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"The Battle Against the Truth"

Are we doomed to repeat history?

By May of 1973, the White House coverup was unravelling, and the stalking of Richard Nixon by the wider press corps had begun. Woodward and Bernstein had been more than vindicated. The Nixon Administration, mired in a losing war in Vietnam, was also losing the battle against the truth at home. Throughout the two-year crisis, Watergate was perceived as a domestic issue, but its impact on foreign policy was profound. As memoirs by both Nixon and Kissinger show, neither man understood why the White House could not do what it wanted, at home or in Vietnam. The reason it couldn’t is, one hopes, just as valid today: they were operating in a democracy in which they were accountable to a Constitution and to a citizenry that held its leaders to a high standard of morality and integrity. That is the legacy of Watergate.

[Seymour M. Hersh, "Watergate Days", The New Yorker, 13/20 June 2005 issue, posted online on 6 June2005.]

Posted on June 7, 2005 at 14.29 by jns · Permalink
In: All, Common-Place Book

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