Tricky Dicky’s My Lai Cover-Up Revealed
Well, well, well: the wily ol’ Trickster tried to interfere in a war crimes prosecution! Shocking. Not.
Click here for reuse options!This past week marked the 46th anniversary of the My Lai massacre, in which 504 unarmed Vietnamese civilians were massacred by U.S. troops in 1968. It’s one of the most shameful chapters in American military history, and now documents held at the Nixon Presidential Library paint a disturbing picture of what happened inside the Nixon administration after news of the massacre was leaked.
The documents, mostly hand-written notes from Nixon’s meetings with his chief of staff H.R. “Bob” Haldeman, lead some historians to conclude that President Richard Nixon was behind the attempt to sabotage the My Lai court-martial trials and cover up what was becoming a public-relations disaster for his administration.
One document, scribbled by Haldeman during his Dec. 1, 1969, meeting with Nixon, reads like a threatening to-do list under the headline “My Lai Task Force.” Haldeman wrote “dirty tricks” (with the clarification that those tricks be “not too high a level”) and “discredit one witness,” in order to “keep working on the problem.”
“Haldeman’s note is an important piece of evidence that Nixon interfered with a war-crime prosecution,” says Ken Hughes, a researcher with the University of Virginia’s Miller Center Presidential Recording Program.
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