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My Kingdom for a Horse



Now I understand why Pat Buchanan was so busy promoting his new book on Nixon.  It was a preemptive strike (if you will) against a new book and documentary timed for release on the 40th anniversary of Nixon's resignation August 8.  Almost anyway, as the HBO documentary, Nixon on Nixon, premiers Monday, Aug. 11.

It seems more tapes have become available to the public, which cast the former president in an even more sinister light.  Ken Hughes is the author of the most recent book on Nixon, Chasing Shadows.  You can read an excerpt here.  David Greenberg reviews both the book and the documentary for the Washington Post.  Hughes apparently focuses largely on the Chennault Affair, in which Nixon used a friend of a friend to sabotage Johnson's attempt to end the Vietnam War in 1968, as Nixon feared it would give Humphrey a boost in the tight election.  Eerily similar to Reagan's own efforts to sabotage Carter's attempt to end the Iran Hostage crisis in 1980, but the Gipper seemed to skate clear of this controversy.  Hughes doesn't let Nixon off the hook.


It seems that this kind of skulduggery has become part and parcel of the Republican bag of dirty tricks.  Of course, Nixon wasn't the first to resort to such nasty deeds to get what he wanted, nor are such dirty tricks exclusively Republican.  Johnson was certainly no saint, and no doubt saw any kind of peace agreement in Vietnam as a way to undermine Nixon's candidacy.  But, what sets Nixon apart from others is that he didn't seem to have a single altruistic bone in his body.  He was perhaps the most cynical and duplicitous president ever, undermining the efforts of his own cabinet, notably Henry Kissinger, who the former president thought was straying from the path.

Nixon comes across as a later day Richard III.  As much as Buchanan tries to point to the good Nixon did, the bad just piles up against him, made even worse by Nixon's copious tapes, which ultimately proved his undoing and still haunt his battered legacy 40 years after.

Comments

  1. Lo and behold! I wondered if you were still out here doing your thing. I will begin looking in again on a regular basis because this new incarnation doesn't seem to have the same problems that prevented me from enjoying it in the past.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Always happy to see comments. Keep them coming.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Colbert is priceless!

    http://thecolbertreport.cc.com/guests/pat-buchanan/2kctj0/exclusive---pat-buchanan

    ReplyDelete
  4. ... and here is John Dean on The retro-Colbert Report plugging his new book,

    http://thecolbertreport.cc.com/videos/ecplh0/john-w--dean

    ReplyDelete

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