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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
- --------------------------
-
-