George Will confirms Nixon's Vietnam treason
by Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
August 8, 2014
Richard Nixon was a traitor.
The new release of extended versions of Nixon's papers now confirms this long-standing belief, usually dismissed as a
"conspiracy theory" by Republican conservatives. Now it has been substantiated by none other than right-wing columnist
George Will.
Nixon's newly revealed records show for certain that in 1968, as a presidential candidate, he ordered Anna Chennault,
his liaison to the South Vietnam government, to persuade them refuse a cease-fire being brokered by President Lyndon
Johnson.
Nixon's interference with these negotiations violated President John Adams's 1797 Logan Act, banning private citizens
from intruding into official government negotiations with a foreign nation.
Published as the 40th Anniversary of Nixon's resignation approaches, Will's column confirms that Nixon feared public
disclosure of his role in sabotaging the 1968 Vietnam peace talks. Will says Nixon established a "plumbers unit" to stop
potential leaks of information that might damage him, including documentation he believed was held by the Brookings
Institute, a liberal think tank. The Plumbers' later break-in at the Democratic National Committee led to the Watergate
scandal that brought Nixon down.
Nixon's sabotage of the Vietnam peace talks was confirmed by transcripts of FBI wiretaps. On November 2, 1968, LBJ
received an FBI report saying Chernnault told the South Vietnamese ambassador that "she had received a message from her
boss: saying the Vietnamese should "hold on, we are gonna win."
As Will confirms, Vietnamese did "hold on," the war proceeded and Nixon did win, changing forever the face of American
politics----with the shadow of treason permanently embedded in its DNA.
The treason came in 1968 as the Vietnam War reached a critical turning point. President Lyndon Johnson was desperate for
a truce between North and South Vietnam.
LBJ had an ulterior motive: his Vice President, Hubert Humphrey, was in a tight presidential race against Richard Nixon.
With demonstrators in the streets, Humphrey desperately needed a cease-fire to get him into the White House.
Johnson had it all but wrapped it. With a combination of gentle and iron-fisted persuasion, he forced the leaders of
South Vietnam into an all-but-final agreement with the North. A cease-fire was imminent, and Humphrey’s election seemed
assured.
But at the last minute, the South Vietnamese pulled out. LBJ suspected Nixon had intervened to stop them from signing a
peace treaty.
In the Price of Power (1983), Seymour Hersh revealed Henry Kissinger---then Johnson’s advisor on Vietnam peace
talks---secretly alerted Nixon’s staff that a truce was imminent.
According to Hersh, Nixon “was able to get a series of messages to the Thieu government [of South Vietnam] making it
clear that a Nixon presidency would have different views on peace negotiations.”
Johnson was livid. He even called the Republican Senate Minority Leader, Everett Dirksen, to complain that “they
oughtn’t be doing this. This is treason.”
“I know,” was Dirksen’s feeble reply.
Johnson blasted Nixon about this on November 3, just prior to the election. As Robert Parry of consortiumnews.com has written: “when Johnson confronted Nixon with evidence of the peace-talk sabotage, Nixon insisted on his innocence
but acknowledged that he knew what was at stake.”
Said Nixon: “My, I would never do anything to encourage….Saigon not to come to the table….Good God, we’ve got to get
them to Paris or you can’t have peace.”
But South Vietnamese President General Theiu---a notorious drug and gun runner---did boycott Johnson’s Paris peace
talks. With the war still raging, Nixon claimed a narrow victory over Humphrey. He then made Kissinger his own national
security advisor.
In the four years between the sabotage and what Kissinger termed “peace at hand” just prior to the 1972 election, more
than 20,000 US troops died in Vietnam. More than 100,000 were wounded. More than a million Vietnamese were killed.
But in 1973, Kissinger was given the Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating the same settlement he helped sabotage in 1968.
According to Parry, LBJ wanted to go public with Nixon’s treason. But Clark Clifford, an architect of the CIA and a
pillar of the Washington establishment, talked Johnson out of it. LBJ’s close confidant warned that the revelation would
shake the foundations of the nation.
In particular, Clifford told Johnson (in a taped conversation) that “some elements of the story are so shocking in their
nature that I’m wondering whether it would be good for the country to disclose the story and then possibly have [Nixon]
elected. It could cast his whole administration under such doubt that I think it would be inimical to our country’s best
interests.”
In other words, Clifford told LBJ that the country couldn’t handle the reality that its president was a certifiable
traitor, eligible for legal execution.
Fittingly, Clark Clifford’s upper-crust career ended in the disgrace of his entanglement with the crooked Bank of Credit
and Commerce (BCCI), which financed the terrorist group Al Qaeda and whose scandalous downfall tainted the Agency he
helped found.
Johnson lived four years after he left office, tormented by the disastrous war that destroyed his presidency and his
retirement. Nixon won re-election in 1972, again with a host of dirty dealings, then became the first America president
to resign in disgrace.
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Bob Fitrakis is Editor-in-Chief of the Free Press and Harvey Wasserman is Senior Editor. Read more Harvey Wasserman at solartopia.org.