Thursday, January 5, 2017
Nixon’s Treachery 1-5-2017
5, January 2017 Nixon’s Treachery
The recent release of archives from the Nixon
library reveal a man obsessed with power who would willingly allow thousands of
Americans and Vietnamese to die in the pursuit of the US presidency.
Historians and President Johnson had long suspected
Nixon of treachery but had never found the “smoking gun.”
Here are the historical facts. In 1968 Johnson was
advancing a peace initiative with South and North Vietnam.
Henry Kissinger, an outside Republican advisor,
advised Nixon that a peace agreement was in the offing, if Johnson would halt
bombing raids on North Vietnam, the Soviets pledged to urge North Vietnam to
engage in peace talks.
Fearful that the successful conclusion of Johnson’s
efforts would jeopardize his presidential ambitions, Nixon ordered his aide
H.R. Haldeman to scuttle the peace talks to give him an advantage over his
rival, Vice President Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 election.
Release of Haldeman’s notes confirms long held suspicions
that Nixon prolonged the war unconcerned of the human carnage that would ensue.
As Haldeman’s notes reveal, Nixon was able to
persuade the South Vietnamese president, Nguyen Van Thieu, to stall the talks.
CIA director, Richard Helms, was ‘persuaded’ to remain silent while this coup
d’état was taking place.
Haldeman’s notes yield other shocking items -
Nixon’s promise to Southern Republicans that he would soft-pedal on civil
rights and “lay of pro-Negro crap,” if elected.
In the 1962 gubernatorial campaign, he and his aides
conspired to wiretap political opponents.
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