already broken the agreement, but Congress has been unwilling to allow us to retaliate and help reimpose the conditions of the treaty we signed. That’s their decision to make, but I hope they understand the costs of that, both in terms of our prestige and in lives.” Connally took a sip of water and continued on. “Now, back to the economy. We need to wring inflation out of the economy now before it grinds things to a halt, as it has in Great Britain. Price and wage controls are a bandage, not a solution, and we may well have to accept some job losses for a time to bring balance back to the economy. Another route, if Congress is willing to fund it, is to increase funding for the Trans-Alaska Pipeline so we can put more workers on the job of completing it and easing the oil crunch that is also dragging our economy down. More refineries should be built. Offshore drilling should be expanded. We need more engineers and skilled tradesmen to grow our oil industry, and we need to expand our use of computers to bring greater efficiency to our economy across the board. To that end, it might be useful to provide DARPA-style funding to our best technology groups, such as Xerox’s PARC complex, or California Technological Institute. We could also commission a new Works Progress Administration to rebuild our infrastructure in places where it is outdated. I know many of my Republican colleagues will shrink at the idea of more government spending, and I’m not someone who just wants to toss money at every problem. However, by funding the right projects, working in conjunction with private industry, we can stimulate our economy and hopefully reverse the damage caused by this twin problem of inflation and stagnant growth. Anything we do, of course, is going to require our allies to join us or it’ll be absolutely worthless.”

    “Speaking of allies, Mr. Vice President, Dr. Kissinger has performed what some would consider to be a heroic job at the State Department in keeping our allies aligned with America, while negotiating multiple peace treaties. If you were to become President, would you keep Dr. Kissinger on in both roles that he currently serves in?” “I don’t see why, if I were to become President, I wouldn’t keep Dr. Kissinger on as Secretary of State. His knowledge of the world is superlative, and experience is going to be more important than ever before in this post-Vietnam, détente-infused decade.” Connally slipped just a bit there, and Rather pounced. “So, Mr. Vice President, you believe Dr. Kissinger shouldn’t be the National Security Advisor anymore?” Connally smiled again. “Dan, I think that the Secretary of State is an all-consuming position, and keeping the good doctor in both positions is asking a lot of a man. He has some very capable deputies that could be promoted to National Security Adviser, and that’s something I’ve brought up with the President recently, but he has not wanted to make a change yet.” Connally hadn’t, but that wasn’t the point. He wasn’t going to let Dan Rather or anybody else get a step up on him.

    After the interview concluded, Connally reached out to shake Rather’s hand and surreptitiously passed him a note. Rather showed a professional poker face as he didn’t react, didn’t look, and just pocketed the note. He’d have enough time to read it later.
     
    May 8, 1974
  • Creighton Abrams knew the smoking was getting to him. He felt the coughs grow worse, and when he saw the blood come out this morning, darker than it had in the past, he did something that was anathema to every fiber of his being: he gave in and went to Walter Reed Medical Center. The oncologist took X-rays and saw clearly that there was a large mass on his right lung. He consulted with the chief of surgery and the two decided that an operation would take place today. They would attempt to perform a lobectomy [a removal of a lobe, or full section of the lung] instead of a full lung removal on the right lung, and the left, which had a very small tumor, would be removed by a wedge resection. There were somewhat higher risks to this, but it left Abrams with the better chance to recover fully with greater lung capacity.

    Abrams’ aide called the Pentagon to inform them, where the information made its way quickly up the chain to Secretary of Defense Schlesinger, who then called Al Haig at the White House so Ron Ziegler could be prepared to make a statement. Haig felt a familial affection towards the older man and decided he wanted to go down to Walter Reed himself. The chief of staff let his secretary know where he was headed so they could reach him and left the White House. He didn’t see any issue coming, after all, it was the final day of opening statements in the impeachment trial, and the President would be planted in front of the television, furiously making notes and yelling for Ziegler whenever he felt like something merited rebuttal from the podium in the press room. And if something came up, after all, that’s what the Vice President was there for.

    The senators hadn’t been given any word about Abrams when they filed into the chamber for the third and final day of opening arguments, not that it would have changed anything. They were on a tight timetable, agreed to by both Majority Leader Mike Mansfield and Minority Leader Hugh Scott—Mansfield didn’t want Nixon in office any longer than necessary, and Scott didn’t want the trial to drag on any longer than necessary. On the House side, the final word was going to be had by Barbara Jordan, whose verbal capabilities had shown so brightly during the impeachment hearing in the Judiciary Committee. Presenting for the defense would be F. Lee Bailey today. Determined to make his mark, he had been up most of the night with a fifth of Finlandia furiously writing and editing his opening statement, aimed at what he thought the President cared about most—protecting the power and prerogatives of the presidency. He’d make a mark, all right, just not quite where he wanted it to land.

    After Chief Justice Burger called the chamber to order, Bailey rose and strode to the podium in a manner reminiscent of his days in the United States Marine Corps. A sunlamp had tanned his face and made it easier to miss the bags under his eyes from lack of sleep. Bailey’s drinking had become an issue for him, possibly the cause of his sloppiness in getting involved with the Koscot International “multi-level marketing” fraud. Bailey, in fact, was not long removed from a hung jury verdict in his trial for conspiracy and mail fraud. Prosecutors dropped the charges against him, and he was hoping that this moment would redeem himself in the eyes of the public.

    He flipped open his leather binder, emblazoned with his initials in gold script on the front, and began. “Members of the Senate, Mr. Chief Justice, I am privileged to be here before you today in this most important of matters. The impeachment of a President is no small matter under the Constitution. It is because of this, I suspect, that this is only the second impeachment of a President in the history of our great country. The case of the House is built upon a number of circumstantial pieces of evidence, pieces which they have woven into a tapestry of allegations against Richard Nixon, president of the United States. That tapestry is thin, though, held together precariously by nothing more than spiderwebs in places. We need to look at the broader picture. Richard Nixon is the head of the executive branch, one of three in the Constitution, but the one branch where actual law enforcement falls under his purview. He appoints the Attorney General and the director of the FBI, both subject to your approval, but ultimately, they are his decisions. The FBI, the Secret Service, the U.S. Marshals, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, all of these investigative apparatuses are underneath his leadership. He is, in effect, the chief law enforcement officer of the United States.

    Now, why do I mention all of these things? It is because, in his heart, I believe the President was indeed trying to get to the bottom of the Watergate caper. The investigation was never killed outright. He replaced the director of the CIA last year and sent him to be ambassador to Iran, hardly a prestige post. He fired John Dean, and asked for the resignations of Bob Haldeman, John Ehrlichmann, and Richard Kleindeinst, his Attorney General. He agreed to the appointment of a special counsel. Most importantly, the President released the transcripts of his tapes, every last one of them. This was a major compromise for him with this body. He felt at the depth of his soul that he should not relent on this issue, that a president’s meetings with advisers were sacrosanct, but yet he relented and provided this information to the House. All of it. If he hadn’t, we would not be here right now, I believe. The evidence has been formed against this President using his own transcripts, his own words and those of others around him. It then takes other, highly circumstantial evidence to weave a supposed web of conspiracy. If there was really a conspiracy run out of the Oval Office, then why the hell would the President provide this information? If the President were a criminal, as he’s been accused of, then why did he not shut down the investigation early? Hand it off to local law enforcement and order the FBI to not investigate it?

    The fact is, this President is honest, to a fault sometimes. He has dealt honestly with pulling our troops out of Vietnam. He has dealt honestly with our adversaries, leading to this age of détente with the Soviet Union and he has normalized our relations with China. We did not even have relations with the Chinese in the past 20 years. He supported Israel in its darkest hour last year,” with this Bailey’s eyes slipped over towards Jacob Javits, “and now peace appears at hand in the Middle East. The Constitution makes the President the sole arbiter of foreign affairs. We see, in a bill in this very body, what happens when the President does not have full control of such things. The Jackson-Vanik bill only allows for favored trading relationships if the other nation agrees to additional behaviors. Is that going to further our relationships with the Soviets or will it undo all of the good work done by President Nixon? We have multiple treaties on restricting nuclear weapons. We have agreements to trade items they want, such as Pepsi-Cola, for items we want, their high-grade vodka. We have reduced areas of friction between us. And with China, we’ve reduced the threat to Taiwan. They’re no longer supplying the North Vietnamese. We’re about to open a consulate there. Those are concrete achievements that President Nixon has made.

    Here are some more concrete achievements of this President: The Clean Water Act. The Environmental Protection Agency. The Clean Air Act. The Endangered Species Act. The Office of Minority Business Enterprise and the Philadelphia Plan. The National Cancer Act. The creation of OHSA to protect our workers. He supported the Equal Rights Amendment. How many presidents can claim such a distinguished history in their first five years? I urge you, distinguished Senators, to not allow circumstantial evidence, fragments of conversations, and the testimony of a disgruntled former White House attorney to overrule the very real, tangible achievements of this President, who won the greatest landslide election in American history. We will demonstrate in our defense why these items of evidence are simply not proof of guilt. And when this trial is finished, I urge you to do what’s best for America’s future. Vote not guilty on this article of impeachment.”

    Nearly everyone watching, whether in the Senate chamber or on television, was surprised at the brevity of the argument Bailey had made. Inside the chamber, one person was even more surprised at the content of it—Senator Henry “Scoop” Jackson of Washington state. Jackson expected that politics would suffuse some of the President’s argument, as he did have an excellent record to fall back on. But being called out on national television for his proposed bill, which would deny most favored nation status to the Soviet Union on trade matters until it allowed Jews to emigrate freely, was a slap in the face to this proud man. Jackson vowed to vote for conviction and do everything in his power to bring along some conservatives with him.

    Meanwhile, after a ten-minute recess, Barbara Jordan walked to the podium, her hands tightly clasping her speech to keep them from shaking. She felt the nerves really hit when she looked out at the sea of white faces, realizing how unique this moment was, and then she spotted Senator Edward Brooke, the only black man in the chamber. He winked at her, and in turn she relaxed a little, smiled, and then opened her binder and began. “Distinguished members of the Senate, Mr. Chief Justice, I’m honored to be here, representing the House of Representatives in its impeachment case against Richard Milhous Nixon, President of the United States. I am not here to talk about the evidence. I am fully convinced the evidence proves the House’s case. What I am here to say is that there is a moral obligation, that if you believe the evidence, you must vote to convict the President of the United States. Free and fair elections are the hallmark of America—trust in those is how we are able to deal with the other nations of the world and have them believe in our word. Mr. Bailey (and here Jordan ad-libbed from her printed speech) stood up here and listed the President’s achievements, telling you that such a man cannot be convicted. I would tell you that yes, you can. It is no different than a valedictorian who cheats on their final exams, or on their bar exam. It is no different than a man who did everything for his wife for 24 years, but in the 25th had a public affair with a mistress. It is no different than Sherman Adams or Walter Jenkins or any one of those cases. Exemplary service means nothing if you break the law. Exemplary grades mean nothing if you cheat on the last exams. When you commit not one, but multiple felonies, you cannot expect to be let off just because you did really well up until that point.”

    Returning to her prepared remarks, Jordan continued. “I have studied the history of impeachment. It is not a tool that is used often, and it is not always a tool utilized successfully. The first impeachment was a Senator—the House impeached him for colluding with Britain, and the Senate decided that instead of trying him, they would simply expel the Senator themselves. Andrew Johnson was impeached improperly, even though his behavior conclusively merited removal from office. More recently, Justice Douglas was twice investigated by the House and twice was not found to have committed impeachable offenses. There have only been four convictions so far in nearly 200 years of this nation. That alone is a reminder that impeachment is and should be rare, but it is also something that, when the actions merit it, must be used. This impeachment trial is one of those times. Richard Nixon has abused the power of his office for nothing less than preventing the American people from voting in a free and fair election. He rigged the primaries of the opposition party to help bring about the candidate he truly wanted, Senator McGovern. Then, displeased with that, he tried to bug the Democratic Party headquarters. He got caught, stonewalled matters for two years running, and only now, is finally facing a measure of justice for his actions.

    And yet, there are still objections from this President and his attorneys. Even though impeachment does not disqualify the President from finding work, even though impeachment carries no criminal penalty, even though impeachment does not mean he will serve one single day in prison or pay any fines, he objects to this constitutional duty. That is fine, it is his right to defend himself. But as a Congress, it is our right to hold him to account for his actions that strike at the very heart of a democracy – interference in our elections and abuse of power to ensure his reelection as our President. It is our right to serve as a check and a balance on the continued usurpation of constitutional powers from this body, such as the impoundment of funds we appropriated or the conducting of war powers without a vote by this body. We have passed legislation to address these issues, but the article of impeachment the House is asking the Senate to vote guilty on means that the full context of the President’s actions, his entire conduct, must be part of that consideration you undertake at the end of this trial. If the President’s attorney (again Jordan diverted from her prepared text) says that you cannot convict him because of all the good that he has done, then you must also look at all of his wrongdoing. The mining of Haiphong Harbor, the incursions into Laos, the bombing of Cambodia, the use of the FBI to spy on Americans without a warrant, the attempted censorship of the free press through prior restraint, the barring of certain publications from the White House Press Room, the use of government funds to upgrade his private properties in San Clemente and Key Biscayne, the questionable tax writeoffs he used on his vice-presidential papers, the refusal to provide evidence to Congress, even under subpoena, and the act you will hear about from Leon Jaworski, that of destruction of evidence that Judge Sirica ordered turned over to the District Court.

    No president is above the law. No president has the right to act as if his office is above that of this body. No president has the right to defy judicial orders. No president has the right to destroy evidence. No president has the right to tamper with criminal investigations. Richard Nixon is a man who has shown no rule or law he will not break in service of maintaining his power, and that is exactly the sort of man the Founders warned us about. It is why they created the impeachment clause in the Constitution, so that we had a remedy to remove such a danger to the rule of law. We in the House have done our part. We have presented the impeachment charge to you, and we have done so in bipartisan fashion. The evidence portion of the trial is upon us, and we ask, at the end, that you decide to vote guilty and restore the rule of law to the executive branch.”

    Jordan sat down, and the room was so spellbound that it took a minute for Chief Justice Burger to snap out of it and gavel for the lunch recess.

    By that afternoon, General Abrams was out of surgery and resting comfortably in his bed. Haig told the doctors that they needed to report to him should there be any downturn in his condition. While technically against privacy rules, the doctors recognized Haig's power and also knew that he was technically above them in the chain of command because he was on "leave" from the Army as opposed to retired, and because he was a four-star and former Vice Chief of Staff, that meant he could hurt their careers. They nodded their assent and Haig departed for the White House.
     
    May 8, 1974 (part 2)
  • ANNOUNCER: From CBS News headquarters in New York, this is the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite, and Eric Sevareid in Washington, Dan Rather in Washington, Bob Schieffer in Silver Spring, Marvin Kalb in Tel Aviv, Bruce Dunning in Saigon, and Richard Roth in Moscow.

    cbs impeachment.jpg


    CRONKITE: Good evening. The fireworks were bursting inside the Senate chamber today as House managers and defense attorneys for the President argued over the admissibility of the White House tape transcripts and which ones should be included. For more, here’s Eric Sevareid at the Capitol.

    SEVAREID: House manager Jack Brooks and President Nixon’s defense attorney, F. Lee Bailey, squared off as Congressman Brooks introduced the selected transcripts that the House used to impeach the President last month. These transcripts included June 20, 1972; June 23, 1972; September 15, 1972; and March 21-22, 1973. Bailey argued that if they introduced those dates, they also needed to introduce dates like January 8, 1973, where Nixon expressed confusion as to why Senator McGovern was bugged; April 14, 1973, where Nixon told Mitchell, Magruder and Liddy to not withhold any testimony because they were worried it would damage the President; April 15, 1973, where then-Attorney General Richard Kleindienst demanded a special counsel be appointed, and April 16, 1973, when Nixon asked for the resignation letters of Dean, Haldeman and Ehrlichmann. The two then began adding to their lists in rebuttal to the other for some time, after which Chief Justice Burger intervened and declared that any material in the submitted transcripts could be used by either side in their case, and if he believed its use to be irrelevant, he would rule as such at that time.

    Now, the trial will turn its attention on Friday to the star witness of the impeachment, former White House special Watergate counsel Leon Jaworski. Jaworski resigned a couple of months ago after a disagreement over the defense strategy, according to the White House, but according to the House, Jaworski’s resignation was because of an admission of guilt on the part of the President. We do know that Jaworski met with Judiciary Chairman Peter Rodino and Watergate counsel John Doar after his resignation, but not the subject of the discussion. Jaworski’s resignation also became part of the impeachment debate, where it has been rumored that he did so after an admission that the President broke the law or wasn’t complying as promised. We will find out on Friday.

    CRONKITE: Thank you, Eric. For the other side of this story, we turn now to Dan Rather in our Washington bureau this evening. Dan?

    dan rather 1974.jpg


    RATHER: Thank you, Walter. I’ve spoken to several White House officials about the testimony of Leon Jaworski coming up, and they believe that if he says the rumors are true, that the President will have no chance of winning. The president’s attorney, F. Lee Bailey, is making an argument that these officials believe is coming straight from the President, that only he can continue to keep détente alive and bring peace to the Middle East. However, I do have some news to report. I received a call just a bit ago from a Senate official who informed me, and I quote, “Jaworski’s testimony will implicate the President in the destruction of evidence, specifically the eighteen-and-a-half-minute gap in the June 21, 1973 tape.” That was the tape which Alexander Haig, the White House chief of staff, testified to Judge John Sirica last fall was destroyed by a “sinister force.” It would appear, Walter, that if what this Senate official told CBS News pans out, the sinister force will have been the President himself.

    CRONKITE: Dan, is there anything else you can tell us about this Senate official? Do you believe they have access to the information they’ve given you?

    RATHER: Walter, yes, this person holds a sufficiently senior position that they would know the content of Leon Jaworski’s scheduled testimony. The House would not call Jaworski to testify unless they already knew the contours of what he was going to say. Remember, Walter, the Judiciary Committee hearing that passed the article of impeachment was a closed session. We can only surmise what was said in there, but it’s possible, even likely, that Jaworski provided information then, and that is how they knew to subpoena him for the impeachment trial.

    CRONKITE: Thank you, Dan, for that report. Now, we turn to the Pentagon, where today, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Creighton Abrams, underwent an emergency procedure on his lungs. At Walter Reed now is Bob Schieffer. Bob?

    SCHIEFFER: Good evening, Walter. This morning, General Abrams suffered what was described as some respiratory distress and he was driven here by his regular Pentagon driver to see a doctor, thinking he had the flu. Once he was seen, however, an oncologist was called to further examine the general, and they determined he had two lung tumors. General Abrams was then taken to surgery, where two separate procedures were performed. A lobectomy, where a whole section of lung is removed, was performed on his right lung, and a small resection on his left lung, where the much smaller second tumor was located. The Joint Chiefs is temporarily being managed by the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, while General Abrams recovers. The spokesman for the commanding general, Major General Robert Bernstein, says tonight that Abrams is expected to make a full recovery. I’ve also been told that Alexander Haig, White House chief of staff, spent the day here with Abrams’ wife and family. Haig served as vice chief of staff in the Army last year under Abrams, and the two men are said to be close. It is interesting, however, that Haig was here and not at the White House with the impeachment trial ongoing. Walter?

    CRONKITE: Thank you, Bob. We’ll be back after a brief commercial break with Marvin Kalb in Tel Aviv with Secretary Kissinger.


    Ron Ziegler nearly threw his remote control at the television in his office. He wasn’t aware that Haig had been off campus, so to say, the entire day. But that wasn’t even the biggest headache. The press secretary had been ambushed as thoroughly as the Israeli brigade manning the Bar-Lev line during the Yom Kippur War the previous autumn. There was a full day between this news and Jaworski’s testimony and he had no idea how he would handle it. Attacking the veracity of anonymous sources had not worked out well for Ziegler, to put it mildly, so that route was not an option. The problem was he didn’t have anything else. Wait for the testimony would get him two minutes. Goddammit, what is happening here? Who’s the leaker?

    He poured himself a stiff drink of whiskey, and before he could even take a sip, his intercom buzzed. “Mr. Ziegler, the President would like to see you immediately,” the disembodied voice said. Shit. “Okay, I’m on my way.” Ziegler gunned down the drink and took the metaphorical long walk to the Oval Office, where another angry verbal barrage surely awaited.
     
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    May 10, 1974
  • This is quite the Thing, by far the longest single chapter I've ever written, and boy, have we ever set many things in motion.

    ********************************


    He’d been up all night, pacing, writing furiously on his yellow legal pads, the Wagner playing on the old phonograph, the fire lit in the third floor Sitting Room while the air conditioning was on full blast at the same time. The dualities of fire and ice, martial music and statesmanlike words, all stand-ins for the strangest duality of them all: Richard Nixon’s soul. The President was a haunted man, drinking too much, neglecting sleep unless the wine took him there, plotting, planning, scheming, looking for an exit strategy from the particular das Gefängnis seiner eigenen Herstellung he found himself in. The German phrasing would be considered quite appropriate by the New Left, or even most Democrats. The man had surrounded himself with Germans: Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Kissinger. He’d acted the part of a führer with his secret incursions into Laos, the Christmas bombing of Cambodia, the plan to escalate and withdraw from Vietnam all at once. The proud architect of the LINEBACKER bombing campaigns (a blitz of sorts, another German phrase making its way into his mind, the one-fifth of German blood he held pure Prussian in so many ways, not least of all in that brain he possessed).

    Nixon roamed the halls, looking at the portraits of Lincoln, T.R., Wilson, and his dead pal Jack Kennedy, actually spending time talking to the portrait of the unfortunate second son of Old Joe. The truth was that he loved and hated Jack all at once. Hated that Jack had taken the office he’d spent eight years absorbing abuse as Ike’s prat boy to sit in, yet loved the personality of Jack so much that when the effort to correct the war’s back injury nearly killed him while still in the Senate, Dick had rushed to the hospital in tears. They were of the same generation, you see, but not the same cloth. Jack Kennedy had embodied every single person that had looked down upon Dick Nixon during his youth, embodied all the snooty types at the southern California country clubs and Duke Law School and in Washington. Nixon was a boy of the dirt, a lonely morose boy who grew into a lonely, morose man so given to masochism that he’d driven Pat on dates with other men, just in the hopes she might see him the way he wanted. Well, he’d gotten Pat all right in the end, but the sadness and loneliness and resentment that lay in his soul, and, most of all, the ambition he stoked had curdled him, turned him into a sour person that had to be President, and driven a massive wedge into their marriage. They hadn’t slept in the same room in years. Her love that she’d found for him after surrendering to his ceaseless efforts had been belittled and scorned so much, not only by a jaded and skeptical public but even by her tortured husband, that it was easier to only appear when appearances necessitated it.

    Somewhere inside of this lost soul of Richard Nixon, he had love for his wife still, but his anger and bitterness were at such a fever pitch that when she tried to bring him to bed a few nights ago, to hold him and comfort him and just be husband and wife, he’d spoken the words he always used, “Just leave me alone.” The difference was Pat stood her ground this time, though, she didn’t leave him alone, she tried to take his hand away from the lined pad covered in notes, and he’d reacted viciously, as if he were a cornered and beaten dog. Nixon was, metaphorically speaking, just that, and he’d even snarled as he backhanded her, leaving her nose bloody. Pat had fled the room and hadn’t left the master suite since, her spokesperson telling the media that she had caught an awful cold and was staying in bed because it was such a miserable one. Like so many other domestic secrets in the White House, this one had kept, but the staff was absolutely mortified that the President had lashed out and struck his wife. They’d been so loyal to him, and she had been so loyal to him, and this was how he’d rewarded it. His heart became harder, his conscience buried deeper, and the hate had fully taken hold, violating the maxim he’d grown up with as a Quaker, that you should never hate those that hate you, because then they win.

    When Ron Ziegler came up in the morning, Nixon was still in his robe, still in the Sitting Room, still listening to the martial music of the Nazis’ favorite composer. His face was haggard, but what really, truly shocked the press secretary was Nixon’s left leg. The left calf was bloated purple, propped on a footstool, looking for all the world like Violet Beauregard in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, Gene Wilder’s hit movie from three years ago. Ziegler tried to get the Old Man’s attention, but Nixon grunted and shooed him away. Ziegler hastened to the nearest phone and called for Dr. William Lukash, the assistant White House physician. He described what he saw, and Lukash ran up all five flights of stairs from the White House basement, where the medical office was, bursting into the Sitting Room to find one of the worst cases of phlebitis he’d ever come across. Nixon looked up at his doctor. “Bill, what’s the matter with you? You look like you’ve been chased by the bulls in Spain.” “Mr. President, aren’t you in horrible pain right now?” The President looked at his doctor quizzically. “I mean, my leg was a little uncomfortable, so I put it on the ottoman, see?” Lukash boggled at that, truly shocked at the serenity of his patient. “Sir, I need to get you to a hospital. You’ve got blood clots in your leg, and they could kill you. That left leg is the worst I’ve seen in my life.” Nixon, still frighteningly calm, rejected that notion out of hand. “No, Bill, I have to defend myself today, and I cannot do that in a hospital bed. It just won’t do, it won’t do at all.” Lukash insisted. Nixon refused.

    Realizing that he could not stop his commander-in-chief, Lukash went back to the medical office, where he gathered a blood thinner and support hose for the president. He returned and convinced Nixon that if he wouldn’t come to the hospital, he should at least wear the support hose and take the blood thinners and allow himself to be checked by Lukash or Dr. Walter Tkach, the senior White House physician, several times a day until the problem abated or until the President would agree to go to Bethesda Navy Medical Center to resolve the problem. This was acquiesced to, and with that, Lukash withdrew. In the hallway, he grabbed Ziegler’s wrist and pulled him into another room. “Ron, I’m only going to say this once. That man has a death wish, and he could easily kill himself in the state he’s in. Get General Haig or Secretary Kissinger, even the Vice President, someone has to talk him out of this course. It’s suicide to even be here and not in a hospital with that leg in the shape it’s in.” Ziegler looked at the doctor with the helplessness he’d long since accepted as the Old Man drove headfirst into the impeachment storm, as if to say, of course we’ll all try, but he won’t listen. He hasn’t listened in weeks. Sure enough, Nixon refused to listen to Haig, refused to listen to Ziegler, even refused Pat Buchanan when he was rousted from his speechwriting office and brought to the third floor to try and convince his patron saint that it was madness to not go to a hospital. Richard Nixon was driven by the need to exonerate himself, and he’d rather die than go down without a fight.

    Some hours later, Leon Jaworski found himself in a holding room outside of the Senate chamber, preparing for the decidedly unusual step of testifying in a presidential impeachment trial. Lawyers, as has been noted before in this story, are not used to being on the stand. They ask the questions, not answer them, so the role reversal is difficult. In Jaworski’s case, he was feeling quite cautious at the prospect of questioning from F. Lee Bailey. Bailey didn’t frighten or scare him, but he was zealous and determined, and especially talented at pointed questions that struck like the blade of a rapier—you feel almost nothing, but look down and there you are, bleeding from multiple wounds.

    John Doar entered the room just then to escort his old friend Leon to the Senate Chamber. The two made small talk in the hallway, mainly their shock at the turnaround Billy Martin had begun in Texas with the Rangers, who looked as if they could compete for the division title after being cellar dwellers the past two seasons. Jack Brooks was at the door to the chamber to greet both men, another Texan there to help keep Leon steady as he prepared for a very long day of testimony. The rest of the House managers were milling about their side of the well, while Brownell and Bailey were clearly reviewing the questions that they were going to ask of Jaworski during their cross-examination. The senators were all in their seats already, the prospect of a titanic clash having drawn them to its light as if they were the proverbial moths. Around the nation, viewers settled in around televisions, knowing that today was the main event, the best chance for major confrontation.

    Per usual, since it was their case, the House managers went first. The handsome, diplomatic Hamilton Fish IV was the lead questioner today, Peter Rodino deciding that it was best to look very fair (a Republican handling questioning to start), while Fish could use his legitimate background as a Foreign Service member to carefully extricate the crucial information. Redirect, if needed, could be handled by Jack Brooks, whose mastery of the facts in the case was undisputed and shared the Texas background with Jaworski. Fish began by walking Jaworski through his early involvement in Nixon’s defense:


    FISH: Who recommended you to the White House?

    JAWORSKI: Charles Alan Wright, University of Texas law professor, and the Vice President seconded me.

    FISH: Who interviewed you?

    JAWORSKI: The Vice President and the President together.

    FISH: Vice President Connally was there?

    JAWORSKI: Yes, I’ve known him for well over a decade now. He informally spoke to me about helping the President out and defending him during this difficult time for the country. Then he walked me over to the Oval Office so I could speak with the President.

    FISH: Excellent, and so the President decided to hire you, and you moved into an apartment in Dupont Circle and began working as?

    JAWORSKI: Special White House counsel for the impeachment investigation.

    FISH: So you were interviewed after the President fired Special Counsel Cox and disbanded the Watergate Prosecution Force?

    JAWORSKI: That is correct.

    FISH: Did you talk to the President about that action?


    Objection, roared F. Lee Bailey from the defense table.

    Chief Justice Burger: Denied. Please continue, Mr. Fish.

    FISH: Mr. Jaworski, did you discuss the President’s firing of the special prosecutor and his team with him?

    JAWORSKI: Yes, I did. I told him that I would defend him vigorously, but as his attorney, I needed to know everything he had said and done, and why he’d said and done it, otherwise I was likely to be ambushed and would not be an effective counsel for him.

    FISH: And what did the President say to that?

    JAWORSKI: He agreed to my terms, otherwise I would’ve flown right back home.

    FISH: Did he abide by those terms?

    JAWORSKI: I don’t believe I’d be sitting in this position if he had.

    FISH: Mr. Jaworski, when did you first learn about the White House’s taping system?

    JAWORSKI: The same as you did, Mr. Fish, when Mr. Butterfield testified about it to the Ervin Committee.

    FISH: And when did you speak with the President about access to his tapes?

    JAWORSKI: Oh, that was early on, within the first day or two. I told him that I had to be able to listen to any of those tapes because I could not defend against the knowledge on them without knowing what actually existed. Simultaneously, I could disprove the existence of certain rumors with those tapes.

    FISH: And when did you start listening to those tapes?

    JAWORSKI: I never did listen to the tapes.

    FISH: Excuse me, Mr. Jaworski?

    JAWORSKI: I said I never did listen to the tapes. The President never allowed me to do so, and by the time he’d decided to change his mind, I had already resigned. The only thing I know is from what Deputy Attorney General Lee told me during a meeting, that “the quality on those tapes was mediocre on a good day and practically impossible to hear well on a bad one.”

    FISH: Okay. Moving on. Mr. Jaworski, what happened on February 11th of this year?

    JAWORSKI: I had a meeting with the President, subsequent to my visit that weekend with Fred Buzhardt at Bethesda, where Mr. Buzhardt said I should be very careful of what I commit to, because things were not as they should be in the White House.

    FISH: And what transpired at this meeting with the President?

    BAILEY: Objection!

    CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER: Denied.

    JAWORSKI: I had arrived at the White House and told Al Haig I needed to meet with the President alone, that it was privileged, so he couldn’t be there, and he interrupted a briefing from General Scowcroft and had me escorted into the Oval Office. I immediately raised the issue of the eighteen-minute gap on the June 20, 1972 tape. The President denied knowing anything about that or erasing it. I told the President that if there was one thing that would sink him fastest in this case, it would be not knowing all of the facts and trying to defend him without that knowledge. That was when he told me what had happened. He had deliberately erased that tape because he believed it incriminated him deeply on Watergate.


    Hamilton Fish let that hang for a moment to sink in for 100 senators and every American watching at home.

    FISH: The President told you he destroyed evidence?

    JAWORSKI: Yes.

    FISH: And what did you do with that knowledge?

    JAWORSKI: I told Al Haig about it, said that his “sinister force” was right there in the Oval, and then I stormed off.

    FISH: Why didn’t you come forward then?

    JAWORSKI: Well, I’d decided to stay on in my role, to prevent more items from being destroyed, to ensure good transcription of the tapes, and to ensure that this trial was fair. Everyone deserves a defense.


    Fish wanted to keep the pace going.

    FISH: Now let’s move to March 26th or 27th, Mr. Jaworski. What happened those days?

    JAWORSKI: That was the 48 hours when the Super Outbreak of tornados happened, and so there was quite a lot going on. However, after the storms were over, the President was agitated about the transcripts again and had taken off towards the Executive Office Building to try and stop the work. He became…I guess I would say paranoid, that the transcripts would be his downfall, and he had to stop them from going out.

    FISH: Well, obviously, they did go out, so what happened?

    JAWORSKI: What happened, Mr. Fish, was that I convinced the President otherwise, but I decided that I’d had quite enough of working for a man who just has no respect for the rule of law. I don’t know if the office corrupts you or you have to be slightly corrupted to run for the office, but Richard Nixon, a member of the bar like myself, just does not respect it the same. He believes that if he thinks it’s right, it is legal. That is not the Constitution as I know it, and it is why I chose to speak with Mr. Doar and Chairman Rodino, because as a government employee, I swore an oath to the Constitution and not to the President.


    Fish had found his mic drop. He stepped away and told Chief Justice Burger that he was done with questioning for now. Burger gaveled for a fifteen-minute recess and everyone in the chamber, who’d been spellbound by the almost casual nature of the volleys between Fish and Jaworski, stood up to stretch and mingle for a bit before Bailey came back at Jaworski with his cross examination afterwards. As this was going on, there was a commotion at the back of the chamber, the doors opened from the main hallway, the center doors, the power doors, and amongst a number of plain-looking men in navy blue suits with earpieces was Richard Nixon, dressed in a worsted grey suit with a navy blue/red checked tie, limping heavily, all scowls and jowls jutting forward at the one hundred men who sat in judgment of him. It was a classic Nixon power play, the fearless leader putting himself out there alone in the arena, projecting a visual of Teddy Roosevelt’s “man in the arena” speech. The senators gawped, stunned at this…audacity. He’s going to show up at this trial? How unpresidential. He’d walked in like he owned the place. Some watched the limp and wondered what was behind it. Others saw the scowl and thought he meant to lunge for his former attorney’s jugular. Surprisingly, shockingly, he made his way down to the well and planted himself firmly at the defense table.

    Herb Brownell took it best, keeping cool, leaning in to shake his client’s hand. Bailey was a little shook and did his best to hide it, so he also shook the president’s hand and then excused himself for the restroom, where he pulled out a small flask from his suit jacket and took a swig of vodka to calm his nerves. His need to nail Jaworski on this cross-examination was especially acute now with the most powerful man in the world, his client no longer a distant observer but an especially close Eye of Sauron, the glare able to burn into one’s soul. Bailey sprayed some Binaca into his mouth to get rid of the alcoholic odor and returned to the defense table. Nixon was in the middle of speaking with Brownell. “Lee, glad you’re back. Listen, the President has some thoughts he’d like you to review before the recess ends in a couple of minutes,” the former Attorney General said, handing over some sheets from Nixon’s legal pad. Bailey looked them over and was mortified. There’s absolutely no way I can ask some of these questions. They’re…deranged. Bailey looked up and saw the President looking at him. Behind the President, Brownell gave the slightest shake of his head, a signal to say “I know, you can’t do it, just humor him.” Bailey kept his poker face on and told Nixon he’d do his best to weave his questions into the alternate narrative he’d constructed. Before the President could respond, Burger had returned to the presiding chair to gavel them back into session. It was a bit of an awkward moment, of course, because everyone had stood except for Nixon, believing that even at his own trial, he was supreme.

    The television anchors, meanwhile, having cut away from the trial, were breathlessly informing viewers that the President had appeared at his impeachment trial and sat at the defense table, a development they could not explain, but which must surely be of great importance. AT&T would later note a massive spike in long-distance calls after the word got out, and there were a great many more radios and television sets turned on. At offices throughout the nation, work stopped entirely as everyone crowded around whatever they could find to listen. It was, as Nicholas von Hoffman would note in the next day’s Washington Post, a happening without parallel in the nation’s history. Consequently, there were more eyes on F. Lee Bailey than he could comprehend, had he known about any of this at the time. He stepped up to the lectern to look at Leon Jaworski, sitting in a special witness chair with rails around it built just for the trial.

    BAILEY: Good afternoon, Mr. Jaworski.

    JAWORSKI: Thanks. That might change by the end of this for both of us.

    [chuckles]

    BAILEY: Mr. Jaworski, I want to begin with a question about your February 11th meeting with the President. Was anybody else present for that meeting?

    JAWORSKI: No.

    BAILEY: So, you spoke with the President, and pressed him about the tapes, and he just up and confessed to you that he’d committed a crime by destroying evidence in a criminal probe?

    JAWORSKI: It was not nearly as casual or as quick as you make it out to be, Mr. Bailey.

    BAILEY: Okay, Mr. Jaworski, please explain in more detail this conversation, if you will.

    JAWORSKI: I believe I’ve already done so.

    BAILEY: Well, I have reason to believe that you haven’t. That you said, and this is an approximation, “I was given reason to believe over the weekend by a person formerly employed in this administration that you erased the tape because it contained clear evidence of White House complicity in the break-in. I know you’re loyal to your men, but if Haldeman, Ehrlichmann, or anyone working under them knew or covered up to protect you, then you have to tell Congress that. If you lie, to me or to them, it’ll come out eventually, and then it wouldn’t matter if it were me or John Marshall defending you—you’d be impeached and removed. Look me in the eye and promise me you will tell me everything. If you can’t do this, then you’ll need a new lawyer.” Does that sound about right?

    JAWORSKI: It’s roughly accurate. I don’t remember my every word, but that sounds right.

    BAILEY: So, this former employee, it’s Fred Buzhardt, isn’t it?

    JAWORSKI: That is correct, yes. He’d told me his suspicions when I’d visited him at the hospital over the weekend.

    BAILEY: So, Mr. Jaworski, the person who you succeeded in the job of defending the President told you that he believed, not that he knew, but that he believed the President had erased the June 20th tape, and you then went and accused the President of it, the President denied it, and then after you threatened to quit, the President just suddenly gave in and admitted doing so?

    JAWORSKI: That is roughly how it happened, yes.

    BAILEY: And with no witnesses in the room, and only your hearsay testimony, this Senate is supposed to convict the President of the United States and remove him from office?

    JAWORSKI: Are you calling me a liar, Mr. Bailey? There’s things I may be in life, but a liar is not one of them.

    BAILEY: No, I…

    NIXON: YES. That’s exactly what he’s calling you, Leon! He’s calling you a liar, because you are lying. I denied that I’d erased the June 20th tape and I stand by that statement, and whatever you think you heard in the Oval Office that day, I never, NEVER admitted to destroying evidence or concealing it.


    Burger tried to gavel things back to order. Nixon was on his feet now, glaring at the Polish Texan, a finger pointing at him.

    NIXON: I am not a crook and I resent the fact that you are accusing me of that in front of the world. You were my attorney, and you turned on me. Why is that? Are you harboring some sort of grudge given to you by Lyndon? Did you take this job knowing you’d violate your oath to defend your client? I want answers, Mr. Jaworski, and I am not going to sit down until I get them!


    Burger continued gaveling, trying to reason with the President, the man who’d elevated him to his prestige position, to please stop so Bailey could resume questioning. Jaworski sat there, stone-faced, inwardly appalled that it had come to this. The nation watched along with him, utterly aghast at the spectacle and unable to turn away from it.

    NIXON: Anyone who served as my attorney shouldn’t even be testifying in a trial against me. It flies in the face of the law, and I have been, throughout my life, a proponent of law & order. What I see sickens me. This trial is a sham [turning to face the senators]. You are all sitting here in judgement of me, when the evidence is nonexistent. I do not accept this, I do not accept your judgement, and I do not accept this attempt to overturn the will of the people for something that does not even come close to “high crimes and misdemeanors.” Let me tell you something. I opened China back to the world. I got us out of Vietnam. I made a major treaty with the Soviets. History will judge YOU [here his index finger stuck out at the Senate] for this moment. They will judge ALL of you for letting this leftist hysteria overcome the truth and remove a good man from the Presidency.


    At this point, the lack of sleep, lack of food, and the blood thinners to combat the phlebitis combined to drop the President’s blood pressure lower than it should be, and he collapsed to the floor. The cameras cut out as the Secret Service swarmed in, picking the President up and carrying him out of the chamber as everyone else sat or stood perfectly still, unable to say a word. Across the nation, local and/or national news anchors tried to summarize what everyone had just witnessed, but words largely failed them in the moment. They turned, instead, to trying to reach out to their Capitol Hill correspondents, who were scurrying to get news on what had caused the President’s collapse. Meanwhile, the Secret Service loaded Nixon into one of their special purpose vehicles designed for transporting the President in the event of being wounded. A Navy corpsman checked Nixon’s vitals as they sped off for George Washington University hospital, thankful that at the moment his heart was still beating and his lungs still breathing. He’d known of the phlebitis since Admiral William Tkach, the President’s senior physician, had told him earlier. This entire trip had been madness, thought the corpsman. God, please let him survive this folly. That's the last thing anyone needs.
     
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    PSA
  • Hi all. You're probably wondering what happened to the next chapter. It was close to being done. I was on a roll.

    And then my wife ended up in the ICU, days after the last post.

    She was there right after Christmas, through New Year's, and nearly until the Super Bowl when I finally got to bring her home. But it was close, far too close for my liking. She was on a ventilator (nope, not COVID, though). She's had memory issues. It's getting better, but it's been tough, and I just couldn't bring myself to write for a long time. I'm sorry, I feel like I let everyone down, and while I know I shouldn't blame myself, it's hard not to.

    Anyway, I'm about ready to dive back in soon. And while I am sad I lost momentum, the break gave me a chance to come up with a fun new plot twist in the near future.

    So sit back, buckle in, and get ready for the verdict of history...and the Senate.
     
    May 13, 1974
  • For once, the machinery of constitutional succession worked properly. The 25th Amendment, so very recently ratified by Congress and the states, provided for the ascension of the Vice President to the Presidency in an acting capacity upon the inability of the President to carry out their duties. The afternoon of May 10th was the first test of a system designed to avoid previous issues, such as Lyndon Johnson serving a full year and change as President without a Vice President, because no such method existed for nominating and confirming a replacement when the President died and the Vice President moved up a rung on the ladder. John Connally, of course, was firmly ensconced in Washington, working in his West Wing office ensuring that all the mundane parts of the Presidency were functioning. He’d been at lunch, surprisingly enough, with Ben Barnes when Richard Milhous Nixon departed on his quest to set alight his political career with gasoline on national television. Within seconds of Nixon’s limp body being carried from the Senate chamber, Connally had been roused from his corner in the senior White House mess with Barnes and rushed to the Situation Room, for no reason other than when crisis struck, this is where people went.

    The Veep asked for and received Nixon’s current condition (unconscious, breathing, heart rate a bit weak). His next action was to have the Cabinet rushed to the White House, which was actually expected in this case because the world watched the American President collapse in front of live television cameras. This was accomplished within a half-hour, not bad for a first effort in an actual coordinated movement of the entire Cabinet (not the same method as a Doomsday evacuation, but good practice for the necessary coordination), Connally judged. He sat down in his usual seat in the Cabinet room, the better to not act as if he was trying to take a metaphorical throne that everyone else in the room was convinced he’d be sitting in within days. When he did so, he beckoned to Dr. Saul Paul Ehrlich Jr., who went by Dr. S. Paul Ehrlich to make it less of a tongue-twister. Dr. Ehrlich was the director of international health and also the acting Surgeon General since February 1973, not officially nominated for reasons that had been forgotten in the maelstrom that was Watergate. He briefed the Cabinet on what had happened with the President since that morning—General Tkach and Captain Lukash had gone to GWU to assist with the President’s condition—including the phlebitis, the surprising refusal of the President to do much about it, the manic behavior, and why the President had likely collapsed in the well of the Senate.

    When he was done, Connally looked around the room. “Gentlemen, a vote is now required. The President is incapacitated, and for me to properly execute duties as acting President, a majority must certify that Dick is unable to perform his duties as President. A show of hands will suffice, I believe,” here Connally looked over at Len Garment, White House counsel, who nodded affirmatively. “All in favor?” the Vice President asked, and everyone’s hand went up. Well, that makes it so much easier now, doesn’t it? “Okay, thank you, gentlemen. Right now, I think we should take a minute to pray for Dick and his recovery here.” Connally bowed his head, calling upon Almighty God to save the life of Richard Nixon, to heal his phlebitis, and allow him to finish his term. The last part drew a few raised eyebrows—nobody in this room was ignorant of John Bowden Connally’s teeming ambition to be President. “Alright. Ron should brief the media that we have done as the Constitution asks of us, and Len can call the Speaker’s office to inform him of the same. I imagine the Senate is still tied up in adjourning today’s session and voting on how to proceed. I think it’s important to show continuity to the world, just so nobody gets any smart ideas on trying to nuke us or Saigon or wherever. Any issue with that?” Again, no dissension. Henry even chimed in to say how wise he thought Connally’s decision was. The men in this room were political animals, and they’d made the instinctual decision that Richard Nixon’s time as President was measured in days. Cabinet officers enjoy their posts and perks quite a bit, and so by backing Connally here, they were making their bid to stay in their posts after the big Texan shifted seats to be on the other side of the oval table.

    Carl Albert raised no objection to the move by the Vice President and the Cabinet. He, too, had been watching and was dumbstruck when Nixon collapsed. He’d already gotten into his whiskey cabinet, trying to calm his nerves because he was now (for the moment) the next in line for the Presidency, and he loved being Speaker and was terrified of being President through historical accident. The President had real responsibilities at a level Carl Albert would gladly stay away from. While Carl got into his bourbon, Mike Mansfield was, as surmised, rather busy at the moment in conference with Minority Leader Hugh Scott and Chief Justice Burger trying to determine how to conduct the rest of the impeachment trial. The President’s presence had been an anomaly, not one required by the rules or the Constitution, and as such, there was no legal reason to continue on with him. As a moral decision, though, the three were troubled by a defendant not being able to assist in his defense until the very end. It was not their choice, though. By the rules of impeachment, the Senate had to vote as a body to suspend the trial. When the leaders brought that proposal to the floor (the cameras were off and the production crew were well away from the chamber), they were greeted with a good helping of scorn and derision from both sides. Liberal stalwarts like Ted Kennedy and Mike Gravel argued that the President’s behavior prior to his collapse was reason enough to convict him and move on, while Republicans, torn between party loyalty and the gross misconduct of its leader, split on the matter. Ultimately, though, Chuck Percy, Edward Brooke, Jacob Javits, George Aiken, Lowell Weicker, Mark Hatfield, and Bob Packwood all voted against a suspension of the trial. The Dixiecrat caucus of Harry Bryd, John Stennis, James Eastland, J. Bennett Johnston, John Sparkman, and James Allen voted with the rest of the GOP…and Mike Mansfield himself. This left the final vote 56-44. The trial would continue on Monday.

    A Greek tragedy is structured into three parts: prologue, parados and exodus. In between those parts is stasima, where the veritable Greek chorus comments upon the action in the tragedy. The stasima was missing from this tragedy, though, for as the senators left the floor, they would not comment to the veritable dogpile of press outside the chambers. Eventually, Richard Schweiker would hold a brief “scrum,” as the terminology went, in his office later that day, but as Friday turned to Saturday, the parados was at its apogee, and chorus or not, the exodus was on its way.

    The weekend came and went, with Nixon in his medical coma and Connally calmly conducting the business of state, as the tension silently built in the capital, the air crackling with metaphorical and physical electricity as thunderstorms moved in Sunday. The morning’s news shows, Issues & Answers, Meet the Press, and Face the Nation, granted F. Lee Bailey the vaunted trifecta of appearances, as journalists scrambled to elicit answers out of Bailey that the doctors at Bethesda Navy Medical Center would not. Bailey was quite aware of their thirst and gladly played along, stringing them along, teasing substantive answers while carefully pushing his narrative that the President was innocent, so much so that he’d risked his life to prove that on Friday. The litigator was hoping to drum up a major round of sympathy for his client, one that would pressure the Senate into acquitting the President. His calculation, not an unreasonable one, was that a 56-44 vote to continue the trial was still ten votes short of conviction (Bailey was not a fool, and knew Mansfield would vote to convict). If the 43 others who voted to recess stuck together, Richard Nixon would stay president. Bailey’s answers and spiel, therefore, were aimed at those 43 men voting for acquittal. Even if he lost five of them, it was still a victory. The high bar that the Constitution had for conviction in an impeachment trial was the best friend of Richard Nixon. And if he stayed in office, he could stave off the inevitable federal prosecution that would surely ensue upon his departure, not to mention the lawsuits.

    Unfortunately for Lawyer Bailey and President Nixon, someone else had different plans. The Acting President, one John Bowden Connally, Jr., was quite aware of Bailey’s plans and was laying his own that Sunday. Unlike Richard Nixon, whose legal career was marked by a lumbering manner disguising his keen intellect, John Connally was a skilled dealmaker, one who knew the law well and how to walk its line even better. His intelligence was never in question, and he performed so ably that, as one Texas oilman was said to have remarked, “you didn’t even know he’d picked your pocket until after he left the room and you realized your wallet was gone.” The play here was simple. Get the Dixiecrats in a room and work them, charm them, serve them fine bourbon and cigars while that baritone Texas twang massaged their egos and offered them their wish lists in return for one thing: a vote for conviction of Nixon should it become necessary. Of the ten votes he believed needed to be peeled off, Connally had seven in the room—Allen, Sparkman, Harry Byrd, Stennis, Eastland, Johnston, and Strom Thurmond, no longer a Democrat but the man who created the Dixiecrats by himself. That left three others still needing to be convinced, and two of those would almost certainly be the ones who tried to get Nixon to resign, Chuck Percy and Barry Goldwater. That left one to get. Fannin was a maybe, as was Norris Cotton, not running for re-election and a man with occasional liberal leanings. Connally figured that, since votes were tallied in alphabetical order, three Dixiecrats would have voted against Nixon by the time Fannin and Goldwater came up for their votes, and if they both jumped, Percy would surely do the same. Just reaching out to the Dixiecrats and finding common ground was masterstroke enough. If there’s one thing that JBC could do, it was count, and the count was moving heavily in his favor.

    Monday morning dawned humid and sticky, the moisture from the previous day’s thunderstorms still permeating the air in the onetime swamplands. Seersucker suits were beginning to appear amongst the more elderly Senators as they filed into the chamber. The House managers, slated to give their closing argument, instead surprisingly moved to go immediately to the vote. Bailey objected to the motion. Chief Justice Burger, unsure of what to do, conferred sotto voce with the parliamentarian for some minutes before enabling his microphone and declaring that the motion could be voted on by the Senators. A quick roll call was taken, and the motion defeated by the slimmest of margins, 51-49. Mansfield was the 51st, having deferred until the end, and deciding to once more fall on the side of fairness. The motion having been denied, Peter Rodino walked to the rostrum to give the closing argument. Tip O’Neill had quietly arranged for Bob Shrum, the wunderkind speechwriter of Ted Kennedy, to come down from Boston to assist Rodino over the weekend after it became clear the trial would conclude this week. O’Neill wanted to strike while they iron was hot, close quickly and get the vote in, because he believed and had convinced the others it was easier to remove Nixon while he was unable to do the job anyway and had been removed from the job under the 25th Amendment. Take what is temporary and make it permanent. So Shrum wrote the words for Rodino, words which were brief but would ring throughout history.

    “I have the honor of giving this closing statement, and I am grateful to the members of this body for their fairness throughout this difficult moment in our nation’s history. Some thirty-plus years ago, many of us in the House and the Senate swore an oath as we donned the uniforms of the United States military and went off into battle, fighting on distant shores, in thick jungles, on mountaintops and in deserts, in caves and castles, to defend our freedom and our way of life. That oath is essentially the same as the one we’ve all sworn to be members of Congress. “To Preserve, Protect, and Defend the Constitution of the United States.” Not the nation itself, though that is surely part of the bargain, but the Constitution. Not the nation’s leaders, but its guiding principles. This may not resemble Anzio or Normandy or El Alamein, but what we do here today is as vital to protecting our way of life and our Constitution as any of those battles. What the President strove to do was to use the power of the presidency, a vast, mighty power indeed, and direct it towards subverting the right of the people to choose their leaders fairly, in a free election, without the heavy hand of the state upon the scale.

    When one candidate is unable to run their campaign without agents of the state interfering in the process, then the Constitution loses value, and if that value is allowed to be further diminished over time, it would jeopardize our republic. These were not mere “dirty tricks,” as the President’s men phrased them. These were retired CIA and FBI agents, working alongside mercenaries, breaking and entering into a political party’s headquarters, stealing documents, planting microphones, and planning to use that illicit access to completely sabotage the election. It was shocking then, and became far more so when the scope of the Nixon campaign’s involvement became clear.” Rodino paused, took a breath, and continued into the peroration that would rank this speech as one of the finest in American political history, one that made Bob Shrum the most in-demand speechwriter in Democratic politics for the next decade. “Now, I am a modest man, I do not like the spotlight, and I am uncomfortable with it even now, but I am standing on a different shore than the one so many brave men died on thirty years ago. This shore I stand on today is that of the rule of law, of our Constitution, and by God, I will defend this shore to my last. Your votes, Senators, are the bullets for my gun. Give me enough of them and we will have protected our democracy once more from attack. Give me too few, and the next person to attempt such an attack upon our free and fair elections might well succeed, and our cherished Republic fall. Our work here is done, our cause is just, the hour is nigh; the decision is yours. Thank you for your time.”

    The gallery erupted in applause, the succinct message of the member from New Jersey breaking through all the noise and spin to present one unalienable truth: this trial was about protecting the Constitution and the country. Burger repeatedly gaveled, trying to bring matters under control. After the commotion settled down, in a surprising twist, Herb Brownell and not F. Lee Bailey rose to take the spot at the rostrum, making one final argument to save the political life of the President, while his actual life hung in the balance a short walk away at Bethesda Naval Medical Center.

    If the world were perfect, it wouldn’t be. A great philosopher from my neck of the woods said that. A few of you may even have heard his name before: Yogi Berra.” Laughter rippled through the chamber. Brownell smiled. His gambit had worked. “The great Yogi may have sounded as if he’d stepped on his own words there, but there was a big truth behind those words. We live in an imperfect world, but even a “perfect” world wouldn’t really be perfect. And just like our world is imperfect, so are the leaders of the nations in it, present company excluded, of course.” More laughter as Brownell flashed another lopsided grin. “I’m sure everyone across this great land of ours can agree that Richard Nixon is an imperfect man. The president, though, won two terms as president, the second one by the largest landslide in American history. There’s a lot of talk during this impeachment that the President rigged the election, that by helping swing the race to Senator McGovern, he drew the best opponent he could wish for. Now, I’m not entirely sure what’s more insulting about that. Is it that Senator McGovern, one of your colleagues, is so inept at politics that he only won the Democratic nomination because of the President’s interference? Or is it that the voters are unable to discern fact from fiction, and the biggest landslide in history was because they are easily swayed? That infers that they were not influenced by the facts, that the President did reduce our presence in Vietnam and negotiate peace with honor in Vietnam, that he did open up China again, and that he signed a historic arms control treaty with the Soviet Union. Everything I just named are facts, and they are undisputed. I would argue that as much as there is evidence in this whole sordid saga, there is also much conjecture. There are inferences made from conversations, but no hard facts. The only physical evidence of any of this is from the inept burglars who were arrested at the Watergate. We’ve heard much testimony in front of the Ervin Committee, and those who uttered the words largely stood to gain by bringing the President down with them.

    The President right now is fighting for his life at Bethesda Naval Medical Center. I’ve known Richard Nixon for over twenty years. He is as tough a man as I’ve ever known. I have no doubt he will recover from what happened here last Friday. He cannot, however, recover from what happens here today if an unjust verdict is brought down upon him. There is no appeal to this vote. There is no second chance. An impeachment conviction would forever bar this President, one of the most effective in this century, from his pension, access to information and resources, and ability to provide future service to this government. Is that just? Is that a proper punishment for these alleged crimes? Is that the right decision to come to when the evidence presented is not as conclusive as the House managers make it out to be? Are the President’s mistakes greater than his successes?

    Senators, one of your brethren, later to become President, wrote not twenty years ago about Edmund Gibson Ross. He was the deciding vote in the impeachment trial of Andrew Johnson. Now, Johnson was a horrible man and a horrible President, but the crimes which he was charged with were not actual crimes. The Congress passed a law that was unconstitutional in its claim of power over the President—the Tenure of Office Act. That act stated that the President could not accept the resignation nor fire any of his Cabinet officers without the concurrence of Congress. Now, the Senate is to provide advice and consent to a President’s appointees, but this was the first time Congress claimed to have power over the ability of the President to fire members of the executive branch. Johnson was a proud man, and so he tested the Act, leading to his impeachment in the House and his acquittal by the Senate by a single vote. One vote. That was Senator Ross, who was facing pressure from his party and most of the nation. Senator Ross, though, voted his conscience. He knew the charges were improper. He voted no, and lost his next election and his political career. It was a brave step, though, and Jack Kennedy immortalized him for it.

    Today I am asking you, the jurors of this case, to take the same brave step. This impeachment was rushed. The charges lack hard evidence. The House determined it wanted to be rid of Richard Nixon, but this body, the Senate, named after that august body of ancient Rome, was meant to prevent a rush to judgment. Madison wrote in Federalist No. 62 that the Senate was less likely “to be seduced by factious leaders into intemperate and pernicious resolutions,” and less inclined to “the impulse of sudden and violent passions.” The House acted passionately, angered by what they read in the transcripts provided to them by the President, and acted swiftly to impeach him. It is your job, as the house of Congress the Founders intended to be deliberative, to act dispassionately, and to deliver justice. It may not be popular, but the only just verdict is acquittal. Thank you for your time.”

    Chief Justice Warren Burger looked to Mike Mansfield. The Majority Leader rose to speak. “Mr. Chief Justice, the Senate will now move into closed session for deliberation of these articles of impeachment, and seek permission to do so from the chair.” “The motion is granted. The Senate shall move into closed session, and the chair shall adjourn to the President’s Room to await a verdict.” Burger gaveled the Senate to a close, and the room was cleared of all but the one hundred senators and the sergeant-at-arms, who sealed the doors. It was a very informal affair, not that much different than a court jury, except the room was much bigger and this jury was 8.3 times larger than a standard one. Mansfield put two fingers in his mouth and whistled. The chatter stopped. “Alright, boys, before we start talking, Barry’s asked me if he can go first and I’ve agreed to let him do so. Barry, the floor is yours.” Mansfield stepped aside from the well and let Goldwater stand facing the other ninety-eight senators.

    “Now, listen, I’m gonna be blunt with all of you because I think we all know each other well enough that I can do that. I’ve known Herb Brownell since I came to the Senate over 20 years ago, and I think he did a fine job advocating for the President. Despite that fine job, Dick is guilty as hell and I think we need to own up to that as a party and cut him loose. He got in front of this body and lost his damned mind yelling at his own former attorney. Now he’s lying in a coma at Bethesda. Even if some of you wanted to acquit him out of friendship or party loyalty, the fact is he certainly is not even capable of doing the job and would be removed via the 25th Amendment anyway. I think this body, our party, and our nation would be better off if we just moved on from this sorry period.” The reaction was somewhat muted, but that was all the better in Mansfield’s mind. It meant they were thinking it over in their heads right now.

    One by one, senators stood up and cast their informal votes. Howard Baker was a reluctant yes. Wallace Bennett, who’d tangentially been involved in the early days of Watergate when his son’s ties to E. Howard Hunt had been published by Woodward and Bernstein, joined the no column. Bill Brock and Edward Brooke were two more defections. Jim Buckley held to a firm no. Bob Dole, whose full-throated defense of Nixon during the 1972 campaign had aged like a bad wheel of Brie cheese, abstained for now. Pete Domenici owed his Senate seat to Nixon and voted no. Hiram Fong, considered a bellwether vote—a liberal Republican who’d staunchly supported the Vietnam War and Richard Nixon—voted yes. Bob Griffin, another liberal Republican, tearfully voted yes. On the voting went, a few Republicans having crossed over, but the solid South remaining in doubt, holding out until the end, their fingers firmly wetted and up in the air. The Republicans in the South, like Jesse Helms and Strom Thurmond, said they’d never desert this President. Hugh Scott, the Minority Leader, couldn’t bring himself to vote yes. When the count got to Robert Taft, Jr., the son of the Ohio stalwart whom Richard Nixon had helped shove out of the presidential nomination in 1952, he gleefully announced he would vote yes. The good senator served his revenge quite chilled to the President. It was damnably close now, and wouldn’t be sealed until Lowell Weicker, the maverick Connecticut Republican, voted yes. That was the 67th vote, the one that cinched a conviction. Then Russell Long spoke up, and announced he’d vote yes. At that point, the Dixiecrats all broke no, a safe vote, keeping their political base happy while not being the ones to acquit Nixon. Even John McClellan, hardly a Nixon friend, voted no.

    Mansfield was pleased. He’d delivered a bipartisan vote by letting Goldwater make the case and if politics made for strange bedfellows, Goldwater voting yes with a number of liberal Republicans while his fellow conservatives stood with Nixon to the end was downright incomprehensible. The final vote was 69-31, a number that would haunt Nixon for years, not knowing the deal that the Dixiecrats had struck with Connally that they wouldn’t help acquit the man, but they wouldn’t go against him if they could avoid it. If he’d known the truth, maybe it would’ve helped him, maybe it would’ve just made his emotional state worse. That was in a future yet unseen, though, with the man in a coma at Bethesda Naval Medical Center. A page was sent for Chief Justice Burger. The chief justice also owed his position to Nixon, but he possessed no desire to throw himself in front of a moving train like this. If Nixon had brought the tapes case to the court as part of a criminal subpoena instead of a congressional one, Burger would’ve voted against him. The justices had all agreed they caught a lucky break not having to get involved.

    Burger might be a vain man, susceptible to flattery, but he was not stupid. He deduced that such a relatively short deliberation meant conviction was occurring. He wrote a quick note to William O. Douglas, the senior-most Associate Justice on the high court, telling him to head to the White House as soon as possible. Burger loathed Douglas, and vice versa, but this moment called for propriety, and Douglas was the justice that should swear in the Vice President. He sealed the note and had an aide run it across the street to the Court. Then he checked himself in the mirror, fixed his tie, and strode out into the Senate Chamber, ascending to the presiding seat at the front. The networks, tipped off that a verdict was reached, scrambled to go live, cutting into programming with little preamble. Graphics were hurriedly put on the screen to inform viewers this was the moment of truth. Burger leaned into his microphone and spoke. “Mr. Majority Leader, I am informed that the senators have reached a verdict in the impeachment charges before them. Per the rules of this impeachment trial, I shall now poll each senator for their vote, in alphabetical order, and the clerk shall tally the votes.”

    James Allen (D-AL), No
    James Abourezk (D-SD), Yes
    George Aiken (R-VT), Yes
    Howard Baker (R-TN), Yes
    Birch Bayh (D-IN), Yes
    Dewey F. Bartlett (R-OK), No
    John Glenn Beall, Jr. (R-MD), Yes
    Henry Bellmon (R-OK), No
    Wallace F. Bennett (R-UT), No
    Lloyd Bentsen (D-TX), Yes
    Alan Bible (D-NV), Yes
    Joe Biden (D-DE), Yes
    Bill Brock (R-TN), Yes
    Edward Brooke (R-MA), Yes
    James L. Buckley (C/R-NY), No
    Quentin Northrup Burdick (D-ND), Yes
    Harry F. Byrd, Jr. (I-VA), No
    Robert Byrd (D-WV), Yes
    Howard Cannon (D-NV), Yes
    Clifford P. Case (R-NJ), Yes
    Lawton Chiles (D-FL), Yes
    Frank Church (D-ID), Yes
    Richard C. Clark (D-IA), Yes
    Marlow Cook (R-KY), No
    Norris Cotton (R-NH), No
    Alan Cranston (D-CA), Yes
    Carl Curtis (R-NE), No
    Bob Dole (R-KS), No
    Pete Domenici (R-NM), No
    Peter H. Dominick (R-CO), Yes
    Thomas Eagleton (D-MO), Yes
    James Eastland (D-MS), No
    Sam Ervin (D-NC), Yes
    Paul Fannin (R-AZ), No
    Hiram Fong (R-HI), Yes
    J. William Fulbright (D-AR), Yes
    Barry Goldwater (R-AZ), Yes
    Edward J. Gurney (R-FL), No
    Mike Gravel (D-AK), Yes
    Robert P. Griffin (R-MI), Yes
    Clifford Hansen (R-WY), No
    Philip Hart (D-MI), Yes
    Vance Hartke (D-IN), Yes
    Floyd K. Haskell (D-CO), Yes
    Mark Hatfield (R-OR), Yes
    William Hathaway (D-ME), Yes
    Jesse Helms (R-NC), No
    Ernest Hollings (D-SC), No
    Roman Hruska (R-NE), No
    Walter Huddleston (D-KY), Yes
    Harold Hughes (D-IA), Yes
    Hubert Humphrey (D-MN), Yes
    Daniel Inouye (D-HI), Yes
    Henry M. Jackson (D-WA), Yes
    Jacob K. Javits (R-NY), Yes
    Bennett Johnston Jr. (D-LA), No
    Ted Kennedy (D-MA), Yes
    Russell B. Long (D-LA), Yes
    Warren G. Magnuson (D-WA), Yes
    Mike Mansfield (D-MT), Yes
    Charles Mathias (R-MD), Yes
    John Little McClellan (D-AR), Yes
    James A. McClure (R-ID), No
    Gale W. McGee (D-WY), Yes
    George McGovern (D-SD), Yes
    Thomas J. McIntyre (D-NH), Yes
    Lee Metcalf (D-MT), Yes
    Walter Mondale (D-MN), Yes
    Joseph Montoya (D-NM), Yes
    Frank Moss (D-UT), Yes
    Edmund Muskie (D-ME), Yes
    Gaylord Nelson (D-WI), Yes
    Sam Nunn (D-GA), Yes
    Bob Packwood (R-OR), Yes
    John O. Pastore (D-RI), Yes
    James B. Pearson (R-KS), No
    Claiborne Pell (D-RI), Yes
    Charles H. Percy (R-IL), Yes
    William Proxmire (D-WI), Yes
    Jennings Randolph (D-WV), Yes
    Abraham A. Ribicoff (D-CT), Yes
    William Saxbe (R-OH), No
    Bill Roth (R-DE), Yes
    Richard Schweiker (R-PA), Yes
    Hugh Scott (R-PA), No
    William L. Scott (R-VA), No
    John Sparkman (D-AL), No
    Robert Stafford (R-VT), Yes
    John C. Stennis (D-MS), No
    Ted Stevens (R-AK), No
    Adlai Stevenson III (D-IL), Yes
    Stuart Symington (D-MO), Yes
    Robert Taft, Jr. (R-OH), Yes
    Herman Talmadge (D-GA), No
    Strom Thurmond (R-SC), No
    John Tower (R-TX), No
    John V. Tunney (D-CA), Yes
    Lowell Weicker (R-CT), Yes
    Harrison A. Williams (D-NJ), Yes
    Milton R. Young, (R-ND), No


    As things went, with the vote in alphabetical order, the 66th vote for conviction went to Taft, and the deciding vote was cast by John Tunney, the freshman senator from California and best friend of Ted Kennedy. It was a verdict where all of Nixon’s misdeeds, injured friendships, and illegal shenanigans backfired, his victims all coming back to haunt him with Yes votes. Once Milton Young cast the final vote, Burger took a deep breath and intoned, “The ayes being 69, the noes being 31, the Senate of the United States has convicted Richard Milhous Nixon, President of the United States, of the impeachment charges laid before them, and, by the procedure set out in the Constitution, have removed him from the office of President. As soon as expedient, the Vice President, per the 25th Amendment, shall be sworn in as the 38th President of the United States. The Senate shall, at a time of its choosing, vote on whether to bar Richard Milhous Nixon from holding any future office under the auspices of the government of the United States. This impeachment court is adjourned.” The Chief Justice banged his gavel and stepped down from his chair, shaking hands briefly with Mansfield and Hugh Scott before departing through the door to the President’s Room. He didn’t wish to draw attention to himself for this.

    Across America, every antiwar protestor, every embittered Vietnam veteran, every liberal who’d been convinced Nixon was a fascist since he Red-baited Helen Gahagan Douglas twenty-four years prior, celebrated with car horns and champagne bottles and beer cans. Fireworks were lit off. Dance parties broke out from San Francisco to New York’s Greenwich Village. And just as equally, across the Sun Belt and in the Rockies, on Staten Island and in the Appalachians, middle-aged white factory workers, farmers, oilmen and preachers fumed over the conviction. It was this rapidly cleaving society which John Bowden Connally would become President of, and it would take all of his political skills and personal charm to bridge the chasm.
     
    May 13, 1974 (part deux)
  • William O. Douglas, senior associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, appointed by the grand old man himself, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, sat near the hastily erected stage in the East Room. The cameras from the press room in the West Wing were still being wired frantically in preparation for the sudden inauguration. It was by necessity, of course. John Connally couldn’t be seen to be dancing on the political grave of a man in a coma, even when the man was as unloved as Richard Nixon. Douglas didn’t enjoy cooling his heels for anyone, let alone a ruthless man like the Veep. Douglas loathed Warren Burger, but at least Burger was lazy and could be strung along. Connally was different: he was as hardworking as he was ruthless, and that made him dangerous. Douglas had political instincts second to none, so much so that FDR thought about making him his vice-president, and then four years later the man who had been the choice, Harry Truman, asked Douglas to run with him. Douglas refused on the belief that he shouldn’t be the number-two man to a number-two man. However, none of that meant the justice didn’t care. He cared a great deal. He was troubled by the personality of the man he was about to make President of the United States. He was just too…smooth.

    Fifteen minutes later, the cameras were ready, the room was rapidly filling with White House aides and a few select others. Douglas noticed Ben Barnes sitting right up front—he didn’t know him, but the young man looked like the cat that swallowed the canary. I bet he’s getting a promotion real soon. Who else was here? Douglas scanned the room. There’s Jack Valenti, that makes sense. Marvin Watson too…reaching into LBJ’s old circle. Well, he probably trusts them. Bill Clements, the deputy Secretary of Defense, another Texan confidante, and a nice way for Schlesinger to curry favor, sending a friend in his place. Well, I get the feeling this is going to be a lot like Lyndon’s White House, filled with Texas politicos, scheming. If Connally wasn’t such a rat, I might even think it was good. Lyndon’s White House produced a lot of quality legislation, at least, even if he did sink us deep into Vietnam. His reverie was broken when Connally came striding into the East Room. The Vice-President made a beeline for Douglas, bearing a large, dog-eared Bible. “Justice Douglas,” intoned Connally, his arm outstretched, “thank you so much for doing this.” Connally was taller than the Justice, and it rankled Douglas. He put on his own smile, “Glad to do this for you and the country.” The two men aligned themselves on the stage as the cameras went live and viewers around the country got a look at the soon-to-be 38th President of the United States, his children (they had not been in front of cameras for the vice-presidential inauguration, and flew in over the weekend as Nixon’s demise became very likely) John Connally III (28 years old), Sharon (24 years old) and Mark (22 years old), and his wife, Nellie, beaming with the million-watt smile of a lady delighted to become First Lady.

    Pat Nixon was at Bethesda, since Nixon was still in the Presidential Suite, she was sleeping in there on a rollaway bed that had been brought in. Julie and Tricia, their daughters, were handling the packing up of the family’s items. Connally was not rushing them, and he and his family were staying across the street in Blair House now, since his residence was no longer suitable from a security standpoint. The Nixon girls were sad, with Julie being particularly devastated, as she defended and loved her father unconditionally, and his impeachment conviction was a scar on her very soul. Their husbands, David Eisenhower and Edward Cox, were working on other things, namely logistics in case Nixon died. David was working on what would be necessary for the funeral and where they were going to live. San Clemente was the obvious choice, as it were far larger and was the Nixon home state—Ed Cox was already looking at selling Key Biscayne as he pored over the Nixon estate. It was heartbreaking, in a way, because this was a big part of the small group of people that loved Dick Nixon. The staffers were sad too, but were keeping busy and doing their best to move forward. They lined the back rows of the East Room, getting ready to watch their new boss take the oath of office for the second time in less than a year.

    “Sir, will you please raise your right hand and repeat the oath after me? I, John Bowden Connally,”

    “I, John Bowden Connally,”

    “do solemnly swear,”

    “do solemnly swear,”

    “That I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States,”

    “That I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States,”

    “and will to the best of my ability,”

    “and will to the best of my ability,”

    “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States,”

    “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States,”

    “so help me God.”

    “so help me God.”

    Douglas looked dead into the eyes of Connally. “Congratulations, Mr. President. May God guide you well.” Connally returned the look. “Thank you, Justice Douglas.”

    Connally turned to the podium and looked into the cameras. “My fellow Americans, we have been through a long and trying ordeal, and it is my fervent hope that we can now begin the process of healing. Healing our nation, our relationships, our economy, and our brave men serving in the armed forces. There has been far too much enmity in this country for a decade now, and it has served no purpose other than make us a weaker, smaller, divided America. My primary goal is to remedy that division and make this amazing nation the very best in the world. I want America to be a land of opportunity, where anything is possible. We’ve spoken far too often in the past several years of what we are not able to do, and I want us to start thinking about what can we do. I will be providing more details in the weeks to come, but I can tell you this. I will bring to the Congress a plan to revive our flagging economy, strengthen our neglected infrastructure, relieve the burden of oil embargoes, and assist our nascent technological breakthroughs. I believe that every American, if given the opportunity to work hard, be productive, and prosper, will seize that opportunity. The reason so many in America have not done so is that they have not been provided with the means in which to succeed. My old friend and predecessor, Lyndon Johnson, believed in a Great Society. He and I disagreed on how to bring that about, but we shared the same goal—an America where all of us are healthy, contributing members of society, who enjoy comforts, a roof over their heads, clothes on their backs, food in their bodies, and rewarding work.

    To our friends around the world, our friendships and partnerships will endure and be strengthened. We will not abandon you, we will not withdraw to our own shores, we will not let you down any longer. There has been far too much of that already. I intend to work with Congress to enforce the peace treaty we signed to end the Vietnam War, because we made a promise to the South Vietnamese and America keeps its word. I also intend to continue the great work done under my predecessor and Secretary Kissinger to stabilize the situation in the Middle East and on cutting down nuclear armaments. Peace is better for the world, as it is during peacetime that we can truly prosper as a people. I will speak more on this later as well, providing details of what I hope to accomplish during the next two and a half years as your President.

    Finally, I know that many of you are praying for Richard Nixon’s recovery right now. I also know that many of you are wanting him to be criminally tried for his actions. If he recovers, the Justice Department will be empowered to investigate and bring whatever charges are supported by evidence. Right now, though, I will not pile on him or his family. They are suffering terribly, and even if you do not like Richard Nixon, I ask that you pray for his wife, Pat, as well as his daughters Tricia and Julie, because they love him dearly, and no family should have to sit through this sort of agony. I lost my daughter Kathleen in a tragic shooting accident fifteen years ago. Eleven years ago, I myself was shot while riding with President Kennedy on that awful day in Dallas. In both cases, myself and my family went through terrible emotional pain, and I ask you to remember that while our former President is laying in a hospital bed. No matter what he may or may not have done, he has a family, and they feel pain like each and every one of you.

    May God bless you all, and may God bless the United States of America.”

    The room applauded the new President as he embraced his wife and children, and then left the East Room. It had already been decided that this was not to be celebratory, but statesmanlike. Connally headed through the corridors, with Barnes directly in tow and Justice William O. Douglas looking right at the young man. Oh, that’s who he is. That’s the new Haldeman.

    Connally headed to the Oval Office, already having been changed, with his paintings on the walls, sculptures on the shelves, and chair at the desk. Nixon had used Woodrow Wilson’s desk, an expression of the good Nixon, the one who wanted peace. That desk was gone, replaced by the famed Resolute desk, which had existed since the time of Queen Victoria, who gifted it to America in gratitude for its rescue of the sailors on the HMS Resolute, and the desk was made from recovered timber from that ship. It had been heightened to accommodate taller men like Connally, and he eased into the chair behind it as Barnes took a seat at the side chair with his notepad out and pen at the ready.

    “Alright, Ben, who can we announce today as far as the Cabinet and staff go? I know we’re keeping some folks, but I want to get moving as fast as possible. We’ve got a lot of work to do. I also want Burns down here later today so we can talk money,” the President said.

    The new chief of staff consulted his pad. “Sir, we’re going to announce that we’ve decided to keep Kissinger, Ruckelshaus, Butz, Brinegar, Weinberger, Morton and Ash. We’re going to say that we’re still deciding on the rest, but in reality, we know who we’re getting rid of already.” “Great, Ben, how are we on getting acceptance from the people we want,” Connally asked.

    “I’ll just go down the list with you in case you’ve reconsidered any of these:

    • Admiral Arleigh Burke accepted appointment as your national security adviser.
    • Marvin already accepted becoming deputy NSA, and he’s getting his first briefings already. Thankfully, his clearance from Lyndon’s time was still good for a few more months and the FBI is just doing some follow-up checks to ensure there’s no other issues out there.
    • Elliot Richardson has not decided yet. I think he feels pretty stung by what happened last October and isn’t sure if he wants to serve again. I’ve made it clear you don’t operate like Nixon did and that you want someone you trust at Defense.
    • Nelson asked to come meet with you tonight to discuss the offer in person.
    • Jack is happy to accept at Commerce, he just wants a little time to wrap up his tenure at the MPAA first.
    • Al and I are working together as he helps transition me in. He’s going to fill the Abrams vacancy as the Army COS.
    • CIA—Colby is a liability. He’s got it in his head that he can save the agency from the fallout of Nixon’s abuses by opening up the files in places and talking to reporters. It’s a bad idea, sir, and we need a replacement. There’s a folder on your desk already with summaries of candidates. The admiral amongst that group is a Texas boy, definitely our type of man. I like him, but the choice is yours, of course.
    • Nitze has agreed to be U.N. ambassador. Scali knows already, because I offered him the job of communications director. Ziegler will be departing later today to help the Nixons, Jerry Warren will handle press briefings while John and I discuss a replacement.
    • Brennan is an embarrassment at Labor. Nixon used him, but he has no cachet with Meany or many others in the unions, and we’re going to need their cooperation if we want our economic plans to work. I’ve been thinking this over all weekend and I think Charles Pillard from the IBEW would be perfect. He’s bipartisan, he has good relations with everyone, and he’s respected. He’s a TR kind of guy, speaks quietly but carries a big stick.

    And that about wraps it up for now, sir.”

    “Great job, Ben. Yes to Pillard. If Elliot doesn’t accept then I’m going to promote Bill. When Nelson arrives, have the driver take him to Treasury. I’ll take the tunnel across and that way nobody will know about it. When does Burke start?” “They are re-clearing him as we speak. He’ll start getting briefings tomorrow and he asked for a few days to get up to speed before he officially takes over. General Scowcroft will continue handling the NSA work for the rest of the week. Al says Brent is an excellent guy and we need to find him a good landing spot, probably Europe. General Jones is about to leave that post and we need a replacement. It’ll mean getting his leap to a four-star approved by Congress, but I don’t think anybody will argue that much,” Barnes concluded.

    “Excellent. And please, call Elliot and tell him that I would consider it a personal favor if he accepts, and if he needs to talk to me directly, I’ll do it. Schlesinger is an arrogant son of a bitch and I don’t want that man in the Cabinet a day longer than necessary. There’s nothing worse than a man who thinks he’s smarter than everyone else and makes sure that everyone knows he thinks that too,” the President said. Barnes took his cue and left while Connally began going over his own list for one spot: Vice President. It was a short list—Bill Scranton and Ronald Reagan. Scranton would make the liberals in the party happy, men like Javits and Weicker. Reagan, on the other hand, was in his last year as governor in California and by all accounts was itching to run in 1976. Obviously, the situation had changed dramatically with Nixon’s fall from power, and challenging an incumbent president was heresy, but it wasn’t without precedent, either. Connally was a pragmatist above all else. He put on the cloak of conservatism where it fit him and shed it when it didn’t. His economic ideas that he wanted to employ to more naturally bring down unemployment levels while going after inflation weren’t the dogmatic sort that Reagan espoused. Not like Ronnie even stuck to them running California. There were going to be tax credits and economic grants, mixed with some tax cuts and spending cuts elsewhere. Liberals were going to scream bloody murder at what Connally would do to public housing, but it was clear that those things were a damned blight and drew the worst sorts. Ugly, squalid, massive concrete projects that did nothing but reinforce poverty because they looked like something out of Moscow. Connally wanted to knock them down, and use rent controls and credits on private residences and private apartments. Give people something to strive for. He also wanted to index the minimum wage to inflation after he got inflation down. That way it would grow slowly, naturally, instead of being one more erratic Washington policy.

    If the cities were going to be tamed and brought back to a semblance of normalcy, the flight had to be stopped, and that meant getting business to invest there. Economic Development Zones was another linchpin idea. Business spend money investing in projects in the cities and get to slash their tax bill in return. Tax credits for businesses that hired instead of laid off. Grants to some of the new high-technology ideas out there—Connally had read about Xerox’s PARC in a DARPA document and was a big believer there was something worth spending some cash on out there. Hewlett-Packard was another company out there doing big things—a programmable pocket calculator! Connally was admittedly not personally savvy about using technology, but he understood its implications for the future. And more than anything, he wanted America to be first in the field, and if Europe was going to spend big dollars jointly to fund aerospace and technology, he wanted to be there with them. This economy needed a soft push to survive.

    To get there, though, he had to sell his plan, and the problem likely wouldn’t lie with the liberals in his own party, it’d be with the conservatives. It wasn’t a tax and spend plan, nor was it an orgy of privatization. This was going to be creative conservatism, and he wanted contrasting philosophies in the Cabinet. To ensure that, one man was coming down tonight to talk with him. The other was on this list in front of him. Reagan it would be. It’s a big enough position that it would deter him from running in 1976 if he accepted, which is all that the man in the Oval Office wanted. He could only run and win once because he’d gotten his promotion too early in the term. Charles Alan Wright had made that pretty clear with his weekend brief.

    There was one other call to make after Reagan. Leon. He’d done his work faithfully and well and Connally wanted to reward the man without it being obvious...to Leon, that is. He was going to make him White House Counsel. He’d told him when they last spoke that he wanted honest men like Jaworski, and he meant it, because honest men kept you out of trouble. They kept you away from all the harebrained stunts that Nixon’s motley crew of idiots had pulled because there was nobody in the room telling them no.

    Connally lit up a cigar and took the phone outside with him. He’d asked for and received a second standard phone with an extension cord near the door to the colonnade (the Gold Phone, from NORAD, could not and would not be extended any further than his desk). Connally wanted to conduct some of his calls casually while smoking a cigar outside. Wouldn’t do to make the Oval smell, lest they think I’m just like Lyndon, taking a shit with the door open. Connally started laughing at that memory before dialing the number written on the pink phone slip. It went directly to the Governor, bypassing his secretary. Weinberger had been most helpful having that number committed to memory. “Good morning, who’s calling?” That warm, fluid baritone wafted out through the receiver.

    “Hi there, Ron, it’s John Connally calling. How you doing, Governor?”

    “Well, good afternoon, Mr. President! I’m honored to hear from you so soon after taking the oath. What can I do for you?” Reagan had furiously motioned for Lyn Nofziger to quietly pick up an extension. He wanted someone else to hear whatever was coming.

    “Ron, I’m a straight shooter and I’m gonna lay my cards right on the table. I’m going to make some Cabinet changes, because I want a better group of people. I want people who will push me a little, give me advice from both sides, because this country is coming apart right now. There’s so much to do and Dick’s heart hadn’t been in it for months. I want you to be on the team. Hell, I need you on the team.”

    “What did you have in mind, Mr. President?”

    “Ron, I want you to be my Vice President.” Silence. Connally could imagine the hamster wheel inside Reagan's brain furiously churning away. In Sacramento, Nofziger picked up a pad and wrote MORE DETAILS in large block letters. Reagan temporized.

    “I’d have to discuss it with Nancy of course, and a couple of my staff here. I mean, I’ve got months left in my term and we’ve got budget negotiations underway too,” he said. Connally took another puff of the cigar. Ego, he’s trying to decide whether he should run still. Well, might as well play my ace. “Ron, I understand how much you care about your state, the same way I cared about Texas while I was governor there. It’s an important job. But, I promise you, you ain’t gonna be no Agnew to me. More to the point, and I don’t know if you know, but I only get one shot at running for election. It’s an all or nothing for me. When 1980 rolls around, if I win in ’76 and you’re on the ticket, then come 1980 you will have my full support. I will make sure the field is cleared and that every oilman in Texas is ready to fund you. I want to do big things, change the direction of this country. Can you imagine what Teddy Kennedy would do? Tax and spend to high hell, inflation out of control, unemployment in double digits. Dick tried to take a shortcut. I want to do it right, build something that lasts. And Ron, I can’t do that without you. You know my problems—the Democrats are split on me, the Republicans aren’t sure they can trust me. But you? They love you, Ron, and they trust you. So, you have my word. You come be my VP, and you’ll have anything you need to run and win in 1980. I know it’s a long way off, but it sure beats trying to run against an incumbent and splitting the party,”

    Connally leaned back again one of the pillars, taking another puff. Nofziger, on the other side of the country, wrote TAKE IT!!! on the pad. Reagan nodded. “Mr. President, you make a hell of a sales pitch. I’m going to talk to Nancy, and as long as she’s okay with it, I’ll join the team. We’re going to make America great again.”

    *****

    Later that evening, a private jet arrived from Westchester and taxied on the runway at National Airport. Andrews would’ve been too obvious, too many reporters looking for a scoop. At National, the plane was just one of many. A sedan from the White House fleet was there, along with Len Garment, a fellow New Yorker, taking the four-term governor of New York to see the former four-term governor of Texas currently serving as President. The two men had been around each other for years at gubernatorial functions, White House meetings, and elsewhere. Rockefeller like Connally, but was unsure whether he could trust him. This offer, if true, was going to be a nice way to cap one’s career. He had wanted to run one more time for the big seat, do it right, learn from the mistakes he’d made. The decline of New York City under his watch, though, made that exceedingly difficult. He wasn’t the mayor and it wasn’t really his watch, but New York city and state were easily conflated, and most Republicans wouldn’t care to know the difference. The sedan arrived at the West Wing, where Rockefeller was ushered not to the Oval, but to the President’s private dining area, where dinner and wine were waiting. Steak, potatoes, broccoli and a choice French red. Either he’s trying to impress me or he really does have taste. They shook hands. “Mr. President, it’s an honor,” Rockefeller said.

    “Nelson, I’m glad you came. I’ve been on the phone all afternoon. I am going to be shaking the Cabinet up, although in some cases, I don’t have a choice. George Shultz already turned in his resignation at Treasury and leaves July 1st. We’ve got a lot to do in this country, to make it work again for everyone, make it better, and I need you to be part of it. You’ve got as good a mind for numbers as anyone in this country. You know diplomacy. You have the relationships with the boys on this coast that I’ve never had. That’s important. More to the point, you’ve done all that creative work for infrastructure projects while you were governor. That’s the sort of creativity I’m going to need for my economic plan to work,” Connally said. Rockefeller looked at Connally, that bulldog jaw jutting forward and the eyes peering through the square glasses. “So I’m not just here to be a figurehead? You want me to be more than your sop to the liberal wing of our party?” Connally smiled. “Nelson, this thing ain’t gonna work unless everyone is working. This country lost a war, inflation is out of control, we’ve got a lost generation on the streets. We’ve got to fix it, and it’s going to require big ideas. We can’t be timid. Nelson, you’re a man of action, same as I. I’m trying to bring in other men of action on the domestic side. Dick didn’t care as much about domestic policy and it showed. Look who he had running around here handling domestic policy—it was like a daycare center in here or something. I want to do better. We can do better.”

    Rockefeller thought it over. It was a no-brainer, really. A premier Cabinet post, one of the big four, and the chance to try out some ideas on a national stage. And, if Connally failed, maybe he could still run again after all…he rose from his seat and reached across the table. “You’ve got yourself a Treasury Secretary, Mr. President. When do I start?”
     
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    May 14-27, 1974
  • It made sense, really. Get the easy win first. It even had the imprimatur of being the logical decision because of the looming resignation of George Shultz, and Shultz was perfectly happy to amend the resignation to June 1st and leave early. After three years of Richard Nixon, the University of Chicago professor was quite happy to show the District his back. The Senate confirmed Rocky as Treasury Secretary by an 86-14 vote, with only the hardline Dixiecrats (and Goldwater, because he and Rocky still detested each other ten years after the bruising 1964 Republican National Convention) voting no. The Democrats had tripped over themselves to give the still popular Rocky an expeditious confirmation process, though, delighted that a spender, not a slasher, had gone to Treasury. Al Haig’s promotion to Army Chief of Staff had been in jeopardy, but a call from General Abrams to the chair of the Armed Services Committee, John Stennis (who was not opposed to Haig per se, but thought he was getting a political promotion) sufficed to skip the committee hearings altogether and take his nomination right to a floor vote, albeit on a fairly close margin of 54-46.

    On the near horizon, hearings were being scheduled for Paul Nitze to replace John Scali at the United Nations, and Bill Clements to be promoted to Secretary of Defense. Elliot Richardson had decided that he just didn’t want to return to government right now, and Connally wasted no time promoting his friend to the top spot. Those hearings would be sometime in the summer, since Clements was already a Senate-confirmed official and could serve in the role without much of an issue, in everyone’s judgment. Jack Valenti’s Commerce nomination would be taken up in mid-June, as would Charles Pillard’s at Labor. CIA…well, Bill Colby called in every chit he’d ever banked with national security officials. Connally seethed when his phone started lighting up with calls on the direct line from those in a position to have that particular phone number, all before he’d even uttered a word in public about wanting to replace Colby. He hadn’t even hinted at it. By the end of the first week, Connally ordered Colby to come to the Oval Office for a “come to Jesus” meeting. In the parlance of the President, this basically meant that Connally laid down the law with enough ferocity that all Colby could muster was “Jesus.” The soon-to-be former Director of Central Intelligence was told, in no uncertain terms, that if he did not go quietly that Connally would declassify the files from Project PHOENIX, which Colby had ran as chief of operations for Southeast Asia, and “hang your ass out to dry.” PHOENIX was, to put it bluntly, a terror campaign that mirrored the Viet Cong’s own campaign against village elders in South Vietnam. In the case of PHOENIX, that meant assassinating thousands of known or suspected Viet Cong operatives, leaders, and collaborators; those that were not murdered outright faced torture, kidnapping, and other brutal, ugly measures. Some of it was known already from congressional hearings in 1971 and questioning of Colby during his 1973 confirmation hearing, but the full story was something that no man would want on his epitaph. The Viet Cong collaborator that was hurled from a helicopter while in flight was a particularly awful example of the violence of PHOENIX.

    Colby got the message. He announced his resignation as DCI on Monday afternoon. By Wednesday, the White House announced a nominee, the newly-minted director of Naval Intelligence, Rear Admiral (upper half) Bobby Ray Inman. It was a stunning decision for a man who’d only gotten his first star two years prior, but Inman was nothing if not a “comer,” a fast-moving, upwardly mobile officer with outstanding analytical abilities and twenty-plus years in intelligence work. He also had the distinction of being a political non-entity, which was considered by Barnes to be a benefit, although a fair amount of senators wondered if this was wise, given that the current deputy director, Lieutenant General Vernon Walters, outranked Inman. Barnes quickly organized a reshuffling—Walters would move to the National Security Agency as director and receive his fourth star, Inman would take leave from the military to serve in his role at CIA, and the existing NSA director, Air Force General Lew Allen, was slotted in at Air Force Systems Command, a command that often served as the stepping-stone to the USAF spot on the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The current commander at AFSC, Samuel Phillips, took retirement and returned to NASA as a senior advisor to the director. They hadn’t seen anything like it in Washington since the war thirty years before. The bureaucracy took notice—John Connally did not play games.

    That same week, Scali had resigned at the United Nations to come to the White House as communications director, replacing the beleaguered Ken Clawson, who’d never really been a good fit and had not recovered from his exposure as the author of the “Canuck Letter,” which had smeared Ed Muskie badly and caused a meltdown in Muskie’s 1972 presidential campaign. Scali was a professional communicator and the White House shop noticeably improved under him. His first action was to pull out his voluminous Rolodex and begin compiling names of those who’d make a good press secretary. Once he’d put together five candidates, he asked for background checks to be run on them so he didn’t go to his new boss with a request to appoint someone who’d ruffle feathers a little too hard. Scali trusted everyone he’d chosen, and his instincts were world-class, but it never hurt to be cautious once inside the corridor of power in the Western world, that of the White House’s West Wing. It took a few days, and the answers were the expected ones—he’d chosen clean men, and now had his pick of them.

    The communications director was fortunate in that his first choice was one who, at the moment, was working less than a mile to the west of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. He picked up the phone and dialed the desk number. “Kalb.” “Hey, Bernie, John Scali here.” “John! Congratulations! I know it’s kind of a step up and down at the same time, but it still has to feel like a dream to work in the White House. What can I do for you?” “Well, Bernie, I need a press secretary, and I’m drafting you into the position. When can you start?” “John, that’s quite the honor, but I really enjoy my job, and it’s important, too. I’m sure you can find a lot of talented guys out there who can go up there and do this.” Scali took off his horn-rimmed glasses and started chewing on the stem a bit as he thought over his approach. “Bernie, you’re right, I could go find a lot of talented guys out there, but I don’t need just talent. I need integrity.” The line got quiet. Scali knew he’d scored a major point there. “This place has seen a lot of lies and deception and criminality. I’d like for people to trust their government again. You’re a trustworthy person, Bernie, you go on with Cronkite every night. You’re the sort of person who can help restore faith in our government, and right now, people need that faith. Now, come on, are you in?”

    Bernard Kalb was not a cynical man. He retained a deep and abiding faith in America and the concept of patriotism. A friend was asking him to come work for the President of the United States, and irrespective of his personal politics, John Connally had not committed any crimes. The worst Kalb had ever heard about Connally was that he was a ruthless political operator, but that was hardly a description confined to the 38th President of the United States. The senior diplomatic correspondent for CBS News bent to the logic of the moment. “Okay, John, I’ll do it. But just know that if the administration does something immoral or unethical or illegal, I’ll resign that moment. I have to obey my conscience first.” Scali considered that for a minute. He’d handled it differently, stayed at his post even as it became clear that Nixon was in deep. He considered it a duty to the country because he was the face of America at the United Nations, and that position mattered. Being White House press secretary wasn’t the same, though, and he couldn’t hold that against Kalb. “Alright, Bernie, you’ve got a deal. End of the month?”

    ****

    Ronald Reagan was still in California, conducting state budget negotiations as he waited for Congress to take up his nomination as Vice President. The Democrats were digging in their heels, smelling an opening. Bob Moretti had just lost the gubernatorial primary to Jerry Brown, finishing second, doomed by not being the popular ex-governor’s son and not holding a true statewide office, but he was still speaker of the state assembly and wielded a big club. Democrats also finally outnumbered Republicans in registered voters in the state, a psychological buoy against the tide of Reaganism. Reagan was halfway out the door, and while Moretti had worked well with Reagan for the past three years, one was headed up and one was headed down, and Moretti wasn’t going to go down without drawing metaphorical blood. Every cut, every tax break, the Democrats held firm and would not give in. The governor was not at all pleased by this or by the fact that his nomination hearings had been pushed until after Memorial Day by the Democrats in the House, as his was the only office requiring approval of both houses of Congress.

    The general consensus amongst Reagan’s political advisers was that he was thoroughly boxed in. He didn’t want to go off to Washington with a big political loss that would hurt his credentials with the right and also make him look weak with the left. The Democrats smelled blood and were gearing up for a full-court press in the midterms. Worst of all, in a stunning twist, a federal grand jury had just indicted his lieutenant governor, Edwin Reinecke, for perjury. Reinecke had testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding the ITT scandal and his discussions with former Attorney General John Mitchell, and the grand jury found some direct lies in his testimony when presented with additional evidence by Earl Silbert, U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. Silbert had been the lead prosecutor in the Watergate burglary trial, and now he’d thrown a major wrench in the California succession.

    “Reinecke needs to resign, it’s plain and simple. He’s going to screw this whole thing up if he doesn’t,” That was Michael Deaver, Reagan’s deputy chief of staff and almost another son to the Reagans. Nancy trusted him fully, and that was an ace card that very few could claim. Deaver knew that Reagan’s legacy would be ruined if he left the state in the hands of a soon-to-be convicted criminal. Evelle Younger, the state Attorney General (also a Republican) had already said that Reinecke could not be forced out until he was convicted and sentenced. “Mike, I think we all agree on that score, but he still thinks he can win, and he’s also running for the Governor’s chair. And, quite frankly, he’s winning the damn thing in the polls. It doesn’t seem to be having an effect on his poll numbers,” said Edwin Meese, Reagan’s chief of staff. Nofziger spoke up: “Why don’t we give Cap a call? He might have some insights we don’t.” Heads nodded. A secretary in the room, taking notes for Meese, set up the speakerphone on the conference table and dialed in the office line for the Secretary of HEW. “Secretary Weinberger’s office.” “Good afternoon, ma’am, this is Edwin Meese, chief of staff for Governor Reagan. Is the secretary available for a few minutes?” “I’ll check, Mr. Meese, please hold.” Interminable silence, then, the Reaganesque voice came out of the speaker. “Fellas, how nice of you to invite me to your party. How is everyone?” Chuckles. “Cap, we’re doing just great over here,” Nofziger said. “We wanted to get your advice on something.”

    Now it was Weinberger’s turn to chuckle. “Let me guess, it’s that damn fool Reinecke that’s got you worried. Well, it should. From what I hear, Silbert’s got him dead to rights. He needs to know that, but I’m not exactly the person who should be telling him, either. Hatch Act requires me to stay out of it. I’ll tell you what, though. If I were the Governor, and I could get Reinecke out of the way, I’d appoint someone like John Harmer and resign. No one can say that Harmer isn’t a rock-ribbed conservative, and then it becomes his problem. The governor’s only got a few months left in office regardless of what happens here in DC, and he should just go. If somehow he lost the VP vote because of Dems, it’d give him a hell of an issue to run on—he could jump in against Cranston, because Richardson’s going to get creamed, or wait for Tunney in ’78. There’s opportunity out there.”

    “Cap, that still doesn’t solve the issue of how the hell to get Reinecke out of office,” Deaver said. “None of this can happen until we can assure the Governor won’t be leaving office for a felon.” Nofziger brightened a bit here. “What if we get him to believe he won’t be?” Everyone’s head turned towards the rumpled, balding, unkempt political savant. “The governor is about to be the next vice-president of the United States. He can’t do that if his replacement will be facing federal charges. Who is in a position to influence this? Now, here’s the kicker. Reinecke only has to believe he’ll be kept safe by resigning. Once he’s gone, it won’t matter anymore, and Silbert can do what he wants with him.” Nofziger grinned. The man loved a good double-cross as much as any operator. The others in the room nodded. Weinberger, in Washington, said, “Okay, I think I know who to talk to.”

    ****

    Memorial Day rose hot and muggy over the Potomac River, the harbinger of the miserable summer months that cursed this city since Pierre L’Enfant had laid it out as the nation’s capital. Many wished that he’d picked a place further inland, somewhere that wasn’t once swampland. As was customary for the President, there would be a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, followed by an address. Connally had thought over what he wanted to say, and he decided to give his speech on the topic of integrating the Vietnam veterans back into society. He also decided to offer the draft dodgers an opportunity to clear their records: return to America, and in lieu of a prison sentence, be drafted into an Urban Restoration Team. The plan for these teams was to have them perform beautification tasks, getting rid of the trash and graffiti that plagued the cities, especially in New York. They’d live in barracks and dormitories, be fed and provided basic amenities, and in return they worked for free until their two-year sentence was over. The President considered it tough but fair. Justice backed the idea as a net savings, the uniforms were split, HUD loved it, and the Reaganauts were not thrilled at all by it. Barnes and Valenti told Connally he shouldn’t give a damn what Reagan thought, considering the help he was getting just to be able to be Vice-President.

    Reinecke had just resigned the day before, going quietly in the night after he’d gotten a visit from a J. Evans Attwell, partner at Vinson & Elkins law firm in Houston. The attorney gave him assurances that if he resigned, his troubles would be resolved in a quiet fashion. He made it clear that he, as a recent law partner of the current President, was able to ensure this message had originated with higher powers. Reinecke bought it, and accepted, not knowing he was merely a sacrificial lamb for those with higher ambitions. (When the case went to trial months later, he’d sputter to his lawyer that he’d been promised his case would be resolved quietly, and this trial was not at all quiet. The lawyer would listen to Reinecke’s recounting of the conversation and point out all of the hedges that had been used by Attwell, the fact that he was not in any official capacity, and that quite simply, the former lieutenant governor of the state of California had been fleeced. Oh, and there was nothing he’d be able to do about it either, because none of it would be admissible.) With the embarrassment of Edwin Reinecke having been removed from office, Reagan announced via press release the same day his appointment of state senator John Harmer as lieutenant governor (the state constitution allowed for just such a thing) and his resignation as governor of California effective June 1, 1974. It was all tied up nice and neatly.

    For the ceremony, Nellie Connally had chosen a somber dark navy pinstriped suit, crisp white shirt, and a royal blue tie for her husband to wear. Shoes shined to perfection by the White House domestic staff, a tie clip and a pair of cufflinks engraved with his initials completed the look. The First Lady would wear a dark grey dress and black heels for her first major public event. The Connallys took the elevator down to the ground level and walked out under the Truman Balcony to the waiting Presidential limousine, a 1970 Lincoln Continental that was kept in immaculate condition, armored with 6,000 pounds of reinforced steel plating and bulletproof glass, powered by a 7.5 litre V8 engine, two gun racks on the inside for submachine guns and automatic weapons in the trunk, and as a concession to politics, a sunroof that allowed the President to stand up and wave in it. It was known as the Beast, and it certainly resembled one. The ride was exceptionally smooth, its wheels constantly aligned, the shocks and struts reinforced and containing additional dampers to absorb vibration. To ensure protection remained consistent when the President traveled, it was driven into the back of a C-141 Lockheed Starlifter and flown ahead of the President so it would be ready upon arrival.

    The drive to Arlington National Cemetery was short, the streets cleared for the President’s motorcade. Upon arrival, the Joint Chiefs were all present in full dress uniform to participate in the ceremonies, as they all lived at Fort Myer, the adjacent Army base dating back to the time of George Washington (Washington’s in-laws actually owned the land at that time, and it eventually ended up being owned by Robert E. Lee and his wife, who was Martha Washington’s great-granddaughter. The northwest part of his land was seized and became Fort Whipple, and in 1864, the rest of the land was seized, including the Lee Mansion, by the government in what was called a tax confiscation (Mrs. Lee supposedly having failed to pay $92.07 in property taxes, when in truth the federal government wanted to deny Robert E. Lee his home and refused to accept payment). They established Arlington Cemetery there by the end of the year. In 1882, George Washington Custis Lee, Robert’s son and heir, sued the government for illegal seizure of property. The Supreme Court agreed, and the land was returned to the Lee family, but given the newly renamed Fort Myer on one end and Arlington Cemetery on the other, he bowed to the logic of the moment and sold it back to the government for $150,000 ($725,000 in current 1974 dollars). During the 1900s, the fort had become the official housing for the service chiefs of staff, and under Kennedy, Quarters Six became the house for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, which was a relatively new position. General Abrams, largely recovered from his lung surgery, was there as chairman; Al Haig just confirmed as Army Chief of Staff; Admiral Elmo Zumwalt as Chief of Naval Operations; General George Brown as Air Force Chief of Staff; and Marine Commandant Robert Cushman.

    The four service chiefs lined up together on one side of the memorial marker in front of the tomb while General Abrams and President Connally brought the wreath forward and set it on its stand in front of the marker. The President then beckoned the First Lady forward, and together they knelt and prayed while approximately 3,000 people watched from the benches of the Memorial Amphitheatre behind them. The generals were touched by this measure of devotion from the former Navy lieutenant commander. Connally rose, saluted, and then turned towards the small podium set up for this address.

    “Thank you all very much for attending this solemn ceremony today. As someone who served during the Second World War, I am keenly aware of the rewards and hazards of military service. Those whom we celebrate here today are those whose sacrifice was greatest, for it happened in total anonymity. It has been sixty years since the outbreak of the First World War, and we have buried three unknowns here with a fourth soon to be added from our latest conflict, that of the Vietnam War. It is this subject on which I wish to dedicate a few words today, in the hopes of healing the wounds that have been inflicted upon our nation by the deep divide that war has caused. Many of you here today are Christians, and therefore know very well the admonition of our Lord, Jesus Christ, when he delivered the Sermon on the Mount: “But whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other to him also.” It was a call for forgiveness, a call for peace. It is in that spirit that I wish to propose a resolution to the divide in this land, one that will allow us to begin binding up our wounds.

    A great many young men found ways to dodge the draft, going into hiding, burning draft cards, or fleeing to neighbors like Canada. To those who served in Vietnam, let alone those who served during past wars, it felt like a grave insult to everything they’d sacrificed for. However, if we are to move forward, we have to recognize that letting this animosity, this divide, linger on will poison our ability to heal ourselves and our nation. Therefore, I am announcing a proposal to those who avoided military service: a new national civilian service corps known as Urban Restoration Teams. Those who avoided conscription, and were not charged and tried because they left the country, can return to America so long as they serve two years in one of these teams, and in return there will be no charges filed and no punishment meted, as service on a URT will be counted in place of their conscription into the Armed Forces. For those who have been convicted and served their sentence, by serving a single year on a URT, we will expunge the convictions from your records, allowing you to regain access to federal programs that those with criminal records cannot currently access.

    These Urban Restoration Teams will be working in our cities during the next two years as part of our dedication to reducing crime, decay, and poverty. I think many people currently living in places like New York City, Newark, and even parts of Washington would say they feel as if they live in a war zone. I want to change that. By having URTs come into these cities, cleaning up the graffiti, refurbishing schools, and tending to the parks, they can help us win our wars on crime, on drugs, and on poverty. We will open registration up to anyone who wishes to join, and it is my fervent hope that by working together, we can heal the wounds inflicted by the past ten years of the Vietnam War.

    There has been a tendency to divide the cities from the suburbs and rural areas in political rhetoric, and I find that unhelpful. The large cities of America drive our economy even today. The banks and stock exchanges in New York, the film and television industry in Los Angeles, the aerospace industry in Seattle and Houston, the auto industry in Detroit, and the oil industry in Dallas, just to name a few. We cannot pretend that the farmers of the Midwest are alien beings, just as we cannot pretend that the factory worker in Chicago is a slacker, or that the engineer in Atlanta is superior to either of those folks. We only thrive when we work together. We will only heal when we can forgive each other and move forward in common purpose to make this nation great again.

    Thank you all for attending today. May God bless you, the fine soldiers serving our nation, and indeed, may God bless the United States of America.”

    Connally shook hands with the Chiefs, and then, with the Secret Service in tow, walked the half mile to the gravesite of John F. Kennedy. Two men, bound together by blood, bullets, and fate. One survived, one did not. Both ended up being President, a historical curiosity that many would likely wonder about in the years to come. Connally had a complicated relationship with Kennedy. It had started when Connally helped broadcast the word at the 1960 Democratic National Convention that Kennedy had Addison’s disease, something that enraged Bobby Kennedy. And yet, because Kennedy promised his Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara, full autonomy in selecting the service secretaries, Connally ended up being the pick for Secretary of the Navy, instead of JFK’s preferred choice, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. When Connally left the Naval Department to go home and run for governor, and won it more convincingly than JFK had won the state in 1960, he became a necessary political partner for the then-President, setting off the chain of events that led to November 22, 1963.

    Connally, eleven years later, was still haunted by that day. He could remember the shots, the punch felt in his chest when the bullet entered it, the mess on the back of his head that doctors did not realize for quite some time was the brain matter and flesh of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Coming so soon after the loss of his daughter Kathleen, Connally felt divine intervention had been involved and he was determined now, as President, to make it all count for something. Only Nellie truly knew the horror he still felt about that moment in Dallas, and so he was making this walk to his predecessor’s grave to try and bring it full circle, to be able to close the door on the shadow that had followed him since, to make amends with John’s soul and move forward. He would pray in front of the eternal flame, and then the limousine would meet him and the motorcade would head back to the White House. John B. Connally, President of the United States, was determined to not be like poor Jack Kennedy. He would author his own destiny.
     
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    June 1974
  • The latest reports from the Bureau of Labor Statistics was not calculated to please. Inflation was headed towards double digits, an ominous sign for the American economy given what had been happening over in Britain. It’d started with three-day work weeks and a miners strike that cut out the legs of Edward Heath’s Conservative government in February, ushering in a minority Labour government allied with the Liberals and the Scottish nationalists and God knows who else. The British government needed to call another election but wanted breathing space to accomplish something, anything to allow them to win a majority. Watching warily from the White House, President Connally was absolutely ardent that inflation had to be cut off at the knees. He did not want labor troubles nor did he want high inflation. Arthur Burns certainly was feeling the heat, and not just the damp clinginess of a Washington summer, either. His predecessor had been unceremoniously fired by Richard Nixon in 1970, an act that was technically not within Nixon’s powers, but had been followed nonetheless. This President had been blunt with Burns in their first meeting in the Oval Office, mere hours after his inauguration: inflation had to go down, and that meant cutting off the flow of easy money that Burns had doled out for the past two and a half years at Nixon’s behest. The economy would stagger, already on the edge as Vietnam had been wound down, military spending had decreased, and veterans came home to no jobs. Unemployment was at its highest since Kennedy had inherited the late Eisenhower-era recession, 6.5% and sure to head up another percent, maybe even two, if inflation was met with full force as Connally wished. Burns thought that would be political suicide for Connally, but the President didn’t want to push it off until a potential second term, where he’d have less ability to do something about it. That was no legacy to leave.

    Another complication was energy prices, something that Connally was already sketching out a plan to deal with during meetings with Ben Barnes and Jack Valenti—one idea coming from those meetings was a Department of Energy, a way to prime the pump for the oil companies to drill more wells and the electric companies to build more nuclear power plants with government support. The monetary markets, something that the President Connally had supervised America’s entry into a mere three years prior when he was Treasury Secretary, were the third leg of the inflation stool, a thought that weighed on his mind often. It was a move that had been made necessary, inadvertently, by the Heath government threatening to call in their bonds for payment in gold, which combined with the same threat from France would’ve wiped out the gold reserves of the United States. Nonetheless, a number of far-right conservatives, such as the Republican candidate in Texas’s 22nd district, were loudly calling for a return to the gold standard to prevent inflationary borrowing. This was the impetus behind the current Treasury Secretary, Nelson Rockefeller, calling Denis Healey, the broad, heavily browed Chancellor of the Exchequer in London, twice weekly to discuss plans for an economic summit to tackle inflation and keep the pound and the dollar from falling in value. The close relationship between the two nations was not mere symbolism. It was a deeply symbiotic, cultural and economic partnership, and it was sucking America into the morass with a nation that resembled “Little England” a lot more than “Great Britain.”

    Over on Capitol Hill, the confirmation hearings for Ronald Reagan as Vice-President were had gone about as well as one would expect, which is to say that there were a great number of soliloquies from liberal members wanting to take metaphorical swings at the ruling king of the conservative movement, and said king launching his own verbal grenades back at them. Ugly, contentious, and not an auspicious start for a spirit of reconciliation that the President promised the month before, Reagan still was confirmed narrowly by the House and a more comfortable margin in the Senate. The Congressional leadership in both parties wanted Connally to succeed, at least in the short term, because the postwar consensus of America was falling apart quickly. This was the fourth President in eleven years, a turn of events that the nation had never experienced with its fixed-year terms. In that measure, Harold Wilson, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, could sympathize, as his own nation was on its fifth leader in eleven years, with Wilson twice.

    “Old ‘Arold” had his own issues beyond the ones the public knew about. He was beginning to suffer episodes where his brilliant memory would completely fail him, and for a man short of 60, that was a genuine concern to others in the Cabinet. Whispers about cancer or dementia ricocheted around the Labour NEC (National Executive Committee), meaning that the jockeying for position had begun. The sizable egos involved all around meant the fight would be a bloody one, and while Wilson had never wanted to be Prime Minister again, now that they’d miraculously forced a draw in February and managed to take back over Downing Street, there simply was no way he’d resign now. The nation trusted him, which is why he hadn’t left his leadership post as planned over a year ago, when Ted Heath’s premiership began its sharp decline. The nation would want the steady hand that’d led Labour and the nation through the tumult of the Sixties. Benn, Callaghan, Healey, Crosland, Castle, Foot, the whole lot of them would throw in for the leadership when he left, and none of them would beat Heath in a rematch in this broken, divided island.

    So here he was, confronted with a grave economic crisis and a substantially more energetic counterpart while a distant corner of his brain noted the episodes he was having and tried to tell him he needed to get it checked out. Instead, Wilson mused over late night brandies with his political secretary Marcia Williams (some would argue she was the second Mrs. Wilson), and his chief policy aide Bernard Donoughue, that he wasn’t sure what was worse: the spiraling inflation or Connally’s incessant pressure on him to take drastic action to deal with it. Labour’s platform, its unions, were not going to take kindly to the sort of measures that Connally and Rockefeller were proposing, nor did Britain have any energy sources outside of coal, not until the North Sea oil came online, but that was years in the future. To boot, that self-aggrandizing fop Thorpe was pushing for the same measures as the Americans! Didn’t they understand that Britain simply didn’t have the sort of economic foundation that could withstand these measures? Didn’t the Americans recognize that it had been their own intransigence, their own actions, like jerking Britain’s chain over Suez in 1956 and crashing the pound, followed by their role in the pound becoming overvalued in 1967, requiring Wilson and then-Chancellor Jim Callaghan to devalue after burning through currency reserves? Bloody Americans.

    *****

    The revolution would not be televised. That’s what Gil Scott-Heron said three years prior in a poem that became legendary throughout the activist world. Not all of the activists believed that, though. Especially not the revolutionary ones who’d brazenly abducted an heiress in the dead of winter and used her captivity as leverage to manipulate one of the most famous families in the world into spending over a million dollars on free food for the poor of the Bay Area. They’d gloried in the television coverage, the cameras showing the distribution of food by the organization PiN (People in Need) in four Bay Area locations, good food, quality food, lamb and beef and ham, all paid for by Hearst dollars wheedled out of them by the Symbionese Liberation Army. It was proof, they all felt, that the revolution could succeed, that if Nixon could be removed from office and the Vietnam War ended, then they could still beat the greedheads and the fascists.

    It hadn’t been enough for Donald DeFreeze, the unstable and charismatic leader of the SLA. Self-styled as Field General Marshal Cinqué, he wanted even more attention, and he did it in the most grandiose way possible: a daring raid on the Hibernia Bank in San Francisco. He executed it square in the midst of the House impeachment hearings into Richard Nixon, with none other than Patricia “Tania” Hearst helping lead the charge, M1 carbine in her hands, telling those in the bank to get “up, up, up against the wall, motherfuckers.” Attorney General William Ruckelshaus called them “nothing more than common criminals, no matter how much they play dress-up as so-called revolutionaries.” The SLA had since taken their money and a stolen van and driven all the way down to Los Angeles, where they’d taken over a house on 54th Street just east of Compton Avenue in between the neighborhoods of South Central and Huntington Park. Despite the immense notoriety surrounding the group, Los Angeles was so big and busy that nobody took notice of them for a time. As one of the neighbors, a seventeen year-old teenager, later said, “I saw five white women and four dudes—two blacks and two white.” [Was one of them Patty Hearst?] “Man, I don’t know, all white women look the same to me.” That sense of nonchalance from the neighbors probably could’ve stayed that way for weeks, at least, but DeFreeze’s instability was rubbing off on some of the others, setting in motion a chain of events that would end badly. On June 15th, “Tania,” along with Bill and Emily Harris, took the van out to Mel’s Sporting Goods in Inglewood, where Bill and Emily began shopping while their erstwhile colleague kept the van running, watching out of the side window. Inside the store, Bill decided to invoke the five-finger discount rule, whereupon a security guard and a manager followed Bill from the store, confronting him. A wrestling match ensued, and Bill’s gun fell from his waistband. Sitting in the van, “Tania” had options. She could’ve run. She could’ve ignored it. What nobody, the Harrises included, expected was what actually happened.

    Patricia Hearst, at this moment, became a full-fledged Symbionese Liberation Army member.

    Pulling a blanket off a cache of stolen weapons, Hearst lifted a Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine gun, slid the side door open, and fired a wild burst at the manager and security guard. The guard tried to return fire, and the young heiress shot a second, longer burst. This one caught the manager square in the left temple. He dropped down, blood fountaining spectacularly from his head. The Harrises grabbed their things and ran towards the van, keeping their heads down as Hearst dropped the MP5 (she didn’t know how to change the magazine) and picked up the M1 carbine that she had actually practiced with, keeping up steady fire on the guard so he didn’t try to pursue the van. As the Harrises got in, Bill took the driver’s seat and booked it for the house on 54th Street. He grimaced as he fought to keep calm. This little adventure was sure to draw quite a bit of heat from the fascist pigs of the LAPD.

    When they returned to the house and related events, DeFreeze was both angry and proud at the same time. Angry that their whereabouts had been exposed but pleased that Patricia Hearst was now fully in her alter ego of Tania, a revolutionary willing to kill for her beliefs. The van was a liability, though. Hardened criminals may do the dumbest of things out of pride or anger, but they don’t willingly make themselves easy to find, either. They cleaned out everything that was in the van, taking care that the arsenal was not spotted by some nosy neighbor, and stored it in the small basement of the house. When they finished their work, Nancy Ling Perry (“Fahizah”) volunteered to torch the van somewhere behind one of the numerous industrial buildings near the Los Angeles River. The attempted arson failed, however, the second stroke of bad luck for the Symbionese. A faulty lighter was the culprit here, so Ling did the best she could to hide it, and then walked to a nearby bus stop, one of many to service the factory workers in the area. She sat there in the back, listening to Spanish and Vietnamese and English all jostle together in conversations. These are the people we want to help, the ones who have nothing and work their hands to the bone. When she finally returned to the 54th Street house, and informed the Field General Marshal that the van was hidden, but not torched, now DeFreeze was in an extremely bad mood.

    With the dragnet sure to envelop Los Angeles, either the SLA needed to steal another van or stick it out in South Central somehow. They had money from the bank heist, but that was a finite supply with some nine people in the house. On Sunday, DeFreeze took Patricia Soltysik (known as Mizmoon) with him to purchase groceries and buy time to figure out what to do. Mizmoon found some cheap hair dye, figured it was worth a shot, maybe disguise their look somehow. Without gas on in the house, they were limited to an electric burner and a couple of cheap pots & pans for cooking (the house, up for sale by Wells Fargo after foreclosing on its previous owners, had electricity kept on), so it was a large assortment of premade meals and canned goods that the two purchased. As they soon discovered, the effort was in vain, because time was not at all on their side. On Monday morning, the van was found early in the morning by a maintenance crew run by the owners of the industrial park where Perry had left it. The crew reported the mysterious van to their foreman, who called the LAPD, thinking it was being hidden by some drug dealers. That call brought out the LAPD, the FBI and crime scene technicians who dusted for fingerprints and conducted a careful, thorough search of the van. Compounding this bad run of luck for the members of the SLA, they’d missed something during their hasty cleanout of the van. A map, opened up and folded up to focus on the area of Los Angeles where they were staying, had been wedged in between the cushions of one of the seats. It was deep enough that a casual search of the seats wouldn’t have caught it, and the haste in which the SLA had worked to remove all of their things from it meant they’d only done such a casual search. This discovery narrowed the search area for the LAPD, who took over point from a very chastened FBI on the manhunt. The Fibbies had months to find Hearst and the SLA, and had failed miserably, because they were still the House that Edgar Built, and as such, were not equipped for infiltrating these small radical bands popping up randomly across America. The LAPD, though, they had long experience in trading information with criminals, with rooting out small bands of drug dealers, commies, and other assorted radicals, and they put that experience to good use.

    Canvassing the area were LAPD patrol units, Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department deputies, and some FBI agents, although most of them were in talks with Commander Daryl Gates, head of the LAPD’s SWAT unit. SWAT was nine years old at this time, and had already gone through a four-hour standoff with Black Panthers a few years back, providing valuable experience with confronting armed radicals. The SWAT officers came equipped with bolt-action scoped rifles, .223 semi-automatic rifles, shotguns, medical kits, and gas masks. They were the best armed amongst the groups there, since the FBI’s Hostage Rescue Team was another nine years into a future completely unseen to these men. Within hours, they’d be needed, too, for it was right around 12:30 pm when a call came anonymously to the LAPD, telling them that they’d seen a van matching the one described on the KCAL 9 news at noon. Said van had allegedly been spotted at 1447 East 54th Street, according to the caller. With that information, a call was sent out to a number of the canvassers to return to their precincts, just in case, Gates said, that these bastards had one of those newfangled scanners that listened in to police broadcasts. Once an appropriate number of officers had been rounded up, they all drove to 54th and 55th Streets to surround the house. Officers on 55th crouched low to evacuate neighbors from their homes in case shooting broke out. On 54th, plainclothesmen headed to the neighbors on each side of 1447 and across the street, at variances of a few minutes apart, keeping cover as best as possible. Despite all the moving pieces, the deception worked long enough for the neighbors to be spirited to safety.

    Now it was time. Captain Mervin King of the LAPD pulled out a bullhorn and sternly informed the SLA that the jig was up. “Occupants of 1447 East 54th Street, this is the Los Angeles Police Department speaking. Come out with your hands up!” Nothing. “We know the Symbionese Liberation Army is in that house. Come out with your hands up or we will be forced to remove you from it.” Still nothing. King gestured to one of the SWAT members, who pulled out an M79 grenade launcher loaded with tear gas grenades, and he fired through the living room window two of them. The gas billowed for a moment, then a voice rang out. “Come and try, motherfuckers!” The ever-resourceful Field General Marshal Cinqué had managed to acquire an M60 machine gun. The unmistakable sound of it rang out with tremendous violence, shattering windshields and windows on the cop cars, ambulances, and fire trucks all on scene. A call was placed by the Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Los Angeles Field Division that they needed heavier weapons and fast. Out went two more SWAT teams, this time with AR-15 and AR-180 rifles and more M79s. The battle raged throughout the afternoon, and the law enforcement personnel did not back down despite their shock at facing weapons of war in this fashion. Meanwhile, there was arguing in the small house over whether to surrender or not. Nancy Ling Perry was dead, a sniper catching her as she leaned out a side door to throw a Molotov cocktail. Emily Harris was wounded, and her husband Bill was too busy trying to help her to fight.

    Tania was fighting, though. Something repressed in her had been set off earlier that day, and she was firing away with a fully automatic M1, taking pride in keeping the cops that were in her field of view down behind their cars. The closest she got to hitting anyone, despite her enthusiasm, was a shot that rang off the helmet of one of the SWAT officers. Despite their own gas masks, the constant volley of teargas was wreaking havoc on the SLA’s ability to return fire. The one exception to this was Donald DeFreeze himself, firing his M60 with reckless abandon, setting two patrol cars on fire. In doing so, though, he was giving away his position with the muzzle flashes. This allowed three snipers to take up positions on roofs across the street, praying all the while they survived this madness, lined up their rifles and fired at once. The westernmost of them caught the Field General Marshal just underneath his left eyeball, putting him and the M60 out of commission. Mizmoon screamed in agony at her sometime lover’s death, then picked up a homemade grenade fashioned out of an old 35mm film cartridge and made to throw it out of the single second-floor window facing the front yard. This was the final, tragic stroke of bad luck for the Symbionese Liberation Army. One of the snipers fired at Mizmoon, but she moved just as he fired, and instead of hitting her, his round struck the jerry-rigged grenade. It exploded, killing Soltysik in gruesome fashion while also triggering a fire. That fire was fed by the copious amounts of tear gas that had been fired into the house over nearly three hours, and while the firefighters moved in to try and put it out, there was inexplicably more firing from within the inferno. The officers weren’t sure if it was deliberate or just ammunition cooking off, but it restrained the firefighters from more vigorously extinguishing the blaze until the gunshots stopped.

    After the LAFD was able to finally put the fire out, the police searching the house found the charred bodies of Perry, Soltysik, the Harrises, DeFreeze, Angela Atwood (“General Gelina”), Camilla Hall (“Gabi”), and Willie Wolfe (“Kahjoh”). The Harrises were in the room adjacent to the rear, her body in his arms, the husband trying to save his wife up to the last. Closest to the door, but not quite having made it, was Patricia “Tania” Hearst, still clutching her M1 carbine. The ASAC for the FBI looked at her corpse and shook his head. Damned fool. She could’ve escaped when the fire started. She must’ve been firing away still. There was no need for this. Christ. The agent stepped outside, wiped his face off with a handkerchief, and dreaded the scrutiny they were all about to get, while thanking a beneficent God that he didn’t have to be the one to tell the Hearst family that their baby girl died in a rundown Los Angeles home shooting it out with hundreds of cops.
     
    July 1974
  • “The day they actually bury Richard Nixon, they’ll need to fill the hole with concrete,
    back over it with a steamroller, then post a guard there just in case he tries to make a run for it.”

    --Jimmy Breslin, New York Daily News, July 2, 1974


    “Ed, you’ve heard of reincarnation, right?”
    “Sure, sure.”
    “Well, most people talk about how they’d like to come back as a dog or a tree.
    Richard Nixon must’ve been a cat that came back as a human, because every time you think he’s dead, he finds another life.”

    --Johnny Carson with Ed McMahon, The Tonight Show, July 1, 1974


    As July came in humid and damp off the Chesapeake Bay, settling over the one-time malarial swamp now home to the nation’s capital, the 37th President of the United States arose from the coma he’d spent the past six weeks in. Despite all of the pain he’d inflicted upon her, physically and mentally, Pat Nixon was overjoyed that her husband had survived. She reached out for his hand, held it, said how much she loved him. It was the most emotion she’d shown in a very long time. The gratitude in those beady, darkened eyes was manifest, her heart lifted by it, yet that feeling was quickly dashed when the business light switched on in his head. An awkward silence ensued when he asked if his briefer was in yet. Pat deferred until the doctors had come in to check on their famous patient. Then the metaphorical bomb was dropped, and the ensuing rage that erupted from Richard Nixon rattled the windows of the Presidential Suite at Bethesda Naval Hospital. The chief of neurology watched the veins rise in the former president’s neck and wondered if a fatal stroke was going to finish off what the phlebitis-induced clot had not. Yet, in keeping with the survival instincts of nature’s most unloved creatures, Nixon did not suffer a cerebral hemorrhage. He found that inner animal strength and settled himself, digesting the information, absorbing it. Those bastards removed me from office when I couldn’t even defend myself. I don’t care if it takes me the rest of my life. I will get every last goddamn one of those ungrateful rats.

    While one leader honed in the crucible of the 1950s pulled himself out of the grave, much further south, another was in his last moments. Juan Perón, the president of Argentina for the third time, the driver of that nation’s politics, was trying to recover from two heart attacks he’d suffered within the last week. His outlook was grim enough that his third wife and vice president, Isabel, had been sworn in under Argentina’s version of the 25th Amendment as acting president. The aides and loyal underlings that had followed Perón for thirty years scurried about, the more religious of them praying, the rest wondering how safe their positions would be. Their leader had been friendly with Allende, after all, and he was in the ground, and the man who had him murdered, General Augusto Pinochet, had just taken Allende’s office as president of Chile. He’d visited Buenos Aires, not that long ago, and didn’t exactly hit it off with Perón. Pinochet wanted Allende’s supporters that had fled across the frontier border with Argentina into the mountains. Into exile, hiding and waiting for their chance to avenge the loss of their martyred leader. Perón was not going to hand anyone over to this strutting martinet, but couldn’t say it out loud, for he valued being able to keep a cordial relationship with Santiago despite his personal distaste. He told the general “Perón tarda, pero cumple (Perón takes his time, but accomplishes).” Now time had caught up to the old grandee of Latin American politics, and the third heart attack struck, the one that stopped the fiercely emotional Argentinian’s life force for all time. Isabel Perón was the leader of Argentina now, but how long would it be until an Argentine Pinochet emerged?

    *****

    “So it’s Trudeau again, huh?”
    “Yes, sir, he does have a talent for coming out of things on the good side.”
    “Well, that’s not a bad thing. He campaigned on being against wage and price controls. For a lefty he’s got good business sense, sounds like.”
    “Perhaps we should invite him to the summit with the Brits.”
    “That might not be a bad idea. The more cooperation we get, the better.”

    --Notes from a meeting between President Connally and Treasury Secretary Rockefeller
    July 10, 1974


    *****

    “I don’t believe in binational states. There are wonderful examples of this, prosperous multinational states: Switzerland, Switzerland, and Switzerland. Everywhere else, be it Cyprus, Austria-Hungary, or the Ottoman Empire, has ended in a terrible bloodbath.”

    --Amos Oz, 1972, discussing the Six-Day War at Bar-Ilan University


    Few places in the world had seen so much violence incurred over so few miles of land as the island of Cyprus. The tiny island’s rich history was soaked in blood and tears—located within shouting distance of Turkey, Lebanon and Israel, but settled by Greeks as far back as 1100 BC, the rich soil, Mediterranean sea salt breezes and utility as a port left it coveted by many. The Hittites, Egyptians, Romans, Arab Caliphate, the Knights Templar, the Republic of Venice, and the Ottoman Empire had all come through and taken the island as their own. Through all of it, the descendants of those Greeks that had settled it for three thousand years had clung to the island, loved it, desired it to be part of their homeland. When the Ottomans fell to the Russians in 1878 and the British took it over to keep it away from Moscow’s outstretched hands, the native Greeks thought their moment was at hand.

    When World War I broke out, and the Ottomans decided to throw in with the Germans after a series of British missteps, there was no question of Cyprus being returned to their former masters. The answer was no, and when the Empire disintegrated under the weight of fighting a war they were too weak to wage, Cyprus became a Crown Colony of the British Empire. The Second World War brought disaster to the British, but Cyprus held, and joined forces with them to fight off the Nazis, and after the war, the British repaid the favor by undertaking an effort to get the Turks and the Greeks to renounce their claims on Cyprus. It took nearly fifteen years to achieve, but the signing of the London and Zurich Agreements in 1959 was a major feather in the cap of Harold MacMillan’s foreign policy. It’d been fifteen years since then, with Archbishop Makarios III of the Greek Orthodox Church serving as President, and Dr. Fazıl Küçük as Vice-President, representing the 18% Turkish population of the island. It’d been rough, there’d been a few close calls, such as attempted subversion by the Greek military junta after the 1967 coup in Athens, but the peace had largely held.

    Until now.

    The Greek junta had spent months pressuring Makarios, even trying to assassinate him, and had failed in doing so. Finally, with the help of the Greeks on Cyprus who favored unification, they launched a full-scale military coup, sending Makarios fleeing to RAF Akrotyri on the island, where he was rapidly evacuated by the quick-thinking base commander to Gibraltar. The uproar spread around the world as fast as word got out from the various embassies and the BBC World Service. While the NATO countries were most concerned, seeing as Greece and Turkey were crucial members of the alliance for reasons of geography, the Soviets also had reasons both historical and geographical for great interest. Henry Kissinger quickly dispatched Joseph Sisco, the former Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs; now the newly-installed Undersecretary for Political Affairs. From the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Big Jim Callaghan bundled the very capable Roy Hattersley, his deputy as Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, on the first flight available immediately after the emergency cabinet meeting (Harold’s performance was somewhat erratic, giving all in attendance further pause as to his ability to carry on in the job). The Brits and Soviets wanted a return to status quo antebellum, Kissinger (through Sisco) would be content with enosis (the unification of Greece and Cyprus) or a return to independence, and the Turks wanted the northern end of Cyprus as their own and let the rest stay independent. It was an absolute mess, and nobody was satisfied with the offers, which to the Turks and Makarios both seemed like a stalling tactic.

    Events quickly escalated from there, with Makarios going before the United Nations in a dramatic appearance a mere 72 hours after the coup and denouncing the invasion by the Greeks, calling it an affront to Greek and Turks both. Two days after that, believing (correctly) that the U.S. would happily accept Cyprus being integrated into Greece, the Turks came storming onto the northern shore of the island. The Cypriot National Guard (an uninspiring force comprising torpedo boats and ancient Soviet T-34 tanks well past their prime) launched several attacks on the beachhead and failed, for rather obvious reasons. The Greeks and Turks now both raced to reinforce, and the Greeks were first to do so, parachuting in two companies of infantry with anti-tank missiles and mortars. The CNG brought all of its T-34s to bear and along with the Greek infantry took the fight to the Turks and nearly collapsed it. What saved them from being driven into the sea was the appearance of F-5As from the Turkish Air Force firing Zuni rockets with antitank warheads, taking out several of the T-34s. This was followed by a second wave dropping CBU-42 cluster bombs upon the exposed Greek infantry. For those unacquainted with a cluster bomb, imagine a shotgun blast magnified by thousands. That’s just one cluster bomb. The Turks dropped dozens of them. The Turks won the encounter, but it was a Pyrrhic victory. As this battle raged, a Greek landing craft, the Lesvos, was using its 40mm Bofors antiaircraft guns to shell Turkish Cypriot militia while landing another two companies of infantry forces. When reports of the attack reached the Turks, they sent out three destroyers, concerned the Greeks were bringing forces en masse to Cyprus. The Lesvos sprinted back to its home port, and in the nighttime confusion and reports of multiple Greek ships, the F-4 Phantoms of the Turkish Air Force ended up attacking their own destroyers, sinking one and setting another ablaze. It was a horrid mistake, one that placed the Greeks in a position to defeat what remained of the Turkish forces and, if they so chose, massacre the Turkish Cypriots.

    Life has a funny way of interrupting when you’re making plans.

    What came next was the confluence of three men’s reactions to the events of 20 July. The first was Callaghan in London, aghast at the scenario laying before them and immediately burying himself deep inside Wilson’s sphincter until Wilson agreed to lay down the law, so to say, with Washington. The second was Connally, who didn’t need Harold Wilson to tell him what a disaster this could be: an all-out war between two pivotal NATO nations. He’d already made a call directly to Dimitrios Ioannidis, the brigadier who’d ousted Georgios Papadopoulos from the junta leadership, to tell him he’d immediately freeze all U.S. military aid to the Greeks if they tried to take advantage of the desperate Turkish situation. This led to Ioannidis calling in an unknowing Joseph Sisco, who endured an hour-long diatribe that focused on the withdrawal of support, repeating, “You promised me you’d keep the Turks out of Cyprus!” Sisco, caught short by the President bypassing his boss, Kissinger, could only stammer out that he had made no promises, just offers to do his best. When Wilson called, Connally was already prepping to tell the Turks to not send any reinforcements unless they wanted the USAF to load up the B61s on a C-141 and fly right out of Turkey forever. That was an extremely big stick to wave at the Turks, and Connally knew it. He was going to be the Law now.

    The third person who saw opportunity and took it was Spyros Markezinis, the very brief former Prime Minister of Greece, having served for a whopping total of six weeks last year before Ioannidis decided he didn’t like the liberalization that Markezinis was creating and threw both him and Papadopoulos out. While some of the old guard politicians like Konstantinos Karamanlis wanted nothing to do with their former Cabinet colleague because he’d, in their eyes, legitimized the junta (even though he took the job precisely because the task was to ease out the junta), others still spoke to him. These people had eyes and ears, they knew that dissatisfaction was rising all around and they knew that the Americans were now threatening to throw the Greek economy into the abyss if Ioannidis took one more step in pursuit of enosis. And so they talked. They talked to Spyros because he was the money genius, the man who saved Greece’s economy in the 1950s; the only civilian to get on the inside, if only for a few weeks, of the junta. There was one other thing, too, something almost everyone had forgotten. Spyros had spent the war in the Resistance, leading one of the many bands despite being only 5’2” and a lawyer by training, and had caught the eye of old Marshal Alexander Papagos himself in the early days of the Cold War. That wasn’t an accident.

    Spyros organized. He called secret meetings, cajoled and flattered, slowly brought more old guard politicians into the fold, and on July 24th, a general strike began. Across Athens, Corinth, Patras, Tripoli, Livadia, and Thessaloniki, the people took to the streets. The Navy, royalist to its core and already having attempted to throw out the generals a year before, steamed the destroyer HS Kanaris (named after the old hero of the war for Greek independence) into the Petalioi Gulf. As Ioannidis tried to sneak reinforcements to Crete using a pair of Olympic Airlines 727s, the Kanaris aimed its brand new French Crotale surface-to-air missiles skyward and shot both of them down. With the loss of his last trump card, so went any power Ioannidis had left. The other members of the junta had him arrested, and reached out to Spyros Markezinis. They knew him, even if it had been a brief association, and trusted him a damn sight more than they did the other royalists and socialists out there. Brought into the Royal Palace, they offered Markezinis the Presidency. It was a much higher step up. To their shock, he declined, and told them that if this were to work, then he would have to be in the Cabinet, as a symbol of intraparty cooperation, while a rival served as President. It took a man of true principles to turn down their offer, but the little barrister had those qualities in spades. And so, Konstantinos Karamanlis was named President of Greece, while the prime minister ousted in 1967, Panagiotis Kanellopoulos, returned to that position, with Spyros Markezinis as deputy prime minister and Minister of Finance. To further ensure stability, Andreas Papandreou returned from exile to serve as Minister of Public Order, lending leftist credibility to the unity government.

    And so by July 27th, while sporadic fighting continued on Cyprus between Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots, the military government of Greece ceased to be. By the early days of August, a United Nations peacekeeping force had landed on the island while Hattersley conducted talks in Geneva with representatives from the new Greek government and the existing Turkish one. Also present was Makarios III, determined that these men should not partition his nation. The Turks were threatening to go onshore again in the north to seize ground, and while the Greeks were no longer led by generals, national pride required them to fight against any seizures or divisions of land by Turks. For now, though, the peace held. The rest would be figured out soon enough.

    *****

    “I stand here today to address what has come to feel like semi-annual speculation about my political ambitions for higher office. It has been a difficult five years for my family and I. There’s the mistakes I’ve made and the suffering my wonderful son, Ed Junior, has gone through with his cancer that he has miraculously recovered from. There’s also the greater tragedy of the Kennedy family. One brother shot down over France. One who became President and struck down by an assassin. A third who ran for President—and would have won—until an assassin came for him too. Now I am the only son of Joseph P. Kennedy remaining, and I have done my best these past five years to match his legacy as patriarch of the Kennedys. Part of me wants to leave it at that, to look over my family, to help care for my nieces and nephews who lost their fathers.

    The rest of me, though, looks out at this nation and sees it crying out for real leadership. The last six years have been nothing but an orgy of criminality from the executive branch. Things simply cannot go on as they are. If we are to move forward through the rest of the 1970s and regain our standing as a progressive, freedom-loving nation, then we cannot look to the retreads that President Connally has instilled at the White House, not least of all his choice for Vice-President, Ronald Reagan. Mr. Reagan’s political philosophy lies somewhere in the sixteenth century, and is not fit to be a heartbeat away from the Presidency. I think the President is an honorable man, but honorable men can and do make mistakes. The appointment of Mr. Reagan shows that he valued expediency over the right temperament to succeed him if necessary.

    I can no longer deny what reason and common sense are telling me, and it is with this in mind that I am declaring my candidacy for the Democratic nomination as President of the United States.


    --Ted Kennedy, July 30th, 1974
    Excerpt of his campaign announcement in Lafayette Park,
    with his back to the White House
     
    August 1974
  • There was something to be said about proper Southerners being back in the White House, the congressman from the new 5th District of Alabama thought. The Southern Democrats who’d first welcomed Lyndon Johnson to the Presidency because he was One of Them and then slowly backed off when he’d decided to tear down the walls of segregation and stop being One of Them were happy to have a President who’d break bread with them once more. The party switch was troubling, as was his friendship with certain Negroes, but he was a conservative and he welcomed them with open arms. That Barnes boy, he was quite the charmer. Checked in with them regularly, sounded them out on proposals for legislation, invited them over for drinks with the President after hours. Now it was his turn to bring one to the President.

    “Robert, how are you doing? Good to see you. Sit down, what do you want to drink? I’ve got some exceptionally smooth George Dickel No. 12 here.” My, but the President knew how to entertain. Sure beats the hell out of Dick. You could tell he hated being around people. Never understood why he went into politics. “Mr. President, I’d be delighted.” “Excellent. Mr. Roberts, two glasses of the Dickel, please,” Connally asked one of the omnipresent White House household staff. They were sitting out on the veranda outside of the Oval Office, the sun casting shadows as it proceeded on its downward trajectory to sunset in a couple of hours. Connally opened a box and pulled out two cigars, handing one over to Congressman Jones, and the two men lit up and sat back, savoring the smooth smoky flavor. “Mr. President, I…”

    “Now, listen, Robert, when we’re here like this, just call me John. We don’t need to be formal all the damn time. Makes the conversation harder to have when you keep using five syllables instead of one.” Connally grinned at the veteran representative for Huntsville and its surrounding towns. “Alright, John, I came here because there’s something specific I wanted to ask about. You know who Dr. Wernher von Braun is, right?” Connally nodded affirmatively. “Well, he’s a VP over at Fairchild now, the people building that YA-10. Listen, it’s been approved for production since last year, but there’s talk of another fly-off against the Corsair, to “prove” we need it, and I think we ought to speed it up, get some off the line now. I’m worried about what’s happening in Vietnam, and if they had a few of them, it’d go a long way to helping them beat back those Commie bastards in the North.”

    “Robert, those boys would have to be trained, you know that? Hell, we haven’t even done training for ours yet.”

    “John, Dr. von Braun says this thing is incredible. Like a flying tank, almost impossible to shoot the damn thing down as armored as it is, and the cannon that GE is building for it is going to be murder, especially down in the jungle. It’ll slice right through that jungle cover and make those little rice-eaters think twice about things. Hell, I’m ready to move a bill through now. I’m chairing Transport and Infrastructure. I’ve got control over so much pork I can trade for damn near anything. We’re still providing aid, right? You could probably get some of those Air America boys over here and have them do it. Plausible deniability, something y’all are certainly better at than the idiots who ran this place for Dick.” Connally knew a hard sell when he saw one. It might even be a trap. Yet, by the same token, he kind of liked the idea. But he wasn’t going to let the South Vietnamese fly it. If it was going to be done, Americans would do the flying. “Alright, I’m gonna call Bill and Nitze and chew it over with them. I like the idea, Robert, but if they go, it’ll be with our boys, not the Vietnamese. At this point, Thieu would probably sell it for cash to get the hell out if the roof caves in. Now, there’s something I’d like you to do for me.”

    The President went on to describe a major idea he wanted to push through: substantial tax breaks for the Big Three automakers in return for creating more fuel-efficient engines to reduce the dependence on Saudi oil. It’d started with Jack Valenti, who after getting Connally’s approval had spent most of July in secret talks in Detroit—Hank the Deuce, Ed Cole (the famed engineer who’d put a V8 in a Chevy before rising to the top at GM), and Lynn Townsend at Chrysler. Townsend was most resistant to the idea, even though he was already in deep trouble financially. He’d instituted the sales bank, a thoroughly bad plan from someone who should’ve known better, building cars without dealer demand, “banking” them for later buyers. This meant that surplus cars were strewn across Michigan, because nobody was buying what Chrysler was selling in the midst of an oil crisis. The usual two-week shutdown for retooling in July had stretched into six weeks to save cash and try to unload the surplus cars, sending the UAW into a frenzy at the lost pay. Townsend’s protégé was John Riccardo, president at Chrysler since 1970, and he had been publicly supportive of the sales bank. Valenti quietly took Riccardo aside and told him that he needed to let go of the sales bank and instead get his boss to agree to this deal. Otherwise, Valenti said, he could forget about any potential financial assistance if Chrysler crashed. You need to understand, the Secretary of Commerce told the young Italian executive from upstate New York, that we don’t mess around in this administration. There is nobody that holds a grudge the way the President does, and unlike Nixon, he’s a lot better at sticking the knife in if you screw with him. The country needs this deal so we can keep the economy above water and buy time to get that new Alaskan pipeline online so we aren’t bringing all of our oil in from those ungrateful sheikhs in the Arab Peninsula. Riccardo took the point. Townsend didn’t, and while most people were on vacation in mid-August, enjoying the last of summer before school came back, Riccardo engineered a boardroom coup that shoved Townsend out of the chairmanship. In a remarkable act of foresight, Riccardo wooed his fellow Italian, Lido “Lee” Iacocca, away from Dearborn, where he’d chafed under the heavy-handed chairmanship of Henry Ford II, admiringly known as “Hank the Deuce.” Iacocca was an engineer by training but a salesman by birth, and he’d made Ford extremely profitable even in a difficult economic climate. Unfortunately, he worked for a man who was vain, susceptible to flattery from his coatholders, and thought he knew more than everyone else because his name was on the cars, to the point where he’d stand in front of a mirror and say, “I know I’m right, because the king is never wrong.” Iacocca had, along with his right-hand engineer Hal Sperlich, developed the “Mini-Max” project, and Hank had flat-out crapped on it. He’d crapped on the idea of teaming up with the Japanese to speed up acquisition of fuel-efficient engines too. “No Jap engines are going in my vehicles, not while I breathe,” the Deuce bellowed in an April 1974 meeting with the pair.

    Later in his memoir, Iacocca, the newly installed president of Chrysler recounted his first week at Highland Park, Chrysler’s headquarters. “I got there the first week of August, right as Secretary Valenti had gotten sign off from Hank, Ed Cole, and John on the tax incentives. The irony wasn’t lost on me that after fighting Hank for years on things like fuel efficiency, he’d finally agreed to do it right after I’d quit. By the second week of August, I was starting to wonder if I’d made the right move. Chrysler was an absolute mess: we had no organizational charts, no structure, this godawful sales bank idea, angry UAW officials, and cars that nobody wanted sitting up the road at the State Fairgrounds. I didn’t have Hal, either. A lot of people would have despaired in this situation. In fact, if we’re being honest, I got damned close to doing so myself. The sales bank cars were an absolute albatross on our back, and so I did the best I could with them—what we could donate for tax writeoffs, we did. I offered more at wholesale to HUD for the Urban Restoration Teams. We clearanced the rest and made sure the dealer losses were minimized, which hurt us. I did have some other ideas, and thankfully, there was some engineering talent once I started poking around the complex and asking questions who helped me bring those ideas to fruition. Between the fuel efficiency improvements we made in our engines and creating the K-frame common platform, we saved Chrysler from what looked like a certain bankruptcy by the end of the decade.”

    *****

    By the middle of the month, Paul Nitze at CIA and Bill Clements at Defense had come back to the White House to say that getting the A-10 built in time would be very difficult, but they had another idea: the AH-56 Cheyenne that Lockheed had built in the late 1960s. There were eight usable prototypes and it wouldn’t take long to get some more built up. Because the contract had been cancelled two years prior, there wasn’t any issue with handing over what was considered to be obsolete technology (the last eight years had seen massive improvements in technology and the analog controls in the AH-56 were outmoded already). Nitze offered to use some of his black fund to pay for the immediate costs of building some. It had the benefit of A: testing in combat the improvements made right at the end of the Cheyenne program, such as the ACMS (advanced control mechanical system) and B: it’d be a lot easier training up the South Vietnamese and/or Air America pilots to use it. Oh, yes, there was also C: gathering more performance data on BGM-71 TOW missiles, which had been highly effective during America’s last full year in Vietnam. Since the North Vietnamese had more of the new Chinese Type 62 tanks, it would be a wonderful opportunity to test the improved warheads on the latest and greatest Red tanks.

    Until recently, Nitze’s black fund was one of Washington’s quietest appropriations. The chairs of the relevant committees would agree to the amounts, and then without giving details, the Congress would vote up or down on the total. Vietnam had brought more scrutiny to the process, though, and Nixon’s impoundment of funds in 1972 had led to the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act, slated for a final vote within days. Nitze had circulated a memo that the Act would potentially lead to infringement upon his reprogramming prerogatives, but so long as they moved quickly, any action regarding the Cheyenne would not be an issue. Clements, for his part, would have Terence McClary, the Pentagon comptroller, rewrite the Vietnamese aid package for FY1975, which would be introduced soon, to cover the costs of 20 AH-56s. This would provide 30 in total, a sort of quick reaction force that could come into battle and help thin the herd with the rocket pods for BTR-60s and the TOW missiles for the PT-76 and Type 62 tanks. The Pentagon would keep a couple of the prototypes for further testing if needed. The A-10 flyoff with the Corsair would be cancelled and production begun for unit testing by January 1975. In return, Robert Jones of Alabama’s 5th District would gather Dixiecrat votes for the tax incentive plan, which would also draw in the environmentalists, making for a happy confluence for the occupant of the White House.

    Connally would later remark to Barnes that the job really wasn’t that hard if you knew how to manage people. That comment would haunt him soon enough.

    *****

    He was, to use a later phrase that would permeate pop culture, master of his domain. Park Chung-hee, the President of South Korea, looked out on the crowd at Seoul’s National Theater. They were gathered to celebrate 29 years of freedom from colonial rule by the Japanese, and there were no special measures needed to raise their fervor. The Koreans were intensely patriotic, because nothing makes you love your nation more than having been enslaved at the hands of others. He was a dictator in all but name, having used his supporters in the National Assembly to evade the existing Constitution by amending the term limits on the presidency, and then when he still, despite all the barriers he’d erected, almost lost to the charismatic opposition leader Kim Dae-Jung in the 1971 election, it was the end of democracy for South Korea. The free elections were replaced by a pro forma electoral college packed with his supporters. Dae-Jung was kidnapped by the KCIA in 1973 and almost killed until the Japanese tracked the kidnappers and the U.S. ambassador, Phil Habib, interceded and won his release. Park rammed through his Yushin constitution, which could be fairly described as South Korean Juche, and tried to modernize the countryside as a play to keep support in the heartlands, but it was slow going. Park justified his draconian methods by saying that democracy couldn’t make the economy grow. In this, too, he sounded just like Kim Il-Sung.

    That actually scared the North Koreans. They’d had the same history lessons as every other Communist movement, that capitalist fascism was waiting for the chance to crush them. Kim Il-Sung had been a major in the Red Army during the war, having evaded the Japanese multiple times. He’d been there when things looked bleak and Hitler was driving on Moscow. As such, ever since the Korean War ended, he’d believed in constant offense against the enemy. The North Koreans didn’t have the normal intelligence apparatus of most nations, including the Soviets, but rather kept a firm hand on every leash. This meant they had every agency under the umbrella of the Workers’ Party of Korea Central Committee, including what was known as the External Investigations and Intelligence Department of the Workers Party of Korea. A rather unwieldy handle for what was essentially the North Korean version of the KGB’s First and Second Chief Directorates, they had been involved in multiple incidents, including the digging of tunnels to infiltrate agents into South Korea, the first of which had recently been discovered by the joint American/ROK patrols at the DMZ. The EII officers also were working throughout the Asian nations in the area, such as Japan, where fifth columnists who’d been there since the outbreak of hostilities over twenty years before on the Korean Peninsula had brought names of potential agents to them. One of those agents was a young émigré of the North, a pudgy man known to the Japanese as Nanjō Seikō, but whose birth name was Mun Se-gwang. His parents had fled the north when the Americans had stormed over the 38th parallel in late 1950 after MacArthur’s last great operation, the landing at Inchon behind DPRK lines in the South. They’d ended up in Osaka, where Mun was born. As he grew up, his parents assimilated (which is how his name changed), but in high school, he began studying Mao and Kim’s writings. This got him the attention of the fifth columnists, who then got in touch with their EII contacts. By the time Mun was a college senior, he’d fully been taken in by Communism, and the EII agents had convinced him to go back home to Korea. To the South. To kill Park Chung-hee.

    So, now, at the National Theatre, President Park stepped out from behind the curtain, and his beautiful second wife, Yuk Young-soo, led the vigorous applause of the crowd. Observers noted that Yuk was the one thing in Park’s life that he treated with love and respect. He truly adored her, and she knew how to support him and keep his spirits up. Park embraced her, and then stepped to the podium to give his speech. It was filled with nationalistic fervor and Yushin philosophy, his typical bland style a sharp contrast to his enemy Kim Dae-Jung. He was about twenty minutes in, the crowd lulled into a stupor, when Mun Se-gwang suddenly bolted up in the front, leveled a Browning .38 pistol swiped from an Osaka police station, shouted “파시스트 쓰레기! 주사위! [Fascist scum! Die!],” and got off five shots before being tackled by the crowd. On stage, Yuk began screaming as her husband, blood flowing from wounds in his upper left chest and neck, fell to his knees and then his face, and the world would change once again. Yushin would not be enough to save its progenitor.

    Perversely, as Park lay bleeding out inside a theater at nearly 9 pm Seoul time that day, the sun had just been up for two hours as a working Thursday began in Washington. The President and Vice-President were both at their respective ranches—for the President, that meant Picosa Ranch outside of San Antonio, where he was likely still asleep; for the Veep, it was Rancho del Cielo high in the Santa Ynez Mountains north of Santa Barbara, where the time meant he’d certainly be asleep. It was so remote that the NSA team sent to wire communications systems after his confirmation despaired at the task. It was simultaneously both an extremely protected place in that you’d need an airborne battalion to get near it and not so much so in that a single tacnuke dropped within range would obliterate everything. Such was life in the big city, one of the Secret Service agents on his detail would remark. Or back on the chicken farm, the other retorted.

    In any case, the logistics were such that a courier drove as fast as he dared with a gumball light on his government-issued Dodge towards Picosa Ranch, while at Vandenberg Air Force Base, a Hughes OH-6 observation helicopter lifted off in the semidarkness to the Reagan ranch, where a hastily constructed concrete pad that was just finished the week before awaited its arrival. The pilot radioed ahead to the duty team. Wouldn’t do to have them shoot their own intelligence briefer with a Redeye now, would it, the pilot thought darkly to himself. The National Intelligence Officer in the back, part of the regular briefing team, cursed the beers he’d had the night before with the flyboys. I was supposed to get a full eight! It’s vacation, dammit.

    President Connally arrived in his kitchen to find the large head of W. Marvin Watson, every hair perfectly in place, bent over a folder while drinking a cup of coffee that Connally’s house staff had already made up. The President imported high-grade coffee from Brazil, a deal struck on the side while down there after the ’72 campaign working a deal between one of the Houston refineries and Petrobras, the national energy company. Connally had a cup his first morning and fell in love. He’d get a barrel sent up every three months from Minais Gerais, and since moving to Washington, he was able to have it brought back with the diplomatic couriers. Now, as President, his coffee got the first-class treatment, which meant it didn’t even come out of his pocket. The do-gooder voters would probably bitch if that got out, Connally thought briefly, but most Americans wouldn’t deny the President good coffee.

    “Marvin, it’s early and you’ve got a black cloud hoverin’ over you fixing to drop a storm. What is going on and why am I not going to like it?” The deputy National Security Advisor looked up at his boss. “The President of South Korea was assassinated overnight, sir. Somehow, a young longhair type was right up front during their liberation celebration. The chargé d'affaires was there from the embassy. The student jumped up, shouted “Die, fascist pig!” in Korean, and started firing. Browning, evidently, from what little the military has told us. The KCIA has sprung into action, arresting students and dissidents all over Seoul. It’s ugly and only going to get worse,” Watson said. “How does this play out? They were already a dictatorship in all but name, so now what? A junta like the Greeks just threw out?” Connally was thinking out loud, trying to absorb what he heard with the reality of having just woken up a half hour before. “What about Japan? North Korea? Anything from either place? I mean, it was literally a celebration of their freedom from Japan. Any dead-enders there that might want to put one into Park just to show the cause of the Empire of Japan is still alive?”

    Watson nodded. “So, the Japanese are tearing through all of their intelligence to try and see if anyone from there is responsible. KCIA surely is looking at the issue—arresting the dissidents is a reflexive response based on thirteen years of Park’s influence. They’re almost certainly wondering if Kim Il-Sung did it, and let’s face it, if he could do such a thing with plausible deniability, he would. Probably wouldn’t even hesitate, the same way he came over the 38th parallel at Syngman Rhee back in 1950. Admiral Burke certainly is thinking along those lines, sir, but it’s a hell of a risk too. The ROK just took delivery of the first set of refurbished M48A3s that Chrysler Defense ginned up for them. New diesel engines, 90mm cannon, definitely more accurate than the T-54s and -55s the Norks have. Killing a President is a real casus belli, and I’m not sure they want to go there. They’re still more productive than the South, which is why Park was so gung-ho with his modernization program. Anyway, NSA has trawlers cruising along the coast well south of the 38th and their ears are perked. If something shakes loose, they’ll catch it.”

    “Marvin, I think I’d better head back to Washington. Quietly, of course. Have Kalb brief the traveling crew down here that we’re just wanting to keep a close eye on things and are going back out of an abundance of caution because comms ain’t the greatest here at the ranch. Oh, and for God’s sake, make sure Ronnie stays out at his mountaintop retreat. If it turns out the North Koreans did it, he’ll be screaming for us to rouse the ghost of MacArthur to charge north and shoot some Commies.” The President chuckled at the thought. He liked Ron. It was hard not to like him, but he just was so damned sure of himself and the way the world worked. It wasn’t like that. Shades of gray existed everywhere, and the only way you could succeed at this job was to recognize that fact, otherwise you got eaten up alive. It’s why Lyndon got himself so deep in Vietnam. He didn’t see the truth of the matter, that ‘Nam was as much of a civil war between extremists while the rest of them just wanted to live. Reagan didn’t get that, probably never would. But John Connally did, and he’d be damned if a second war on the Korean Peninsula kicked off over the certainties of others.
     
    Labor Day Weekend, 1974
  • It was as good a time as any to test the system. A long holiday weekend, with the Korean crisis having simmered down ever so slightly from its peak on the 17th of August, when it became clear the scope of the assassination of President Park Chung-hee of South Korea. The investigation found what the U.S. had feared—the man arrested under the alias “Yuki Kawagami” and known as Nanjō Seikō to his friends and classmates in Osaka, Japan was really Mun se-Gwang, a native North Korean who’d been paid half a million yen by the North Korean intelligence apparatus to assassinate the president of South Korea in the name of world socialism. The South Koreans were outraged, and had mobilized in force, while the North Koreans smugly denied having killed Park and lined up about as much artillery on the north side of the demilitarized zone as the world had ever seen in one place. Deputy Secretary of State Kenneth Rush flew to Seoul to speak with the acting President and current Prime Minister, Kim Jong-pil, and convince him that it would not be in their best interests to go to war over this. The scholarly, avuncular former law professor and president of Union Carbide had negotiated the Four-Power agreement over Berlin, and that paled in comparison to dealing with this crisis. Kim had been very clear that he expected, no, demanded the support of the United States in this matter per the Mutual Defense Treaty. Rush countered by saying that Article 1 of the Treaty specified that diplomacy would be deployed first in any conflict between the two nations. Kim’s retort was that an assassination of their president by a paid agent of North Korea was a declaration of war and demanded retaliation. Rush gently pointed out that if the U.S. joined in any retaliation, the Soviets would surely come in on the side of the North Koreans, and what good would retaliation mean if it ended with nuclear artillery falling on Seoul? Rush’s great skill was being able to raise these points in a calm, gentle way, as if he were a priest counseling a parishioner suffering a major crisis. It had the desired effect of ratcheting things down enough to where Kim didn’t cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war.

    The situation in Asia was still tense, despite the quiet backchannel communication to Pyongyang by Moscow urging them to not do any more foolhardy actions, lest they provoke a war they could not hope to contain. They specifically reminded them that the Americans had several squadrons of FB-111s in Southeast Asia, which could covertly enter Korean airspace and turn the city into a parking lot. Kim Il-Sung tried to bluster through it, act as if he was not at all responsible, but then Yuri Andropov, KGB Chairman, flew to Kim’s mountain resort and laid the message down in person: offer a quiet apology and promise to never do something this foolish again, or else you will be cut off from the aid that keeps your socialist paradise afloat. This is twice now in your lifetime that you have committed such a damnably stupid act, and brought us troubles we have no desire to deal with. Once more, and we will publicly cut you off at the knees, and a year from now, maybe two, one of your generals, or bodyguards, or somebody we can coerce will take your head too. This is not a threat, Comrade. This is a promise. Kim fumed at the statement, but nodded his head and assented to the poker-faced Slav with the receding hairline. I won’t take such foolish actions again, Comrade Chairman. Please give General Secretary Brezhnev my regards.

    The apology hadn’t yet come by the time that Labor Day weekend arrived, and with the lack of information that so often colors decision-making in a crisis, Arleigh Burke decided it would be a good time to hold a readiness drill for nuclear evacuation plans. Besides the National Security Advisor, JCS Chairman General Abrams, SecDef Bill Clements, SecState Henry Kissinger, Vice President Reagan, and the President knew. Nobody else did. The plan was that the President and First Lady would be at Camp David, and sometime during the weekend, the helicopter crew for Marine One would receive the alert and fly the President to Raven Rock. Reagan would be whisked off to Andrews and put aboard the EC-135 “Looking Glass” that was a mirror image of the CINCSAC’s plane at Offutt in Omaha. Clements, Abrams, and Kissinger would join Reagan on the Looking Glass, while Burke would be at Camp David with the President, but monitoring from the nuclear command shelter built during Eisenhower’s second term. It’d recently been refurbished because Richard Nixon, upon first visiting the presidential retreat, decided he wanted a heated swimming pool next to Aspen Lodge, the President’s cabin. Unfortunately, that location was above the shelter itself. Nixon refused to budge, and so the black budget went in the hole for $261,000 to reinforce the shelter and add some creature comforts. It was not nearly as safe from a direct hit as Raven Rock, Mount Weather, or NORAD, but it was completely secret.

    It was early Sunday afternoon, with John and Nellie lounging by the pool, when the Klaxons went off and all hell broke loose. Within seconds, Marines in camouflage holding M-16 rifles were everywhere while the Secret Service ran and guided the President, who was caught off-guard despite knowing this drill would occur sometime that weekend, to a waiting GMC Carryall. Nellie, wearing nothing more than a floppy hat and a swimsuit, was handed rubber swim shoes and hustled alongside her husband into the rear seats of the Carryall, which booked it to the helicopter pad as fast as possible without flipping the utility vehicle. From there, they were trundled into Marine One, which headed north to Raven Rock. This was the only part of the drill that would go as planned. The VH-3A helicopter deputized for Vice President Reagan at the newly refurbished Naval Observatory failed to lift off from HMX-1 (Presidential Transport Squadron)’s helipad when a compressor in the engine blew. Making matters worse, it was already the backup VH-3A being used for this drill, as the primary chopper was undergoing maintenance and was disassembled in a hangar at Naval Support Facility, Anacostia. When the Secret Service received the frantic radio transmission from the pilots of Marine Two, they threw Ron and Nancy into a limousine while the driver did the math at warp speed and gunned it down Massachusetts Avenue, sirens blaring, to the White House. The calculus was for the Vice President to be in a secure location within eight minutes of warning. They’d lost three when the helicopter failed. It took another three minutes and nineteen seconds to reach the East Wing entrance, where VPOTUS and VFLOTUS were ordered to run down two flights of stairs into the entrance for the emergency bunker underneath. Nancy Reagan, who was not accustomed to such behavior, struggled and an agent scooped her up and ran with her tiny frame in his arms into the bunker. Reagan laughed heartily at his wife being deposited onto a sofa like a child’s doll, something she found far less amusing.

    Across the river at the Pentagon, General Abrams and SecDef Clements boarded their helicopter and took off for Andrews Air Force Base, where the EC-135 was waiting, engines already firewalled and ready for liftoff. Kissinger’s helicopter, landing on the helipad atop the State Department in Foggy Bottom, had the wrong set of evacuation orders and flew north to Mount Weather instead of to Andrews, leaving Clements confused and Abrams fuming as they boarded the Looking Glass plane. Bad enough he’d been ordered to cut his smoking after the lung operation, but now the military, his military, was dropping the ball all over the place during the most sensitive of drills. The helicopters that did get off the ground reached their control points within the expected window to survive an eight-minute warning, although in a real attack, Reagan and Kissinger both would likely have been lost. The Looking Glass plane did its job safely and smoothly, as smooth as a forty-five degree angle takeoff could be, and spared its pilots and crew the wrath of an infuriated, nicotine-deprived four-star general. Admiral Burke, sitting in the Camp David shelter, was making notes furiously and grimacing as the President and the SecState were both without reliable comms to Looking Glass, and the White House Situation Room wasn’t set up to communicate with the airborne command posts, so the Vice President was on a speakerphone talking to Burke at Camp David, who also had a radio set on to communicate with the Looking Glass, which was trying to patch in the President and Secretary Kissinger. All told, it was a colossal failure of planning and organization, and spoke to how little sway the Office of Emergency Preparedness had in official Washington. It also speaks to how little Henry gave a damn about making sure this stuff worked during his four years as my predecessor. Twenty minutes later, Connally had arrived at Raven Rock, and was on the secure radio channel. Reagan, listening via the speakerphone, all too keenly felt his distance from the real power circle and resented it. Not that he’d show that, of course. He didn’t want to poison the well this early.

    The President leaned forward into the radio microphone. “Listen, boys, I don’t know what the hell that was, but I do not feel very confident in our ability to get me and my closest advisers the hell out of Washington or anywhere else in a hurry. We’ve got forces on the Korean Peninsula at DEFCON 3 hoping to hell that the two Kims don’t start firing at each other and we can’t even organize a squad of helicopters to take us to preset places, for Chrissake! Bill, Abe, you have one mission when we’re done here today, and that’s knocking some heads back at the Pentagon. So, who wants to explain this colossal failure?”

    Burke went first. “Mr. President, first and foremost, I want to apologize to you because we failed you and failed the country today. We did not have sufficient redundancies to deal with equipment issues. We did not have the proper routes and instructions placed with everyone participating in this drill. We did not have all of our communications centers properly connected to each other. We just tested the system, and we must face up to the truth: if this had been real, our ability to counterattack would have been severely compromised. You spent twenty minutes out of consistent contact. The Vice-President never got out of Washington. The Secretary of State was headed to the wrong shelter for this evacuation plan. The Secretary of Defense and General Abrams would not have been able to issue valid launch orders. In short, sir, we’d have been crippled until you made it to Raven Rock, and that’s provided that it would’ve survived a dedicated attack against it. We cannot afford this, not now, not with a brewing crisis in one of the world’s biggest flashpoints. We must make changes, some immediately, and bigger ones for the long term.”

    “Admiral Burke, I’m ready to do so. I’m definitely fixing to relieve some people of their commands,” the President replied. “What do you need to fix this up?” Nobody could see Burke smile. He finally was going to get to drive the nuclear war planning and emergency planning, something he’d waited fifteen years for.

    “Sir, in the short term we need a radio system installed at the White House that can talk to the NEACP planes.” In said White House, Reagan looked over at his military aide, who whispered, “National Emergency Airborne Command Post.” Burke continued, “We need improved radios inside Marine One and Marine Two, and we need to have two backups available at all times. The primary Marine Two was down for maintenance and the secondary failed, leaving the Vice President in the least safe location, being driven to the White House emergency bunker. That’s unacceptable. We also need to organize the evacuation plans, minimize the chance for mistakes to occur. I’d further add that OEP is completely incapable of managing these efforts in its current form and needs to be burned down and reimagined. Whatever comes from that, it needs to have real authority to make sure these things happen, or it’ll be pointless.” The retired admiral took a deep breath. “Also, sir, if we’re going to do this review, there’s one more thing.” Connally asked, “I gather this is about to be a big ask, Admiral. What are you thinking?” “Mr. President, it makes no sense to just review our defensive measures. We should use this opportunity to have a full nuts and bolts review of SIOP,” replied Burke. There it was. He’d put it on the table, the thing he’d carried with him since 1959, the idea that giving SAC all of the power to write up a nuclear wargasm (as Herman Kahn from RAND had so scathingly termed it) meant that defensive measures and civil protection had been neglected. Lyndon had gotten so deep into Vietnam that he didn’t care much about civil defense, and Nixon cared more about rattling cages than protecting citizens.

    “Arleigh, you really want to take on those flyboys again?” Abrams asked the question while dragging on a much needed Camel Light. “They ran out the clock on you last time or blocked access. Why would you go back for another round?” Burke smiled again. “Abe, the difference now is that I outrank all of them. There’s something to be said for civilian control of the military.” Clements chuckled in his seat next to Abrams aboard the Looking Glass’s conference room, where they were facing a map wall that rotated between three separate panels—North America, Europe, and the Soviet Union. During a real war, it would be illuminated in lighted, colored pins to denote nuclear detonations. Abrams wondered if he’d ever be up here for real one day, and decided he’d rather have the cancer take him than live through that.

    *****

    While the nuclear planning melodrama played out elsewhere, there was a less dramatic but equally as important meeting being held out in Virginia’s horse country. The Attorney General, the Deputy Attorney General, John Doar, and Jack Brooks were discussing the most momentous prosecutorial decision in the history of the Justice Department: whether to criminally charge the former president of the United States. They were discussing what could be best proved: the illegal use of government resources, conspiracy to illegally wiretap citizens without due process, embezzlement of political donations for personal purposes, bribery (the International Telephone & Telegraph scandal and the milk money donations—a very sensitive spot given the believed role of the current President in connecting the two sides involved in the latter), tax evasion on the sale of his vice presidential papers and his valuation of San Clemente, or finally, the overarching, easy to prosecute crime of obstruction of justice. Ruckelshaus was strongly in favor of prosecution, his moral rectitude virtually oozing from his pores. Rex Lee, the constitutional expert in the group, was on the fence, leaning to the side of no—he understood that impeachment did not preclude criminal prosecution, yet he was concerned that it would appear to be piling on and could backfire in any number of ways. Then there were the practical effects: if he was convicted, prison time would be required, and how would you protect the secrets of the Presidency without keeping him in solitary confinement, which he could appeal and likely win? John Doar, as upright an attorney as Ruckelshaus, agreed with the Attorney General that prosecution was necessary, but they’d give Nixon the chance to plead to the obstruction charge and accept probation. Doar believed that Nixon was practical enough to take the off-ramp, but having been denied the opportunity to finish fighting his impeachment by the phlebitis attack, he might just want to represent himself. It’d be a circus. Brooks, surprisingly, was leaning against prosecution as well, because he was worried it would reduce the power and prerogatives of Congress, which had been vastly strengthened by a successful removal of a President via impeachment.

    It was at this point that, after a phone call made by Ruckelshaus during a break, a fifth person joined the conclave quietly. Justice Potter Stewart of the Supreme Court was not above interjecting himself quietly into political situations that had the ability to become legal ones. By giving an indicator of how the Court might rule on a situation, he’d provided a small push to the rudder guiding the ship of state for over a decade now. Now, the AG had called him here to give a judicial view on the matter. Lee was extremely uncomfortable with Stewart’s presence but also knew that this was how the man worked, and whatever you thought of actions like this, his rulings were meticulous and fair. Stewart said that, from his viewpoint, there was no reason a verdict would be overturned by the court on constitutional grounds, and that the Justice Department had a variety of options that a state judicial system did not, such as the federal prison camp at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida’s Panhandle. Therefore, security wasn’t really an issue, either. Brooks chuckled. “Well, the Watergate Five are already there, he’d be right at home with them, wouldn’t he?” Ruckelshaus stepped back in. “Okay, so now that we have a good insight into the overarching issues here, I believe we should move back into closed session without Justice Stewart so we can make our decision.” Stewart stood up, gave a small bow with a flourish, collected his hat and left.

    The discussion went deeper into the merits of the charges. Identified early on by John Doar as one of the more evidence-rich cases, the ITT pay-for-play (a gentler way to say bribery) would turn on a couple of things. The first was if E. Howard Hunt would testify, as he played a central role in that scandal’s denouement. After lobbyist Dita Beard wrote a memo to ITT’s vice president about how a $400,000 donation to the 1972 Republican National Convention would yield a favorable antitrust decision, someone else within ITT promptly leaked it to Jack Anderson. The public fallout meant that damage control was vital—and damage control in the spring of 1972 meant the Plumbers. The Watergate prosecution team at DoJ still had not found any paper directing Hunt to plug the leaks, but what was known beyond a reasonable doubt was this: Hunt, wearing a clownish wig, snuck into the Denver hospital room where Dita Beard was staying after a believed heart attack. He proceeded to convince her of his bona fides and persuaded her to sign a fabricated statement to clear the Nixon Administration. The RNC quickly scrambled and moved the convention to Miami right after the Democrats left town from their own convention. Beard was reportedly about to be retired off soon, damaged goods in all respects, and she had been talkative enough back in 1972. Subpoenas could be used for them both, but the main concern was whether they’d testify truthfully and honestly. Hunt was already serving hard time thanks to Judge John Sirica’s sadistic streak coming out. They couldn’t threaten him with that. Beard might be offered a large payoff to go away and keep her mouth shut. There were risks, but they were manageable ones, and what they could do was dangle a commutation or reduction of sentence in return for truthful testimony. Of all of the prosecutions, ITT was by far the most time-sensitive. It’d been a little over three months since Nixon’s removal from office and there were likely to be a lot of nervous folks ready to destroy evidence. It would definitely exacerbate the wounds of Watergate and rankle a lot of right-wingers. The President might even be rather sore at his Attorney General. William Ruckelshaus, though, was not one to shy away from confrontation. He was willing to quit once before over his fidelity to the law above all else. He wouldn’t hesitate to do it again.

    “Let’s do it. John, I am going to draft an order naming you as a special prosecutor reporting to Deputy General Lee. You’ll look over all of these other cases and come to me with what, if anything, you decide to prosecute. The President hasn’t said it yet and probably won’t say it because he’s in a tenuous position as an unelected President, and I understand how difficult that is, but we must have a clean break from the illegality and the ugliness of the last administration. I thought I was coming to serve a good President, but the last year has convinced me quite otherwise. I believe the current one is a better man, and the best thing we can do for him, for the country, and for the cause of justice is to make sure that the criminality of the Nixon coterie is held to account. In the meantime, I think we’ve got enough to get a search warrant. I think we should go with Judge Carter in the Southern District of New York, don’t you?”

    Doar smiled at that, one of those subtle smiles that any one of his assistants at DOJ during his tenure as head of the Civil Rights Division would’ve recognized when he’d managed to outfox another drawling, racist attorney for the Klukkers that held power. Judge Robert Lee Carter had the name of a man that, on paper, had to have been a proponent of a return to antebellum days. However, that was not the case. Judge Carter was, in fact, a distinguished Black attorney, a lieutenant in the Army Air Corps during the Big War, a lead counsel for the NAACP on Brown v. Board of Education, the successor to Thurgood Marshall himself as general counsel of the NAACP, and a special assistant U.S. attorney in 1962 whose temporary appointment had been signed off on by Doar himself. Carter was 21-1 in arguments in front of the Supreme Court and had yet to be reversed on appeal in his eighteen months as a judge. Best of all, he’d been appointed to the bench by Richard Nixon himself. Normally cause for recusal, in this case it would insulate the warrant against charges of political impropriety.

    The Attorney General laid out his thinking. Provided they found what they were looking for, he would then follow up with charges of bribery, conspiracy to commit bribery of a government official, conspiracy to obstruct justice, and conspiracy to influence government policy via bribery. Harold Geneen, CEO of ITT; Bill Merriam, vice-president for government affairs, ITT; Herbert Kalmbach, personal attorney to Richard Nixon; and Richard Nixon himself. All four of those men would stand trial. Ruckelshaus believed to his core that America needed to purge itself of the poison of the Nixon presidency and move forward, and the only way it could happen was through justice. Justice was making the powerful atone for their crimes. The rank bribery and corruption of Richard Nixon and those around him had to be excised. It was that clear to the Attorney General. The others in the room hoped the President shared those sentiments, or at least knew enough to not stop this case from going forward.
     
    September 9-20, 1974
  • There is a rhythm to Monday mornings known throughout the industrialized world. The yawns, the strong coffee, the chatter in locker rooms and office canteens, the complaints about the commute. It’s a time when reactions are slower, the adrenaline of the work week not yet having taken hold. The perfect time, in short, for a raid on a corporate headquarters grown fat and dull-witted by its unchecked power.

    Such was the case when agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrived in the ornate lobby of the International Telephone & Telegraph headquarters at 75 Broad Street in lower Manhattan. Their heels of their shoes clicked officiously on the marbled floors toward the elevators, along with a new assistant U.S. Attorney hired for the special prosecutor’s office: Rudolph Giuliani, a former Robert Kennedy campaign worker and hotshot law clerk to U.S. District Judge L. Francis McMahon. Giuliani had the nose for the hunt and the balls for the kill, and Doar was nothing if not an excellent judge of talent. McMahon spoke highly of his clerk, as did his professors from NYU’s School of Law. Doar hired him for the special prosecutor’s office, and Giuliani wanted to be there for this moment. He knew it would make the papers and the evening news, and there was a good chance his photo would be in there. He also knew he was not to speak on camera, but that was fine by him, because a picture, as they say, is worth a thousand words. “Rudy,” as his friends knew him, was already thinking about a run for the House in a few years from his old neighborhood in Flatbush, perhaps. It’d mean a primary challenge against Libby Holtzman, or changing parties, perhaps. Giuliani had voted for George McGovern two years ago because he was Bobby’s best friend, but Ted…he wasn’t sure. The law & order mindset of Rudy was in conflict with his more sensitive, caring side—his father was a convicted felon who worked as a mob enforcer, and he loved his father. Teddy was a Kennedy, but he also was someone who struggled with drink and likely killed a woman while driving drunk on an island. Would it be worth crossing party lines? Giuliani pushed those thoughts from his mind. Had to do this job right before he could consider another.

    The elevators opened up on the executive floor, and the security guards saw the badges and the guns massed, recognized a superior force when they saw it, and stood aside without a command being necessary. Giuliani took the lead now, as the AUSA, and headed right for the office of Harold Geneen himself. The secretary went to protest and was ignored, something she was unused to and did not know how to handle. The double doors were pushed open, and the perfectly round, balding head of the chief executive officer of one of the world’s biggest conglomerates shot up in disbelief. “Mr. Geneen, my name is Rudolph Giuliani, Assistant United States Attorney, and this is a search warrant for this floor of ITT, the personal files of yourself, Mr. William Merriam, and Dita Beard, along with your company’s archives for the years between 1970-1974. These gentlemen from the Federal Bureau of Investigation will be conducting the search. I’m sure your in-house counsel would already be in here objecting, but he’s probably a bit busy with the agents searching his own office.” Geneen was a smart man, and he knew anything he said from this moment would be used in an investigation against him, so he said nothing. Giuliani laid the warrant on the great man’s desk, turned, and began listing off the items of the highest priority. Internal memos detailing interoffice planning before and after meetings with Nixon administration officials; copies of the thirteen memos sent to the SEC, then DOJ, and hidden until after the 1972 election by the former deputy Attorney General, Ralph Erickson; any memos detailing the efforts to circumvent the potential antitrust breakup that the Nixon DOJ was going to enforce until the White House stepped in; and, most damning of all, any memos involving efforts to change foreign policy. One of the items that Jack Brooks had gotten onto Doar’s desk was the coup in Chile the previous fall, and the very loud whispers that ITT had helped Pinochet’s men purchase arms and politicians. Brooks was certain the CIA had used ITT as a deniability vehicle, much as United Fruit had driven the Guatemala coup twenty years prior. Doar believed if there were any evidence of that, it’d be locked away on this floor. There was no way, for the safety of their own legal position, that ITT would just play proxy for the United States government without some sort of paper to cover their own asses.

    The news crews were outside of 75 Broad within an hour, and because the network news divisions were all located in New York, the networks had star correspondents outside. Roger Mudd from CBS, Frank Reynolds from ABC, and Peter Hackes from NBC shared space outside the entrance to 75 Broad with reporters from The New York Times, New York Daily News, New York Post, AP, UPI, and sundry local television reporters from the city and across the river in New Jersey. By the time the raid ended, reporters from the Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News were there as well. And, just as Giuliani had hoped, as the agents left with file boxes in hand or on pushcarts, his photo was snapped numerous times as he directed traffic, so to say, and the film would be on the evening news programs, and if he were really lucky, his name spoken. This was going to be an entertaining case, the young AUSA mused. Play it right, and I could be in D.C. in three years’ time.


    *****

    The pollsters at the Republican National Committee could hardly believe it. Three months prior, they thought that the party was going to get destroyed in the midterms, buried under the weight of scandal and their own chairman resigning. And yet, President Connally had brought back a perceived trust in government with the hiring of well-respected public faces like Marvin Kalb and John Scali, along with such skilled cabinet secretaries like Nelson Rockefeller. It also helped, in swing districts represented by a GOP congressman, if they voted for impeachment. There were likely losses coming, but the scale of the losses appeared to be manageable. In New York and Maryland, the Yes votes of Senators Javits and Mathias were of great help, especially to Javits, beset by the left and the right. Conversely, the No vote of Bob Dole paired with his role vigorously defending Nixon in 1972, was putting him in danger of losing. The state became “Bloody Kansas” once more, the popular congressman Dr. William “Bill” Roy running an extremely tight campaign against Dole. Congressman Roy was pitting this as a matter of integrity, that if you can’t speak truth to power, how can you speak the truth to the farmers and schoolteachers of Kansas? It put Dole, a genuine war hero who’d morphed into a political hatchetman, on unfamiliar footing. His integrity had not been challenged before. In private he damned Richard Nixon a thousand times over, while in public he spoke of the need to preserve presidential prerogative. The issues, on which Roy and Dole were largely polar opposites, got buried under the drumbeat of character. Bob Dole had never lost a fight over that before, but here was this photogenic, young, charming doctor. Dole couldn’t challenge him on service, because Roy was a retired USAF captain. Dole couldn’t challenge him on ethics, because Roy was as pure as the fallen snow. Dole couldn’t challenge Roy on anything except ambition, and Bob Dole wasn’t exactly a shrinking violet in that area. Roy had delivered over 8,000 children to parents around Topeka’s metropolitan area and spent most of his life as a Republican. Everyone liked him. It increasingly looked as if Dole would have to draw an inside straight politically to win.

    Marlow Cook was another Republican in danger with his No vote. The state’s governor, Wendell Ford, was a powerhouse in the state. The man who guided Ford’s campaign to consecutive wins for the mansion in Lexington, Walter “Dee” Huddleston, had won the other Senate seat in Kentucky two years earlier, flipping it to the Democratic column. Ford hoped to join his old friend in Washington, and Cook was flailing, down at least ten points. The vote was the least of Cook’s issues, though. A dam on the Red River, deep in the heart of Appalachia, was a hot-button issue in the state. Cook opposed it, Ford was for it, and as governor, he had the ability to do something about it—in this case, allocate surplus budget money towards building it, creating a whole bunch of new jobs in an economically disadvantaged area, and likely creating a bunch of new votes too. Cook’s campaign cried foul, tried to paint Ford as corrupt, and Ford’s campaign just parried it back to Cook voting against convicting the most corrupt, abusive president in United States history.

    Despite that, the RNC staff was cheered that it wasn’t a bloodbath. They knew they’d take a hit, but if the losses weren’t too bad, they’d be able to help President Connally get his agenda through Congress, and could bounce back big in ’76. Connally-Reagan was a dream ticket for the staffers, two well-spoken, tall, strong men of the West. Horses, cowboy hats, ranches, the American mythology running through their blood. Stu Spencer, Reagan’s advertising guru, was salivating at the thought of the upcoming campaign. He considered it a chance to help seal a Republican stranglehold on the White House. Whenever staffers got down about potential midterm losses, someone else always responded with humor. One of the more frequently heard lines in their offices was, “…it could be worse, Jerry Ford could be president!” It never failed to yield laughter.

    *****

    Less of a laughing matter was the situation in Korea, which simply refused to settle down. At long last, a letter was dispatched via the demilitarized zone, borne by the Soviet ambassador to North Korea in diplomatic vehicles and full livery, bearing the written apology that Andropov had demanded Kim il-Sung make to the South Koreans. It was written as vaguely as possible and addressed to “The Acting President of the Republic of Korea,” a calculated insult in diplomatic language. Upon its delivery, Kim Jong-pil read the note, pondered it for a minute, then pulled out a piece of official stationery and wrote in a clear penmanship, “당신의 어머니는 일본인 창녀였습니다,” then signed it, “Kim Jong-pil, President of the Republic of Korea.” He sealed it, then handed it back to the Soviet ambassador. The ambassador’s convoy then repeated the drive through the demilitarized zone until they reached the Kaesong Folk Hotel, a part of the historic Kaesong Old Town just across the border on the North Korean side. The Supreme Leader of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea sat there in the courtyard, awaiting the return of the ambassador. Kim il-Sung didn’t wait on people, and so this was excruciating to him, but nobody would know looking at his impassive mien. His aides were the ones projecting his inner feelings, though, snapping at underlings, rushing about in a frenzy of activity where nothing was actually being done, but they gave the appearance of action, which was all they needed to do to avoid the attention of the Supreme Leader.

    The convoy pulled up to the front, and the ambassador, a Byelorussian named Gleb Kriulin, alighted from the vehicle. Kriulin was a deputy member of the Central Committee, part of the upper crust of the Communist Party apparatus. He was here because he and Kim shared experience as front-line fighters during the Second World War, replacing Nikolai Sudarikov, who was being promoted to ambassador to Australia, a major leap forward in his career. Sudarikov was widely believed within the Soviet Foreign Ministry to be KGB, but unless your name was Andrey Gromyko, you weren’t going to know the answer. Kriulin, on the other hand, was nowhere near KGB. He was an apparatchik, and this was his first big assignment. He walked into the courtyard, where Kim stood to greet him. The ambassador handed over the envelope. “So soon?” Kim spoke in Russian, having learned it during the war, and remained fluent in the language. Kriulin had no such experience in Korean. He nodded. “Yes, Prime Minister Kim’s [here Kriulin used the lesser title in deference to the Supreme Leader] response was rather short. I did not see its contents before he sealed the envelope.” Supreme Leader Kim pulled out an old pocketknife he’d carried since the war, sliced through the seal, and read the enclosed note. His face turned an exceedingly bright shade of red, throwing the letter down in a fit of rage and storming out of the courtyard. An aide to the Soviet ambassador picked up the note, looked at it, then whispered in his boss’ ear, “He replied, in these exact words, “Your mother was a Japanese whore.”” The ambassador’s face took on a sour expression. “He is going to be even more intransigent now. Yuri Vladimirovich will not be pleased at all,” Kriulin whispered back. The aide looked over in surprise. “What about Andrey Andreyevich?” The ambassador grunted amusedly. “He’s not the one who came here to threaten Kim. The fallout will not land on him, so his only concern will be protecting the SALT II talks from ruin. Chairman Andropov is facing the graver challenge. Either he loses his seat atop the Lubyanka or he’ll be the one who has to figure out how to remove this self-proclaimed demigod. Neither is a fate I would choose.” With that, the ambassador got in his car for the long drive back to Pyongyang, over roads that guaranteed he’d struggle to get a nap in.

    *****

    The Single Integrated Operations Plan. It sounded so benign, Arleigh Burke thought, as he sat down in his corner West Wing office, the one that Kissinger used to hold. Benign words used to name a massive collection of paper meant to “control” the end of the world. Typical of this city. Burke was still getting a bit used to being a civilian official, but one does not refuse the President’s request, especially at a time of national distress. He fondly wished to still be in uniform some days, to order a ship out into the Chesapeake Bay just to feel the wind on his face and smell the salt water flowing in from the Atlantic Ocean. The President had been rather amused when Burke asked to conn the presidential yacht Sequoia during a dinner cruise to escape the July heat, but to the old admiral, it’d been refreshing. He felt alive in a way that you couldn’t explain to anyone that had not commanded at sea.

    The binders on the table alone had taken a direct presidential order to acquire, and even still, there was an air force officer on guard outside the office at all times during the day. The wall safe that came with Burke’s office, installed by Kissinger when he got moved up from the West Wing basement to the first floor, had to be upgraded with a hardwired alarm feature to satisfy the SAC folks. Burke thought the entire thing just more security theater, as if someone would get through all the Secret Service, the officer outside his door, and defeating his safe combination. Still, he went along with it, because the Holy Grail was now in his grasp.

    What the old admiral planned to do was an evolved version of what he’d wanted to do fifteen years prior, although now he had far better data to back his position. The bombing leg of the nuclear triad was next to useless, in his eyes. They were the most vulnerable component: slow, cumbersome, and too easily shot down well short of their targets. The years of Vietnam had demonstrated that, with shorter mission times and the same bomber wings as the ones SAC would deploy if everything went to hell, dense SAM clusters could knock out substantial portions of the B-52s. Burke knew that the USAF (and SAC, because it was always a flyboy commanding there) would never accept the elimination of their precious bombers, but he wanted to cut it off. The B-1 was foolish and a waste of money, and he wanted to strangle it while it was still in prototype (the first flight was a couple months out). The B-52s were old aircraft, and because the maintenance costs were so low, they’d survived several attempts to replace them already. Nearly 300 in service, and Burke wanted to pull all but sixty of those out of nuclear postured missions.

    In return, Burke wanted to accelerate the building schedule for the 726-class missile submarines, the Ohios, to match the scheduled deployment of the Trident C-4 missile being designed for it (at the current schedule, the 726s wouldn’t make it to sea until after the end of a second Connally administration). The lead ship, USS Ohio, had been ordered on July 1, and Burke wanted to order the next three before the end of the year—in fact, if he could get his comrades in the Navy to agree, he’d ask to put off the next round of 688-class Los Angeles fast-attack subs. Ten were already in progress between Electric Boat and Newport News Shipbuilding thanks to his old colleague, Admiral Hyman Rickover, who hated private contractors and pushed them to sign fixed-price contracts to build the 688s. Burke had an idea to use the President’s talk of public-private partnerships in favor of his goal. Mare Island Naval Shipyard in San Francisco had only stopped building two years ago. A government-owned facility, it had built seven SSBNs (submersible ship ballistic [missile] nuclear [powered]) in the past twenty years, and was still fully outfitted in its current role as a major refitting yard. A private contractor could run the yard and would hire the extra builders in return for a fixed payout with performance bonuses for early delivery. It would make a lot of naval officers happy, along with not one, not two, but nine California congressional representatives whose districts circled the Bay, some of whom were Democrats, which would only be a positive for the administration. A president could never have too many friends in the capital.

    To most, especially on the outside, this would appear like another Washington power play by Burke, doing an end run around SAC to benefit the Navy. It was more than old school ties and wearing the blue suit for decades, because that wasn’t who Arleigh Burke was. The retired admiral honestly believed that the Ohios would be far more useful than bombs dropped by an aging, slow bomber like the B-52. It allowed for the flexibility to wait, to not have to launch on warning. Bombers had to get off the ground or get obliterated. Boomers (the colloquial nickname for the missile subs) could hide under the waves of the oceans, thousands of kilometers away, a black hole, and could be communicated with far more easily as well. Hundreds of B-52s were far harder to protect and coordinate with under attack than three dozen subs at most. That would become even easier if the proposed Project Seafarer, the reduced version of its vetoed predecessor, Project Sanguine, came online. Several large ELF (extremely low frequency) transmitters could send coded burst transmissions receivable by any United States submarine while submerged, bringing them to the surface to receive the actual orders. It would be utterly game-changing, adding to the existing advantage held by the technologically superior American sub force. There had been virtually zero American SSBNs that had been successfully tracked by the Soviets, because their first two generations of Soviet subs had been poorly engineered out of the desire to rush as many as possible into production. They were so bad that American naval officers joked that they were from the Helen Keller class—deaf and blind. On the flip side, the attack subs, the SSNs, had been able to pick up and trail Soviet boomers without being detected. Now, though, that was starting to change, and Burke wanted to lock in the advantage while reducing the risk of an all-consuming nuclear cataclysm.

    Removing the large-scale bombing component from SIOP would help to substantially cut the target list back—what was the point of dropping all those warheads on the Chinese in a war against the Soviets? The Soviets and ChiComs were skirmishing at the Amur River for over a year, and the vaunted Nixon opening to Beijing was only possible because of that particular ideological rift having turned violent. If America was changing its tune regarding Peking (and the decision over whether to commence actual diplomatic ties was being debated in both capitals while special envoy David K.E. Bruce, the famed diplomat, held regular discussions in Peking with Zhou Enlai, the official who’d convinced Mao to take this chance), then the SIOP should be updated to reflect that as well, and yet, it hadn’t. There had been zero changes. Every city from Harbin to Shanghai to Peking to Guangzhou to Wuhan and everything in between would be obliterated if America and the Soviet Union went to nuclear war, even if the Chinese hadn’t fired a single shot at either side. That was the insanity behind SIOP, the scornful phrase of Herman Kahn entering his mind again, “Wargasm.” Burke had known it as this massive, unjustifiable targeting that had endured since he was Chief of Naval Operations.

    Despite the work of Robert McNamara to create tiered attack options in SIOP, the fact remained that a lot of unnecessary “soft” targets remained, like Petropavlovsk. The city was 20+ kilometers across the bay from the actual submarine base that was the important target. There was no great industrial production in Petropavlovsk, no massive amount of natural resources. It was a mid-size city practically on the other side of the world from Moscow, and SIOP treated it as a worthy target in a full retaliation strike. The city was home to approximately 175,000 people, none of whom needed to die, yet all of whom would in a nuclear war. Burke reflected that SIOP as presently constituted was an article of vengeance, determined to destroy every last remnant of the other side’s society because of their political system and the presumed belief that it was too dangerous to allow to live. Those people, though, most of them didn’t choose Communism. It was just what the system was, the same as free elections being in the DNA of Americans. Snuffing that city, like so many others, had no point. It certainly didn’t help win any wars. Vengeance was not a good endgame for any war. Nuclear war was a danger to every human on the planet, and nobody, Burke thought, should have the power to end so much life. Right now, when relations with the Soviets were as good as they’d ever been in the last thirty years, was the time to dial down the severity of nuclear war. Neither side, the West or the East, would be able to take another inch of land after the overwhelming salvo of missiles and bombs that would almost certainly comprise the first launch. The idea of limited strikes flew out the window once you thought it through, because it’d escalate, every time. One nuke begets another begets two begets ten and within hours, it’s Armageddon. Acting as if any other scenario were possible was delusional, and Burke’s was a keen analytical mind, not given over to the fantasies of men like General Thomas Power, SAC’s former commander, who thought America could shatter the Soviets and survive.

    Nearly as large an obstacle as SAC in changing the SIOP was the recently signed Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT). The treaty specifically limited the number of submarine ballistic missile launch tubes and modern submarine platforms (the modern term was a way for the Soviets to get a whopping eighteen more submarines – paradoxically, they felt more secure about having more subs even though it made it obvious to any impartial observer how large the quality gap between the two nations was). For the United States, that meant 656 launch tubes on a total of 44 submarines. Currently in service were five classes of missile subs, the George Washingtons, the Ethan Allens, the Lafayettes, the James Madisons, and the newest, the Benjamin Franklins. They comprised a grand total of forty-one subs, and there’d have to be retirements to accommodate the Ohios when they came online. A whopping twenty-four Ohio-class subs were planned over ten years’ time, but Burke knew that if the discussed SALT II talks began at year’s end, that could be scrapped in a hurry. The ten Washington/Allen subs were engineered and built under Burke’s tenure as Chief of Naval Operations, and while he was rightly proud of how quickly he’d gotten them built and to sea, with proven launch capability of the first-run Polaris missiles, he wasn’t going to be swayed by sentiment. The Ohio subs would come first. One for one replacement as much as possible (the mix of launch tube counts meant that the 656 tube-limit had already been reached while being three subs under the limit, and the Ohio subs would, if built in full, invalidate nearly the entire rest of the boomer fleet, at 576 tubes over 24 ships), but it would really be two Ohio entering service for every three Washington/Allen class leaving service at the start, and the tough choices would come later. If the accelerated pace that Burke wanted to invoke were to take place, then six of the first-run boomers needed to be retired or converted. There’d been talk in Tom Moorer’s office about converting them to standard SSNs or special operations subs, carrying Marines and SEALs into missions behind enemy lines. They were meant to avoid detection, and were ideal in that regard, but their size (nearly twice as heavy as the Sturgeon fast-attack subs, the newest in the fleet) was an argument against that.

    He had only ten more weeks to sort all of these issues out.
     
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    October 30, 1974
  • The term “October Surprise” had been in the political lexicon of Americans for a century, at least, and to those with the keenest of political antennae in the nation’s capital, the time was ripe for the President to launch one. In this highly irregular year, though, it rather made sense that the electoral earthquake wasn’t engineered at all, but instead emanated from a more natural combustion in the frozen woods west of Moscow. A few days prior, Leonid Brezhnev, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, suffered a severe stroke at his dacha. While they sat on it for a few days, hoping Brezhnev would recover, by the 30th it appeared unlikely that the man would speak again. Like Lenin and Stalin before him, the current head of the Soviet Union’s Politburo and the Communist Party apparatus was a voracious smoker, and when that was combined with the stress of the job, the results were predictable. When the realization sank in, a call was placed to the office of Ambassador Walter Stoessel, asking him to come to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a Stalinist-era building resembling that of a Pharaoh’s throne in shape, while possessing all the charm of a T-64 tank. The ambassador’s visit was accomplished with the normal manic detail to security and secrecy that the Soviets were known for.

    Andrey Gromyko, Soviet Minister of Foreign Affairs, did not mince words. Brezhnev was severely ill and unlikely to recover. The Soviets had no intention of going public with the news yet, but they were informing America as it was likely that the SALT II summit would be postponed. Stoessel tried to inquire as to more details, but the man whose nickname around the Kremlin was “Ass of Stone” had not gotten there by being voluble. Upon his return, the ambassador began immediately coding a telex for transmission to Kissinger at the State Department, which was a combination of few facts and much speculation. The position in Moscow was as much intelligence officer as it was diplomat, and the same went for Anatoly Dobrynin, the Soviet Ambassador in Washington. Unbeknownst to Kissinger or Stoessel, one of the embassy staffers had a lucrative side gig as a confidential source for Newsweek’s Moscow correspondent, Al Friendly, Jr., son of the legendary journalist Al Friendly. Friendly Sr. had been headed for the top spot at The Washington Post when Ben Bradlee swooped in and stole that away from him. Junior had been in the business for fifteen years and recently won the prestige appointment in Moscow. The newsmagazines, more than any other news outlets, relied heavily upon money to grease the wheels. Government officials got to write blurbs for $25 in the “Periscope” section of Newsweek, for example. Dinners and cigars and whiskey were used elsewhere in return for juicy leads for purloined documents. In this case, it was more than worth the bottle of Chivas Regal that served as payment.

    Friendly knew there was only one way to handle news of this magnitude, and it wasn’t going to be in Moscow. He booked a flight out of Sheremtyevo International Airport for the following morning to go to Paris, home of Newsweek’s European bureau. Friendly wasn’t sure who had more bugs in the Moscow embassy, CIA or the KGB, and Paris would be safe from the prying ears of both countries. There would be another flight there, that of Osborn Elliot, the executive editor of the magazine, who wanted to hear this in person. Competition would make him do his best to keep it from Bradlee, whom Elliot had mentored for a time while serving as managing editor (the number two slot at any publication) when Bradlee was Washington bureau chief for Newsweek. Bradlee would want the news, of course, another scalp on a belt that already included the Pentagon Papers and the first impeached & removed president in American history. Elliott didn’t know the details of the story, but the short phone call he received from Friendly told him that this was a story where Elliot would want to hold it and make sure it got responsible treatment, which is easier to do with a weekly magazine versus a daily newspaper. Not that his former protégé was irresponsible, but the amount of time spent considering the fallout of a story was more compressed in the newspaper world. Friendly, of course, had his own reasons for making sure Bradlee didn’t know a thing until they went to print. A little revenge for Pops. Ben’ll understand. Hell, he might even send me one of his famous letters.

    Friendly arrived first at the brand new Charles de Gaulle airport, which opened the previous March, and marveled at how spacious it was, how high the ceilings were, and at the massive electronic flight status board. The baggage claim was faster than Orly ever had been, and Friendly hailed a cab into Paris. He’d booked a room at the Villa Panthéon, a charming boutique hotel in the Latin Quarter on a quiet side street. This ensured a much better chance of secrecy than the bigger, fancier hotels along the Champs-Élysées. He ordered a glass of Bordeaux at the bar, something that was rather cheap to do, and waited for Elliott to arrive. Friendly was on a second glass when the balding, perpetually rumpled editor came through the doors. Friendly waved him over to the bar, where Elliott ordered a scotch, neat, and the two retired to a table on the sidewalk. It was an unseasonably warm day, in the mid-60s, and the sun was out. Coming from Moscow, which was already freezing, Friendly was glad to be outdoors in the sun. Elliott took a large slug from his scotch and looked at his Man in Moscow. “Okay, Al, I flew six hours from New York to listen to you, so what’s so damned secret?” Friendly sipped at his Bordeaux. “Oz, I got the summary of a cable being sent back to Washington from the embassy. Brezhnev is incapacitated and likely to die. He had a massive stroke. The Soviets hoped he’d bounce back, but when he didn’t, they started to panic a little. Called the ambassador to the Foreign Ministry where Gromyko told Stoessel that the Vladivostok summit was off and swore him to secrecy. Such a story, of course, is sure to drive them insane, but this story is huge. There’s going to be a massive fight to replace Leonid Il’ych—he’d been making moves to fully sideline Kosygin and Podgorny to ensure nobody would threaten his seat. They’ve got all this oil money coming in and instead of resolving the issues with housing or consumer goods, they’re just pouring out military aid to other nations. Buying the peace, if you will, and subsidizing oil purchases by the Pact nations. Whoever replaces him is going to swing one way or the other. If it’s a hardliner like Suslov, we’re going to be in big trouble. He hates detenté and will gladly spike it, but if it’s Kosygin or Podgorny, expect some radical reforms to open up that economy. Kosygin is probably the smartest guy there, which in a way makes him dangerous, but he genuinely wants peace because he wants to cut back on the military spending. That, of course, will set off Marshal Grishin, who thinks World War III is always imminent.”

    Elliott took another drink. “How solid is your source, Al?” “Embassy staffer, handles comms. I get him a good bottle of Chivas whenever I leave Moscow and he gives me interesting tidbits. It’s a cold, miserable place and you don’t have much of a social life. We assume all of our apartments are bugged. The embassy has more bugs than a Bronx tenement, except they’re all electronic and not usually ours. We all have tails, get followed. They distrust journalists in general, but because my dad was an intel officer during the war, they really distrust me,” Friendly replied. “Oz” nodded. “Okay, I’m going to want to talk to legal about this. He didn’t hand you the actual cable, correct?” The correspondent shook his head in the negative. “Excellent, so our embassy won’t revoke your credentials. Is there anyone at all in their bureaucracy who will talk, Central Committee?” The editor knew it would be a no, but he had to ask anyway. Friendly confirmed that it was a non-starter. “We’ll co-byline it for you, because I’m going to have Kosner backstop this in Washington, maybe see if someone at State will talk. You know how that place is, especially with Kissinger being the leaker-in-chief for the past five years,” Elliott commented. Friendly thought about it, and decided solo glory was useless if the story didn’t run. This would be the cover and it would be a big one. “Sure, Oz, I’d love the help. What else do you need from me?” “Nothing much. You ready to start writing?” The two men got up, Friendly paid the tab at the bar, and they took their bags up to their respective rooms before coming back outside to catch a cab for the bureau. Elliott would call back to D.C., telling Kosner to be ready for a telex with instructions. Friendly began typing away at one of the floater desks, and his copy would be taken by Elliott back to New York. Friendly looked up after a while at Elliott, who was making notes at a nearby desk. “Oz?” “Yeah, Al?” “Can you give my dad a call when you get back, tell him he should make sure to get the next issue? I think he’d love it.” Elliott smiled. “Of course. I might even have Ed hand-deliver it to him.”

    Ed Kosner was the man who’d headed the Watergate coverage for the last year and a half as assistant managing editor in Washington, and it was generally agreed that Newsweek had excelled at the task, providing top-tier analysis and solid reporting. Now Kosner himself was working the phones, at 36 still fresh and energetic. He had cultivated sources all around town, having worked under Bradlee for two years when that man was still helming the bureau in D.C. Bradlee had given him his first big assignment, sending him to write about how Jacqueline Kennedy was adapting to life after the murder of her husband, former President John F. Kennedy. Kosner handled the topic with sensitivity and proceeded to climb the ladder. He was supposedly in line whenever Oz retired in New York—the man was in demand. He was chairman, president, and editor of the magazine, and Columbia was after him to become a full professor at their journalism school, generally regarded as one of the top ones in the nation. Kosner would be the youngest editor in the magazine’s history if he got promoted to that spot, and that was just another prod for an already driven young man to help confirm this massive scoop. After spending a couple of hours working some contacts of his elsewhere in the bureaucracy, Kosner realized that there was someone who could definitely confirm—the only issue was that there was an equal chance the man would squeal to his boss, old Henry himself. Kosner thought about it, picked up the phone a couple of times and put it back down again, wondering if it were worth the gamble. The man in question had recently been put down around some reporters rather viciously by the Secretary of State, and was likely still smarting from that. That would be a reason he’d be willing to talk, just to stick it to “Super K,” as an earlier issue of Newsweek had dubbed the SecState. On the other hand, this man had been called “Kissinger’s Kissinger,” by many, another German Jew who’d fled the Nazis, joined the U.S. Army, and fought against them. That gave him a very close bond with his boss.

    Finally, Kosner pulled the trigger. He dialed the number from his Rolodex. It only took two rings for the recipient to answer. “Sonnenfeldt.” “Hal, it’s Ed Kosner. Care to grab lunch, say about 12:30? I’ll pay.” The Counselor to the Secretary of State looked at his calendar. “Yes, that should be fine. How about Sans Souci?” That was immediately followed by a belly laugh from Sonnenfeldt, who knew that Ben Bradlee, Art Buchwald (humor columnist at the Post), and the general counsel for the newspaper, Edward Bennett Williams, all ate lunch there regularly. Kosner smiled. “Duke Zeibert’s. A corned beef sounds amazing right about now.” Zeibert’s was also well-known for its high-end clientele. Now it was Sonnenfeldt’s turn to chuckle. “Okay, Ed, you got me. Scholl’s, then. It’s a 15-minute walk. Anonymous.” The counselor hung up. Kosner made a note to write an expense report for the lunch, even though it’d be cheap. Why spend money when a fabulously wealthy owner could spend it instead?

    An hour later, the two met in line at Scholl’s, a buffet cafeteria for lunch, enjoyed by everyone. The food was tasty, if not healthy, and it was busy. After getting their food and paying the cashier, they found a table in between some businessmen and some construction workers, a perfect pair of bookends who would not care a whit about their conversation. “So, Hal,” Kosner started in between bites of his pastrami on an onion roll, “what’s Henry think about Leonid Il’ych and his…misfortune?” The counselor to Kissinger kept a perfectly good poker face while blandly asking, “What misfortune are you talking about?” Oh, but I bet you’re a good cardsharp, Hal, Kosner thought beneath his own smile. “We’ve gotten information we consider authoritative that the Boozer-in-Chief had a major stroke and the Vladivostok summit is off. That he’s probably not going to recover. It would be nice if you’d confirm. Doesn’t have to be by name, just a State Department source.” Sonnenfeldt considered that. “Ed, you do realize how bad this could get, right? The way the forces are arrayed, the wildcard being the chairman of the KGB? Are you sure that’s a story you want to run?” Asking the question served as a confirmation, however indirectly, that the story was true. Kosner felt a surge of excitement. “Hal, if it were to get as bad as you say it could be, the people should know about it. And it’s not like the administration has a ton of credibility about dangers after what Nixon did. I did note, however, that you didn’t deny it. Very Ziegler-ish of you.” Sonnenfeldt put down his food. “Ed, I like you, but don’t compare me to that wehklagend kleine Scheiße again, please.” Kosner didn’t ask for him to translate, he could tell by the reappearance of the Berlin accent of the State Department man that it was not something to repeat. “Okay, Hal, I’m sorry. So, in or out?”

    “Brezhnev did have a stroke. No communication ability, nor is he walking, according to what Gromyko told Walt in Moscow. Probably his awful personal habits coupled with the stress of being the leader of that behemoth—he smokes like a chimney, drinks like a fish. When I’ve gone over with Henry before, it’s astonishing what his appetites are. There’s been some intel that he’s also terrified of nuclear war. Probably the only real reason we’ve reached detenté with the Soviets, although it is strange that his alliances are with the hardliners for domestic reasons. Anyway, the way this plays out if he’s done for is hard to figure out. Kosygin has been largely sidelined, even if he continues to head the government. Podgorny still has substantial influence, although Kirilenko probably controls most of the bureaucracy. Suslov is the kingmaker—he can never take the chair himself. Andropov has been cozy with Brezhnev, yet we’ve heard that he’s a purist who despises the corruption around Brezhnev and his clique. There’s a lot about the Politburo that resembles the school I went to in Britain as a teenager. Kosygin and Podgorny could make a move if they can get someone else on their side—Kirilenko, perhaps. Grechko is like Suslov, will never take the chair himself because the Party does not trust the military, but his support will still be valuable. Understand this: Whatever we do in the next few weeks will have enormous impact on our future relations with the Soviets. We have to be measured in our responses and sensitive to their situation. Senator Jackson, for example, does not understand this. We have worked five years to bring detenté, and it could disappear in a heartbeat if we push them the wrong way right now. It is only because of detenté that Gromyko had the space to tell us what was happening over there. If we blow it, then we’re right back to 1962 again. Even someone inclined to continue it will be in a delicate situation, because they don’t have Brezhnev’s pedigree. You’re too young to really remember how Beria fared, but he wanted to reform, leaned forward too far without consolidating his position, and they shot him. Those worries still permeate the thoughts of every Politburo member today.” Sonnenfeldt leaned back in his chair while Kosner hurried to finish taking down that whole exposition.

    “Is this a wave-off, essentially, a warning that Oz should spike this?” Kosner prayed it wasn’t the answer. “No, Ed, Oz Elliott should not in any way discern my motivation as a desire to exercise any censorship or prior restraint. It is merely my desire to convey to you and to the Newsweek editors the situation as it is. It’s why I came to lunch.” Sonnenfeldt smiled. Kosner closed his notebook. “Okay, if it runs, attribution will be to State Department officials, nothing specific. That should pass muster.” Kosner laid a couple of dollars on the table for the tip and left first. Sonnenfeldt decided to go back for some pie. They made it good here.

    *****

    George Bacon was in a jovial mood. The first trial raid of the Cheyenne helicopters had been a rousing success. Bacon was a former Green Beret, now a CIA field officer, and because of his experience in Vietnam, his first posting was in Laos. Director Nitze thought it was a perfect place to run the trial from, because it wasn’t in Vietnam proper, and aid to Laos had not been cut off by the Congress. Another sleight of hand pulled by the bureaucratic master, the Cheyennes were piloted by VNAF officers, with Air America copilots to help supervise and guide them. The target had been a fueling station on the Ho Chi Minh trail, with PAVN trucks and BTR-50s lined up, guards out with portable SAM launchers but not aimed in any direction, unaware that a pair of Laotians were hidden deep in the trees and quietly radioing back snippets of information to Bacon. The four Cheyennes took off when it became clear the vehicles were going to be there for a while. Buzzing in underneath the radar floor at 224 mph, they fired multiple cluster rockets first, which reduced the amount of portable SAMs available to fire back with, and then they deployed the TOW missiles, eliminating multiple BTR-50s. With the SAMs unable to acquire targets because the helicopters were too close and too low, they pressed their advance with the 30mm cannons, taking out the trucks and blowing holes in the pipeline. The fuel spill added to the devastation already inflicted, catching fire and causing further chaos. The Cheyennes spun around and used their miniguns to do another pass, then took off west for Long Cheng, the CIA’s black site that was still unknown to virtually everyone on Earth, including Congress. The entire attack had lasted under ten minutes, but a whole company of PAVN soldiers, not Vietcong, had been decimated by four Cheyenne helicopters working with the element of surprise.

    Bacon composed a short coded message that he sent using the communications building at Long Cheng, as state of the art as it got. Even though the U.S. had officially pulled out after the Paris Peace Accords, both Bill Colby and Paul Nitze had continued to insert CIA officers into the country because nobody knew about the airfield, and thanks to Air America (the CIA-owned front that was as much its paramilitary air force as it was a cargo company), it was the easiest covert op to keep going that the CIA had ever known. They had night-vision goggles, satellite communications, and an airfield kept in pristine condition. It was the perfect place for the Cheyennes to stage from, and after receiving Bacon’s message, Nitze called Lockheed to press for accelerated production. One mission wasn’t enough to bring to the Oval Office, but if they could pull off a couple more ambushes, especially a bigger one, that would be something to hand the President.

    *****

    brezhnev newsweek mockup.jpg


    The Brezhnev story broke on the Monday morning newscasts, The CBS Morning News and NBC’s Today both led with it, while ABC was forced to just air a “Breaking News” graphic as they had yet to launch their new morning show. Frank Reynolds did about thirty minutes from Washington, while the other networks covered it at the top of each hour for about ten minutes. As a courtesy, Elliot had delivered copies the night before to the White House so that the aides who arrived in the predawn hours would have time to read it, digest it, and write their memos for the President. Connally, of course, knew everything that was in the article, but such a close-held secret leaking out this fast was going to raise hackles with the Soviets. Kissinger was on the phone to the President to proclaim his desire to catch and fire the leaker before Big John had even finished his breakfast. This proclamation made Connally roll his eyes, as he knew well that this was how Henry operated, and he’d have put money on Henry himself being the leaker if it wasn’t so damaging to Henry’s goals with SALT II. The President leaned back as Henry went on, sipping his coffee and thinking about who knew. It didn’t take long before he recognized that it was probably a low-level person who confirmed, no matter how Newsweek framed it, a comms center employee at Foggy Bottom or something of the sort, someone who saw the cables back and forth with Moscow. Maybe a secretary. Connally shrugged mentally—the Soviets had to be shitting themselves right now, but they always proclaimed collective leadership and now they’d have the chance to prove it. There’d be a lot of Sturm und Drang coming from Gromyko and Dobrynin, but that’s all it would be, noise.

    Barnes came in to give his boss the morning brief and agenda—today had been scheduled to be one of those days that Presidents love, a Rose Garden ceremony for the new World Series champions, the surprising Texas Rangers, managed by Billy Martin, who’d turned around a club that lost an astounding 105 games the year before. Martin had made a number of roster moves before the owner who’d brought him in as manager/general manager, Bob Short, sold the club to a wealthy oil supplier, Brad Corbett. Corbett decided he would be his own general manager, but as the club did well in the first three months, leading the AL West, Corbett had left the roster alone. After falling behind the Oakland Athletics in July, it took every last bit of Martin’s being to convince Corbett not to start making crazy trades. After the All-Star Game, Martin made all the right decisions with the lineup, catching the A’s and passing them in a wild final weekend. They then went into the American League championship series with the AL East champion Baltimore Orioles. It went all five games, but the Rangers prevailed and made it to the World Series to face the MLB's winningest team, the Los Angeles Dodgers, whom they defeated in six games.

    The deciding game was played at Arlington Stadium, one of the only games played during the daytime the entire year, since there were no awnings and it was the hottest place in the entire league. Connally had been there—an event that made the Secret Service nervous as hell, and he’d arrived after the game started, a concession to security. When the Rangers won, Connally made his way down to the locker room, startling MLB commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who’d not expected this. When the cameras came on, the nation saw the President in the background, beaming like a schoolgirl who’d just gotten to kiss her crush. Billy Martin, for once in his life, was at a loss for words when the President gave him a big bearhug and pulled a cigar out for him. It seemed so out of character for Connally, but the man took such great pride in Texas, and Martin’s story echoed his own, a kid from a small town who fought his way to the top. So, today, everyone on the Rangers was far more prepared for their President. They brought a Rangers jersey and a plaque inscribed for “the most powerful fan in baseball.” Connally loved it so much that he had it framed and hung in the private study off of the Oval Office.

    As the most powerful fan in baseball celebrated with his home state team, the rest of official Washington was ablaze with chatter about the Brezhnev story. The conservatives were warning anyone within earshot that a hardliner like Grishin would come to power, the liberals were voicing hope that Kosygin would become the new General Secretary, and the reporters scurried about, trying to get it all on paper or camera. Teddy Kennedy had put a statement out in time for the 8 am coverage on the morning shows, and would end up giving interviews to his hometown Boston Globe, as well as the Los Angeles Times and Miami Herald, by day’s end. He’d cut back substantively on his drinking, too—a doctor-professor from Harvard Medical School had provided him Naltrexone, a drug deep into its FDA trials for its ability to curb addictions with opioids. The doctor thought it was worth trying for a man who wanted to be President, who had a problem with alcohol, and who could, perhaps, help win the FDA’s approval for it if he won the Presidency. Only Joan and his chief of staff knew that particular secret, in fact, she was considering trying it too watching what it’d done for her husband. Teddy’s sobriety had cut down on his penchant for womanizing, which was doing wonders for their marriage. It had been rocky from the start—a rushed engagement, followed by Joan’s reluctance to meet at the altar, and then Joe Kennedy’s intervention to push her forward into the marriage. Shortly thereafter was the 1964 plane crash, then Chappaquiddick, Ted Junior’s bone cancer, and just a couple months ago, a near-riot in Boston where white families protesting integration began throwing insults…followed by various objects. The rollercoaster had been brutal and she’d long been ready to get off. The past few months changed her thinking—the ride might just be leveling off.

    Others joined in on the commentary, looking to boost their own stature. Scoop Jackson held a full-blown press conference, taking questions and giving bold pronouncements on the future, or lack thereof, he saw for the Soviet Union. Lots of bluster, warnings about the need to increase the defense budget in case a hardliner like Suslov or Grishin took the reins in Moscow—Scoop was laying down his own markers as he plotted the announcement of his own run for President. James Buckley prevaricated about the evils of Communism and how the felling of Brezhnev was a sign from God. John Stennis drawled that apparently Brezhnev couldn’t hold his liquor. By that evening, Ambassador Dobrynin appeared on all three network news broadcasts to angrily deny that Brezhnev was on the way to a state funeral thrown in his honor. There’d also been an equally angry call to Henry, about how they broke their word. Kissinger swore up and down he’d never do such a thing, and how could Dobrynin accuse him after all they’d done together? The two diplomats went back and forth, the Russian heated throwing accusations of treachery out, the German-Jewish American cajoling, pleading with the ambassador to listen to him, to believe him. Henry had learned the art of wearing down the person on the other side of the table, or phone line, and it worked. Dobrynin finally relented. He would advise Gromyko to continue on with the plans for SALT II. Those plans, of course, were rather dependent on who became the next General Secretary.

    Eight days until the midterms.
     
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    Updates of comings and goings
  • Greetings, everyone. The midterms are upon us. I've created a spreadsheet of every House and Senate seat, tinkered and gamed out scenarios, and in general planned an interesting, somewhat unpredictable result. Big John is going to be in San Antonio to watch it all go down. Larry O'Brien is going to spend his last election as DNC chairman watching in DC. Pundits will pundit, some familiar faces will end up in unfamiliar situations, and the sands of time will be even more scattered from OTL than before.

    Strap in, it's going to be eventful.
     
    November 5th-6th, 1974 -- Midterms, part one
  • Midterm elections for presidents have historically been one thing: an exercise in damage control. Presidents know they’re going to lose seats. It’s almost guaranteed. The degree to which it happens is small (Nixon in 1970 only lost twelve House seats while miraculously gaining two Senate seats) or massive (eighty years prior, Grover Cleveland somehow managed to lose an astonishing 127 House seats and four Senate seats, taking Democrats from control of the House to a mere footnote for the next two years). John Connally woke up that day, though, with the confidence that he’d be like Nixon and not like Cleveland. There had already been a number of successes, such as keeping the two Koreas from shooting at each other, and keeping SALT on track despite Brezhnev’s untimely departure from the stage. More importantly, the people were beginning to trust their government again, against all odds. Marvin Kalb held court daily in the press room and the delight of having one of their own, who wasn’t arrogant and secretive, had muted a press corps that had grown vicious in Nixon’s last days. While criticisms and tart questions abounded, Kalb’s decency often won the day. The clips of Kalb on the nightly news broadcasts were a stark departure from the terse, persnickety Ron Ziegler, and that, in turn, influenced the feelings of the electorate.

    Most helpful of all, perhaps, was that Watergate had been brought to a close with real justice, the impeachment and conviction of Richard Nixon. It had been a demonstration of government working as designed, of justice winning out. Connally had seamlessly taken office, and won the hearts of the conservative base by naming Ronald Reagan as his vice-president, while acting moderately enough to not scare off the many true independents that still existed amongst the American voters. It was as good of a transition as the GOP could’ve hoped for. By the same token, the choice of Reagan had put off a sizable number of liberal Republicans, people who were already appalled at how the party aided, abetted, and protected Nixon. That would prove decisive in some close races.

    By midday, President Connally had flown to San Antonio and then driven to his polling place in Floresville, the small town southeast of the city where his ranch was located. After casting his ballot and doing his bit for the cameras, he drove back to San Antonio, where he’d rented out one of the hacienda-themed suites at the top of the Hilton Palacio del Rio on San Antonio’s famed Riverwalk. It had views of both the city and the river below. The Secret Service had the two suites on either side, one for operations/monitoring and the other for off-duty agents to sleep in. The agents in the motorcade parked underneath the hotel at the service entrance, and the service elevator went straight up to the top floor. The President walked in and tossed his jacket on a chair. Ben Barnes came in behind him, inspecting the room to make sure the hotel staff had brought the right bourbon up, added the extra phone lines for calls during the night, and had the three televisions set up in the living room area. He needn’t have worried. This location was the last big project of Old Man Conrad himself, and everything had been done with precise detail. Barnes smiled, and then phoned room service for lunch to be sent up. In a few hours, the room would fill up with local political allies and the big donors. Amongst them would be David Parr from AMPI, and he’d shake hands with the President, they’d smile, lean in close, chuckle over something only the two of them knew, and Parr would move on to conduct business. Connally would not be here without Parr, and AMPI would not have survived a few years ago without Connally. That a man died in the process was of no concern. Jake Jacobsen had been weak and he died in a way that only a weak man would thirteen months ago, helping set all of this in motion. The fun part was, the President thought, nobody else knew. It would just be something else to smile about, he hoped. With that, he sat down to read over economic figures sent over by Rockefeller. Nelson had done as good as he’d hoped, showing his sharp business intellect while also presenting the moderate image that Connally wished to project to get his legislation passed.


    *****

    In Washington, the DNC brass were gathered at the Hay-Adams Hotel, in their own suite, watching the same results as they began to come in. Larry O’Brien and Jean Westwood, the previous two chairpersons, were up there with the current one, Robert Strauss, who, irony of ironies, had been close with John Connally when they both worked for Lyndon. Now they were political adversaries, and Strauss’s job was to keep strong congressional majorities to leverage for 1976. Kennedy had already declared, and there’d be some others joining him based upon what happened tonight. Strauss had, along with Albert and Mansfield, designed the common program to run the midterms on--Honesty. Integrity. Belief in the will of the people.

    As both sides gathered, and it struck nine p.m. in the east, the picture started to become clearer. Marlow Cook was getting thumped in Kentucky, and Wendell Ford was going to waltz into the Senate. Jacob Javits was ahead, narrowly, in one of those divided races that only New York seemed to have. Charles Mathias would hold in Maryland, and in New Hampshire, Louis Wyman and John Durkin were in a knife fight. Shockingly, the same was happening next door in Vermont, where the expected win by Democratic prosecutor Patrick Leahy over the state’s lone congressman, Republican Richard Mallary, was being disrupted by a bespectacled social worker from Burlington named Bernard Sanders. In a state where just over 173,000 people would vote, every last voted really did count, and Sanders had peeled off a little over five percent of the electorate with his calls to democratic socialism. Speculation abounded that a recount might be necessary. By midnight, 11 pm in San Antonio, Connally and his inner circle, along with the donors, were unsure whether to be happy that things weren’t worse or gravely concerned that the right flank of the party was in danger of being tossed on its ear in the Midwest, of all places. Milton Young was down narrowly to his Democratic challenger, the former three-term governor William L. Guy. In Kansas, Bill Roy was beating Bob Dole, against what seemed to be all odds. Connally blurted out, “He was a damn fool to not vote for conviction. Bob’s not likeable enough to be principled, especially after Dick’s meltdown on the floor.” Nobody was terribly surprised. They knew the President valued pragmatism above all else. Either way, losing Senate seats was not something they wanted. Too much of that and a filibuster couldn’t even be sustained. Ben Barnes, making notes at the conference table while making calls, had heard his boss, and privately thought a big loss would be a positive. He thought Hugh Scott was a weasel, unable to show any courage or lead anyone to anything.

    Just as the DNCers were about to erupt with glee, Florida came in with a surprise. Reagan’s strong campaigning there for Jack Eckerd had brought a corresponding drop in some of the American Independence Party (George Wallace’s segregationist creation) vote for its candidate, a true spoiler who’d been polling at 15-18%, John Grady. Grady wound up with only about 11.5%, and Eckerd pulled off the victory, holding a seat thought lost. The Midwest continued to be tighter than Nixon’s sphincter upon hearing about the ITT indictments—Roy had the slightest of leads on Dole, but with the city vote more Democratic, he was expected to hold it. Milton Young and William Guy were literally a couple hundred votes apart. In Iowa, David Stanley looked like he was going to pull off a heist of the seat Harold Hughes was retiring from. It was just a few thousand votes, but compared to the other two races, it felt like a landslide. Henry Bellmon looked to be clinging to his Oklahoma seat by his fingertips, but a win would be a win. Richard Schweiker, who’d assiduously courted the union vote for years in Pennsylvania, had parlayed that into a comfortable re-election. Ohio, a state with a deeply conservative governor, where Nixon had swept to victory two years before, had resoundingly chosen Apollo astronaut John Glenn as its next senator. He’d deposed Howard Metzenbaum in the primary and then destroyed Ralph Perk, a hapless Republican who only polled 30% of the vote.

    Connally was not drunk, as he’d carefully managed his bourbon intake throughout the night so he could look over all the results with a gimlet eye. By a little after two in the morning, it was clear that the GOP had minimized their losses in the Senate. Vermont and New Hampshire would both go to a recount, but at the moment, Republicans had kept both seats. That was better than they could say in the Plains states. Milton Young had lost in North Dakota to William Guy. Further south in Kansas, Bill Roy had received stronger than expected turnout in Topeka and Kansas City/Overland Park, enough to overcome Bob Dole’s strong support in the farm counties. Next door in Iowa, though, David Stanley had narrowly snatched away Harold Hughes’ seat from Democrats. The last Senate race to be called was Nevada, and once again, the AIP was a factor, this time hurting Republicans. Jack Doyle, the AIP candidate, was only expected to poll about 6% at the ballot box. Doyle, like Sanders had in Vermont, punched above his weight, pulling in 7.1% of the vote, almost exclusively drawn from the GOP’s base, allowing the clean-living, anti-Mafia crusader and lieutenant governor, Harry Reid, to beat out Ronald Reagan’s dear friend Paul Laxalt, the former governor. Connally shared a look with Barnes about that. The AIP was a threat to their right flank and they had to make sure that threat was neutralized in time for 1976.

    *****

    CRONKITE:
    Last night’s midterm elections featured a large number of extremely close races, some of them being Democrats who narrowly won in historically Republican seats. Others include Republicans who held onto their seats against all odds, and even taking a half dozen Democratic House seats, despite losing many of their own. It appears that Republicans who voted for the impeachment of President Nixon did the best amongst those that retained their seats. In the Senate, it appears to be a much smaller Democratic gain than expected, with only three certain pickups and two seats facing recounts. In Vermont and New Hampshire, Republicans very narrowly appeared to hold those seats. The battle for Vermont’s Senate seat was shockingly upended by a bushy-haired socialist carpenter named Bernard Sanders, who has built a following in the very liberal community of Burlington. Mr. Sanders used his popularity in Vermont’s most populous city to win about 5.5 percent of the statewide vote, all drawn from the base of Democratic candidate Patrick Leahy. This left Leahy a scant .04% behind Republican Richard Mallary, the incumbent congressman who declined to run for reelection so he could contest the seat of retiring moderate Republican George Aiken. Next door in the New Hampshire vote, as currently counted, Republican candidate Louis Wyman is 0.2% ahead of Democratic candidate John Durkin in the battle to replace the retiring Norris Cotton. By law in many New England states, any vote margin 0.5% or less requires a recount by hand, so that is expected to happen in both of these races.

    Meanwhile, in Nevada, the fight over the seat vacated by Alan Bible between the current lieutenant governor, Democrat Harry Reid, and the former governor, Republican Paul Laxalt, ended with a shocking result, as American Independence Party candidate Jack Doyle won just over seven percent of the vote statewide, a result that no pollster forecast. Perhaps surprised most of all by this result was Vice-President Ronald Reagan, who is extremely close with Mr. Laxalt and campaigned heavily for him, especially in Las Vegas, where Mr. Reagan was once a regular performer. Mr. Doyle, a far-right candidate running under the banner of the party that George Wallace built, siphoned enough support from Laxalt for Lieutenant Governor Reid to win, with the final margin resting just outside of Nevada’s requirements for an automatic recount. While many urged Mr. Laxalt to contest the race, the former governor put out a statement late last night stating that “in a democracy, it is important for the person who lost to recognize they did so and support the winner. The lieutenant governor won a very tight race last night in part because I did not keep my base together. That isn’t the fault of the votes, or the people that cast them. The fault alone is mine. I wish Mr. Reid well and I intend to spend some time with my family and consider the next chapter in my life.”

    Finally, before we move on to gubernatorial elections, a last look at some House races of note last night. Ten-term incumbent Representative, Democrat Frank Clark, lost his bid for reelection in Pennsylvania’s 25th district by a resounding margin, stunning many observers of Pennsylvania politics. Another seat that switched sides unexpectedly was in Michigan’s Sixth District, a staunch Republican seat that was won by 0.6% by Democrat Milton Robert Carr. Carr’s victory margin was less than the combined vote share of the left-wing third parties that ran and got 1.8%. In the end, though, most of the seats that changed hands were swing districts that had not been held by the incumbent long. There were many close calls in places like Nebraska’s Third District, where Virginia Smith, running to replace the retiring David Martin, eked out a miniscule victory in a longtime Republican district. Sometimes, as the Democrats discovered in the Louisiana Sixth, pushing an incumbent out in a primary is a good way to lose a seat.

    If all counts hold, the new Congress will feature 286 Democratic congressmen and 149 Republican congressmen, while in the Senate, Democrats will hold sixty seats to forty of those for the Republicans. When we come back, we'll run down the gubernatorial election results, and our panel will discuss what the elections mean for the future of the Connally Administration.
     
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