iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Pentagon Papers Being Released 40 Years Later

Pentagon Papers Released

CALVIN WOODWARD and RICHARD LARDNER   06/13/11 12:32 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Forty years after the explosive leak of the Pentagon Papers, a secret government study chronicling deception and misadventure in U.S. conduct of the Vietnam War, the report is coming out in its entirety on Monday.

The 7,000-page report was the WikiLeaks disclosure of its time, a sensational breach of government confidentiality that shook Richard Nixon's presidency and prompted a Supreme Court fight that advanced press freedom. Prepared near the end of Lyndon Johnson's term by Defense Department and private foreign policy analysts, the report was leaked primarily by one of them, Daniel Ellsberg, in a brash act of defiance that stands as one of the most dramatic episodes of whistleblowing in U.S. history.

On Monday, the National Archives and presidential libraries are releasing the report in full, long after most of its secrets had spilled. The release is timed 40 years to the day after The New York Times published the first in its series of stories about the findings, on June 13, 1971. The papers showed that the Johnson, Kennedy and prior administrations had been escalating the conflict in Vietnam while misleading Congress, the public and allies.

As scholars pore over the 47-volume report, Ellsberg says the chance of them finding great new revelations is dim. Most of it has come out in congressional forums and by other means, and Ellsberg plucked out the best when he painstakingly photocopied pages that he spirited from a safe night after night, and returned in the mornings. He told The Associated Press the value in Monday's release was in having the entire study finally brought together and put online, giving today's generations ready access to it.

At the time, Nixon was delighted that people were reading about bumbling and lies by his predecessor, which he thought would take some anti-war heat off him. But if he loved the substance of the leak, he hated the leaker.

He called the leak an act of treachery and vowed that the people behind it "have to be put to the torch." He feared that Ellsberg represented a left-wing cabal that would undermine his own administration with damaging disclosures if the government did not crush him and make him an example for all others with loose lips. It was his belief in such a conspiracy, and his willingness to combat it by illegal means, that put him on the path to the Watergate scandal that destroyed his presidency.

Nixon's attempt to avenge the Pentagon Papers leak failed. First the Supreme Court backed the Times, The Washington Post and others in the press and allowed them to continue publishing stories on the study in a landmark case for the First Amendment. Then the government's espionage and conspiracy prosecution of Ellsberg and his colleague Anthony J. Russo Jr. fell apart, a mistrial declared because of government misconduct.

The judge threw out the case after agents of the White House broke into the office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist to steal records in hopes of discrediting him, and after it surfaced that Ellsberg's phone had been tapped illegally. That September 1971 break-in was tied to the Plumbers, a shady White House operation formed after the Pentagon Papers disclosures to stop leaks, smear Nixon's opponents and serve his political ends. The next year, the Plumbers were implicated in the break-in at the Democratic Party headquarters in the Watergate building.

Ellsberg remains convinced the report – a thick, often turgid read – would have had much less impact if Nixon had not temporarily suppressed publication with a lower court order and had not prolonged the headlines even more by going after him so hard. "Very few are going to read the whole thing," he said in an interview, meaning both then and now. "That's why it was good to have the great drama of the injunction."

The declassified report includes 2,384 pages missing from what was regarded as the most complete version of the Pentagon Papers, published in 1971 by Democratic Sen. Mike Gravel of Alaska. But some of the material absent from that version appeared – with redactions – in a report of the House Armed Services Committee, also in 1971. In addition, at the time, Ellsberg did not disclose a section on peace negotiations with Hanoi, in fear of complicating the talks, but that part was declassified separately years later.

Ellsberg served with the Marines in Vietnam and came back disillusioned. A protege of Nixon adviser Henry Kissinger, who called the young man his most brilliant student, Ellsberg served the administration as an analyst, tied to the Rand Corporation. The report was by a team of analysts, some in favor of the war, some against it, some ambivalent, but joined in a no-holds-barred appraisal of U.S. policy and the fraught history of the region.

To this day, Ellsberg regrets staying mum for as long as he did.

"I was part, on a middle level, of what is best described as a conspiracy by the government to get us into war," he said. Johnson publicly vowed that he sought no wider war, Ellsberg recalled, a message that played out in the 1964 presidential campaign as LBJ portrayed himself as the peacemaker against the hawkish Republican Barry Goldwater.

Meantime, his administration manipulated South Vietnam into asking for U.S. combat troops and responded to phantom provocations from North Vietnam with stepped-up force.

"It couldn't have been a more dramatic fraud," Ellsberg said. "Everything the president said was false during the campaign."

His message to whistleblowers now: Speak up sooner. "Don't do what I did. Don't wait until the bombs start falling."

.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
WASHINGTON — Forty years after the explosive leak of the Pentagon Papers, a secret government study chronicling deception and misadventure in U.S. conduct of the Vietnam War, the report is comin...
WASHINGTON — Forty years after the explosive leak of the Pentagon Papers, a secret government study chronicling deception and misadventure in U.S. conduct of the Vietnam War, the report is comin...
Filed by Elyse Siegel  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 268
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Highlights
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (6 total)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimall3
11:53 PM on 06/13/2011
Great. Maybe in 40 years Americans will get to see why 3,000 of us had to die in 9/11 and why Bush, Cheney, and Condi Rice lied to us that they were never forwarned of the attacks and why no Airforce jets were at the ready after the first plane hit.

Of course at the stage it will all be Academic because those of us who were adults on 9/11 will either be elderly or dead.
11:25 PM on 06/13/2011
The people at the pentagon has had 40 years to rewrite the pentagon papers. In 1963 JFK sign executive order 1110. This order would take the money and power to print U.S. money from the 5 people that own The Federal Reserve bank. An give the money and power to print U.S. money back to the U.S. Treasury. JFK was also going to spinter the CIA into a thousand pieces. The CIA is under the department of The U.S. Treasury. On November 22 1963 the secret agents the ride on the back of JFK's limo were order to stand down just minutes befor Kennedy was kill. This is why the one agent is seen running up to the limo to protect the first lady. He should of have been on the back of the limo behind Jackie and the other agent behind JFK. Now who had the money and motive to kill JFK? Now do you think the pentagon is going to tell the world that JFK was kill by his own Government.
photo
360Dunk
Feeder of slot machines
10:04 PM on 06/13/2011
Why are they still keeping 11 words secret on these Pentagon Papers and does it have anything to do with Colonel Sander's recipe?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rae112754
07:15 PM on 06/13/2011
With the soon to be released top secret pentagon papers. Its time for all of the politians to run for cover. After all of these years the truth is going to come out and finally be heard.
07:34 PM on 06/13/2011
Are you kidding?? less than one in a thousand will bother to read them, and one out of ten will learn to capitalize from it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sejs105
06:11 PM on 06/13/2011
What about the pow's lost in the jungles of Southeast Asia? The 8,000 pow's from Korea will all be dead soon and should be declared legally dead and given medals. The missing from Viet Nam and Cambodia and Laos should be negotiated to freedom. People trust their lives to politicians in many countries. Most of the time these politicians do not betray their constitutents. In the case of all these missing men, politicians have indeed betrayed their constituents.
fanetiks
Sense in spelling and everything else
07:45 PM on 06/13/2011
There is little to no reason to think any POW's remain in any country's camps so long after a war. No, these men are almost certainly all DEAD.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shelby4087
05:54 PM on 06/13/2011
Viet Nam is still painful, even to those who did not loose a loved one.
photo
UH34D
1. The Dark Ages or 2. Progressivism, I opt for #2
05:44 PM on 06/13/2011
I'm still waiting for DOD to release the study completed sometime in 1968 I believe and titled The Communist Infracture of South Vietnam, a study classified as Top Secret. A very large study and actually bound as a book so very few were produced.

Wish I could find a copy of it floating around somewhere! Do not believe it has ever been declassified.
05:22 PM on 06/13/2011
Danial Ellsburg was a common thief and should have been jailed for thievery and treason. He STOLE secret pentagon papers and published them. End of story.
06:05 PM on 06/13/2011
I think this is what they refer to as a TRAITOR!!!! This guy and Hanoi Jane Fonda!!!
06:19 PM on 06/13/2011
I suppose you supported Nixon too, never mind that he's been proven the second-biggest crook there is behind that mega-traitor Reagan.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Fi
A Gluten-Free life!
04:31 PM on 06/13/2011
I would really love to know, what all this about.
04:29 PM on 06/13/2011
You can read all about Viet Nam lies and deceipt by the U.S. government in two books: 1.VietNam and America 2. The Best and Brightest
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shelby4087
05:51 PM on 06/13/2011
A very good fictional account of the U.S. involvement leading up to the Viet Nam War is "The Silent American".
06:14 PM on 06/13/2011
You want to know what the Indo-China problem was all about you need to know Uncle Ho....Ho Chi Minh A Life by William Duiker....this lays out the Viet Nam problem from it's earliest days until our involvement...900 years of fighting there...and you can thank the french for our Viet Nam problem...Uncle Ho assisted the allied forces during WWII he wanted an audience with Truman and independence for Nam....he was ignored and Nam continued as a french colony....because of Michelin Rubber (tires) cost of almost 60,000 lives for a tire....
fanetiks
Sense in spelling and everything else
07:49 PM on 06/13/2011
At the end of WWII, the U.S. Government advised the European colonial powers NOT to resume their colonial overlordship of colonies happenstantially liberated when the Japanese displaced the colonial governments. They ignored us, and we did nothing to force them to do as we told them to do -- which would have saved us a huge amount of trouble.
03:23 PM on 06/13/2011
SIMPLE, , IF YOU were NOT a Mature Adult back then, , , shut up now!
fanetiks
Sense in spelling and everything else
07:49 PM on 06/13/2011
Why shouldn't younger people who know what they're talking about, address any issue at any time? Your remark makes no sense.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Godweiser
The eyes have it.
06:16 AM on 06/14/2011
Of course it doesn't. Then again, "Love it or Leave it" made no sense either.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ron Beicht
03:22 PM on 06/13/2011
As a Marine Vietnam Veteran we could have told you all the crap about Vietnam if you had taken the time to listen to us instead of spitting on us and calling us baby killers. Vietnam Veterans are "The Forgotten Generation"
photo
UH34D
1. The Dark Ages or 2. Progressivism, I opt for #2
05:37 PM on 06/13/2011
Amen to that Brother, but we are only forgotten if we let ourselves be. I have never passed up the opportunity to let people know I'm a Nam vet if the conversation allowed. Anybody who ever questioned my service was made to know, we were as loyal, fought as hard, died just as heroically as any member of our Armed Forces in our entire history and right up to this very day.

Sadly, Nam vets allowed a small cadre of Americans to dictate the history of our service and what it represented to our Nation. Not bragging, but I didn't let that happen with me when I stepped off that plane in CONUS in February 1968. Explained properly, people understood and realized the mistake they had made in judging us based upon the opinions of the few.

Semper Fi Brother, glad you made it home okay. Crew Chief, UH34D choppers, HMM 263.
fanetiks
Sense in spelling and everything else
07:51 PM on 06/13/2011
The Nation has recognized the injustice of its treatment of Vietnam vets, starting with the Vietnam Memorial in Washington. Unfortunately, the Kremlin and Forbidden City had very effective propaganda and agitprop programs at work thru a Fifth Column inside the U.S., esp. in academia and media, to subvert the U.S. will to fite.
03:10 PM on 06/13/2011
Do they say where all the money goes?
fanetiks
Sense in spelling and everything else
07:52 PM on 06/13/2011
What money? What are you talking about?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
heikhali
02:51 PM on 06/13/2011
Wow! Just 2 generations after the Viet Nam War ended. That DOD has a sharp bunch. Now, voters can make informed decisions abour the Viet Nam War. In another 40 years we'll hear abourt the "Afghanistan conflict."
fanetiks
Sense in spelling and everything else
07:53 PM on 06/13/2011
Classified documents are never declassified during the war in question. There is often a 50-year delay, not the 40 here.
01:53 PM on 06/13/2011
American people should not be informed they may question what the royal families of politics are doing and remove them from their throwns.