Watergate
Lies Multiplied
The
Fiction of Frost/Nixon
We
are now in the midst of a grand celebration of itself by the mainstream media.
Forty years ago this summer, through their great investigative reporting,
they began the process that drove a president from office for the crime of
lying about his participation in the cover-up of a political “black bag”
operation. To the more perspicacious young people among us who just
became aware of their political surroundings in the 21st century,
this so-called Watergate story, this morality play, must be very
confusing. Isn’t this the same mainstream press that shows not the
slightest interest in big-time hush-ups like, say, the omission of any mention
at all in the official 9/11 report of the collapse, demolition-style, of World
Trade Center Building 7 or of who might
have been behind the forgeries of
documents
purporting to show that Saddam Hussein was attempting to obtain raw material
from Niger for building nuclear weapons? Could our mainstream press
really have come down so far so fast?
The
answer, of course, is no. As you might expect, our press in the Watergate
episode was not the great knight in shining armor that they would have us
believe they were, rather, they were the same old blackguards that are covering
our current presidential race as if the American people have actually been
presented with legitimate choices. As it
turns out, almost everything they have told us about Watergate is about 180
degrees from what actually happened. For a good introduction to the real
story, I recommend two recent contributions by Charles A. Burris on
LewRockwell.com, his article “Watergate Plus Forty” and his LRC Blog
entry “Russ Baker and Jim
Hougan on Watergate.”
Watergate
might have been a small time burglary, but the entire episode was a big time
spook operation. And that brings us to the title of this article.
If the official Watergate story itself is phony, what is one to make of the
2008 fictionalized movie that is based upon a 2006 fictionalized play about a
set of carefully edited interviews that essentially retell the outlines of a
phony story? It’s like a fake of a fake of a fake of a fake; like raising
a lie to the fourth power.
Actually,
as it turns out, we are missing one of the links in the chain. The
following is from the dust jacket of James Reston, Jr.’s 2007 book, The
Conviction of Richard Nixon: The Untold Story of the Frost/Nixon Interviews:
“Originally written in 1977 and published now for the first time, this book
helped inspire Peter Morgan’s hit play Frost/Nixon.”
How
about that? A prize-winning playwright somehow got his hands on an
unpublished manuscript by one of David Frost’s researchers and saw enough in it
that he was moved to turn it into a compelling play. One has to wonder
how, exactly, that came about, but the dust jacket says no more, nor is there
any explanation in the book.
As
it turns out, the playwright apparently didn’t see quite enough in the book for
his dramatic purpose. In the movie, his Nixon interview is one big
desperate and frightfully expensive entrepreneurial venture by Frost and his
young producer, John Birt. The advance
financing that he had hoped to get from one of the major U.S. networks did not
materialize and Frost is forced to resort to his own rather shallow pockets and
to do the interviews as an independent production. If he can’t squeeze
enough drama out of the Nixon exchanges to attract viewers, he could be
ruined. If this were actually true, one would think that this would be of
some matter of concern to Frost employee Reston and of interest to readers of
his book. Since he makes no mention of this matter, we may draw our own
conclusions about its veracity. Reston also fails to mention the drunken,
self-incriminating telephone call that the movie has Nixon making to Frost in
the middle of the night. As for the truth of that episode, we need make
no surmises. Director Ron Howard admitted in his commentary
on the DVD release that the phone call was, “from start to finish, an artistic
invention by the scriptwriter Peter Morgan.”
What
is in Reston’s book that is central to the movie is Reston, himself, and
his great research success in finding “obscure” court documents that, almost at
the last minute, sufficiently arm the “lightweight” Frost that he is able to
bring down the haughty and “heavyweight” Nixon to the point that the latter is
forced, in essence, to admit his guilt before the world.
That’s
all balderdash, too, but, at least, there is a James Reston, Jr., and he did
work as a researcher for Frost, but are he and the Frost team really who the
movie purports them to be? There is some reason for skepticism.
Reston’s father, after all, was the famous New York Times reporter and
columnist, but he was more than that. He was also a high profile member
of the “Georgetown Set.”
After
the Second World War
a small group of people began meeting on a regular basis. The group. living in
Washington, became known as the Georgetown Set or the Wisner Gang. At the first
the key members of the group were former members of the Office
of Strategic Services (OSS). This included Frank
Wisner, Philip
Graham, David
Bruce, Tom Braden, Stewart Alsop
and Walt Rostow.
Over the next few years others like George
Kennan, Dean
Acheson, Richard
Bissell, Joseph
Alsop, Eugene
Rostow, Chip Bohlen, Desmond FitzGerald, Tracy
Barnes, Cord
Meyer, James
Angleton, William Averill Harriman,
John McCloy,
Felix Frankfurter,
John Sherman Cooper,
James Reston, Allen W. Dulles
and Paul Nitze joined their regular parties. Some like Bruce, Braden,
Bohlen, McCloy, Meyer and Harriman spent a lot of their time working in other
countries. However, they would always attend these parties when in Georgetown.
This, folks, is the very heart of the U.S.
secret government establishment. Notice the “journalists” like Reston,
Phillip Graham, and the Alsop brothers keeping close company with a lot of
known high-level spooks. Wisner, in fact, is the CIA man who coined the
term, “mighty Wurlitzer,” to describe their propaganda apparatus for
“influencing” the news media. Reston, Sr., is alleged to have been a part
of it. (See Operation
Mockingbird.)
How far did the apple fall from the
tree? Before addressing that question, let’s have a look at some of the
other characters involved with the Frost interviews of Nixon. How about
that fresh-faced, idealistic young producer, Birt?
We learn this from p. 179 of Reston’s book:
“John Birt went on to the daunting post as director general of
the BBC, to become a well-known public figure in Britain in his own right, and
to become Prime Minister Tony Blair’s alter ego during Britain’s entry into the
Iraq war. He [like Frost] got his peerage and is now known in the House
of Lords as Baron Birt of Liverpool. Once I
challenged [Birt] to a chess game. ‘I never
play chess,’ he replied. ‘My whole professional career is a chess game.’”
(p. 30)
The
executive editor of the Frost/Nixon interviews, Robert Zelnick, who came from
National Public Radio, became a household name in America as a 20-year ABC
correspondent covering the Pentagon, Moscow, and Israel.
My
recollection is that these interviews of Nixon by Frost hardly made any splash at
all at the time—certainly not the dramatic encounter that they are represented
in the movie—but working on them, like working on the Watergate investigative
staff (e.g. Hillary Clinton) surely looks like it was a good career move.
Speaking
of the Watergate staff, Reston tells us that one of his mentors in his research
job for Frost, a person with whom he developed a “friendly working
relationship” (p. 48) was Richard Ben-Veniste.
Ben-Veniste was in charge of Special Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski’s Watergate Task Force and was the chief prosecutor in the cover-up
trial of several Watergate figures. We encounter Ben-Veniste
again playing a major cover-up role (along with the mainstream press, led by The
Washington Post) in the case of the death of Deputy White House
Counsel Vincent Foster during the Bill Clinton administration. Most
recently he has turned up as a member of the government’s 9-11 Commission. Along the
way he was defense counsel for CIA-connected drug smuggler Barry Seal.
Who is James
Reston, Jr.?
So
what do we know about Reston other than who his father was? When he got
the call to join the Frost project, he was, perhaps quite appropriately, a
lecturer in “creative writing” at his alma mater, the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. We’ll have to take his word for it that the
opportunity came about through a chance conversation that his mother had at a
party in Washington, DC. Although he has gone on to a successful career
as an author and journalist, his credentials look rather thin for a job on the
faculty of a major public university. With just a bachelor’s degree, it
would appear that he had somehow managed to leverage his just-published first
novel into the cushy teaching job, a job that afforded him the time to work on
his first non-fiction book, The Amnesty of John David Herndon. What
he had been doing in the form of actual employment before he got the UNC job is
not clear. On his Wikipedia page there’s a three-year gap between his
U.S. Army tour and his college teaching job.
The
résumé gap is intriguing, but so, too, is news of the Army tour. He
mentions it a couple of times in his book, once to one-up Zelnick
who flaunted his Marine background, when he had only been in the Marine
reserves while Reston had served a full three years of Army active duty.
What is odd here is that, to the very best of my memory, when we knew one
another in Chapel Hill, he never mentioned the fact to me. It is
particularly odd because it is on account of my work as a principal organizer
of the North Carolina Veterans for Peace that he sought me out in the first
place. (See “Spooks on the Hill” for another
future Washington figure, Frances Zwenig, whom I
first encountered through my NC antiwar activism.) He was working on his
Herndon book and making contact with assorted veterans, particularly those who
were opposed to the Vietnam War, which was just about all of us in Chapel Hill
at the time.
In
Frost/Nixon Reston is portrayed as something of a Nixon-hating
anti-Vietnam War firebrand. But by that time, the war was over. The
time to agitate against the war was when we were at Chapel Hill together, and
the most effective way to do it was openly as a veteran. In fact, after
Nixon instituted the draft lottery, most of the undergraduates seemed to lose
interest in the war. Veterans’ agitation was the only antiwar game in
town, and it is my recollection that Reston took no part in it. Rather,
he was busily working on his book that seemed to advocate leniency toward the
least sympathetic of the war’s presumed opponents, military deserters, which is
what John David Herndon was. Reston, frankly, struck me as just a
careerist and an opportunist, not as a sincere Vietnam War opponent.
Speaking
of strange résumé gaps, upon reflection the Army tour looks a bit like one as
well. Straight out of college he got a good job as assistant to the U.S.
Secretary of the Interior. Then, with the Vietnam War raging most
dangerously, he went into the Army for three years. We know that he
didn’t serve in Vietnam, or he would have told us. Did he know that there
was no chance that he would be sent to Vietnam before he signed up? Was
he drafted? That’s not likely given his connections, and draftees were
obligated to serve only two years of active duty. Had he been in ROTC,
with his active duty obligation deferred while he worked in his government
job? Again, an ROTC commission had only a two-year active duty
requirement. Maybe he went to Officers’ Candidate School, but why, and
what did he do in the Army? Maybe he didn’t tell us about his Army
background because he was afraid we might ask him questions like that.
Professional
Wrestling
Elizabeth Drew, writing in the Huffington
Post, gets almost to the heart of the phoniness of the Nixon interviews by
Frost. She and others have told us that Nixon was paid $600,000 for it
(Reston says it was a cool $1 million.), but, most importantly, what we don’t
learn from Reston or the movie is that Nixon was also promised 20 percent of
the television revenues. That revelation completely undercuts the central
premise of the movie that Frost and Nixon were great adversaries. If
Frost wanted the program to be interesting and “edgy” enough that it could make
money, so, too, did Nixon. Drew also throws cold water on the great
Reston findings that supposedly gave the interviews, just in the nick of time,
their edginess:
There
are other distortions in the movie. One of them makes a very big thing of the
"discovery" by James Reston, Frost's chief researcher, of a taped
conversation between Nixon and his political henchman Charles Colson,
supposedly the first one about the cover-up. (Reston, is depicted as the moral
conscience of the story, the one who is determined to hold Nixon to account,
but he is made less of a noodge in the movie than in
the play, where he became an irritating presence.) Much is made of the fact
that this bit of conversation was theretofore unknown. But after I saw the play I checked with one of the Watergate prosecutors, who
told me that that particular piece of tape was unknown because "we were
awash in far more incriminating evidence" against Nixon, and the
prosecutors didn't consider it worth using.
So much for Reston’s crucial last minute “discovery.” Where I part
company with Ms. Drew is at her conclusion:
It
doesn't matter that Frost/Nixon moves some scenes around (though it's
not always clear why), and engages in some invention. But such a gross
misrepresentation of such important events -- roughly seventy percent of the
population is too young to have been aware of Watergate -- about a figure over
whom there is still serious debate, in the name of entertainment and profits,
to my mind, crosses the line of dramatic integrity and is dishonorable.
I
believe that the evidence is far stronger that the movie and the play, like the
interviews themselves, were not done primarily for entertainment and
profits. They were done as propaganda.
David Martin
June 20, 2012
For more on recent Hollywood propaganda,
see “M. Stanton Evans
on Good Night and Good Luck.”
Addendum
Assuming that
it is accurate, Wikipedia has since confirmed my suspicions about Reston’s
Army experience. It is now reporting
that his three years of active duty were spent working as an intelligence
officer. Putting that ingredient into
the mix, we may well conclude that Reston, probably like his father, has spent
his entire career working in the service of the Deep State.
If you still
doubt that, consider what he revealed about himself in the year after we wrote
this article. Here is how we began our article on the subject of the press coverage of the 50th
anniversary of the JFK assassination:
In the weeks leading up to the actual date
of the 50th anniversary of the murder of President John F. Kennedy,
the news media, we had noted, had, for the
most part, adopted a rather low-key approach on the question of who actually
perpetrated the crime. The press, it
would appear, was following the dictum of CIA Document 1035-960, “Concerning
Criticism of the Warren Report,” “We do not recommend that discussion of the
assassination question be initiated where it is not already taking place.”
One notable exception was James Reston,
Jr., writing on
November 20
in USA Today, the daily lowbrow
counterpart to the Sunday Parade magazine. He touted his new book whose purpose is to
throw cold water on any talk of conspiracy by floating his theory that Lee
Harvey Oswald’s real intended target was Texas Governor John Connally. He begins
this way:
What possesses the American
public still to believe there was a conspiracy behind the murder of John F.
Kennedy 50 years ago?
In a History Channel poll
last year, the astonishing figure of 85% of those polled subscribed to the
belief. Lee Harvey Oswald must have been a "patsy" of a Mafia
organization, people think, or the agent of a foreign government such as Cuba or Russia, or
even the tool of a sinister CIA.
Surely there had to be a vast and evil empire behind so well-planned
and orchestrated a plot.
It's a comfortable notion
for Americans. There's only one problem: Conspiracy theories are nonsense.
There is no credible or convincing evidence of a conspiracy, not by Mafia
gangsters or foreign governments or even by U.S. intelligence agents. And yet
the rubbish keeps spilling out in print and celluloid. It appears very likely
that these fantasies will dominate the American commemoration of Kennedy's
death on Friday.
When what the man says is precisely the opposite of the truth prima facie one really can’t have a lot
of confidence in what he says in his book.
It’s not at all a “comfortable notion” to believe that we are ruled by
murdering gangsters who pay hacks like Reston to tell us otherwise. It’s in spite of how it makes us feel rather
than because of how it makes us feel that we believe that there was a
conspiracy, Reston’s wave-of-the-hand dismissal notwithstanding. It’s the evidence and it’s common sense. And speaking of fantasies, his suggestion
that the controllers of our airwaves and our print media would allow conspiracy
talk to dominate the commemoration is just about the biggest fantasy anyone can
imagine.
As anyone who is only dimly
aware of his surroundings could have predicted, on Friday, November 22, 2013,
America’s news media went all out once again for the one-lone-nut explanation
of the crime. (Make that two lone nuts counting the Mafia-connected Jack Ruby,
but his name was hardly mentioned.)
And I believe we can rest
our case against Reston, the Younger.
David Martin
May 16, 2019
Home
Page Column Column 5 Archive
Contact