context for Nixon portrayals and GR final page

Doug Millison millison at online-journalist.com
Thu Feb 28 13:01:08 CST 2002


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Tapes: Nixon Considered Nuclear Bomb

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) - A few weeks before ordering an escalation of the
Vietnam War, President Nixon matter-of-factly raised the idea of using a
nuclear bomb. The notion was quickly shot down by national security adviser
Henry Kissinger.

Nixon's abrupt suggestion, buried in 500 hours of tapes released Thursday
at the National Archives, came after Kissinger laid out a variety of
options for stepping up the war effort, such as attacking power plants and
docks, in an April 25, 1972, conversation in the Executive Office Building.

``I'd rather use the nuclear bomb,'' Nixon responded.

``That, I think, would just be too much,'' Kissinger replied.

``The nuclear bomb. Does that bother you?'' Nixon asked. ``I just want you
to think big.''

The following month, Nixon ordered the biggest escalation of the war since
1968.

In a 1985 interview, Nixon acknowledged that he had considered ``the
nuclear option.'' He told Time magazine then: ``I rejected the bombing of
the dikes, which would have drowned 1 million people, for the same reason
that I rejected the nuclear option. Because the targets presented were not
military targets.''

Nixon showed less regard for the North Vietnamese in his 1972 taped
conversations.

In a conversation from June, he told domestic adviser Charles Colson, ``We
want to decimate that goddamned place.''

He added: ``North Vietnam is going to get reordered. ... It's about time,
it's what should have been done long ago.''

The conversations were in the archives' largest-ever release of Nixon
tapes. The material covers mostly the first six months of 1972, including
everything from Nixon's groundbreaking trip to China to the early days
after the Watergate break-in.

With this release, historians and researchers for the first time are being
allowed to use their own recording equipment to copy the Nixon tapes.

``The sheer volume and contents of the tapes will give historians and
others plenty of research opportunities,'' said Karl Weissenbach, director
of the Nixon Presidential Materials staff at the archives.

The archives now has made public roughly 1,700 of the 3,700 hours of
conversations Nixon taped. Most of the segments related to Watergate had
been previously released, but the new tapes contain a few additional
conversations, and include full conversations where previously only
excerpts had been available.

The public now can hear what was said before and after the infamous 18
1/2-minute gap in the Watergate tapes three days after the break-in, and
hear the full context of the ``smoking gun'' snippet, which revealed that
the president was interested in using the CIA to derail the FBI's
investigation of the break-in.

``This time, you're getting the total historical perspective and complete
context surrounding the Watergate break-in,'' Weissenbach said.

On the Net:

Archives: http://www.nara.gov



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