It has been 45 years since the bungled 1972 break-in at the Watergate offices
of the Democratic National Committee headquarters by burglars tied to the president's re-election committee
set off the Watergate
scandal. The burglars were
there to repair electronic eavesdropping bugs they had installed the previous
month.
The resulting
attempted cover-up, abuse of power, perjury, news of the existence of a
clandestine group called the Plumbers operating from within the White House, discovery
of other crimes (break-ins, kidnapping, etc.) and the eventual
resignation of the sitting president in 1974.
The
free press especially The Washington Post
played its fundamental role in bringing the scandal to light. The Senate Select Committee Watergate hearings exposed the depth of the
scandal.
Nearly
half a century later, as another American president finds himself engulfed in
scandal over claims of election misconduct, he and his staff may well want to read up
on the Watergate scandal in the bestselling book All
the President’s Men. There
are lessons to be learned!
Watergate was basically decent men who went astray. It was a failure of decent men to follow their conscience. They made tragically destructive errors and many even criminal conduct.
In the end, the lessons of Watergate contain both an
assurance and a warning.
The assurance is that the American system works. The warning
is that, no matter how high or important the post, if one betrays a public
trust, the system will be brought into play.
Watergate shows that the odds of beating the system are strongly against
a guilty person.
After what happened to Richard Nixon, only a fool would take
the chance.
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