Hello and welcome to this bonus episode of America History, recorded straight after our recently published episode, why did Nixon Resign?
Speaker AI'm joined now by the guest from that episode, Ewan Morgan from ucl, to discuss this a little more.
Speaker AEwan, thanks for hanging on.
Speaker BPleasure.
Speaker AThere's a couple of big questions that we didn't actually get around to answering in the main episode, so let's tackle them head on right now.
Speaker ASo you gave us a full timeline of what happened, why he resigned, and the circumstances around that.
Speaker ABut you mentioned these tapes in the Oval Office that recorded everything that happened in the Oval Office.
Speaker AAnd there was a big, big legal battle to get those tapes handed over by Nixon.
Speaker AI guess the question is firstly, who was Nixon hiding all of this from?
Speaker BWell, the COVID up that is caught on the tapes, the initial cover up is intended to hide the connection between the White House and the burglars.
Speaker BNow, who is looking into this?
Speaker BEverybody thinks that it was the David and Goliath story of the two Washington Post reporters, Woodward and Bernstein, against the big bad wolf in the White House, Richard Nixon.
Speaker BBut it wasn't quite as simple as that because the agency that was investigating the Watergate break in because it transgressed federal law was the FBI.
Speaker BAnd the whole purpose of the initial cover up was hide it from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Speaker BNow, what happens very famously is that Woodward and Bernstein, the two reporters who are the first to smell a rat over the Watergate break in, are being fed information by a mole whom they call Deep Throat.
Speaker BNow, it took 30, more than 30 years before the identity of Deep Throat was revealed.
Speaker BAnd who should he be but Associate Director of the FBI Mark Felt.
Speaker BThe FBI smelt the rat and Felt was taking it on himself to feed information to these journalists.
Speaker BHe doesn't reveal his identity until 2005 when he's 91 years old.
Speaker BBut that was critical in keeping the investigation going.
Speaker BAnd the FBI also was responsible for tracing the money that had found its way to hush money that had found its way in to the Watergate burglars.
Speaker BWhen you think about who was responsible for the downfall of Richard Nixon, anybody who's seen the film all the President's Men or read the book would say Bernstein and Woodward.
Speaker BWell, no, there were many more people involved in it.
Speaker BThe FBI was critical.
Speaker BJohn J. Sirica, who handed the Watergate burglars huge prison sentences to force them or to force one or other of them into talking.
Speaker BHe was important, Congress was important in setting up the investigatory machinery of the Senate Select Committee and then the Special Prosecutor.
Speaker BBoth Cox and Jaworski played an important role and the figures in the media were also very important.
Speaker BSo it wasn't just Benson and Woodward as popular history might demand it.
Speaker BSo that's the first thing.
Speaker BIt's also interesting, the question I've always asked myself, why did Nixon not just destroy the tapes?
Speaker BThey were his downfall, that if he'd have destroyed them, there wouldn't have been any evidence against him.
Speaker BThe first thing is Nixon was very reluctant to destroy the tapes because.
Speaker BBecause they were going to be the source for his Churchill style memoirs that he would write after his presidency to extol his greatness as a leader to the world.
Speaker BAnd Nixon famously, once famously quoted Churchill and Nixon said, well, you know, Winston Churchill once told a critic, history will treat me well.
Speaker BAnd the critic responded, how do you know?
Speaker BAnd Churchill then said, because I intend to write it.
Speaker BAnd that's what Nixon decided he would do, use his memoirs to protect greatness.
Speaker BAnd the tapes were there as a source for it.
Speaker BNixon was such a klutz that he couldn't have switched on the taping system himself.
Speaker BHe couldn't even open a bottle of aspirin properly.
Speaker BAnd they were voice activated.
Speaker BThat's why the in say, you know, he could have switched them off when the incriminating stuff was being discussed, but he couldn't.
Speaker BIt was voice activated.
Speaker BNow why didn't they destroy them?
Speaker BAnybody thinking of tapes will immediately think of cassette sized tapes.
Speaker BThey were huge fools.
Speaker BGet rid of all the tapes would have required a van to come outside the White House and for trolleys to be a full trolley of tapes to be put on the band to take away.
Speaker BNobody was going to do that, to incriminate himself on Richard Nixon's behalf when the tapes became such significant documents in the investigation.
Speaker BSo Nixon was caught out by his own desire to become a great man in history and to use recordings that would eventually undermine his place in history and his concerns about the FBI.
Speaker BHe tried to hide everything from the.
Speaker BHe was trying to prevent the FBI closing in around where the hush money was coming from.
Speaker BAnd that's why Mark felt Deep Throat came into play, to feed Bernstein and Woodward little tidbits about what was going on.
Speaker BBernstein and Woodward's importance.
Speaker BThey were important, there's no doubt about that.
Speaker BBut their importance was to keep the Watergate boiling in terms of a press story because it had faded quickly after the break in.
Speaker BAnd they were the ones who kept plodding away at it and coming up with stuff.
Speaker BAnd that is their real significance while everybody Else their attention with was elsewhere.
Speaker BThey kept their focus on Watergate.
Speaker AIt feels from everything that we've.
Speaker AWe've spoken about that when you consider Nixon setting up CREEP in the first place, the COVID up the tapes, then not wanting to destroy the tapes and how he acted throughout this entire thing, it's almost like he was so preoccupied thinking about his legacy that it was this sort of narcissism that was really his undoing and actually destroyed his legacy anyway.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BYes, it is.
Speaker BNixon has Shakespearean qualities, There's no doubt about that.
Speaker BHe'd make a fine subject for a Shakespearean play where the great man is undone by his flaws.
Speaker BAnd certainly Nixon was.
Speaker BThere is more to Watergate than Richard Nixon, and it would take too long to explain what it was.
Speaker BBut, you know, Nixon is responsible for detente with the Soviet Union, with the opening up of China, for the desegregation of the public schools, however reluctantly he did that, and for being in many ways the first green president, through his cooperation with Congress to establish the Environmental Protection Administration.
Speaker BIf you look at Nixon in the round, there's a lot more to him than Watergate, but Watergate will always be central to the evaluation of, of his presidency and its legacy.
Speaker BTowards the end of his life, he was being interviewed by Time magazine and he said, what I would like my legacy to be is that he brought China back into the world, meaning, you know, People Republic of China had isolated itself for 25 years following the revolution of 1949.
Speaker BNixon brought it back in and that begins the process by which the China of today emerges.
Speaker BSo that's what Nixon wanted to be remembered for.
Speaker BBut he said, I know I won't be remembered for that.
Speaker BI will be remembered for Watergate and having resigned the office.
Speaker AYeah, and.
Speaker AAnd I mean, that's precisely what we're talking about in this episode and in the main one as well.
Speaker ASo he was.
Speaker AHe was correct.
Speaker ABut it's a, it's a good note to end on as well.
Speaker ASo, Ewan, as always, thank you for joining me.
Speaker AAnd for those listening to this, if you haven't yet heard the main episode, do go back on the feed and listen now.
Speaker AAnd as always, if you enjoy the podcast, do rate review, follow the show and support us if you feel you want to do so.
Speaker AAll the links to everything we discussed in this episode in the moment are in the show notes.
Speaker AAnd Ewan, a quick reminder where people can connect with you.
Speaker BThey can email me at I.morgancl.ac.uk.
Speaker AWonderful.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AAnd it's a pleasure as always having you on the podcast.
Speaker ATo everyone listening, thank you so much and goodbye.
Speaker BThank you.