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Pentagon Papers Released 40 Years After New York Times Began Publishing Them

Daniel Ellsberg

CALVIN WOODWARD and RICHARD LARDNER   06/13/11 10:18 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Call it the granddaddy of WikiLeaks. Four decades ago, a young defense analyst leaked a top-secret study packed with damaging revelations about America's conduct of the Vietnam War.

On Monday, that study, dubbed the Pentagon Papers, finally came out in complete form. It's a touchstone for whistleblowers everywhere and just the sort of leak that gives presidents fits to this day.

The documents show that almost from the opening lines, it was apparent that the authors knew they had produced a hornet's nest.

In his Jan. 15, 1969, confidential memorandum introducing the report to the defense chief, the chairman of the task force that produced the study hinted at the explosive nature of the contents. "Writing history, especially where it blends into current events, especially where that current event is Vietnam, is a treacherous exercise," Leslie H. Gelb wrote.

Asked by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara to do an "encyclopedic and objective" study of U.S. involvement in Vietnam from World War II to 1967, the team of three dozen analysts pored over a trove of Pentagon, CIA and State Department documents with "ant-like diligence," he wrote.

Their work revealed a pattern of deception by the Lyndon Johnson, John Kennedy and prior administrations as they secretly escalated the conflict while assuring the public that, in Johnson's words, the U.S. did not seek a wider war.

The National Archives released the Pentagon Papers in full Monday and put them online, long after most of the secrets spilled. The release was 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, prompting President Richard Nixon to try to suppress publication and crush anyone in government who dared to spill confidences.

Prepared near the end of Johnson's term by Defense Department and private 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.

As scholars pore over the 47-volume report, Ellsberg said 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.

The Pentagon Papers chronicle failures of U.S. policy at seemingly every turn. One was a focused attempt from 1961 to 1963 to pacify rural Vietnam with the Strategic Hamlet Program, combining military operations to secure villages with construction, economic aid and resettlement.

The report concludes the U.S. had not learned lessons of the past, namely that peasants would resist attempts to change their lives. The hamlet program "was fatally flawed in its conception by the unintended consequence of alienating many of those whose loyalty it aimed to win," it said.

At the time, Nixon was delighted that people were reading about bumbling and lies by his predecessors, 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 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 in a mistrial.

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 and smear Nixon's opponents.

The next year, the Plumbers were implicated in the break-in at the Democratic Party headquarters in the Watergate building.

Ellsberg remains convinced the mammoth report would have had 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 has appeared elsewhere.

One volume missing from the Gravel edition and released Monday details U.S. miscues in training the Vietnamese National Army from 1954 to 1959. The U.S. sent more than $2 billion in aid to Vietnam then, nearly 80 percent for security.

In words that echo today's laments about money misspent in Iraq and Afghanistan, the report says the U.S. did not get much in return. "Very little has been accomplished," the volume says.

Bureaucratic compromises between the Pentagon and State Department also undermined the training program in Vietnam, according to the document. Increasingly, the U.S. was "selecting the least desirable course of action."

The 40th anniversary provided a motivation for government archivists to declassify the records. "If you read anything on the Pentagon Papers, the last line is always, `To date, the papers have yet to be declassified by the Department of Defense,'" said A.J. Daverede, director of the production division at the National Declassification Center. "It's about time that we put that to rest."

The center, part of the National Archives, was established by President Barack Obama in 2009 with a mission to speed the declassification of government records.

If not with the same personal vendetta, presidents since Nixon have acted aggressively to tamp down leaks. Obama's administration has pursued cases against five government leakers under espionage statutes, more than any of his recent predecessors.

Most prominent among the cases is that of Pfc. Bradley E. Manning, an intelligence analyst accused of passing hundreds of thousands of military and State Department documents to WikiLeaks. The administration says it provides avenues for whistleblowers to report wrongdoing but cannot tolerate unilateral decisions to release information that jeopardizes national security.

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.

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 vowed in the 1964 presidential campaign that he sought no wider war, Ellsberg recalled, even as 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."

___

Online:

http://www.archives.gov/research/pentagon-papers/

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WASHINGTON — Call it the granddaddy of WikiLeaks. Four decades ago, a young defense analyst leaked a top-secret study packed with damaging revelations about America's conduct of the Vietnam War.
WASHINGTON — Call it the granddaddy of WikiLeaks. Four decades ago, a young defense analyst leaked a top-secret study packed with damaging revelations about America's conduct of the Vietnam War.
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07:59 PM on 06/15/2011
Of course Johnson lied, what do you expect from a thief and a murderer?
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ringmaster
retired showman from Memphis, down in Dixie
05:20 PM on 06/15/2011
http://www.amazon.com/JFK-Unspeakable-Why-Died-Matters/dp/1439193886/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1308172776&sr=1-1
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ringmaster
retired showman from Memphis, down in Dixie
05:18 PM on 06/15/2011
It wasn't Kennedy who wanted a large war.
Get your facts straight.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_0_54?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=jfk+and+the+unspeakable+why+he+died+and+why+it+matters&sprefix=jfk+and+the+unspeakable+why+he+died+and+why+it+matters
02:33 PM on 06/15/2011
Cowabunga dudes & dudettes, 1st Calvary Division Vietnam 1970-1971 medic 18yrs old. Have not been the same since. Severe PTSD Trying to merge back into society. Anyhow, thanks Mr. Ellsberg. Same war, different battle field. Peace Doc
04:57 PM on 06/14/2011
Why would any educated person who stands to benefit nothing need the Pentagon Papers in the first place? Much of the failure in US foreign policy as it relates to war and aggression abroad lacks the common sense present in a 10 year old's understanding of human relationships.
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arthrbaum
04:00 PM on 06/14/2011
we didn't need the Pentagon papers..to tell us anything. we all new what was going on since 1954.''..as a antiwar protester we got our heads crack open..we fought our war at home..to stop the genocide/madness...kennedy,johnson,nixon,McNamara,westmorland, the culprits, millions of human life vietnemese,american kids bombed to dust for what? it was the poorest country on earth!!..we had to be insane.but its,to late for the pentagon papers..tell the truth to the young americans today history is repeating itself ... Iraq,Afghan,Pakistan again the poorest countries on earth....stop the killing of our children now!!
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Julia Bailey
12:13 PM on 06/15/2011
Really wish our current youth had your passion and patriotism. They seem to be content to just let all the money go to war while they fight for jobs at McDonalds.
03:16 PM on 06/14/2011
WAIT UNTIL THE SECRETS REGARDING THE IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN WAS REACH THE LIGHT OF DAY
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Rhonnybay
Be well. Love well. Do well.
07:48 AM on 06/14/2011
We'll never have that level of reporting again.
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carmenalex
!Mamá caliente humanista!
02:38 AM on 06/14/2011
And that was one war, and now we have five wars going on to six.
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02:13 AM on 06/14/2011
The Pentagon Papers, made public 40 years ago today, were more highly classified than any of the secret materials published by WikiLeaks. President Obama has said that “Ellsberg’s material was classified on a different basis” than were the WikiLeaks disclosures. “That’s true,” Mr. Ellsberg says. “Mine were top secret.” “I wish I could say that our government has improved its treatment of whistle-glowers in the 40 years since the Pentagon Papers.”
Manning’s treatment amounts to governmental misconduct “that offends a sense of justice,” Ellsberg added, borrowing words from the judge who presided over his own trial.
11:28 PM on 06/13/2011
This article is sheer idiocy. The implication throughout is that there was no war and that the North Vietnamese were not attacking the south. In reality, the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong brutally attacked, tortured and slaughtered those in the South that resisted. After abandoning the South because of ignorant idiots like Ellsberg, we allowed the Viet Cong to murder countless souls in both Viet Nam and Cambodia
. Ellsberg should be tried as a war criminal and dealt with as such.
12:37 PM on 06/14/2011
U.S. involvement in indochina resulted in more than 2 million deaths in the region. Entire generations have been damaged by the lies upheld by several presidintial administrations. We drafted our youth and they were scrificed on the basis of lies. Most did not understand why they were fighting and could not distinguish our "enemies" from those who we were supposed to be helping. Everyone was confused. In hindsight, at least in my opinion, it was unsubstantiated ideology that resulted in such a perverse loss of life. A percieved threat to democracy, a global power struggle that resulted in destruction that cannot be enumerated. Ellsberg burdens his responsibility for the atrocities associated with Viet Nam. He helped excellerate the war with his work for the Nixon administration and it is not likely that he will ever forgive himself. We are all accountable because we didn't listen or speak out. Because we let history repeat itself. We are all war criminals.
03:50 PM on 06/14/2011
Since when has the US cared about people slaughtering and torturing other people, unless it's in the US ideological or financial interest. US dropped two atom bombs on Japan, it brutally murdered, burned and tortured many Vietnamese people and allowed many of its own citizens to pay the ultimate price. Ellsberg is not responsible for the deaths you speak of, responsibility lies with the US war machine.
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Reno Fickler
Head Lifeguard/Dead Sea Marina
11:26 PM on 06/13/2011
Military strength quadrupled during LBJs reign. So much the "dove". The Pentagon Papers revealed our govt's interest in oil and rubber and who controled them in Vietnam. In 1969 I was the guy with the machine gun in the lead jeep leading the convoys through the Michelin rubber plantation 50 miles north west of Saigon. Business 'arrangements' have a lot to do with war.
Those papers confirm---It IS about the money.
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MsLiz
burned out attorney, flaming liberal
12:25 AM on 06/14/2011
I was a kid the first time we had a dinner table argument about Vietnam, mostly between father and two older brothers.  I piped up and suggested that they had valuable rice!  I wanted to eat.  My mother explained the domino theory very accurately to me, without giving judgment as to its validity.  I had a great family.
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carmenalex
!Mamá caliente humanista!
02:37 AM on 06/14/2011
JPMorgan owns gold mines in Afghanistan.
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datenutloaf
.......not approved by the moderators...........
08:36 PM on 06/13/2011
Daniel Ellsberg on Last Word.......
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Tquin
07:58 PM on 06/13/2011
I didn't realize that it had been 30 years since the NYT was a real newspaper.
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MsLiz
burned out attorney, flaming liberal
12:27 AM on 06/14/2011
The actual owners of newspapers made the decisions of what to publish, not some corporate hireling or committee.  The owners need to be in the building with their sleeves rolled up.  That's the way it was done in the comic books and movies.
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Jambala99
A GOP vote is a character flaw at this point.....
07:04 PM on 06/13/2011
Even Republicans back THEN were giant P.O.S.?......hard to believe......
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1jdgriff
Logic Prevails
07:45 PM on 06/13/2011
LOL. . . . that's the way it has been since Nixon.
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MsLiz
burned out attorney, flaming liberal
12:32 AM on 06/14/2011
Yes, you are right.  Nixon was a sort of Rovian character in Republican Party politics.  I think a train pulled out of a station while an opposition candidate was making a speech from one of the cars.  Nixon defeated Congresswoman Helen Gahagan Douglas by calling her the "Pink Lady," implying that she was  a red communist.