SFG75
Well-Known Member
I don't know why I'm fascinated by a 35 year old scandal, but for some reason, I'm just hooked on reading everything. Perhaps it's because it featured some colorful names, among them-Bebe Rebozo. Say that ten times fast. At any rate, here's review #1
Leon Jaworski, The Right and The Power 3/5
Jaworski was the second prosecutor of the Watergate affair, after Archibald Cox was fired in the "midnight massacre" over Nixon's refusal to turn over crucial tapes. Jaworksi's book highlights how he was selected by Nixon and how he came to lead the investigation that led to Nixon's resignation. Jaworski writes with a lawyer's "just the facts" manner and points out some items the average person may not know about Watergate. The Nixon White House gave him full accomodation over any and all evidence that he wanted. The exception was the tapes of course, and when the court forced Nixon's hand, Nixon resigned. Interestingly enough, Jaworski hypothesized that Nixon kept the tapes as he thought it would make him rich one day. Had he destroyed the tapes during the early part of the cover up, he could'vefinished out his presidency. Why he didn't destroy them is one of the more interesting topics-given his predilection for secrecy and deviousness.
No many books provide you with the administration's viewpiont on matters, this one was refreshing in that it did. To them, the stealing of Ellsberg's psychiatric file was a matter of national security as he leaked the pentagon papers. How his past was a matter of ultimate nationl security wasn't explained, but that was the viewpoint. Nixon's legal appeal against Jaworski's appeal for the tapes was based on the notion that the special prosecutor's office was part of the executive branch as such, the branch can't sue itself(i.e.-the prosecutor suing the president for release of tapes) The court saw through that subterfuge and repudiated the notion of intra-executive lawsuits, let alone "national security" when the president attempted to use it to his advantage. The scandal also featured corporate scandal-with ITT paying $400,000 to the GOP convention in San Diego, so as to help an anti-trust lawsuit to disappear. I didn't know of the corporate essence of it as much before.
this book is a good read, it brought out some items that a lot of books leave out and on that basis alone, I give it 3/5.
Watergate book review #2- John Dean's Blind Ambition
Leon Jaworski, The Right and The Power 3/5
Jaworski was the second prosecutor of the Watergate affair, after Archibald Cox was fired in the "midnight massacre" over Nixon's refusal to turn over crucial tapes. Jaworksi's book highlights how he was selected by Nixon and how he came to lead the investigation that led to Nixon's resignation. Jaworski writes with a lawyer's "just the facts" manner and points out some items the average person may not know about Watergate. The Nixon White House gave him full accomodation over any and all evidence that he wanted. The exception was the tapes of course, and when the court forced Nixon's hand, Nixon resigned. Interestingly enough, Jaworski hypothesized that Nixon kept the tapes as he thought it would make him rich one day. Had he destroyed the tapes during the early part of the cover up, he could'vefinished out his presidency. Why he didn't destroy them is one of the more interesting topics-given his predilection for secrecy and deviousness.
No many books provide you with the administration's viewpiont on matters, this one was refreshing in that it did. To them, the stealing of Ellsberg's psychiatric file was a matter of national security as he leaked the pentagon papers. How his past was a matter of ultimate nationl security wasn't explained, but that was the viewpoint. Nixon's legal appeal against Jaworski's appeal for the tapes was based on the notion that the special prosecutor's office was part of the executive branch as such, the branch can't sue itself(i.e.-the prosecutor suing the president for release of tapes) The court saw through that subterfuge and repudiated the notion of intra-executive lawsuits, let alone "national security" when the president attempted to use it to his advantage. The scandal also featured corporate scandal-with ITT paying $400,000 to the GOP convention in San Diego, so as to help an anti-trust lawsuit to disappear. I didn't know of the corporate essence of it as much before.
this book is a good read, it brought out some items that a lot of books leave out and on that basis alone, I give it 3/5.
Watergate book review #2- John Dean's Blind Ambition