Authors: Lamar Waldron
The Plumbers’ first, unsuccessful, attempted break-in at the Water-
gate offices of O’Brien occurred eight days after the Chilean Embassy
burglary, on May 22, with another failed attempt on May 23. The group
finally succeeded at the Watergate on May 28, 1972. Anthony Summers
writes that “Hunt’s Cubans photographed papers [and] planted bug-
ging devices . . . on two telephones.” Fiorini said that “we looked high
and low for this document” but didn’t find it. As with the final Watergate
bugging three weeks later, Nixon was far from Washington during the
May attempts.22
Several important developments took place before the group returned
to the Watergate for another burglary in June 1972. J. Edgar Hoover
had died on May 1, 1972, and his “personal and confidential” files were
reportedly destroyed soon after. In Laurel, Maryland, on May 15, 1972,
Arthur Bremer shot George Wallace, who was running for the Demo-
cratic presidential nomination.23 Wallace’s injury removed a serious
threat to Nixon’s reelection, and though White House tapes show that
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LEGACY OF SECRECY
Nixon and Colson discussed planting leftist literature in Bremer’s apart-
ment after the shooting, no earlier connection between Nixon’s men and
Bremer was found.24
Richard Helms had several meetings in May 1972, including some
with top entertainment executives, about turning E. Howard Hunt’s
spy novels into a weekly pro-CIA television series. That Helms pressed
the issue several times that month is important, because it confirms the
ongoing close relationship between Helms and Hunt, which is com-
pletely at odds with the image Helms would always present after Hunt’s
arrest. It also indicates the Watergate arrests were not engineered by
Helms and the CIA, as many authors and officials have claimed, since
Helms wouldn’t tie himself and the CIA so closely to Hunt in May,
knowing that Hunt would become infamous in June.25 Also in May,
Helms appointed former Miami Station Chief Ted Shackley to head the
CIA’s Western Hemisphere division. After Watergate, Shackley would
make several suspicious trips to Miami and Mexico City—where much
of the Watergate money was laundered—without telling the local CIA
Station Chief.26
In addition to Artime, Haig, Hunt, and the others mentioned so far in
this chapter, two more veterans of the covert war against Castro were
in positions in 1972 that would let them play key roles in the aftermath
of the Watergate burglaries. Alexander Butterfield had first worked
with Haig and Joseph Califano to resettle the Cuban-American troops
from Fort Benning. Charles Colson said Joseph Califano recommended
that Butterfield be hired as a Nixon aide. By June 1972, Butterfield was
responsible for arranging Nixon’s extensive taping system—which he
would dramatically reveal during questioning by Fred Thompson, just
over a year after McCord, Barker, and the others were arrested.27
General Alexander Haig, working in Nixon’s White House as Kiss-
inger’s aide in June 1972, had remained friends with his old boss from
1963, Joseph Califano. By June 1972, Califano was a partner at Williams
and Connally, the powerful Washington law firm of Edward Bennett
Williams. Though Williams had originally introduced Johnny Rosselli
to Robert Maheu, and had represented Hoffa and Giancana (and still
represented the Teamsters), Williams had spent his recent years building
a more reputable image. At the law firm, Califano’s clients included both
the Democratic National Committee (target of the Watergate burglaries)
and the
Washington Post
.28
Chapter Sixty-three
In events well-chronicled for decades, early on the morning of June 17,
1972, James McCord, Bernard Barker, Frank Fiorini, Eugenio Martinez,
and Virgilio Gonzalez broke into the Watergate offices of the Demo-
cratic National Committee, while E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy
watched from across the street. Ostensibly, their mission was to fix or
move a bug on the phone of Lawrence O’Brien’s secretary, but they
brought no additional bugging equipment. Instead, they had more than
a hundred rolls of film, and Frank Fiorini later said, “Our assignment
was to photograph 2000 documents that night.” In addition to looking
for the crucial Castro assassination document, Hunt had also told them
to watch for “anything that had to do with Howard Hughes,” which
would include items about Robert Maheu. They were also looking gen-
erally for anything that could damage Nixon or hurt the Democrats.1
For reasons still debated, the five burglars wound up being arrested by
Carl Shoffler and others, while Hunt and Liddy fled.
Joseph Califano’s key role in focusing attention on the Watergate
story has been overlooked by most historians and journalists. At 5:00
AM on the morning of the arrests, Califano was called with news of the
break-in at the offices of his client, the Democratic National Committee.
According to Evan Thomas, Califano was told that “the burglars had
been caught copying files and bugging telephones. Califano hung up
and called another of [his] firm’s clients, the
Washington Post
. Califano
suggested to . . . the managing editor that the Watergate burglary might
be a good story,” setting in motion the coverage that would make Wood-
ward and Bernstein famous. Califano’s instincts and timing continued
to be amazing later that morning, because after “Califano was told that
the police had found the phone number of the Committee to Re-Elect
the President on one of the burglars,” Califano asked Williams, “What
if this goes all the way to the White House?”2
The following evening, “Califano decided to file a suit for the Demo-
crats against [CREEP].” Though little-remembered today, the suit was
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LEGACY OF SECRECY
important because the pre-trial discovery process kept the story barely
alive at a time when most American journalists continued to ignore the
incident. In Califano’s recent autobiography, he detailed for the first time
the many extralegal and illegal steps the Nixon White House attempted
in order to stymie the Democrats’ suit.3 Those were just some of the
illegal actions authorized by Nixon, to ensure that Watergate wouldn’t
impact the 1972 presidential election.
Jack Anderson bailed Fiorini out of jail, while Hunt and Liddy were
eventually tied to the break-in and arrested. Even before that, the Nixon
White House was in damage control mode. On June 20, 1972, Richard
Nixon called H. R. Haldeman and said to “tell Ehrlichman this whole
group of Cubans is tied to the Bay of Pigs.” A confused Haldeman asked,
“The Bay of Pigs? What does that have to do with this?” Nixon simply
said, “Ehrlichman will know what I mean.”4
Three days later, in the Oval Office, Nixon told Haldeman, “Well, we
protected Helms from one hell of a lot of things . . . Hunt will uncover
a lot of things. You open up that scab, there’s a hell of a lot of things . . .
tell [the CIA] we just feel that it would be very detrimental to have this
thing go any further. This involves these Cubans, Hunt, and a lot of
hanky-panky that we have nothing to do with ourselves.”5
Thus began Nixon’s effort to get Helms to persuade the FBI to back
off their Watergate investigation on national security grounds. Nixon
later told Haldeman that “when you get the CIA people in say, ‘Look,
the problem is that this will open up the whole Bay of Pigs things again.’
So they should call the FBI in and for the good of the country don’t go
any further into this case.”6
Just before Haldeman was to meet with Helms and General Walters to
discuss Watergate, Nixon said to “tell them that if it gets out . . . it’s likely
to blow the whole Bay of Pigs which we think would be very unfortu-
nate for the CIA.”7 Helms had been reluctant to obstruct the FBI, even
though three of those involved (McCord, Hunt, Barker) had worked for
the CIA and another (Martinez) was still on monthly retainer for the CIA
at the time of the break-in. So, Haldeman tried Nixon’s suggestion dur-
ing a June 23, 1972, meeting with Helms, saying, “The President asked
me to tell you this entire affair may be connected to the Bay of Pigs and
if it opens up, the Bay of Pigs may be blown.”
Helms erupted in rage. According to Haldeman, there was suddenly
“turmoil in the room, Helms gripping the arms of his chair leaning for-
ward and shouting, ‘The Bay of Pigs had nothing to do with this! I have
no concern about the Bay of Pigs!’” Haldeman was “absolutely shocked
by Helms’ violent reaction [and] wondered what was such dynamite in
the Bay of Pigs story?” Whatever it was, it worked, at least for a while,
since Helms soon issued a memo saying the CIA was requesting the FBI
“desist from expanding the investigation into other areas which may
well, eventually, run afoul of our operations.”8
Later, Haldeman said in his autobiography he realized that “in all
those Nixon references to the ‘Bay of Pigs,’ he was actually referring
to the Kennedy assassination.” In other words, “when Nixon said,
‘It’s likely to blow the whole Bay of Pigs thing,’ he might have been
reminding Helms, not so gently, of the cover-up of the CIA assassination
attempts on the hero of the Bay of Pigs, Fidel Castro—a CIA operation
that may have triggered the Kennedy tragedy, and which Helms des-
perately wanted to hide.”9
In later years, Richard Helms would make a point of telling journal-
ists that he had never succumbed to pressure to get the FBI to back
off from their Watergate investigation, something repeated by Stephen
Ambrose and other historians. But the record clearly shows Helms did
call off the FBI, at least for a time—all while withholding crucial infor-
mation about the backgrounds of Hunt, Fiorini, and other Watergate
participants from government investigators.
While many books, documentaries, and films have chronicled the
basic facts of Watergate, some points remained unresolved. While there
is a famous eighteen-minute gap in one of the crucial Nixon tapes, other
tapes are missing entirely or also contain erasures. An example is the
tape from the day when Nixon said that Watergate could “blow the
whole Bay of Pigs thing.” Anthony Summers discovered that tape, kept
at the National Archives, had “at least six unexplained erasures.”10
By the fall of 1972, Helms and the CIA had stopped helping the White
House block the FBI on several fronts, though Helms continued to with-
hold information from investigators that could negatively impact him
or the CIA. Nixon easily won reelection in early November, since Water-
gate was not a factor in the race. After his victory, Nixon began cleaning
house, asking on November 5, 1972, for most of his officials to submit
their resignations. Helms thought he would be an exception, but Nixon
fired him at Camp David on November 20, 1972. Apparently Helms
still had some leverage left, because he was able to get Nixon to appoint
him as ambassador to Iran, a post he wanted that was also far from the
Watergate investigations.
Richard Helms’s last day at the CIA was supposed to be February 14,
724
LEGACY OF SECRECY
1973, but Nixon moved the date up to February 2 on just two weeks’
notice, so that new CIA Director James Schlesinger could take office.
Helms and his secretary spent the next ten days destroying four thou-
sand pages of transcripts from Helms’s own office taping system, plus
the tapes themselves. According to Helms biographer Thomas Powers,
the destruction also included all of Helms’s “personal records from six
and a half years as Director,” including everything relating in any way
to Watergate. Because so many of the figures involved in Watergate had
also been involved in the JFK-Almeida coup plan, the Mafia’s infiltration
of the plan, or the CIA-Mafia plots, this effectively allowed Helms to
complete the cover-up he’d been conducting since 1963. There was no
way his successor would have the information needed to really expose
Helms, even if the new Director were so inclined. Helms didn’t destroy
the only copy of the IG Report, because it had left out so much crucial
information and all of its supporting files had already been destroyed.11
When coupled with the destruction of Hoover’s private files the pre-
vious year, Helms’s housecleaning put many details about the assas-
sination of JFK, and likely some aspects of Dr. King’s and Bobby’s,
permanently beyond the reach of history.12
Three months later, when new CIA Director Schlesinger issued an
order for senior CIA officials to tell him about past or ongoing CIA
activities outside its charter, he received almost seven hundred pages
of misdeeds. Eventually named “The Family Jewels,” the full list—kept
secret until June 2007—was woefully incomplete, for several reasons.
Aside from the unlikelihood that CIA employees and officials would
willingly volunteer their most serious crimes or charter violations, there