Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Watergate Essays (2054 words) - Watergate Scandal, L. Patrick Gray
  Watergate    WATERGATE Sex, drugs, money, power, you name it and there is a scandal  for it, but look back and you will see that from all the scandals there have been,  Watergate was among the worst. The Watergate scandal had everything.  From Nixon disgracing the presidency by lying to the country and abusing his  power, to his committees being involved in illegal acts and a big cover up. All  leading to little side roads of corruption and lies. Watergate is by far one of the  worst presidential scandals in the history of the United States. In the story of  Watergate, five burglars were found breaking into democratic offices at the  Watergate complex in Washington DC. The break-in was passed off as just  another burglary, but when the burglars were found to have connections with  the CIA, questions were starting to be asked. Then when the phone number of  Howard Hunt was found in one of the burglars phone books, it made people  think, Why would one of the burglars have the phone number of one of the  presidents men? Then there is Richard Nixon, the man of the hour, plays the  role of the president of the United States of America. The man that was voted  into office by the people, and the man that swore to serve the people. When  Watergate was uncovered, it revealed that the president was a liar and a cheat.  The president lied to our country, lied about his involvement, concealed self  incriminating evidence, abused his power, and planed to have the CIA stop the  FBI investigations. He was also deeply involved with the cover up and still lied  about his involvement. During the times of the unraveling of Watergate,  questions were asked about connections with the White House and the  president, but when the president was asked about it at a press conference he  assured Americans that The White House has no involvement whatever in  this particular incident. He was lying to the country like it was part of his job  (Dorman 158). The lying did not end there, it went on and on for months, and  as the scandal kept unraveling, President Nixon and White House, and creep  officials were deliberately misleading the public about the significance of the  Watergate affair (158). As Watergate was becoming a front-page article in  the newspapers, new evidence was being uncovered. One piece of evidence  that changed the peoples ideas of our president was the tapping of every  conversation in the oval office since about the 18th month of president  Nixon's term (Kutler 368). Those tapes would soon prove that the president  was deeply involved in the scandal. During the trials, the Nixon administration  claimed that the March 21st, 1973 meeting was the first Nixon had heard of the  cover-ups, but after the tapes were heard it was discovered that Nixon was  involved from the beginning (Heritage 36). The Nixon tapes brought out much  controversy. The tapes alone could prove the president innocent or guilty,  whichever one it was, Nixon refused to hand over the tapes. the courts then  demanded the tapes, and Nixon still would not give them up. After much  struggle Nixon agreed to give a transcript of the tapes. The transcripts brought  to light a significant amount of evidence against Nixon. The transcripts  revealed payoffs, affiliation with the burglaries, and the OK's to the cover-up,  But most important the transcripts showed that Nixon had lied repeatedly after  he had denied knowing anything about the conspiracy (27). After much  struggle, the courts finally got the tapes from Nixon, It was Archibald Cox that  issued the subpoena for the tapes, and that started the bloodbath we now know  as the Saturday night massacre. The night of October 20,1973, possibly the  most tumultuous in American political history, when the special Watergate  prosecutor and the nations two top law officers lost their jobs within the space  of an hour and a half. (Heritage 38). Soon the country would find a new  problem with the tapes. When the presidents lawyers were going over the  tapes, they came along an 18 minute gap during a conversation with Nixon and  Haldman (34). Three weeks later, the gap was discovered, Rosemary Woods  (Nixon's secretary) testified that while transcribing the tape, she had  accidentally erased perhaps five minutes when interrupted by a phone call, she  said she had pressed the 'Record' button instead of the 'Stop' button and then  kept her foot on the machines control pedal while speaking into the phone. (34)  Not everyone accepted this explanation; The maneuver would have been  difficult    
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