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$Unique_ID{bob01197}
$Pretitle{}
$Title{Nixon Tapes, The
April 14, 1973. (11:02pm - 11:16pm)}
$Subtitle{}
$Author{Various}
$Affiliation{}
$Subject{nixon
haldeman
pres
hr
right
that's
john
tell
yeah
say}
$Date{1974}
$Log{}
Title: Nixon Tapes, The
Author: Various
Date: 1974
April 14, 1973. (11:02pm - 11:16pm)
Telephone conversation: President Nixon and John Haldeman
--------------------------
Material not related to Presidential actions deleted
--------------------------
Pres. Nixon: One thing that occurs to me Bob is this and, as I reflect a
little on Magruder's stuff -
HR Haldeman: Uh, huh.
Pres. Nixon: I'll be damned if I don't think some of that could be, you know,
exaggerated. But I don't know -
HR Haldeman: That's right.
Pres. Nixon: I don't know. I can't tell. He is obviously flailing around
like a wild man at the present tune.
HR Haldeman: No, no, he's not really. I think he was earlier. He was
frantic, but once he figured out where he was going, I think he
Pres. Nixon: He thinks this is what he remembers now?
HR Haldeman: Yep. Uh, huh.
Pres. Nixon: I am not sure that his interpretations on various things - they
could be interpreted either way you know, like his
interpretation on Dean, his interpretation on Strachan, for
example.
HR Haldeman: Yep, yep.
Pres. Nixon: Certainly -
HR Haldeman: That's right and there
Pres. Nixon: I just don't know how it is going to come out. That is the
whole point, and I just don't know. And I was serious when I
said to John at the end there, damn it all, these guys that
participated in raising money, etc. have got to stick to their
line - that they did not raise this money to obstruct justice.
HR Haldeman: Well, I sure didn't think they were.
Pres. Nixon: Huh?
HR Haldeman: I didn't think they were and I don't think they did.
Pres. Nixon: Well -
HR Haldeman: With maybe some exceptions.
Pres. Nixon: Right, right. Of course, I suppose there they will say, like
McCord has said, that that was the purpose. That somebody told
him that. That doesn't mean anything.
HR Haldeman: Yeah.
Pres. Nixon: The question, of course, is Liddy and the others. But we shall
see. It is the word of the felons against the word of the men
that raised the money, huh?
HR Haldeman: That's right. Well, you just - You don't know how much will
come out in what way either. I mean that -
Pres. Nixon: No, we, at least I think now, we pretty much know what the worst
is. I don't know what the hell else they could have that is
any worse. You know what I mean. Unless there is something
that I don't know, unless somebody's got a piece of paper that
somebody signed or some damn thing, but that I doubt.
HR Haldeman: It doesn't appear that there is such a thing. I mean there has
been no hint to that. What you hear is all stuff that has been
hinted at. It goes further than what was in some areas, but
it's obviously totally consistent, basically, with everything
John has developed.
Pres. Nixon: Let me ask you this: I wonder if it is not only fair, but in
our interest, for either you or John without going into too
much detail to fill him in on Magruder? I mean, having in mind
Colson could -
HR Haldeman: Who's (unintelligible)
Pres. Nixon: Colson. I mean we have no interest - you know what I mean - in
getting him up there, you know, guilty on a perjury charge.
HR Haldeman: Of course there is nothing Jeb said that is inconsistent with
anything that Chuck has said.
Pres. Nixon: Oh, that could be right. Chuck could say, yes, the Liddy
project, sure but I thought the Liddy project was something
else.
HR Haldeman: That's right. That's what he does say.
Pres. Nixon: He does, huh?
HR Haldeman: Yeah. And as Ehrlichman said - under questioning, they
specifically said that he didn't get into any specifics on it,
and they have nothing that hits him on any specifics. And I
think he's probably clear on it.
Pres. Nixon: I think he believes that, Bob. I know -
HR Haldeman: I do too.
Pres. Nixon: I think he believes that.
HR Haldeman: I have thought that all along.
Pres. Nixon: Well, we will sleep on the damn thing and, what is the situation
tomorrow? Is Ehrlichman going to sit down with Ziegler again,
or something?
HR Haldeman: Yeah
Pres. Nixon: I do think that PR thing we've got to sort of make up our minds
on what the hell -
HR Haldeman: Sir, I want to get at getting the statement done.
Pres. Nixon: And we've got to get at sort of make this decision with regard
to this damn Committee. I don't know -
HR Haldeman: Yep.
Pres. Nixon: I still have mixed emotions on it. I don't know, I don't know.
I have been one way one time one way another.
HR Haldeman: Well, it's a mixed bag. It has pluses and minuses, and it is
hard to be sure which outweighs the other.
Pres. Nixon: One more scenario would have been to say they will all come up.
Everybody will come up in Executive Session including Dean.
Just say that. Make that offer, and that's flat.
John Dean: Yeah and that gets turned down and then we're standing on the
question of - The way it will be played is not that the
Committee is being unreasonable by insisting on television, but
that we are being unreasonable by insisting against it.
Pres. Nixon: Well, that would be true unless you go out and hammer that the
whole record could be made public.
HR Haldeman: Yeah.
Pres. Nixon: It's only that we want information, not a show -
HR Haldeman: Yeah.
Pres. Nixon: And that we think it is reasonable.
HR Haldeman: The question then is that you lose something obviously by doing
that, and do we really gain enough to make it worth it? How
bad is it if we go on television? I am not at all sure it is
all that bad. In the first place, it is going to be in the
daytime. In the second place, as of now it is not going to be
carried live by the networks.
Pres. Nixon: Yeah.
HR Haldeman: Now it might be, but I would guess it won't be after this other
stuff breaks, it isn't going to be that important anymore. The
networks don't want to carry it. It would cost them money.
What will probably end up happening is, it will be carried on
the public broadcasting which has virtually no audience in the
daytime.
Pres. Nixon: Uh huh. I suppose what happens there is that every new break is
carried for five or ten minutes in the evening news.
HR Haldeman: That's right.
Pres. Nixon: That's the point.
HR Haldeman: It is going to be carried anyway. It is a question of whether
it is carried for five minutes with one of us on camera for a
couple of those minutes, or whether it is carried for three
minutes with -
Pres. Nixon: Weicker -
HR Haldeman: Weicker and John Chancellor and Dan Rather, saying: "trembling
with fear and obviously trying to hide the truth, ah . . .
Pres. Nixon: I wonder if you would do this? Did you discuss public or
private thing with two people whose judgment is - Rogers and
Connally? What did Connally think? Public?
HR Haldeman: I am not sure.
Pres. Nixon: Would you mind?
HR Haldeman: I would have to reopen that
Pres. Nixon: Would it be alright for you to call him tomorrow and say, "Look.
We've just got to make a command decision on this -"
HR Haldeman: Sure
Pres. Nixon: And I think you should tell - would you tell him about the
Magruder?
HR Haldeman: Nope.
Pres. Nixon: No, I guess not.
HR Haldeman: I can say the whole thing looks like it is coming to a
conclusion -
Pres. Nixon: Before the Grand Jury
HR Haldeman: Yeah.
Pres. Nixon: That's right.
HR Haldeman: Without saying anything specific.
Pres. Nixon: Now, the other fellow whose judgment would be pretty good would
be Bill Rogers on that.
HR Haldeman: Yeah. I agree.
Pres. Nixon: I wish you would give him a call.
HR Haldeman: Right. I will.
Pres. Nixon: I think with Bill, though, you could tell him, don't you think?
HR Haldeman: Nope. I don't think I should. In the first place, I am not
supposed to know.
Pres. Nixon: This isn't from the Grand Jury, Bob.
HR Haldeman: No, I know. But Kleindienst is worried about John giving the
information to anybody, and that -
Pres. Nixon: I see. You're right.
HR Haldeman: I don't see anything to be gained from telling him, anyway.
Pres. Nixon: But you can tell him that our investigations indicate that the
Grand Jury is hot on the trail of breaking the thing now.
HR Haldeman: Yeah.
Pres. Nixon: And that is the way it is going to come. That - but if you
wouldn't mind giving a call in the morning to both of those
fellows, and tell them you are calling for the President and
that he would like to have their considered judgment, should
you be on television.
HR Haldeman: Right. Will do.
Pres. Nixon: And it may be on the Dean thing, I am almost inclined to think
we ought to give on that. What do you think? The idea of
backing down - they are going to take it back down anyway, so
what's the difference?
HR Haldeman: That has never bothered me, but I guess I am wrong on it,
because it sure bothers other people.
Pres. Nixon: It bothers Ziegler and the rest, but -
HR Haldeman: I think we gain more by backing down than we lose. I don't
think you have any problem of being the President. We're
fighting enough battles anyway.
Pres. Nixon: I would just say, because of all of these charges that have been
around these men are entitled to be heard in public.
HR Haldeman: That's right.
Pres. Nixon: And I want them heard in public, and I want them to tell their
story in public. I am almost convinced that that is what we
ought to do with the whole damn bunch and not try to stand on
the Dean thing and the rest. Get a settlement that way. Well,
that's my present view, Bob, and we can go on it. Another
point. You do, one person you do tell and I - and he can still
say that he just told him to tell the truth. You ought to tell
Strachan, but tell him -
HR Haldeman: John is telling him.
Pres. Nixon: John is, but not in a way that Strachan indicated that he knows
what the other fellow said.
HR Haldeman: That's right
Pres. Nixon: Is Strachan smart enough to do that?
HR Haldeman: Yes.
Pres. Nixon: He has to be prepared that he is going to be asked this and is
going to be asked that John should put him through a little
wringer there.
HR Haldeman: Yep.
Pres. Nixon: John is the one who should do it. He is conducting an
investigation for the President.
HR Haldeman: Well, and he's got the information. I don't. I can reconstruct
-
Pres. Nixon: No.
HR Haldeman: part of it.
Pres. Nixon: That's right. I agree. But John will know the questions too.
HR Haldeman: The specific points is what he needs to cover.
--------------------------
Material not related to Presidential actions deleted
--------------------------