Nixon's Second Watergate Speech
August 15, 1973
Good evening:
Now that most of the major witnesses
in the Watergate phase of the Senate
committee hearings on campaign practices
have been heard, the time has come
for me to speak out about the charges
made and to provide a perspective on the
issue for the American people.
For over 4 months, Watergate has
dominated the news media. During the
past 3 months, the three major networks
have devoted an average of over 22 hours
of television time each week to this subject.
The Senate committee has heard
over 2 million words of testimony.
This investigation began as an effort
to discover the facts about the break-in
and bugging of the Democratic National
Headquarters and other campaign abuses.
But as the weeks have gone by, it has
become clear that both the hearings
themselves and some of the commentaries
on them have become increasingly
absorbed in an effort to implicate the
President personally in the illegal activities
that took place.
Because the abuses occurred during my
Administration, and in the campaign for
my reelection, I accept full responsibility
for them. I regret that these events took
place, and I do not question the tight of
a Senate committee to investigate charges
made against the President to the extent
that this is relevant to legislative duties.
However, it is my constitutional
responsibility to defend the integrity of this
great office against false charges. I also
believe that it is important to address the
overriding question of what we as a
nation can learn from this experience and
what we should now do. I intend to
discuss both of these subjects tonight.
The record of the Senate hearings is
lengthy. The facts are complicated, the
evidence conflicting. It would not be
tight for me to try to sort out the evidence,
to rebut specific witnesses, or to pronounce
my own judgments about their credibility.
That is for the committee and for the courts.
I shall not attempt to deal tonight with
the various charges in detail. Rather, I
shall attempt to put the events in perspective
from the standpoint of the Presidency.
On May 22, before the major witnesses
had testified, I issued a detailed statement
addressing the charges that had been
made against the President.
I have today issued another written
statement, which addresses the charges
that have been made since then as they
relate to nay own conduct, and which describes
the efforts that I made to discover
the facts about the matter.
On May 22, I stated in very specific
termsand I state again to every one of
you listening tonight these factsI had no
prior knowledge of the Watergate break-in;
I neither took part in nor knew about
any of the subsequent coverup activities;
I neither authorized nor encouraged
subordinates to engage in illegal or improper
campaign tactics.
That was and that is the simple truth.
In all of the millions of words of
testimony, there is not the slightest suggestion
that I had any knowledge of the planning
for the Watergate break-in. As for
the coverup, my statement has been challenged
by only one of the 35 witnesses who
appeareda witness who offered no
evidence beyond his own impressions and
whose testimony has been contradicted
by every other witness in a position to
know the facts.
Tonight, let me explain to you what I
did about Watergate after the break-in
occurred, so that you can better
understand the fact that I also had no
knowledge of the so-called coverup.
From the time when the break-in
occurred, I pressed repeatedly to know the
facts, and particularly whether there was
any involvement of anyone in the White
House. I considered two things essential:
First, that the investigation should be
thorough and aboveboard; and second,
that if there were any higher involvement,
we should get the facts out first. As I said
at my August 29 press conference last year,
"What really hurts in matters of this sort
is not the fact that they occur, because
overzealous people in campaigns do
things that are wrong. What really hurts
is if you try to cover it up." I believed that
then, and certainly the experience of this
last year has proved that to be true.
I know that the Justice Department
and the FBI were conducting intensive
investigationsas I had insisted that they
should. The White House Counsel, John
Dean, was assigned to monitor these
investigations, and particularly to check into
any possible White House involvement.
Throughout the summer Of 1972, I
continued to press the question, and I
continued to get the same answer: I was told
again and again that there was no
indication that any persons were involved
other than the seven who were known to
have planned and carried out the
operation, and who were subsequently indicted
and convicted.
On September 12 at a meeting that I
held with the Cabinet, the senior White
House Staff and a number of legislative
leaders, Attorney General Kleindienst
reported on the investigation. He told us it
had been the most extensive investigation
since the assassination of President
Kennedy and that it had established that only
those seven were involved.
On September 15, the day the seven
were indicted, I met with John Dean, the
White House Counsel. He gave me no
reason whatever to believe that any others
were guilty; I assumed that the
indictments of only the seven by the grand jury
confirmed the reports he had been giving
to that effect throughout the summer.
On February 16, I met with Acting
Director Gray prior to submitting his name
to the Senate for confirmation as
permanent Director of the FBI. I stressed to him
that he would be questioned closely about
the FBI's conduct of the Watergate
investigation. I asked him if he still had full
confidence in it. He replied that he did,
that he was proud of its thoroughness and
that he could defend it with enthusiasm
before the committee.
Because I trusted the agencies
conducting the investigations, because I believed
the reports I was getting, I did not believe
the newspaper accounts that suggested a
coverup. I was convinced there was no
coverup, because I was convinced that no
one had anything to cover up.
It was not until March 21 of this year
that I received new information from the
White House Counsel that led me to conclude
that the reports I had been getting
for over 9 months were not true. On that
day, I launched an intensive effort of my
own to get the facts and to get the facts
out. Whatever the facts might be, I
wanted the White House to be the first to
make them public.
At first, I entrusted the task of getting
me the facts to Mr. Dean. When, after
spending a week at Camp David, he failed
to produce the written report I had asked
for, I turned to John Ehrlichman and to
the Attorney Generalwhile also making
independent inquiries of my own. By
mid-April, I had received Mr. Ehrlichman's
report and also one from the Attorney
General based on new information
uncovered by the Justice Department. These
reports made it clear to me that the
situation was far more serious than I had
imagined. It at once became evident to me that
the responsibility for the investigation in
the case should be given to the Criminal
Division of the Justice Department.
I turned over all the information I had
to the head of that department, Assistant
Attorney General Henry Petersen, a career
government employee with an impeccable
nonpartisan record, and I instructed him
to pursue the matter thoroughly. I
ordered all members of the Administration
to testify fully before the grand jury.
And with my concurrence, on May 18
Attorney General Richardson appointed
a Special Prosecutor to handle the matter,
and the case is now before the grand jury.
Far from trying to hide the facts, my
effort throughout has been to discover the
factsand to lay those facts before the
appropriate law enforcement authorities
so that justice could be done and the
guilty dealt with.
I relied on the best law enforcement
agencies in the country to find and report
the truth. I believed they had done so
just as they believed they had done so.
Many have urged that in order to help
prove the truth of what I have said, I
should turn over to the Special Prosecutor
and the Senate committee recordings of
conversations that I held in my office or on
my telephone.
However, a much more important principle
is involved in this question than what
the tapes might prove about Watergate.
Each day, a President of the United
States is required to make difficult
decisions on grave issues. It is absolutely
necessary, if the President is to be able to do his
job as the country expects, that he be able
to talk openly and candidly with his
advisers about issues and individuals. This
kind of frank discussion is only possible
when those who take part in it know that
what they say is in strictest confidence.
The Presidency is not the only office
that requires confidentiality. A Member
of Congress must be able to talk in
confidence with his assistants; judges must be
able to confer in confidence with their law
clerks and with each other. For very good
reasons, no branch of Government has
ever compelled disclosure of confidential
conversations between officers of other
branches of Government and their
advisers about Government business.
This need for confidence is not confined
to Government officials. The law has
long recognized that there are kinds of
conversations that are entitled to be kept
confidential, even at the cost of doing
without critical evidence in a legal
proceeding. This rule applies, for example,
to conversations between a lawyer and a
client, between a priest and a penitent,
and between a husband and wife. In each
case it is thought so important that the
parties be able to talk freely to each other
that for hundreds of years the law has
said these conversations are "privileged"
and that their disclosure cannot be
compelled in a court.
It is even more important that the
confidentiality of conversations between
a President and his advisers be protected.
This is no mere luxury, to be dispensed
with whenever a particular issue raises
sufficient uproar. It is absolutely essential
to the conduct of the Presidency, in this
and in all future Administrations.
If I were to make public these tapes,
containing as they do blunt and candid
remarks on many different subjects, the
confidentiality of the Office of the
President would always be suspect from now
on. It would make no difference whether
it was to serve the interests of a court, of
a Senate committee, or the President
himselfthe same damage would be done to
the principle, and that damage would be
irreparable.
Persons talking with the President
would never again be sure that recordings
or notes of what they said would not
suddenly be made public. No one would
want to advance tentative ideas that might
later seem unsound. No diplomat would
want to speak candidly in those sensitive
negotiations which could bring peace or
avoid war. No Senator or Congressman
would want to talk frankly about the
Congressional horsetrading that might
get a vital bill passed. No one would want
to speak bluntly about public figures here
and abroad.
That is why I shall continue to oppose
efforts which would set a precedent that
would cripple all future Presidents by
inhibiting conversations between them
and those they look to for advice.
This principle of confidentiality of
Presidential conversations is at stake in
the question of these tapes. I must and I
shall oppose any efforts to destroy this
principle. which is so vital to the conduct
of this great office.
Turning now to the basic issues which
have been raised by Watergate, I recognize
that merely answering the charges
that have been made against the President
is not enough. The word "Watergate"
has come to represent a much broader
set of concerns.
To most of us, Watergate has come to
mean not just a burglary and bugging of
party headquarters but a whole series of
acts that either represent or appear to
represent an abuse of trust. It has come
to stand for excessive partisanship, for
"enemy lists" for efforts to use the great
institutions of Government for partisan
political purposes.
For many Americans, the term "Watergate"
also has come to include a number
of national security matters that have
been brought into the investigation, such
as those involved in my efforts to stop
massive leaks of vital diplomatic and military
secrets, and to counter the wave of
bombings and burnings and other violent
assaults of just a few years ago.
Let me speak first of the political
abuses.
I know from long experience that a
political campaign is always a hard and
a tough contest. A candidate for high
office has an obligation to his party, to
his supporters, and to the cause he
represents. He must always put forth his best
efforts to win. But he also has an obligation
to the country to conduct that contest within
the law and within the limits of decency.
No political campaign ever justifies
obstructing justice, or harassing individuals,
or compromising those great agencies
of Government that should and must he
above politics. To the extent that these
things were done in the 1972 campaign,
they were serious abuses, and I deplore
them.
Practices of that kind do not represent
what I believe government should be, or
what I believe politics should be. In a
free society, the institutions of government
belong to the people. They must never
be used against the people.
And in the future, my Administration
will be more vigilant in ensuring that such
abuses do not take place and that officials
at every level understand that they are
not to take place.
And I reject the cynical view that
politics is inevitably or even usually a dirty
business. Let us not allow what a few
overzealous people did in Watergate to tar
the reputation of the millions of dedicated
Americans of both parties who fought
hard but clean for the candidates of their
choice in 1972. By their unselfish efforts,
these people make our system work and
they keep America free.
I pledge to you tonight that I will do
all that I can to ensure that one of the
results of Watergate is a new level of
political decency and integrity in
America in which what has been wrong in our
politics no longer corrupts or demeans
what is right in our politics.
Let me turn now to the difficult questions
that arise in protecting the national security.
It is important to recognize that these
are difficult questions and that reasonable
and patriotic men and women may
differ on how they should be answered.
Only last year, the Supreme Court said
that implicit in the President's constitutional
duty is "the power to protect our
Government against those who would subvert
or overthrow it by unlawful means,"
How to carry out this duty is often a delicate
question to which there is no easy answer.
For example, every President since
World War II has believed that in internal
security matters, the President has the
power to authorize wiretaps without first
obtaining a search warrant.
An act of Congress in 1968 had seemed
to recognize such power. Last year the
Supreme Court held to the contrary. And
my Administration is, of course, now complying
with that Supreme Court decision.
But until the Supreme Court spoke, I had been acting,
as did my predecessorsPresident Truman,
President Eisenhower, President Kennedy, and
President Johnsonin a reasonable belief
that in certain circumstances the Constitution
permitted and sometimes even required such measures
to protect the national security in the public interest.
Although it is the President's duty to
protect the security of the country, we,
of course, must be extremely careful in the
way we go about this for if we lose our
liberties we will have little use for security.
Instances have now come to light in which
a zeal for security did go too far and did
interfere impermissibly with individual
liberty. It is essential that such mistakes
not be repeated. But it is also essential that
we do not overreact to particular mistakes
by tying the President's hands in a way
that would risk sacrificing our security,
and with it all our liberties.
I shall continue to meet my constitutional
responsibility to protect the security of this
Nation so that Americans may
enjoy their freedom. But I shall and can
do so by constitutional means, in ways
that will not threaten that freedom.
As we look at Watergate in a longer
perspective, we can see that its abuses
resulted from the assumption by those involved
that their cause placed them beyond the reach
of those rules that apply
to other persons and that hold a free
society together.
That attitude can never be tolerated in
our country. However, it did not suddenly
develop in the year 1972. It became
fashionable in the 1960's as individuals and
groups increasingly asserted the tight to
take the law into their own hands, insisting
that their purposes represented a
higher morality. Then their attitude was
praised in the press and even from some
of our pulpits as evidence of a new idealism.
Those of us who insisted on the old
restraints, who warned of the overriding
importance of operating within the law
and by the rules, were accused of being
reactionaries.
That same attitude brought a rising
spiral of violence and fear, of riots and
arson and bombings, all in the name of
peace and in the name of justice. Political
discussion turned into savage debate. Free
speech was brutally suppressed as hecklers
shouted down or even physically assaulted
those with whom they disagreed. Serious
people raised serious questions about
whether we could survive as a free
democracy.
The notion that the end justifies the
means proved contagious. Thus, it is not
surprising, even though it is deplorable,
that some persons in 1972 adopted the
morality that they themselves had tightly
condemned and committed acts that have
no place in our political system.
Those acts cannot be defended. Those
who were guilty of abuses must be punished.
But ultimately, the answer does not
lie merely in the jailing of a few
overzealous persons who mistakenly thought
their cause justified their violations of the
law.
Rather, it lies in a commitment by all
of us to show a renewed respect for the
mutual restraints that are the mark of a
free and a civilized society. It requires
that we learn once again to work together,
if not united in all of our purposes, then
at least united in respect for the system by
which our conflicts are peacefully resolved
and our liberties maintained.
If there are laws we disagree with, let
us work to change them, but let us obey
them until they are changed. If we have
disagreements over Government policies,
let us work those out in a decent and
civilized way, within the law, and with
respect for our differences.
We must recognize that one excess
begets another, and that the extremes of
violence and discord in the 1960's
contributed to the extremes of Watergate.
Both are wrong. Both should be
condemned. No individual, no group, and
no political party has a comer on the
market on morality in America.
If we learn the important lessons of
Watergate, if we do what is necessary to
prevent such abuses in the futureon
both sideswe can emerge from this
experience a better and a stronger nation.
Let me turn now to an issue that is
important above all else and that is
critically affecting your life today and will
affect your life and your children's life in
the years to come.
After 12 weeks and 2 million words of
televised testimony, we have reached a
point at which a continued, backward-looking
obsession with Watergate is
causing this Nation to neglect matters of far
greater importance to all of the American people.
We must not stay so mired in Watergate
that we fail to respond to challenges of
surpassing importance to America and
the world. We cannot let an obsession
with the past destroy our hopes for the future.
Legislation vital to your health and
well-being sits unattended on the Congressional
calendar. Confidence at home
and abroad in our economy, our currency,
our foreign policy is being sapped by uncertainty.
Critical negotiations are taking
place on strategic weapons and on troop
levels in Europe that can affect the security
of this Nation and the peace of the
world long after Watergate is forgotten.
Vital events are taking place in Southeast
Asia which could lead to a tragedy for
the cause of peace.
These are matters that cannot wait.
They cry out for action now, and either
we, your elected representatives here in
Washington, ought to get on with the
jobs that need to be done for youor
every one of you ought to be demanding
to know why.
The time has come to turn Watergate
over to the courts, where the questions
of guilt or innocence belong. The time
has come for the rest of us to get on with
the urgent business of our Nation.
Last November, the American people
were given the clearest choice of this
century. Your votes were a mandate, which
I accepted, to complete the initiatives we
began in my first term and to fulfill the
promises I made for my second term.
This Administration was elected to
control inflation; to reduce the power and
size of Government; to cut the cost of
Government so that you can cut the cost
of living; to preserve and defend those
fundamental values that have made
America great; to keep the Nation's
military strength second to none; to achieve
peace with honor in Southeast Asia, and to
bring home our prisoners of war; to build
a new prosperity, without inflation and
without war; to create a structure of peace
in the world that would endure long after
we are gone.
These are great goals, they are worthy
of a great people, and I would not be true
to your trust if I let myself be turned aside
from achieving those goals.
If you share my belief in these goals
if you want the mandate you gave this
Administration to be carried outthen I ask
for your help to ensure that those who
would exploit Watergate in order to keep
us from doing what we were elected to do
will not succeed.
I ask tonight for your understanding,
so that as a nation we can learn the lessons
of Watergate and gain from that experience.
I ask for your help in reaffirming our
dedication to the principles of decency,
honor, and respect for the institutions that
have sustained our progress through these
past two centuries.
And I ask for your support in getting
on once again with meeting your problems,
improving your life, building your future.
With your help, with God's help, we
will achieve those great goals for America.
Thank you and good evening.
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