File size: 7,424 Bytes
f2b3e5d |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 |
1
00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:03,500
>> NARRATOR: The Nixon Presidential Library and Museum presents
2
00:00:03,500 --> 00:00:08,500
A selection from the White House Tapes:
Conversation 886-008,
3
00:00:08,500 --> 00:00:12,500
which took place on March 21, 1973.
4
00:00:12,500 --> 00:00:17,000
>> JOHN DEAN: Uh, the reason I thought we ought to talk this morning is because in, in our conversations, uh,
5
00:00:17,000 --> 00:00:23,500
uh, I have, I have the impression that you don't know everything I know
6
00:00:23,500 --> 00:00:27,000
>> PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON: That's right.
>> DEAN: and it makes it very difficult for you to make judgments that, uh,
7
00:00:27,000 --> 00:00:30,500
that only you can make
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: That's right.
>> DEAN: on some of these things and I thought that--
8
00:00:30,500 --> 00:00:33,000
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: You've got, in other words, I've got to know why you feel that,
9
00:00:33,000 --> 00:00:36,000
uh, that something...
10
00:00:36,000 --> 00:00:40,000
>> DEAN: Well, let me
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: ...that, that we shouldn't unravel something.
>> DEAN: let me give you my overall first.
11
00:00:40,000 --> 00:00:43,000
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: In other words, you, your judgment as to where it stands, and where we go now.
12
00:00:43,000 --> 00:00:46,000
>> DEAN: I think, I think that, uh,
13
00:00:46,000 --> 00:00:49,000
there's no doubt about the seriousness of the problem we're, we've got.
14
00:00:49,000 --> 00:00:55,000
We have a cancer within, close to the Presidency, that's growing.
15
00:00:55,000 --> 00:01:00,000
It's growing daily. It's compounding, it grows geometrically now
16
00:01:00,000 --> 00:01:02,500
because it compounds itself.
17
00:01:02,500 --> 00:01:07,000
Uh, that'll be clear as I explain, you know, some of the details,
18
00:01:07,000 --> 00:01:12,000
uh, of why it is, and it basically is because (1) we're being blackmailed;
19
00:01:12,000 --> 00:01:17,000
(2) uh, people are going to start perjuring themself very quickly
20
00:01:17,000 --> 00:01:20,000
that have not had to perjure themselves
21
00:01:20,000 --> 00:01:25,000
to protect other people and the like. And that is just -- and there is no assurance--
22
00:01:25,000 --> 00:01:28,000
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: That it won't bust.
>> DEAN: That that won't bust.
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: True.
23
00:01:28,000 --> 00:01:31,000
>> DEAN: So, let me give you the sort of basic facts: talking first about the Watergate;
24
00:01:31,000 --> 00:01:35,000
and then about Segretti; and then about some of the peripheral items that, uh,
25
00:01:36,000 --> 00:01:37,500
have come up.
26
00:01:37,500 --> 00:01:42,500
First of all, on, on the Watergate: How did it all start, where did it start?
27
00:01:42,500 --> 00:01:47,000
It started with an instruction to me
28
00:01:47,000 --> 00:01:49,000
from Bob Haldeman
29
00:01:49,000 --> 00:01:56,000
to see if we couldn't set up a perfectly legitimate campaign intelligence operation over at the Re-election Committee.
30
00:01:56,000 --> 00:02:01,000
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: Hmm.
>> DEAN: Not being in this business, I turned to somebody who had been in this business:
31
00:02:01,000 --> 00:02:04,500
Jack Caulfield, who is -- I don't know if you remember Jack or not.
32
00:02:04,500 --> 00:02:06,000
He was your original bodyguard before
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: Yeah.
>> DEAN: they had
33
00:02:06,000 --> 00:02:07,500
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: Yeah.
>> DEAN: candidate, candidate protection
34
00:02:07,500 --> 00:02:11,000
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: Yeah.
>> DEAN: an old New York City policeman.
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: Right, I know, I know him.
35
00:02:11,000 --> 00:02:14,000
>> DEAN: Uh, Jack had worked for John and then was transferred to my office.
36
00:02:14,000 --> 00:02:18,500
I said, "Jack, come up with a plan that, you know, is a normal infiltration,
37
00:02:18,500 --> 00:02:22,000
I mean, you know, buying information from secretaries and all that sort of thing."
38
00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:28,000
He did, he put together a plan. It was kicked around, and, uh, I went to Ehrlichman with it.
39
00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:33,500
I went to Mitchell with it, and the consensus was that Caulfield wasn't the man to do this.
40
00:02:33,500 --> 00:02:37,000
Uh, in retrospect, that might have been a bad call,
41
00:02:37,000 --> 00:02:41,500
'cause he is an incredibly cautious person and, and wouldn't have put
42
00:02:41,500 --> 00:02:44,000
the situation to where it is today.
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: Yeah.
43
00:02:44,000 --> 00:02:48,500
>> DEAN: All right, after rejecting that, they said, "We still need something."
44
00:02:48,500 --> 00:02:52,000
So I was told to look around for somebody that could go over to 1701 and do this.
45
00:02:52,000 --> 00:02:56,500
And that's when I came up with Gordon Liddy, who-- they needed a lawyer.
46
00:02:56,500 --> 00:03:00,000
Gordon had an intelligence background from his FBI service.
47
00:03:00,000 --> 00:03:04,000
I was aware of the fact that he had done some extremely sensitive things
48
00:03:04,000 --> 00:03:09,000
for the White House while he'd been at the White House, and he had apparently done them well.
49
00:03:09,000 --> 00:03:14,500
Uh, going out into Ellsberg's doctor's office
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: Oh, yeah.
>> DEAN: and things like this.
50
00:03:14,500 --> 00:03:19,000
He'd worked with leaks. He'd, you know, tracked these things down. And, uh, and [coughs]
51
00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:26,000
so the report that I got from Krogh was that he was a hell of a good man and, and not only that, a good lawyer,
52
00:03:26,000 --> 00:03:29,500
uh, and could set up a proper operation.
53
00:03:29,500 --> 00:03:33,500
So we talked to Liddy; Liddy was interested in doing it.
54
00:03:33,500 --> 00:03:37,500
Took, uh, Liddy over to meet Mitchell. Mitchell
55
00:03:37,500 --> 00:03:44,500
thought highly of him because, apparently, Mitchell was partially involved in his even coming to the White House to work for, for Krogh.
56
00:03:44,500 --> 00:03:49,000
Uh, Liddy had been at Treasury before that.
57
00:03:49,000 --> 00:03:55,000
Then, Liddy was told to put together his plan. You know, how he would run an intelligence operation.
58
00:03:55,000 --> 00:04:00,000
And this was after he was hired over there at the, the Committee.
59
00:04:00,000 --> 00:04:07,000
Magruder called me in January and said, "I'd like to have you come over and see Liddy's plan."
>> PRESIDENT NIXON: January of '72?
60
00:04:07,000 --> 00:04:09,000
>> DEAN: January of '72.
[Noises in background]
61
00:04:09,000 --> 00:04:14,000
Like, "You come over to Mitchell's office and sit in on a meeting where Liddy is going to lay his plan out."
62
00:04:14,000 --> 00:04:18,500
I said, "Well, I don't really know as I'm the man, but if you want me there I'll be happy to." [clears throat]
63
00:04:18,500 --> 00:04:20,000
So, I came over
64
00:04:20,000 --> 00:04:26,000
and Liddy laid out a million dollar plan that was the most incredible thing I have ever laid my eyes on.
65
00:04:26,000 --> 00:04:33,000
All in codes, and involved black bag operations, kidnapping, providing prostitutes,
66
00:04:33,000 --> 00:04:36,500
uh, to weaken the opposition, bugging,
67
00:04:36,500 --> 00:04:42,000
uh, mugging teams. It was just an incredible thing.
68
00:04:42,000 --> 00:04:50,000
>> NARRATOR: For more information, please visit www.nixonlibrary.gov |