By Alan Caruba
“On August
8 (1974), Richard Milhouse Nixon announced his resignation as of noon the
following day, thus avoiding the humiliation of certain impeachment. It was a
solemn moment in the life of the nation. The change in leadership took place
with no soldiers with fixed bayonets in the streets to keep civil order. The
nation accepted the departure of its disgraced president and welcomed his
successor peacefully.”
This is
how Harry Rosenfeld described that day thirty-nine years ago in his autobiography,
“From Kristallnacht to Watergate: Memoirs of a Newspaperman.” For old
journalists like myself, the book evokes the long effort to get at the truth
behind a June 17, 1972 break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters
at the Watergate complex. Rosenfeld was the metro editor at The Washington Post
at the time.
Many
readers were not even born at that time and, for them, it is a useful lesson in
the way a combination of tenacious journalism and the wheels of government
combined to result in the historic resignation of a president who had won an
impressive reelection. Despite the slavish coverage of Barack Obama by much of
the nation’s mainstream press, the fact remains that the “phony” scandals he
wants to dismiss are in the news every day, building a momentum that could lead
to his resignation in the face of impeachment.
Watergate
unfolded slowly, but its outcome included the indictment, trial, conviction,
and incarceration of forty-three persons, among which was Nixon’s Attorney
General and many of his top staff members and administration officials.
Watergate was a singular scandal, but today Obama’s presidency is circling the
drain with scandals in the Department of State, the Department of Justice, the
Internal Revenue Service, and the Federal Election Commission.
Events
surrounding the passage of the Affordable Patient Care Act—Obamacare—also
demonstrate mounting opposition to Obama’s signature legislation and
exacerbating all of this is the moribund economy.
When the
Senate Watergate Committee issued its final report, its chairman said, “The
presidential aides who perpetrated Watergate…were instigated by a lust for
political power itself.” This could apply to the President and those around him
because their disregard for the Constitutional limits on their actions is
manifested every day. For example, there is no authority to delay
implementation of Obamacare’s employer mandate.
The title
of Rosenfeld’s memoir is a reminder of a grim period of history in the last
century, the rise of the Nazi regime in Germany and the subsequent deliberate
murder of Europe’s Jews in what has come to be known as the Holocaust.
Kristallnacht. On November 9, 1938 a coordinated attack on synagogues, Jewish
businesses, and Jews in Germany made it abundantly clear that those who had not
already left had better do so. The Rosenfeld family, his parents and sister,
were among the fortunate to escape.
Rosenfeld’s
life mirrors journalism from the 1940s to the present. He wanted nothing more
than to be a journalist, beginning in a low-level job at New York’s Herald
Tribune, working not as a copy boy, but in its syndicate department as a
shipping clerk. With meticulous detail, Rosenfeld tells of his rise in the
profession that included the death of his beloved Tribune and to his editorial
positions as foreign news editor for The Washington Post and eventually as its
metro editor, a job that included supervising two young reporters, Bob Woodward
and Carl Bernstein, who would gain fame for their dogged coverage of the
Watergate burglary and subsequent revelations.
As foreign
editor, he was able to travel throughout the world, often meeting the leaders
of its nations throughout that time. While still at the Tribune, in 1965 he
traveled to Jerusalem where he visited “a city divided” in which “the Israelis
had erected high, thick concrete barriers to deflect sniper fire from
Jordanians in the Old City.” Two years later the “Six Day War” would see Israel
gain control of Jerusalem, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights.
When the
Watergate burglary occurred, Rosenfeld had already enjoyed many years working
as a journalist and, in particular, as an editor overseeing the work of
journalists. By then he was already widely regarded as one of the best in his
profession. He had spotted Woodward as having great promise even though he had
no formal journalism training. He also knew that Bernstein had a less than
personal stellar reputation, but his instincts were such that he quickly
surmised that the break-in was no “third-rate burglary” as the White House
press secretary had described it.
“When
people say the Post brought down President Nixon,” says Rosenfeld, “they are
off the mark. He brought himself down.”
When the
impeachment articles were proposed, they said that Nixon had “brought disgrace
and disrespect to the office of the presidency, failed to honor the
Constitution of the United States and the laws enacted thereunder, imperiled
the civil liberties of the American people, and attempted to undermine the
legislative and judicial branches of government, thereby jeopardizing the
constitutional system of government in which the people of the United States
have placed their trust.”
If that
sounds a lot like what has been occurring throughout the first and now second
term of President Obama, you’re right. He is facing the outcome of not one, but
several scandals, all continuing to unravel as the weeks turn into months and
years. It took two years to put an end to Nixon’s presidency and there is every
likelihood that we will have to endure more revelations about the rot at the
center of his presidency before he too must face justice.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
The only difference I can see is that back then, we had journalists. Now those in the media are, for the most part, sycophants.
ReplyDeleteYes, that's true. They have become propagandists, not truth-seekers and tellers.
ReplyDeleteWe patriot bloggers are the Media today...and we have reported to the world the outline, and sometimes the details, of El Presidente (for life?) Obama's many scandals including the old ones like his numerous SSN accounts.
ReplyDeleteHowever, our First Citizen is well protected by his imperial bodyguard of highly paid liars and lackeys, and I seriously doubt resignation is in The One's lexicon.
Impeachment?
Forget it.
This will so not happen!
Indictment? Ditto.
No one dares touch a hair on the head of America's "First Black President" since Bill Clinton!
So I'm afraid we are stuck with The Magic Negro (so named by the L.A. Times) until 2017 at the earliest.
The sheer mass of the scandals may take him down, Ron. It took two years to force out Nixon.
ReplyDeleteLike Alan says, the major difference is the number of scandals themselves. Where does one start? If we had ejected him on the very first scandal, a forged birth certificate, social security, and selective service documentation, we wouldn't even have the problem of Obama right now.
ReplyDeleteI hope you're right, Alan.
ReplyDeleteIf we had ejected him on the very first scandal, a forged birth certificate, social security, and selective service documentation, we wouldn't even have the problem of Obama right now.
ReplyDeleteYou'd just have the problem of someone else.
Someone suggested to me, the other day, that two words explain why Obama will not be impeached: "JOE BIDEN"
ReplyDeleteJDL