Daniel Ellsberg speaks to the press outside his trial
in Boston. Co-defendant Anthony Russo and his wife Katherine, left, and
Ellsberg's wife Patricia look on.
Some of today’s most talked about news items—leaks, secrets, national security, a war on the media, and an embattled, deeply paranoid President—are the same ingredients in a variant recipe as for
the events that unfolded 48 years ago in the during the reign
of Richard M. Nixon. On June 13, 1971 The New York Times began publishing The Pentagon Papers, a top secret history of the military and political involvement of the highest
echelons of the U. S. Government in
the Vietnam War.
The study had been commissioned by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara
and was completed in 1968. The document was
obtained by Daniel Ellsberg, a former military analyst for the RAND Corporation think tank who had
been involved in the original study. He
hoped to expose how the leaders of
the government in successive
administrations had systematically
lied to the American people
about both their intentions in
Vietnam and about the actual conduct of
the war.
Among the many disclosures that
shocked the nation was that Lyndon
Johnson had made the decision to widen U.S. involvement with the introduction
of combat units on the ground well before
a heralded “consultation” with his senior
advisors. Johnson was also shown to
be committed to bombing North Vietnam even as he was running for election in 1964 on a promise
of seeking “no wider war.” The documents also revealed the long secret war in Cambodia.
The Nixon Administration reacted with a combination of horror and fury. Attorney
General John Mitchell immediately sought a
restraining order against the Times
to prevent them from continuing publication
citing the 1917 Espionage Act
which made it a crime to be in
possession of classified documents illegally
obtained “…which information the possessor has
reason to believe could be used to the injury of the United States or to the
advantage of any foreign nation, willfully communicates, delivers, transmits or
causes to be communicated.”
This New York Times headline
grabbed the immediate attention of the President and administration officials
who launched an all-out offensive against Ellsberg, the Times and anyone
and everyone remotely involved.
The Times was forced to suspend publication while the case was expedited through the Federal Courts. A few days later another restraining
order was issued against the Washington Post, which had also been
provided the text by Ellsberg and had begun running its own series.
As the case was
being reviewed, Senator Mike Gravel,
Democrat of Alaska entered 1400 pages of the Pentagon Papers into the Congressional
Record, which could not be restrained by the courts and put the material in
a public form which could be quoted without fear of prosecution.
The next day,
on June 30 a deeply divided court ruled 6–3 that the injunctions were unconstitutional prior restraint and
the government failed to meet the heavy
burden of proof required. Each of
the nine justices wrote decisions agreeing or dissenting opinions on various
parts of the ruling.
It was less
than the clear-cut victory for
freedom of the press than the Times and
Post hoped for, but it did affirm a broad interpretation of the First Amendment and allowed them to
resume publication of the papers.
Meanwhile the Justice Department had warned/threatened publishing houses against issuing the
papers as a book. Fearful, not one major commercial publisher would touch it.
UUA President Robert West and Alaska Senator Mike
Gravel at a press conference announcing the Beacon Press edition of the Pentagon
Papers. Gravel, as a U.S. Senator, was legally untouchable but
paid a heavy political price. West and the UUA endured years of
investigations, constant harassment, and threat of criminal charges and the revocation of the UAA's tax exempt
status and the status of all member congregations. Even individual donors to
the UU were fearful of being targeted when the Fed sought financial records.
Gravel, a Unitarian Universalist, suggested that Beacon Press, publishing arm of the Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) take
it up. UUA President Robert West agreed setting off two and a half years of
harassment, intimidation, and court action against the publisher and the UUA by
the government. Despite threats and even
a personal phone call from Nixon,
the company rushed to put out the full Mike Gravel Edition of the Pentagon Papers
in October.
After
publication the Justice department subpoenaed
all of the UUA bank records for four and a half months, including checks
from individual members. That action was stopped on appeal, then
started again, and finally ended, but the government tied the UUA up in court
for two and a half years and cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.
Both West and
Beacon Press Director Gobin Stair were
publicly named as likely to be indicted
on espionage or even treason charges
and both were called to testify in the criminal trial of Ellsberg and his co-defendant Anthony Russo, an associate who had helped with the copying.
At various
times government agents hinted that the UUA and each member congregation might lose
non-profit tax exempt status and that UUA might even be placed on the
notorious Attorney General’s List of
Subversive Organizations.
Ellsberg and
Russo had been charged under the Espionage Act and with a raft of other charges including theft and conspiracy,
carrying a total maximum sentence of
115 years. The trial finally got
underway in January of 1973 in the Boston
courtroom of U.S. District Judge
William Matthew Byrne, Jr.
During the
trial a number of “gross improprieties”
by the government were revealed. Not the
least of which was the August 1971 break-in
of the office of Dr. Lewis Fielding, a psychiatrist who had treated Ellsberg. This operation was conducted by G. G. Gordon Liddy, H. Howard Hunt and
three Cubans at the direction of Nixon aide John Ehrlichman—the first operation of the infamous Plumber’s Unit that would soon be swept
up in Watergate.
Top Nixon aide and henchman John
Ehrlichman created the Plumbers Unit whose first caper under spook G.Gordon Libby
was a break in at Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist office. That was the rap
that sent Ehrlichman up the river.
It was also
revealed that Judge Byrne personally met twice with Ehrlichman, who offered him directorship of the FBI. Although Byrne said he refused to
consider the offer while the Ellsberg case was pending, even agreeing to meet
with Ehrlichman during the case raised
red flags.
The government
was accused of illegally obtaining
evidence and of monitoring the
defense team. When the government tried
to claim that it lost wiretap records
on Ellsberg the exasperated Judge Byrne declared a mistrial and said “The totality of the circumstances of this case
which I have only briefly sketched offend a sense of justice. The bizarre
events have incurably infected the prosecution of this case.”
Nixon’s
paranoia, which ultimately resulted in his
resignation in disgrace over the Watergate scandal, can be traced to this case. Aides Ehrlichman, H. R. Halderman, Richard Kleindienst, and John Dean were forced
to resign when the Fielding burglary was disclosed in the course of the trial. Egil
Krogh and Charles Colson were convicted and sent to prison for their roles in supervising the break in.
So what about
today? Well unfortunately intimidation of the press has become routine—and successful often
successful. Aides to President Donald Trump have repeatedly
been caught improperly trying to interfere with the Mueller probe and Congressional
investigations in a range of cases including improper communications with
Russian officials and possible tampering
with the 2016 Presidential Election. The Cheeto
in Charge himself was been caught more or less red handed trying to influence FBI Chief James Comey before firing
him. He has also threatened the press and individual journalists in his morning toilet seat Tweets, and been shown to be a bald faced liar on more occasions than
can be counted.
The two more
contemporary whistle blowers have already been imprisoned, the fate Ellsberg
and his press collaborators avoided all those years ago.
Former U.S. Army intelligence analyst
Chelsea Manning addresses reporters outside the Albert Bryan U.S federal
courthouse with attorney Moira Meltzer-Cohen May 16, 2019 in Alexandria,
Virginia.
Chelsea Manning, formally known as Bradly Manning, was an active
duty soldier with a security clearance
who passed thousands of pages of classified
documents to Julian Assange of WikiLeaks. She pled guilty to ten charges and was later
convicted of 17 others. Sentenced to 35
years at the maximum-security U.S.
Disciplinary Barracks at Fort
Leavenworth, President Barack Obama commuted her sentence to basically time served since her arrest.
Widely viewed
as a classic whistle blower, Manning’s reputation has suffered as Assange sat
for year in the London Ecuadorian
Embassy and was revealed to be either a willing or unwitting tool of the
Russians in meddling in the 2016 election.
This year she was returned to prison for refusing to respect a subpoena to testify before a Virginia Federal Grand Jury investigating
Assange and WikiLeaks. She was held for two months until the
expiration of the Grand Jury term.
Almost immediately after her release a new Grand Jury was impaneled in
the same case. Attorney General William Barr, who is ironically himself defying a subpoena,
ordered her re-arrested. She was
returned to jail for the 18 month term of the grand jury. In addition a fine
was imposed of $500 for each day she spends in jail over 30 days and $1,000 for
each day she spends in jail over 60 days.
Even upon the expiration of this Grand Jury, another could be impaneled.
Reality Winner pled
guilty in to leaking classified information about Russian interference in the
2016 election and was sentenced to 63 months in prison.
Reality Winner a young woman
contractor with a name out of a Dickens
novel was charged and unlike Ellsberg was convicted, and imprisoned for leaking documents to the press about Russian hacking of
the election. Despite a spate or
articles at the time, she has already been virtually forgotten.
Meanwhile readers
of this blog, which has undoubtedly
triggered whatever algorithms
are used by NSA supper sophisticated snooping programs to flag possible dangerous threats, and those who click on links here from Facebook
have to look over their shoulders and assume
that Big Brother really is watching.
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