Mansfield News Journal (Ohio)
October 20, 1974
Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein having told the Watergate story from their point of view in "All the President's Men," one of their editors at the Post, Barry Sussman, now follows with his version.
Sussman's book is billed as "the first complete account from break-in to resignation," and while one could quibble about the word "complete," it is still probably true that this is the most thorough discussion of the subject to date.
The book was actually finished two weeks before Nixon's resignation, but fortunately not too late for a quick final chapter on this development and a last-minute revision to put references to the Nixon Presidency in past tense. (One they missed: "...near the White House, where the barber who cuts Nixon's hair...")
The Post got a jump on the Watergate story immediately following the break-in in June, 1972, and stayed ahead of the nation's other media throughout. Sussman tells how the early advantage came about thanks to a Post police reporter who had been on his beat so long that many people, including some policemen, thought he was a cop. So when other reporters were barred from the Democratic National Committee headquarters during the initial investigation, he was allowed inside.
In general, however, it wasn't so much luck as it was the fact that no one else was willing to take Watergate seriously for so many months. Even at the Post, where Woodward and Bernstein were assigned full-time to the story, Watergate ran a distant second to the 1972 presidential campaign.
"To the political staff of the Post, then," writes Sussman, "Watergate was in a way like a leaky faucet---something to think about when you stood near the sink, easy to forget when you were out covering the election campaign."
Conservatives and diehard Nixon supporters will never believe it, but the motivation at the Post, according to Sussman, was not a desire to "get Nixon." Right up to the election, he says, "we had no idea how big the story was, or how much trouble we had been causing Nixon."
Watergate finally became the nation's number-one story in March, 1973, after James McCord broke his silence and the White House began to be implicated in the scandal.
Sussman effectively pieces together the complex Watergate story, creating order out of disorder. By contracting the scandal's diverse ingredients and examining them with the advantages of hindsight and the perspective offered by the Nixon tapes, he is able to put the overall picture into much sharper focus than was possible from reading about day-to-day developments in the newspaper.
It has been popular, since Nixon's resignation, to talk about how well the American system works. Sussman's book makes clear that the nation owes its gratitude as much to plain good luck as it does to the system.
For one thing, there is the matter of the tapes. Had Nixon not been so foolish as to install that taping system in his office or if Alexander Butterfield had not made that historic revelation of its existence to the Senate Watergate committee, Richard Nixon would undoubtedly still be President of the United States. There would still have been much incriminating evidence (Dean's testimony, for example), but there would not have been the solid, indisputable proof that was needed to turn most Republicans against one of their own.
It is sobering to realize just how reluctant Congress, including Democrats as well as Republicans, was to take action against the President. Congress acted only when an outraged public demanded it.
Sussman points out that Nixon was counting on the "politics of cooperation" to get him out of the mess he was in. The game of "you do something for me and I'll do something for you" was responsible for much of his political success, and to the end he tried to make it work this time, too. Fortunately, it didn't.
"The Great Coverup" is good reading, recommended even for those who think they are sick and tired of Watergate.
Bestsellers
"This book is a necessity."
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