Nixon's Release of Watergate Tapes
April 29, 1974
Good evening:
I have asked for this time tonight in
order to announce my answer to the House
Judiciary Committee's subpoena for
additional Watergate tapes, and to tell you
something about the actions I shall be
taking tomorrowabout what I hope
they will mean to you and about the very
difficult choices that were presented to me.
These actions will at last, once and
for all, show that what I knew and what
I did with regard to the Watergate break-in
and coverup were just as I have described
them to you from the very beginning.
I have spent many hours during the
past few weeks thinking about what I
would say to the American people if I
were to reach the decision I shall
announce tonight. And so, my words have
not been lightly chosen; I can assure you
they are deeply felt.
It was almost 2 years ago, in June 1972
that five men broke into the Democratic
National Committee headquarters in
Washington. It turned out that they were
connected with my reelection committee,
and the Watergate break-in became a
major issue in the campaign.
The full resources of the FBI and the
Justice Department were used to investigate
the incident thoroughly. I instructed
my staff and campaign aides to cooperate
fully with the investigation. The FBI
conducted nearly 1,500 interviews. For 9
monthsuntil March 1973I was assured
by those charged with conducting
and monitoring the investigations that no
one in the White House was involved.
Nevertheless, for more than a year,
there have been allegations and insinuations
that I knew about the planning of
the Watergate break-in and that I was
involved in an extensive plot to cover it
up. The House Judiciary Committee is
now investigating these charges.
On March 6, I ordered all materials
that I had previously furnished to the
Special Prosecutor turned over to the
committee. These included tape recordings
of 19 Presidential conversations and
more than 700 documents from private
White House files.
On April 11, the Judiciary Committee
issued a subpoena for 42 additional tapes
of conversations which it contended were
necessary for its investigation. I agreed to
respond to that subpoena by tomorrow.
In these folders that you see over here
on my left are more than 1,200 pages of
transcripts of private conversations I
participated in between September 15, 1972,
and April 27 of 1973 with my principal
aides and associates with regard to Watergate.
They include all the relevant
portions of all of the subpoenaed
conversations that were recorded, that is, all
portions that relate to the question of
what I knew about Watergate or the
coverup and what I did about it.
They also include transcripts of other
conversations which were not subpoenaed,
but which have a significant bearing on
the question of Presidential actions with
regard to Watergate. These will be delivered
to the committee tomorrow.
In these transcripts, portions not
relevant to my knowledge or actions with
regard to Watergate are not included,
but everything that is relevant is
includedthe rough as well as the smooththe
strategy sessions, the exploration of
alternatives, the weighing of human and
political costs.
As far as what the President personally
knew and did with regard to Watergate
and the coverup is concerned, these
materialstogether with those already made
availablewill tell it all.
I shall invite Chairman Rodino and the
committee's ranking minority member,
Congressman Hutchinson of Michigan, to
come to the White House and listen to
the actual, full tapes of these conversations,
so that they can determine for themselves
beyond question that the transcripts
are accurate and that everything on the
tapes relevant to my knowledge and my
actions on Watergate is included. If there
should be any disagreement over whether
omitted material is relevant, I shall meet
with them personally in an effort to settle
the matter. I believe this arrangement is
fair, and I think it is appropriate.
For many days now, I have spent many
hours of my own time personally reviewing
these materials and personally deciding
questions of relevancy. I believe it is
appropriate that the committee's review
should also be made by its own senior
elected officials, and not by staff
employees.
The task of Chairman Rodino and
Congressman Hutchinson will be made
simpler than was mine by the fact that
the work of preparing the transcripts has
been completed. All they will need to do
is to satisfy themselves of their
authenticity and their completeness.
Ever since the existence of the White
House taping system was first made
known last summer, I have tried vigorously
to guard the privacy of the tapes. I
have been well aware that my effort to
protect the confidentiality of Presidential
conversations has heightened the sense of
mystery about Watergate and, in fact, has
caused increased suspicions of the President.
Many people assume that the tapes
must incriminate the President, or that
otherwise, he would not insist on their privacy.
But the problem I confronted was this:
Unless a President can protect the privacy
of the advice he gets, he cannot get the
advice he needs.
This principle is recognized in the
constitutional doctrine of executive privilege,
which has been defended and maintained
by every President since Washington and
which has been recognized by the courts,
whenever tested, as inherent in the Presidency.
I consider it to be my constitutional
responsibility to defend this principle.
Three factors have now combined to
persuade me that a major unprecedented
exception to that principle is now necessary:
First, in the present circumstances, the
House of Representatives must be able
to reach an informed judgment about the
President's role in Watergate.
Second, I am making a major exception
to the principle of confidentiality
because I believe such action is now necessary
in order to restore the principle itself,
by clearing the air of the central question
that has brought such pressures upon
itand also to provide the evidence which
will allow this matter to be brought to a
prompt conclusion.
Third, in the context of the current
impeachment climate, I believe all the
American people, as well as their
representatives in Congress, are entitled to have
not only the facts but also the evidence
that demonstrates those facts.
I want there to be no question remaining
about the fact that the President has nothing
to hide in this matter.
The impeachment of a President is a
remedy of last resort; it is the most solemn
act of our entire constitutional process.
Now, regardless of whether or not it succeeded,
the action of the House, in voting
a formal accusation requiring trial by the
Senate, would put the Nation through a
wrenching ordeal it has endured only
once in its lifetime, a century ago, and
never since America has become a world
power with global responsibilities.
The impact of such an ordeal would be
felt throughout the world, and it would
have its effect on the lives of all Americans
for many years to come.
Because this is an issue that profoundly
affects all the American people, in addition
to turning over these transcripts to
the House Judiciary Committee, I have
directed that they should all be made
publicall of these that you see here.
To complete the record, I shall also
release to the public transcripts of all those
portions of the tapes already turned over
to the Special Prosecutor and to the
committee that relate to Presidential actions
or knowledge of the Watergate affair.
During the past year, the wildest
accusations have been given banner headlines
and ready credence as well. Rumor, gossip,
innuendo, accounts from unnamed sources
of what a prospective witness might testify
to, have filled the morning newspapers
and then are repeated on the evening
newscasts day after day.
Time and again, a familiar pattern
repeated itself. A charge would be
reported the first day as what it wasjust
an allegation. But it would then be
referred back to the next day and thereafter
as if it were true.
The distinction between fact and
speculation grew blurred. Eventually, all seeped
into the public consciousness as a vague
general impression of massive
wrongdoing, implicating everybody, gaining
credibility by its endless repetition.
The basic question at issue today is
whether the President personally acted
improperly in the Watergate matter.
Month after month of rumor, insinuation,
and charges by just one Watergate
witnessJohn Deansuggested that the
President did act improperly.
This sparked the demands for an
impeachment inquiry. This is the question
that must be answered. And this is the
question that will be answered by these
transcripts that I have ordered published
tomorrow.
These transcripts cover hour upon hour
of discussions that I held with Mr.
Haldeman, John Ehrlichman, John Dean, John
Mitchell, former Attorney General
Kleindienst, Assistant Attorney General
Petersen, and others with regard to Watergate.
They were discussions in which I was
probing to find out what had happened,
who was responsible, what were the
various degrees of responsibilities, what were
the legal culpabilities, what were the
political ramifications, and what actions
were necessary and appropriate on the
part of the President.
I realize that these transcripts will
provide grist for many sensational stories in
the press. Parts will seem to be
contradictory with one another, and parts will
be in conflict with some of the testimony
given in the Senate Watergate committee
hearings.
I have been reluctant to release these
tapes, not just because they will embarrass
me and those with whom I have talked
which they willand not just because
they will become the subject of speculation
and even ridiculewhich they will
and not just because certain parts of them
will be seized upon by political and
journalistic opponentswhich they will.
I have been reluctant because, in these
and in all the other conversations in this
office, people have spoken their minds
freely, never dreaming that specific
sentences or even parts of sentences would be
picked out as the subjects of national
attention and controversy.
I have been reluctant because the
principle of confidentiality is absolutely
essential to the conduct of the Presidency. In
reading the raw transcripts of these
conversations, I believe it will be more readily
apparent why that principle is essential
and must be maintained in the future.
These conversations are unusual in their
subject matter, but the same kind of
uninhibited discussionand it is thatthe
same brutal candor is necessary in
discussing how to bring warring factions to
the peace table or how to move necessary
legislation through the Congress.
Names are named in these transcripts.
Therefore, it is important to remember
that much that appears in them is no more
than hearsay or speculation, exchanged as
I was trying to find out what really had
happened, while my principal aides were
reporting to me on rumors and reports
that they had beard, while we discussed
the various, often conflicting stories that
different persons were telling.
As the transcripts will demonstrate, my
concerns during this period covered a wide
range. The first and obvious one was to
find out just exactly what had happened
and who was involved.
A second concern was for the people
who had been, or might become, involved
in Watergate. Some were close advisers,
valued friends, others whom I had trusted.
And I was also concerned about the human
impact on others, especially some of
the young people and their families who
had come to Washington to work in my
Administration, whose lives might be
suddenly ruined by something they had done
in an excess of loyalty or in the mistaken
belief that it would serve the interests of
the President.
And then, I was quite frankly
concerned about the political implications.
This represented potentially a devastating
blow to the Administration and to its
programs, one which I knew would be
exploited for all it was worth by hostile
elements in the Congress as well as in the
media. I wanted to do what was right, but
I wanted to do it in a way that would
cause the least unnecessary damage in a
highly charged political atmosphere to the
Administration.
And fourth, as a lawyer, I felt very
strongly that I had to conduct myself in a
way that would not prejudice the rights of
potential defendants.
And fifth, I was striving to sort out a
complex tangle, not only of facts but also
questions of legal and moral responsibility.
I wanted, above all, to be fair. I wanted
to draw distinctions, where those were
appropriate, between persons who were
active and willing participants on the one
hand, and on the other, those who might
have gotten inadvertently caught up in the
web and be technically indictable but
morally innocent.
Despite the confusions and contradictions,
what does come through clearly is this:
John Dean charged in sworn Senate
testimony that I was "fully aware of the
coverup" at the time of our first meeting
on September 15, 1972. These transcripts
show clearly that I first learned of it when
Mr. Dean himself told me about it in this
office on March 21some 6 months later.
Incidentally, these transcriptscovering
hours upon hours of conversations
should place in somewhat better perspective
the controversy over the 18 1/2 minute
gap in the tape of a conversation I had
with Mr. Haldeman back in June of 1972.
Now, how it was caused is still a
mystery to me and, I think, to many of the
experts as well. But I am absolutely
certain, however, of one thing: that it was
not caused intentionally by my secretary,
Rose Mary Woods, or any of my White
House assistants. And certainly, if the
theory were true that during those 18 1/2
minutes, Mr. Haldeman and I cooked up some
sort of a Watergate coverup scheme, as so
many have been quick to surmise, it hardly
seems likely that in all of our subsequent
conversationsmany of them are here
which neither of us ever expected would
see the light of day, there is nothing
remotely indicating such a scheme; indeed,
quite the contrary.
From the beginning, I have said that in
many places on the tapes there were
ambiguitiesa statement and comments that
different people with different perspectives
might interpret in drastically different
waysbut although the words may be
ambiguous, though the discussions may
have explored many alternatives, the
record of my actions is totally clear now, and
I still believe it was totally correct then.
A prime example is one of the most
controversial discussions, that with Mr. Dean
on March 21the one in which he first
told me of the coverup, with Mr.
Haldeman joining us midway through the
conversation.
His revelations to me on March 21 were
a sharp surprise, even though the report
he gave to me was far from complete,
especially since he did not reveal at that
time the extent of his own criminal
involvement.
I was particularly concerned by his
report that one of the Watergate defendants,
Howard Hunt, was threatening blackmail
unless he and his lawyer were immediately
given $120,000 for legal fees and family
support, and that he was attempting to
blackmail the White House, not by threatening
exposure on the Watergate matter,
but by threatening to reveal activities that
would expose extremely sensitive, highly
secret national security matters that he
had worked on before Watergate.
I probed, questioned, tried to learn all
Mr. Dean knew about who was involved,
what was involved. I asked more than 150
questions of Mr. Dean in the course of
that conversation.
He said to me, and I quote from the
transcripts directly: "I can just tell from
our conversation that these are things that
you have no knowledge of."
It was only considerably later that I
learned how much there was that he did
not tell me thenfor example, that he
himself had authorized promises of
clemency, that he had personally handled
money for the Watergate defendants,
and that he had suborned perjury of a
witness.
I knew that I needed more facts. I
knew that I needed the judgments of more
people. I knew the facts about the Watergate
coverup would have to be made public,
but I had to find out more about what
they were before I could decide how they
could best be made public.
I returned several times to the immediate
problem loosed by Mr. Hunt's blackmail
threat, which to me was not a Watergate
problem, but one which I regarded,
rightly or wrongly, as a potential national
security problem of very serious proportions.
I considered long and hard whether
it might in fact be better to let the payment
go forward, at least temporarily, in
the hope that this national security matter
would not be exposed in the course of
uncovering the Watergate coverup.
I believed then, and I believe today,
that I had a responsibility as President to
consider every option, including this one,
where production of sensitive national security
matters was at issueprotection of
such matters. In the course of considering
it and of "just thinking out loud," as I
put it at one point, I several times suggested
that meeting Hunt's demands might be necessary.
But then I also traced through where
that would lead. The money could be
raised. But money demands would lead
inescapably to clemency demands, and
clemency could not be granted. I said,
and I quote directly from the tape: "It is
wrong, that's for sure." I pointed out, and
I quote again from the tape: "But in the
end we are going to be bled to death. And
in the end it is all going to come out anyway.
Then you get the worst of both
worlds. We are going to lose, and people
are going to"
And Mr. Haldeman interrupts me and
says: "And look like dopes!"
And I responded, "And in effect look
like a coverup. So that we cannot do."
Now, I recognize that this tape of
March 21 is one which different meanings
could be read in by different people. But
by the end of the meeting, as the tape
shows, my decision was to convene a new
grand jury and to send everyone before
the grand jury with instructions to testify.
Whatever the potential for misinterpretation
there may be as a result of the
different options that were discussed at
different times during the meeting, my
conclusion at the end of the meeting was
dear. And my actions and reactions as
demonstrated on the tapes that follow
that date show clearly that I did not intend
the further payment to Hunt or anyone
else be made. These are some of the
actions that I took in the weeks that
followed in my effort to find the truth,
to carry out my responsibilities to enforce
the law:
As a tape of our meeting on March 22,
the next day, indicates, I directed Mr.
Dean to go to Camp David with instructions
to put together a written report. I
learned 5 days later, on March 26, that
he was unable to complete it. And so on
March 27, I assigned John Ehrlichman
to try to find out what had happened,
who was at fault, and in what ways and
to what degree.
One of the transcripts I am making
public is a call that Mr. Ehrlichman made
to the Attorney General on March 28,
in which he asked the Attorney General
to report to me, the President, directly,
any information he might find indicating
possible involvement of John Mitchell or
by anyone in the White House. I had Mr.
Haldeman separately pursue other,
independent lines of inquiry.
Throughout, I was trying to reach
determinations on matters of both substance
and procedure on what the facts were
and what was the best way to move the
case forward. I concluded that I wanted
everyone to go before the grand jury and
testify freely and fully. This decision, as
you will recall, was publicly announced
on March 30, 1973, I waived executive
privilege in order to permit everybody to
testify. I specifically waived executive
privilege with regard to conversations with
the President, and I waived the
attorney-client privilege with John Dean in order
to permit him to testify fully and, I hope,
truthfully.
Finally, on April 143 weeks after
I learned of the coverup from Mr. Dean
Mr. Ehrlichman reported to me on the
results of his investigation. As he
acknowledged, much of what he had gathered was
hearsay, but he had gathered enough to
make it clear that the next step was to
make his findings completely available to
the Attorney General, which I instructed
him to do.
And the next day, Sunday, April 15,
Attorney General Kleindienst asked to see
me, and he reported new information
which had come to his attention on this
matter. And although he was in no way
whatever involved in Watergate, because
of his close personal ties, not only to John
Mitchell but to other potential people who
might be involved, he quite properly
removed himself from the case.
We agreed that Assistant Attorney
General Henry Petersen, the head of the
Criminal Division, a Democrat and career
prosecutor, should be placed in complete
charge of the investigation.
Later that day, I met with Mr. Petersen.
I continued to meet with him, to talk
with him, to consult with him, to offer
him the full cooperation of the White
Houseas you will see from these
transcriptseven to the point of retaining
John Dean on the White House Staff for
an extra 2 weeks after he admitted his
criminal involvement, because Mr.
Petersen thought that would make it easier for
the prosecutor to get his cooperation in
breaking the case if it should become
necessary to grant Mr. Dean's demand for
immunity.
On April 15, when I heard that one of
the obstacles to breaking the case was
Gordon Liddy's refusal to talk, I
telephoned Mr. Petersen and directed that
he should make clear not only to Mr.
Liddy but to everyone thatand now I
quote directly from the tape of that
telephone call"As far as the President is
concerned, everybody in this case is to talk
and to tell the truth." I told him if
necessary I would personally meet with Mr.
Liddy's lawyer to assure him that I wanted
Liddy to talk and to tell the truth.
From the time Mr. Petersen took
charge, the case was solidly within the
criminal justice system, pursued
personally by the Nation's top professional
prosecutor with the active, personal assistance
of the President of the United States.
I made clear there was to be no coverup.
Let me quote just a few lines from the
transcriptsyou can read them to verify
themso that you can hear for yourself
the orders I was giving in this period.
Speaking to Haldeman and Ehrlichman,
I said: "... It is ridiculous to talk
about clemency. They all knew that."
Speaking to Ehrlichman, I said: "We
all have to do the right thing... We just
cannot have this kind of a business..."
Speaking to Haldeman and Ehrlichman,
I said: "The boil had to be pricked
... We have to prick the boil and take
the heat. Now that's what we are doing
here."
Speaking to Henry Petersen, I said:
"I want you to be sure to understand
that you know we am going to get to the
bottom of this thing."
Speaking to John Dean, I said: "Tell
the truth. That is the thing I have told
everybody around here."
And then speaking to Haldeman: "And
you tell Magruder, 'now Jeb, this evidence
is coming in, you ought to go to the grand
jury. Purge yourself if you're perjured
and tell this whole story.'"
I am confident that the American
people will see these transcripts for what they
are, fragmentary records from a time
more than a year ago that now seems very
distant, the records of a President and of
a man suddenly being confronted and
having to cope with information which, if
true, would have the most far-reaching
consequences, not only for his personal
reputation but, more important, for his
hopes, his plans, his goals for the people
who had elected him as their leader.
If read with an open and a fair mind
and read together with the record of the
actions I took, these transcripts will show
that what I have stated from the beginning
to be the truth has been the truth:
that I personally had no knowledge of the
break-in before it occurred, that I had no
knowledge of the coverup until I was informed
of it by John Dean on March 21,
that I never offered clemency for the
defendants, and that after March 21, my
actions were directed toward finding the
facts and seeing that justice was done,
fairly and according to the law.
The facts are there. The conversations
are there. The record of actions is there.
To anyone who reads his way through
this mass of materials I have provided,
it will be totally, abundantly clear that as
far as the President's role with regard to
Watergate is concerned, the entire story
is there.
As you will see, now that you also
will have this mass of evidence I have
provided, I have tried to cooperate with
the House Judiciary Committee. And I
repeat tonight the offer that I have made
previously: to answer written
interrogatories under oath and, if there are then
issues still unresolved, to meet personally
with the chairman of the committee and
with Congressman Hutchinson to answer
their questions under oath.
As the committee conducts its inquiry,
I also consider it only essential and fair
that my counsel, Mr. St. Clair, should
be present to cross-examine witnesses and
introduce evidence in an effort to establish
the truth.
I am confident that for the overwhelming
majority of those who study the evidence
that I shall release tomorrow
those who are willing to look at it fully,
fairly, and objectivelythe evidence will
be persuasive and, I hope, conclusive.
We live in a time of very great
challenge and great opportunity for America.
We live at a time when peace may become
possible in the Middle East for the
first time in a generation.
We are at last in the process of
fulfilling the hope of mankind for a
limitation on nuclear armsa process that will
continue when I meet with the Soviet
leaders in Moscow in a few weeks.
We are well on the way toward building
a peace that can last, not just for this
but for other generations as well.
And here at home, there is vital work
to be done in moving to control inflation,
to develop our energy resources, to
strengthen our economy so that Americans
can enjoy ,what they have not had
since 1956: full prosperity without war
and without inflation.
Every day absorbed by Watergate is a
day lost from the work that must be
doneby your President and by your
Congresswork that must be done in
dealing with the great problems that affect
your prosperity, affect your security, that
could affect your lives.
The materials I make public tomorrow
will provide all the additional evidence
needed to get Watergate behind us and to
get it behind us now.
Never before in the history of the
Presidency have records that are so private
been made so public.
In giving you these recordsblemishes
and allI am placing my trust in the
basic fairness of the American people.
I know in my own heart that through
the long, painful, and difficult process
revealed in these transcripts, I was trying in
that period to discover what was right
and to do what was right.
I hope and I trust that when you have
seen the evidence in its entirety, you will
see the truth of that statement.
As for myself, I intend to go forward,
to the best of my ability, with the work
that you elected me to do. I shall do so in
a spirit perhaps best summed up a century
ago by another President when he was
being subjected to unmerciful attack.
Abraham Lincoln said:
I do the very best I know howthe
very best I can; and I mean to keep doing
so until the end. If the end brings me out
all right, what is said against me won't
amount to anything. If the end brings me
out wrong, ten angels swearing I was right
would make no difference.
Thank you and good evening.
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