The break-in at Watergate and the cover-up that followed brought
about the resignation of Richard Nixon, creating a political
shockwave that reverberates to this day. But as Ken Hughes reveals
in his powerful new book, in all the thousands of hours of
declassified White House tapes, the president orders a single
break-in--and it is not at the Watergate complex. Hughes's
examination of this earlier break-in, plans for which the White
House ultimately scrapped, provides a shocking new perspective on a
long history of illegal activity that prolonged the Vietnam War and
was only partly exposed by the Watergate scandal.
As a key player in the University of Virginia's Miller Center
Presidential Recordings Program, Hughes has spent more than a
decade developing and mining the largest extant collection of
transcribed tapes from the Johnson and Nixon White Houses. Hughes's
unparalleled investigation has allowed him to unearth a pattern of
actions by Nixon going back long before 1972, to the final months
of the Johnson administration. Hughes identified a clear narrative
line that begins during the 1968 campaign, when Nixon, concerned
about the impact on his presidential bid of the Paris peace talks
with the Vietnamese, secretly undermined the negotiations through a
Republican fundraiser named Anna Chennault. Three years after the
election, in an atmosphere of paranoia brought on by the explosive
appearance of the Pentagon Papers, Nixon feared that his
treasonous--and politically damaging--manipulation of the Vietnam
talks would be exposed. Hughes shows how this fear led to the
creation of the Secret Investigations Unit, the "White House
Plumbers," and Nixon's initiation of illegal covert operations
guided by the Oval Office. Hughes's unrivaled command of the White
House tapes has allowed him to build an argument about Nixon that
goes far beyond what we think we know about Watergate.
"Chasing Shadows" is also available as a special e-book that
links to the massive collection of White House tapes published by
the Miller Center through Rotunda, the electronic imprint of the
University of Virginia Press. This unique edition allows the reader
to move seamlessly from the book to the recordings' expertly
rendered transcripts and to listen to audio files of the
remarkable--and occasionally shocking--conversations on which this
dark chapter in American history would ultimately turn.
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