WATERGATE REVISITED

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CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0
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RIPPUB
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K
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4
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December 22, 2016
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July 19, 2010
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18
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Publication Date: 
March 1, 1986
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0 LE APPEAR r=' Pa4:1F ~j ?', COLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW March/April 1986 WATERGATE REVISITED Did the press - and the courts - really get to the bottom , of history's most When Jim Hougan's new Watergate book, Secret Agenda, was published last winter, it caused a brief but intense flurry of interest. Writing for The New York Times Book Review, Pulitzer Prize-win- ner J. Anthony Lukas faulted Hougan in several instances for jumping to what he considered unwarranted conclusions. particularly when it came to Hougan's theory that the real reason behind the Watergate burglary was a secret sex scandal. However, he also found that Hougan had presented some "valuable new evidence." "If even half of this is true." wrote Lukas - whose word car- ries particular weight in this instance be- cause his own book on Watergate. Nightmare, is considered the definitive work on the subject - "Secret Agenda will add an important new dimension to our understanding of Watergate. "But," Lukas added, "it may be months before reporters can sort through this material, check Mr. Hougan's sources, and decide which of these rev- elations is solid gold. which dross." Reviewing the book for The Wash- ington Post Book World. Anthony Marro, himself an old Watergate hand and now managing editor of Newsday, criticized Hougan for mixing "diligent information gathering with question- able. even reckless. assumptions about motive and purpose." Nevertheless, he wrote. "Hougan has attacked the official record of Watergate with .. . consid- erable skill, pointing up scores of ques- tions, flaws, contradictions, and holes." "It likely will take some time for Hou- gan's reporting to be absorbed. cross- checked. challenged. and tested.'' Marro added, "and whether this proves to be an important book or simply a con- troversial one will depend on how well it survives the scrutiny that it is sure to receive.'' Another review, by Robert Sherrill, Phil Stan/ord. Jormerly it senior editor at Inquiry inaga=ine, is now a free-lance writer. famous burglary? appeared in the St. Petersburg Times. Sherrill, who has a reputation for being a hard-nosed investigative writer, found that Hougan "builds a compelling case even though some crucial parts, as he readily concedes, are based on circum- stantial evidence." "If nothing else," Sherrill concluded. ''Secret Agenda has raised enough questions to remind the press that no matter how conscientiously it tries to unravel scandalous riddles of government, it should wait a few years before boasting that the solution is com- plete" - and, like Lukas and Marro. he left no doubt that he expected the press to get to work. That, of course. was more than a year ago - and to date. apparently. no one from any of the major news organiza- tions has made an effort to test any of Hougan's findings. This seems odd, if only because the Watergate affair is one of the most important political and jour- nalistic events of our time. and because. if Hougan is right, our knowledge of it is seriously flawed. What Hougan presents in Secret Agenda is not so much a totally new version of Watergate as it is, to use Mar- ro's words, "a significant new dimen- sion and perspective." There is nothing in his account to suggest that Richard Nixon was not guilty of impeachable of- fenses. Nor does Hougan dispute that the break-in was planned in the White House, or that when the burglars were caught. the president and his men con- spired to cover up their involvement. What he does say is that all the while this was going on, the CIA. quite with- out the knowledge of the White House. was pursuing an agenda of its own. Hou- gan says that at least two of those in- volved in the break-in were actually spying on the White House for the CIA and conducting their own illegal domes- tic operations: that one of these domestic operations involved spying on the clients of a call-girl ring operating out of an apartment complex near the Watergate: by PHIL STANFORD and that when the White House-planned bugging of the Democratic National Committee's headquarters threatened to expose this operation - as it might have, since some of the clients for the call girls were being referred from the DNC - it was sabotaged in order to protect the CIA's role. ''Watergate," Hougan writes. "was not so much a par- tisan political scandal as it was . . . a sex scandal, the unpredictable outcome of a CIA operation that, in the simplest of terms. tripped on its own shoelaces.'' Now, this is clearly a mind-boggling scenario, and there is a natural tendency for some to simply laugh it off. How- ever. considering the published state- ments of journalists such as Lukas, Marro, and Sherrill, as well as Hougan's own reputation as a serious writer and investigator - he is a former Washing- ton editor of Harper's magazine and the author of Spooks, a well-documented study of the use of intelligence agents by corporations and other private entities - Hougan's findings cannot be so easily dismissed. What's needed is a careful look at his facts: either they are correct or they aren't. And the logical place for such an investigation to begin is with Hougan's account of the break-in, since that is the keystone of his entire argu- ment. My own inquiries indicate that Hougan is right on several crucial points. Mccording to the generally ac- cepted account of the break- in. the reason the Watergate burglars entered the head- quarters of the Democratic National Committee on June 17, 1972, was to replace a defective bug on the tele- phone of the secretary of DNC chairman Lam O'Brien. As this version goes. in the course of a break-in two weeks ear- lier, James McCord had installed two bugs - one on the phone belonging to O'Brien's secretary, the other on the phone of another official, R. Spencer Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0 at Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ither FBI nor telephone company tech- - Well, isn't it possible that these re- and rts Oliver. The Oliver bug worked. and for ne icians were able to find the bugs that . ports are merely interim repo ' Ap- lf d i two weeks. we are told. a fellow named n osedly been planted by the Wa- d su h . tse that the FBI later reverse ed FBI ti h Alfred C. Baldwin 111, sitting in a room pp a ate burglars - despite three top-to- r r re parently not. I spoke wit who s in the Howard Johnson motor lodge g te ttom searches, which included the dis- b . special agent Wilbur G. Steven ratory b L across the street from the Watergate o of every phone on the prem- ntlin o a was supervisor of the FBI d (a) that fi complex. monitored conversations from g ma and some urgent pleas from the s i rme during Watergate. He con in bu d fi it. Baldwin passed on summaries of , se assistant U.S. attorney Earl osecutor g a n the FBI was never able to was later those conversations - which he and oth- . pr who understood that the fail- Silbert J the DNC and (bT that when one secretary ers described as sexual in nature - to , . to find a bug could have serious con- discovered after a call from a d it a fake McCord. who passed them along to G. ure ences for his case. Furthermore. . at the DNC. the FBI considere of that ' Gordon Liddy, who passed them on to sequ n an antiquated bug was actually dis- h s nothing that I know "There " he l di Jeb Magruder. When the bug on the w e covered on a secretary's phone some . ngs would change [these fin O'Brien's phone failed to function. e months later. the FBI tested it and h said. f these d ' Plumbers went back in to replace it, and re t ncluded that it would have been in- o t we hear Then why haven an Hou that is when they were arrested. In any co able of transmitting outside the Wa- a g FBI documents before? As tice De- J case. that is the standard version. c p They pronounced it a phony, ate r t us points out in his book. the release d According to Hougan. however, the . g e d it an en- i to partment under Nixon refuse gne obably a plant, and ass te Wa- S DNC was never bugged in the first place: pr ber ena any of these reports to the when FBI technicians arrived on the . tirely different case num quite obviously. this raises Now tergate Committee. This is confirmed by t chief i scene later in the morning of the arrest , uestions that demand answers. me stan Terry Lenzner, former ass "We were they couldn't find a single bug in the q so counsel for the committee. " DNC. And where does Hougan get this For example: Are the documents that Hougan cites Lenz- concentrating on the cover-up. useful b startling information? Hougan says it uine' Yes. They are on file at the een ner told me. "It would have the docu- comes from FBI documents obtained gen FBI reading room in Washington. D.C.. to our investigation to have ainst any h a Freedom of Information suit. throu m h d ments in order to check them ag g According to the documents he cites, . e t and I have examine What were these burglars really after? According to a new theon, the Watergate break-in, shown here in this /974 New York magazine reconstruction, had more to do with a CIA plot and a call-girl ring than political espionage, Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0 conflicts that might have arisen." Nor were the documents given to the de- fendants in the Watergate trial, as noted in a pre-release story on Secret Agenda by The New York Times. Hougan. who obtained a total of 16.000 documents through the FOIA in 1980, was presum- ably the first person outside the Justice Department to examine them. But wasn't the prosecutor required b Y law to hand over material that might be exculpatory to the Watergate defend- ants:' Anthony Lukas raises this question in his review for The New York Times, pointing out that, under the Brady rule. the prosecution is required to give all such evidence to the defense. In this case, the application of the rule seems especially obvious, because the govern- ment had charged the Watergate burglars with planting a bug that its own inves- tigators said was a fake. When I asked the Watergate prosecutor. Earl Silbert. about this, he said he recalled the doc- uments but had no clear recollection of whether they had been available to the defense. He went on to say that the Brady rule is only a "legalism," and that the prosecutor is required to turn over such material only if asked to do so by the defense. "And. frankly. I just can't say that they asked." Silbert said. "If the memos weren't turned over to the defense, that was the reason." "But how could they request them if they didn't know they existed?" I asked. "I can see your point," Silbert said. "but some Brady requests are over- broad." What do the defense lawyers say about that:' I sent copies of the FBI reports to one of them. Ellis S. Rubin. A promi- nent Miami trial lawyer. Rubin was re- tained to represent the four Cuban members of the burglary team - Eu- genio Martinez, Frank Sturgis. Bernard Barker. and Virgilio Gonzalez - after they had pleaded guilty and been sen- tenced to prison. When I called Rubin a few days later he expressed astonishment. stating cat- egorically that his clients had never been given the information. "This is a definite violation of Brady versus Maryland." he said. "and it could be cause for a new trial." He said he would take the matter up with his clients. "You may have a bigger scoop than you imagined." Rubin added. f. as my own abbreviated investi- gation shows, Hougan's facts on the break-in check out, this is ob- viously an important story in itself, as Rubin's comments would sug- gest. But, beyond this, even if Rubin and his clients decide not to seek a new trial. Hougan's version of the burglary is important because of the questions it raises about the rest of the Watergate affair. For example: Since Alfred Baldwin was obviousl listening to something in his room at the Howard Johnson, just what was he lis- tening to? Hougan's answer - and this is where the sex-scandal theory begins to emerge - is that Baldwin was listen- ing to transmissions from a bug that was planted elsewhere. Hougan concludes that the bug was situated in a prostitute's quarters in the Columbia Plaza, which is located near the Watergate complex. As Hougan himself points out, the evi- dence for this is circumstantial. Another question posed by the new break-in evidence. however, is a bit eas- ier to deal with: If much of what we know about the break-in and bugging is false, then where did we get our original ver- sion of those events? Hougan's answer, supported in this instance by the records of the Watergate Commission, is - James McCord. If the standard version of the break-in is false, McCord was ap- parently lying. But why? According to Hougan, both McCord and E. Howard Hunt "were secretly working for the CIA while using the White House as a cover for domestic intelligence operations." Once again, this assertion is so contrary to what Hou- gan calls the "received version'' of Wa- tergate that we are tempted to dismiss it out of hand. However. Hougan's con- clusions in this regard would seem to be based on the same kind of verifiable in- formation as his break-in scenario, so that if anyone is interested it should be possible to check it out. According to the received version of Watergate. Hunt is the somewhat but- foonish member of the White House Plumbers, a former CIA agent in dis- repute. whose ineptitude contributed mightily to the bungling of the "third- rate burglary" at the DNC. As we have come to believe. Hunt left the agency in the spring of 1970 to take a job with a Washington p.r. firm called the Robert R. Mullen Company. He continued in his employment there after he got his job as a White House consultant, working as a publicity writer. Marshaling information from several sources. Hougan argues that Hunt never really retired from the CIA. He presents evidence that'two previous ''retire- ments" by Lunt were acknowledged fakes: that shortly before Hunt ostensi- bly left the agency in 1970 his top-secret security clearance was actually extended in anticipation of his continued "utili- zation" by the CIA: that the Mullen Company was no ordinary p.r. firm but a CIA front with active CIA agents working out of its offices: and that during the Watergate period the president of the Mullen Company. Robert Bennett. re- ported to his case agent at the CIA on his efforts to divert attention from any agency involvement in Watergate. So, if Hunt was still working for the CIA, what was he doing at the White House" Hougan says he was there as an undercover agent. spying on the White House for the agency. In support of this. he introduces an internal CIA memorandum, written by an agency employee who worked at the White House CIA liaison office. According to the memo - which had been previously published as an addendum to House hearings. but in a vague, summary ver- sion, with the names of the author and its two addressees deleted - Hunt reg- ularly used the office to send sealed en- velopes back to CIA headquarters. On one occasion. according to this memo. a member of the liaison staff opened one of the envelopes and found it to contain ..gossip'' material. Hougan found out the name of the author of the memo, Rob Roy Ratliff. and gave him a call. According to Rat- liff. the gossip alluded to was about White House officials and other mem- bers of the administration. Hougan found another source. who described the gossip as "almost entirely of a sexual nature." He also discovered that the re- cipients of Hunt's missives. whose names had been deleted for reasons of ''national security." were CIA director Richard Helms and the CIA's Medical Services division - the staff of which. 0" Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0 as Hougan points out, uses such material to construct psychological profiles. Hougan also succeeds in shedding new light on McCord. the chief Water- gate burglar. Contrary to the popular conception of him as a plodding ex- agency gumshoe. Hougan writes. McCord was for years a high-ranking (GS-15) official in the CIA's Office of Security, which was responsible at var- ious times for the agency's mind-control programs. plots to assassinate foreign leaders. and a variety of illegal domestic operations, such as the mail-opening project. the infiltration of the antiwar movement, and Operation Chaos. It is worth keeping in mind that at the time of Watergate none of these programs had been exposed. As Hougan shows. McCord's sup- posed retirement from the CIA, which occurred in 1970. just three months after Hunt's, was also quite dubious. Mc- Cord's ostensible reason for retiring was to make more money than he earned on his GS-15 salary. However, before he signed on with the Republican National Committee and the Committee to Re- elect the President. McCord's only ap- parent sources of income were his pension, a part-time teaching job at a community college in Maryland, and a private security firm, McCord Associ- ates. which had no clients until he was hired by the RNC. Hougan cites several examples of McCord's activities during his tenure as a Republican security adviser that are difficult to explain, including the pur- chase in Chicago of several telephone bugs that would broadcast only via class- ified CIA communications satellites. There was also a suspicious incident that occurred at McCord's home just five days after the Watergate burglary: all of McCord's records were thrown into the fireplace and burned. Present for the event were McCord's wife (McCord was still in jail) and one Lee R. Pennington. Jr., a deep-cover contract agent who worked for McCord's old outfit. the Of- fice of Security, and receiyed his pay in the form of ''sterile' checks. A CIA memo, not made public until two years after the fire, indicates that Pennington went to McCord's home for the purpose of "destroying any indication of con- nections between the Agency and Mr. McCord." As Hougan points out. since it had already been reported in the press that McCord was a former employee of the CIA - McCord had testified to that effect at his arraignment - the only pos- sible connection that might have con- cerned the agency would have been one subsequent to his retirement. And what was McCord up to? Hougan says that, with the assistance of a down-and-out private investigator named Louis J. Rus- Key to a mystery? This key. found on one of the Watergate burglars - and now reposing in the National Archives - fits the rheorv that a sex scandal prompted the break-in. sell, he was involved in bugging some prostitutes at the Columbia Plaza Apart- ments near Watergate. possibly to col- lect information which the CIA could use for political blackmail. At this point - as Hougan turns toward his sex-scan- dal theory - the facts are somewhat sketchier. However, even with the sex scandal there are plenty of intriguing leads that would seem to warrant further inquiry. To start with, there is the call-girl ring itself. which operated out of the Colum- bia Plaza. catering to an assortment of Washington types. including a U.S. sen- ator and a clutch of foreign intelligence agents. Hot'gan knows this because he got the "trick books." When the call- girl ring was exposed in the weeks before the Watergate break-in, it created a mi- nor scandal. But until Hougan came along no one ever saw any reason to connect it to the Watergate affair. Hou- gan finds several possible links, includ- ing evidence of high-level White House interest in the case. More to the point, Hougan establishes through interviews with Phillip Mackin Bailley, the lawyer who pled guilty to running the call-girl operation, that clients for the prostitutes at the Columbia Plaza were being referred on a regular basis by a woman who worked in the DNC offices. Next. Hougan produces another of the FBI documents he ob- tained through the FOIA - which re- veals that when the burglars were arrested at the DNC. one of them, Eu- genio Martinez. was caught by the police trying to get rid of a key he had in his coat pocket. And the key'? As the FBI quickly determined, it belonged to the desk of Ida "Maxie" Wells. Wells was the secretary of R. Spencer Oliver. who. it will be remembered. was the DNC official whose phone. was supposedly bugged. What does the key mean'? Hougan takes it as additional evidence for his thesis that Watergate was not so much a political scandal as it was a sex scandal. Maybe he's right, and maybe not: and maybe he's partly right, which strikes me as more likely. At this point there's not enough information to come to any conclusion. However, the documents are on file at the FBI reading room for any- one interested in pursuing the matter. The key itself - along with copies of the FBI documents and other Watergate records - is to be found at the National Archives. Without stopping to list several other evidentiary steps here, we can now go straight to Hougan's conclusion: that James McCord had been monitoring the prostitutes at the Columbia Plaza. pos- sibly to obtain blackmail information for the CIA: that when the call-girl ring was busted, the White House saw a chance to collect some dirty stories of its own and launched the Plumbers on its own fact-finding mission: and that, in order to preserve the secrecy of this project. which amounted to nothing less than an illegal domestic operation by the CIA, McCord sabotaged the burglary, causing all hands to be arrested. As should be clear, even from this brief summary. Hougan's sex-scandal scenario has some holes in it - the big- gest being the lack of any positive proof that the CIA was involved in the call- girl operation. or that Baldwin was in fact listening in on the Columbia Plaza. However, it should be equally obvious that the real worth of Secret Agenda does not depend on this one rather sensational theory. Especially for journalists, the importance of Hougan's book lies in the questions it raises about all the old the- ories that we have accepted as fact. In Secret Agenda. Hougan makes a con- vincing argument that at least some of what we think we know about Watergate is wrong. It is high time that the press started facing up to that possibility. ^ Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201180018-0