What Adam Schiff Doesn’t Get About Watergate


Representative Adam Schiff posed a rhetorical question the other week that grated on the sensibility of anybody who remembers nicely the Watergate scandal.

“Where is Howard Baker?” Schiff requested plaintively.

Schiff was evoking the late Republican senator from Tennessee, who died in 2014, in a transparent plea to Republicans’ better selves. Ostensibly, Baker, the ranking minority member on the Senate’s Watergate Committee, put aside partisanship to hitch Democrats in a search for the truth. The proof lies in Baker’s very first query to John Dean, President Richard Nixon’s former White Home counsel and the desk officer for the Watergate cover-up. On June 28, 1973, Baker famously asked Dean, “What did the president know and when did he comprehend it?”

But what many recall as an incisive, if not noble, query concerning the conduct of a president from Baker’s similar political celebration was anything however. Somewhat, it was a shrewd and calculated try and stem the rising tide towards Nixon. Nor was it even Baker’s first assault towards getting at the fact of Watergate, and it might not prove to be his most cynical.

It's true that Baker’s conduct through the Senate hearings does not resemble in the slightest Republicans’ comportment so far. At every good alternative, which is to say always, Baker, oozing border-state allure without being too obsequious, flattered Sam Ervin, the folksy, 76-year-old Dixiecrat from North Carolina who chaired the committee. “It has been a fantastic privilege for me to study from you and to go ahead on this unpleasantness,” typified the remarks Baker directed at Ervin. But here’s the thing: Baker was a highly refined, even Machiavellian, partisan. His genuine position was one in every of collusion with the White Home; adopted by an try at a firebreak that failed; and finally, in desperation, an embrace of conspiracy-mongering.

A lot of what we find out about Baker’s true position comes from three books: a memoir by Fred Thompson, the Watergate committee’s minority counsel (At That Level in Time, 1975); a memoir by Sam Dash, the panel’s majority counsel (Chief Counsel, 1976); and a complete historical past based mostly on main documents by the late dean of Watergate historians, Professor Stanley I. Kutler (The Wars of Watergate, 1990). Along with these books, a fine-grained image of Baker’s behind-the-scenes conduct has emerged as more of the tapes surreptitiously recorded throughout Nixon’s presidency have been released and deciphered.

Schiff had just turned 12 years previous when 5 burglars put the Watergate scandal in movement, so he might be forgiven for not recalling the nuances of what happened. But now that the California Democrat is likely one of the leaders of the impeachment inquiry—and will in all probability be one of many managers who presents the case to the Senate—it is incumbent on him, and Democrats typically, to purge their minds of Watergate fairy tales. And Baker as Watergate truth-seeker is nearly as good as anywhere to start. If the Watergate scandal is any sort of historical guide, the Democrats are going to succeed provided that they cease hankering for a magical nonpartisan Republican and as an alternative concentrate on building a robust, factual case towards the president—one which convinces the American individuals on its own benefit.

***

Baker’s perception of his position on the committee was inextricable from his bigger aims. Ervin had insisted that no senators with presidential aspirations be allowed on the committee. But that was interpreted to mean senators aspiring to run in the subsequent cycle. Baker was wanting additional forward, and in that sense Ervin’s edict was fortuitous. “Though senators are by definition politically formidable,” Dash wrote in his memoir, “Baker was excessively so.” The Tennessean was a political boy marvel. Elected to the Senate in 1966 at the tender age of 41, after having not served in any earlier workplace, Baker was the primary Republican senator from Tennessee since Reconstruction, and an example of the good political realignment happening in the South. He naturally harbored ideas of operating for president in the foreseeable future. Serving on the committee would burnish his credentials, notably if he turned famend for stopping the Watergate scandal from metastasizing additional and consuming a Republican president.

Baker had led the GOP in opposing a full-fledged Senate investigation of the 1972 presidential campaign, and then maneuvered to turn out to be the ranking Republican on the Watergate panel. By way of Nixon’s trusted aide Charles Colson, Baker conveyed his reasoning. The senator had solely accepted the committee task, Baker’s administrative assistant informed Colson, to “go all the means … and defend you and the Republican Get together.” He “wasn’t getting off the reservation.” The president was to disregard any seemingly crucial comments Baker made in public, as well as any elaborate displays of deference to Ervin in the future. The one objective behind these utterances was to take care of Baker’s credibility with Ervin in an effort to negotiate and “control him.” Baker, Colson was advised, needed to “act like one of the Senate membership lest he destroy his effectiveness with Ervin.”

Shortly after his appointment to the Watergate committee, Baker also sought a secret assembly with Nixon to debate the probe. From Baker’s perspective, the assembly would serve a twofold function. At the beginning, he needed to reassure the president personally about his efforts and goodwill. But he also needed to collect intelligence about what to anticipate from the upcoming testimony of all of the president’s men, and wanted steerage on where the White Home meant to attract the road. The important thing question was whether or not the onus for the break-in can be placed solely on Nixon’s reelection campaign, or whether some duty might be traced again to the White Home, if not the Oval Workplace itself. This similar difficulty was a matter of eager interest for Baker too, for to a degree he had now tied his own future to the president’s protestations of innocence.

Baker insisted the assembly with Nixon be clandestine. It was organized for a day when he was already scheduled to attend a big reception within the White House for supporters of the president’s Vietnam policy. Baker arrived an hour early, and was escorted to Nixon’s hideaway in the Government Workplace Building.

Sadly, the recording of their assembly happens to be one of the Nixon tapes that's irreparably flawed. Baker simply occurred to take a seat as distant from the microphones implanted within the president’s desk as attainable, leading to a principally inaudible recording. Moreover, while the assembly lasted 40 minutes, the tape recording is just eight minutes lengthy. Nonetheless, the gist of some remarks could be discerned, and the president later described the dialogue in subsequent conversations with John Ehrlichman, his prime domestic policy adviser, Lawyer Common Richard Kleindienst and H.R. “Bob” Haldeman, the White House chief of employees.

Baker burdened that he was intent on stopping a “fishing expedition.” While he anticipated the hearings to start out with a bang, he thought public interest would taper off dramatically—and his objective was to help make that occur. Baker disclosed that the Democrats have been hoping, as Nixon later put it, to first name “a lot of pipsqueak witnesses, little shit-asses over durations of weeks to construct it up, the strain.” Inside the committee, Baker was arguing for a unique strategy, one that might have all the president’s huge males up there from the begin to “prick the boil.” Then Baker might confront Ervin with the vacancy of their testimonies and reduce off the inquiry, leaving it at the seven men already convicted of the housebreaking. As Nixon defined, Baker aimed to “choke the goddamn factor for the week, and after that individuals might be uninterested.” While this strategy had its points of interest, the president remained cautious. He expressed the hope to Baker that by means of some mixture of government privilege, closed government periods or written interrogatories, the administration may keep away from the spectacle of getting its prime men “dragged up” to Capitol Hill, testifying in public underneath oath.

When the senator gingerly hinted at the potential for White Home involvement, the president denied the insinuation vigorously. However Nixon allowed that he was concerned about former campaign chairman John Mitchell’s position, thereby indicating to Baker the place the road ought to be drawn if needed: across the now-defunct Committee for the Re-election of the President (CRP). Indeed, as Nixon later recounted, he advised Baker that if and when the time got here for him to cross-examine Mitchell, the senator wanted to deliver out the information about Mitchell’s “horrible domestic state of affairs,” which means his alcoholic wife, Martha.

I stated [to Baker], Martha, you recognize, could be very sick. And John wasn’t paying attention, and these youngsters ran away with it. … John Mitchell is a pure, brilliant guy who would have never completed such a thing, but the youngsters ran away with it. And if John did lie [about CRP involvement], it was simply because he’d forgotten. Now whether that may wash or not, I don’t know. However I simply need you [Baker] to know that [is what] I think about the Mitchell drawback.

The subsequent day, Nixon recounted the assembly to Kleindienst; the president now believed Baker can be working for him inside the committee. “Howard came down for the aim of telling me what are his plans for the hearings … what he’s planning on doing. What he’s going to do is … try to make it appear the Republicans are cooperating … [that] the hearings are trustworthy and the administration’s cooperating.” There was a concrete cause for discussing the meeting with the lawyer common as properly. Baker had indicated he didn’t need to be seen speaking to anyone within the White Home any longer, so that they had agreed that Baker’s liaison can be Kleindienst. He was to convey whatever inside info Baker had to John Dean solely, who would then take it to the president, and vice versa. Baker hoped the line of communication would run both methods, as he needed a heads-up earlier than the White House publicly said its place on any of the contentious procedural points that still needed to be worked out.

In the 11 weeks that remained earlier than hearings commenced, Baker, now assisted by Fred Thompson, his selection for minority counsel, labored to circumscribe the probe along the strains of Baker’s February 22 secret meeting. Truncating the witness listing in order that the hearings can be completed in a single month was Baker’s prime precedence. One among his arguments was that People fixated on daytime cleaning soap operas can be upset by having their favorite exhibits preempted by long, drawn-out hearings. Ervin dismissed Baker’s proposal as preposterous, even when it risked frightening TV viewers’ ire. If accepted, Ervin argued, Baker’s scheme would make the committee an adjunct to the White Home’s obfuscations and falsehoods. Then, on April 30, the state of affairs turned immensely more difficult and the stakes exponentially larger. The White Home introduced Haldeman and Ehrlichman had resigned, that Dean was fired and Kleindienst had give up.

Now the query was not whether all the president’s huge males would appear, but in what order. Throughout a pivotal committee meeting on Might eight, Baker lobbied for the burglars to testify first, followed by Mitchell, Colson, Haldeman and Ehrlichman, with Dean coming in final. This topsy-turvy strategy meant that none of them could possibly be asked about Dean’s accusations; the accused can be heard earlier than the accuser, and every little thing might be wrapped up in 20 days. Baker also needed senators to query witnesses first, earlier than committee counsel did. That each one but assured the hearings might simply veer into incoherence and grandstanding, slightly than fact-finding and narrative-building. Most tenaciously, and with uncharacteristic vehemence, Baker fought towards giving Dean immunity for his testimony, echoing the then-prevailing White Home line that Dean was “probably the most culpable and dangerous individual within the Watergate affair.”

Baker did not prevail on any of those narrative-building points, and his initial effort to collude with the White Home was largely for naught. When the hearings lastly commenced on Might 17, the senator, exuding allure, assured his colleagues, together with a nationwide tv audience, that “this isn't in any approach a partisan enterprise, however fairly, it's a bipartisan seek for the unvarnished fact.” In reality, although, Baker was quickly to embark on the subsequent part of his partisan effort to save lots of Nixon’s presidency no matter that fact.

***

The context of Baker’s well-known question means every little thing. Baker posed it to Dean after 3½ days of earth-shattering testimony from the previous White House counsel—testimony that Baker readily agreed was “fairly mind-boggling.” Single-handedly, and within the area of a day, Dean had decisively shifted the committee’s focus from the initial crime, of which Nixon had no foreknowledge, to the cover-up. If the president committed just some of the acts attributed to him, he had violated his oath of workplace. Nor have been the president’s alleged misdeeds as a result of passivity, inattention or distraction. He had, in line with Dean, abused his powers and actively conspired to impede justice.

Seen in its proper context, Baker’s question—“What did the president know and when did he realize it?”—represented a shrewd defense from a highly expert lawyer who recognized the inherent limits in Dean’s testimony. Baker meant to erect nothing less than an insurmountable firebreak in the conflagration that now threatened the Oval Workplace.

Dean had had virtually no private contact with Nixon for greater than seven months after the June break-in. He could not supply direct testimony about what the president stated and did in the earliest and most vital part of the cover-up. Dean’s first urgent, Watergate-related meeting had not occurred till February 27, 1973; only after that have been there virtually every day meetings with the president.

Repeating his rhythmic query time and again, Baker took Dean step-by-step via the important thing occasions beginning in June 1972 till Dean’s departure. At each necessary juncture, Baker depicted Dean’s account as based mostly on hearsay or circumstantial proof at greatest—which means Dean was drawing unwarranted inferences concerning the president’s conduct. The strategy was alleged to end in an alternate narrative, whereby the president allegedly was unaware of the steps taken to hush the burglars, or supposedly ignorant about the strain the White Home exerted on the CIA to thwart the FBI from pursuing certain avenues of investigation. Finally, it would come right down to Dean’s word and narrative towards the president’s. And actually, Baker’s firebreak did work in addition to might be anticipated. By the time Dean completed his last day of testimony on June 29, the shortage of unbiased corroboration of his allegations seemed to be an insuperable impediment.

What Baker didn't know on the time, in fact, was that Nixon had carried out his speedy predecessors one better, and surreptitiously installed a voice-activated taping system that had been operational since February 1971. Two weeks after Dean’s last day of testimony, White House assistant Alexander Butterfield revealed the tapes’ existence. Instantly, the recordings promised to resolve who was telling the truth. And just as abruptly, Baker’s calculated question transmogrified right into a dagger pointed at the heart of the presidency.

As Stanley Kutler wrote, the “discovery of the tapes undid Baker’s cautious handiwork. The tapes made irrelevant his question to John Dean . . . [Because now] Richard Nixon himself might answer Baker, and in indelible phrases.”

***

In late 1973, because the Watergate committee moved closer to its expiration date; whereas the authorized battle over the tapes was winding its method toward the Supreme Courtroom; and months before the House Judiciary Committee mounted its impeachment hearings, Baker turned desperately to a last resort—what would immediately be acknowledged as deep state conspiracy-mongering. Given his own direct information from Nixon that only the CRP was liable for the break-in, this final part represented Baker’s most cynical tactic.

First, somewhat of the back-story is required.

The potential for CIA involvement within the housebreaking had been an problem from the very begin. Two of the five burglars arrested, and one of the masterminds who organized the unlawful entry, had plain hyperlinks to the agency. However then it swiftly turned out that one of many burglars, and each masterminds, had plain links to the White House or president’s reelection campaign. The FBI was initially flummoxed and investigated both prospects. By mid-July 1972, nevertheless, the FBI investigation had “settled down.” Agents working the case knew the CRP, not the CIA, organized the break-in. The one remaining query was how high up in the CRP the conspiracy went.

This notion of culpability lasted until Might 1973, when two new revelations induced allegations of CIA involvement to renew with even higher ferocity. It turned out that beginning in July 1971 the agency, at Ehrlichman’s behest, had given technical help (a wig, digital camera, voice-altering gadget and false id cards) to E. Howard Hunt, one of many two Watergate masterminds, with out understanding what it was going for use for. And before the Democratic National Committee break-in, a number of the gadgets had been used within the housebreaking on the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s Los Angeles psychiatrist. Ellsberg was the Defense Department marketing consultant behind the embarrassing leak of the so-called Pentagon Papers in 1971.

Numerous Home and Senate committees (there have been no Intelligence Committees as such on the time) leaped into the fray and introduced investigations. Maybe envious of the eye the Senate Watergate committee was already producing, though it had yet to hold its first listening to, the House Armed Providers announced a full-blown probe. A particular subcommittee was rapidly shaped, and Consultant Lucien Nedzi, a Democrat and University of Michigan Regulation Faculty graduate, was appointed chairman.

Nedzi’s investigation proceeded quickly. The primary hearing occurred Might 11, 1973, and by the top of July the particular subcommittee had gathered statements or testimony from 26 witnesses. Nothing like this probe into the CIA had ever been carried out earlier than, a lot less in full public view. Nedzi’s subcommittee (along with a a lot smaller Senate investigation that occurred in parallel) developed beautiful new info instantly associated to the CIA and Watergate all right, but nothing proving foreknowledge of the break-in, much much less that it was a CIA operation. Relatively, the House subcommittee spent nearly all of its time investigating the White House’s try, albeit unsuccessfully, to use the CIA to impede delicate elements of the FBI’s Watergate investigation over a interval of two weeks right after the break-in.

The Nedzi subcommittee laid out its findings in a ultimate report revealed on October 27, 1973. While the report criticized the CIA for bowing to White House strain to help out Hunt within the first place, it appropriately famous that the CIA had terminated the help in August 1971 because Hunt stored making new calls for, and absolved the CIA of duty for the break-in. Nonetheless, 10 days later, Baker initiated his own investigation of CIA involvement with a letter addressed to the new director, William Colby. The agency responded by supplying Baker with most of the similar paperwork it had already produced for Nedzi. Baker decided to plow forward, and in January 1974 even arrange a process pressure comprised of three Republican employees members from the Watergate committee, headed by Fred Thompson. For the subsequent three months they reinvestigated what Thompson referred to as the CIA’s “mystifying position,” typically working 18-hour days.

Baker had no concept what was on the White Home tapes and whether or not they might exonerate or implicate the president within the cover-up, or merely be inconclusive. However he did know that his well-known query now threatened the president. Indicating the CIA had foreknowledge of the break-in would recommend that perhaps it was a CIA operation all along—and that appeared probably the most promising, if not only, approach out for the president. In a single stroke it might return the main target to who was chargeable for the break-in, and render the cover-up virtually moot. In any case, Nixon might hardly be blamed for any measures he took in response to a charge he knew to be untrue. In this new narrative Nixon can be the victim of dark forces, slightly than the wrongdoer.

About halfway by way of Baker’s frantic, three-month investigation, the Washington press corps, because of Charles Colson—the one individual within the White House to take a eager interest in the last-ditch effort—acquired wind of the task pressure. Reporters pressed the senator for some concrete outcomes, however all Baker might supply in return was innuendo and unsupported implications. There have been “animals crashing round within the forest” that he might hear but not yet see, Baker claimed.

Increasingly alarmed by what Baker was as much as, the CIA turned recalcitrant about responding to Thompson’s incessant demands. Journalists recognized for their ties to the company, akin to Tom Braden, a former CIA officer but now a syndicated columnist for the Washington Publish, revealed articles that pointedly criticized Baker. Braden recommended Baker was pursuing a fruitless angle for transparent political causes and harming the CIA in the process. Feeling the warmth, and with nothing to point out after three months of ceaseless effort, Baker ordered the duty pressure to tug collectively whatever info it had developed and write a report.

Baker submitted what came to be often known as the “Baker-CIA report” to Ervin for inclusion within the committee’s ultimate report, to be revealed in mid-July 1974. However the chairman didn't need to lend any dignity to the rump report and refused to include it in the primary text. Fairly than admit that there was “no there there,” in any case, Baker insisted the report was merely “incomplete” and raised extra justifiable questions than it answered. About two weeks earlier than the committee’s full report turned out there, Baker and Thompson leaked their findings to the press, with modest outcomes. Probably the most newsworthy item was that the agency had discovered by way of its grapevine, prior to the break-in, that E. Howard Hunt had been trying to rent a retired lock picker from a gaggle of former CIA staff. The Baker-CIA report shortly fell flat, and Thompson recalled in his memoir that it was a “lonely time” for his boss. “Because of his persistent inquiries, [Baker] appeared to have placed himself at odds, not only with the CIA, however with the White Home [sic], the press, and the remainder of the committee.”

Three weeks after newspapers disclosed the Baker-CIA report, the Supreme Courtroom issued its unanimous ruling that Nixon had to offer all of the tape recordings demanded by the Watergate special prosecutor, not just transcripts the president unilaterally deemed responsive. And on August 5, the White Home released what immediately and infamously turned referred to as “the smoking gun” tape: an Oval Workplace conversation between Haldeman and Nixon on June 23, six days after the break-in, which offered the definitive reply to what the president knew and when he knew it.

***

Howard Baker’s fame, perhaps surprisingly, maybe not, suffered no lasting injury from his position on the Watergate committee. It was as if image, relatively than substance, prevailed. As Kutler put it, Baker “projected extremely nicely on tv, combing a boyish smile with the looks of a diffident, nonpartisan pursuit of the truth.” When the senator’s devastating question was remembered, and it typically was, it was misremembered because it was invariably taken out of context. Baker definitely exhibited no abiding impulse to right the misunderstanding.

So for the Democrats to pine now for an additional Howard Baker is, at greatest, folly. Howard Baker was no Howard Baker, and any hope that a Republican champion will instantly emerge and relieve Democrats from doing the required exhausting work that is still..


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