Date: Fri 15-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 15-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Ziefman-Nixon-politics
Full Text:
w/photo: A Key Counselor Sheds Light On The Dark Side Of American Politics
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
Nearly retired from a long legal career which included more than a dozen years
as a key counsel of the Judiciary Committee of the US House of
Representatives, Jerry Ziefman has written a provocative new book that could
rewrite historians' versions of the Watergate years.
Without Honor: The Impeachment of President Nixon and the Crimes of Camelot
reached the bookstores last month. Mr Ziefman, 70, who lives on Walnut Tree
Hill Road in Sandy Hook, already has embarked on a series of interviews,
including an hour-long radio broadcast with John Dean who wrote the preface to
the book. Preparing to begin a book-signing tour which will take him across
the country, Mr Ziefman visited The Bee this week to discuss the book and why
he waited 20 years to write it."
"I don't think I really understood a lot of what happened until later, after
the establishment of the Church Committee and the revelations that came
through it and other sources," Mr Ziefman said. "I started (the book) well
before Clinton became President, but the problem always has been how to
negotiate the large blocks of time needed to go through all of the material
and condense it."
It was during time that Jerry Ziefman served as the chief of staff and general
counsel of the House Judiciary Committee that the panel was directed to
determine whether a Bill of Impeachment against President Richard Nixon should
be recommended to the full House.
Instead of conducting an investigation, the impeachment inquiry staff headed
by John Doar intentionally orchestrated a charade, using flawed legal theories
and behind-the-scenes maneuvering in an attempt to keep Nixon in office,
"twisting in the wind," until the end of his term to improve the odds of
electing Ted Kennedy as President in 1976, Mr Ziefman said.
The charade also was orchestrated to avoid a thorough investigation of the
Nixon administration, Mr Ziefman charged, because such a probe also could
reveal Kennedy-era wiretaps, burglaries and CIA-sanctioned murders carried out
in the name of national security.
In 1954 an illegal secret agreement was negotiated by the CIA with the
Department of Justice not to prosecute CIA agents for felonies that they were
committing if they were discovered by the FBI. The agreement was first
negotiated by then-CIA General Counsel Lawrence Houston, who had been with the
CIA since its inception in the Truman administration, and then-Deputy Attorney
General William Rogers, who eventually became secretary of state under Nixon
and later headed a commission to investigate the Iran-Contra scandal during
the Reagan administration.
Assassination Attempts
In 1960 and 1961, CIA-supported assassination attempts were made on Patrice
Lumumba, premier of the Congo. The CIA also supported plots in the Dominican
Republic that caused the murders of President Rafael Truillo and General Rene
Schneider in the Donimican Republic, President Ngo Dinh Diem in South Vietnam,
and Salvador Allende Gossens in Chile. Perhaps the most sensationalized
example of this policy involved assassination attempts against Cuba's Fidel
Castro.
The Houston-Rogers agreement and the policies that it reflected remained in
effect for more than two decades, through the Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson,
and Nixon administrations until they were revealed in 1976 and rescinded by
President Gerald Ford.
"The theme of my book - from my point of view - is that there has been
something very depressing, wrong, corrupt and immoral in American society from
the Cold War, the concept that felonies can be committed in the national
interest," Mr Ziefman said. "That's a notion we had repudiated in the
Nurenberg trials after World War II, a notion that came into full flower under
Hitler: Acts that are otherwise immoral and illegal could be condoned if done
in the name of nationalism - the end justifies the means."
Mr Ziefman said action taken during the administrations of Richard Nixon, Jack
Kennedy and Robert Kennedy - and even as far back as the Eisenhower
administration when Nixon was vice president - have worked to undermine
traditional American values.
"There's a pervasive attitude, as Leo Durocher once said, that "Nice guys
finish last. If you aren't willing to cut corners, if you comply with the
rules, are honest and straight-laced, you won't succeed. How much of this goes
on in our communities today?"
In the book, Mr Ziefman's journal entries are interpolated with his pointed
analysis of the years preceding, during and after Watergate.
"Watergate's `cancer on the presidency' did not begin - or end - with Nixon,"
Mr Ziefman insisted. "And one thing that caused cancer in American government
- not just the CIA - was the abdication of responsibility on the part of the
Justice Department."
With carefully drawn threads, Jerry Ziefman shows how key players weave in and
out of the picture throughout the past three decades. John Doar, for example,
tapped by Judiciary Committee Chairman Peter Rodino, D-New Jersey, to serve as
head of the inquiry staff, had been the trusted deputy of Burke Marshall,
assistant attorney general under Robert Kennedy. When Doar became the special
counsel to the House Judiciary Committee, he brought with him Bernard
Nussbaum, another former member of the Kennedy Justice Department, and Hillary
Rodham, a Yale law school graduate and protoge of Burke Marshall.
Mr Ziefman argues that actions during the current Clinton administrations by
Mr Nussbaum (who resigned as White House counsel in 1994 amid charges that he
improperly interfered with the workings of federal agencies) and by Hillary
Rodham Clinton are more examples of this continuing pattern of secrecy and
subterfuge.
"My own view is that on a long-term basis, the impeachment charade, being
ethically flawed, did harm to our future national life and the credibility of
the current leaders of both political parties," Mr Ziefman said.
A Twist Of Fate
Growing up on Long Island, Jerry Ziefman went into the Navy immediately after
high school during World War II. The Navy sent him to Harvard for four
semesters and to officers' school. Finishing his degree at Harvard after the
war, he entered medical school, then changed his mind and earned a law degree
at New York University in 1958.
"I hung out my shingle in a small town on Long Island, but as fate would have
it, I became a ghost writer for Prentice Hall on an esoteric subject: state
taxation of interstate commerce," Mr Ziefman said. "That led to my being
recruited to join the House Judiciary Committee staff for a year - I ended up
staying for 14."
He left to become a professor of law at the University of Santa Clara in
California. In 1980 he moved back East, married Marianne Huebenthal of
Newtown, established a private law practice in Washington, DC, and began
dividing his time between Washington and Connecticut.
Mr Ziefman has high praise for many "fine, honorable" members of Congress whom
he worked with and credits President Ford with exposing and rescinding the
Houston-Rogers agreement. Times have changed, he said, and perhaps people
today will find it "less hard to swallow that the cancer that came into view
at Watergate also existed in the Kennedy administration."
"Today, with the Cold War ended, more of us are coming to an awareness that in
the name of "public good," our highest officials have committed secret crimes,
including murders - and with the help of Congress have lied to cover them up,"
he said. "Perhaps the rising tide of disaffection with Congress, the White
House, and both political parties will elevate our state morality - and reduce
the present dangers that secret crimes hatched in government offices will
breed contempt for law, invite anarchy and bring terrible retribution."
Jerry Ziefman will give a brief talk and sign copies of his book, Without
Honor: The Impeachment of President Nixon and the Crimes of Camelot , Forward
by John Dean, Thunder's Mouth Press, $24.95/hardcover, at the Hickory Stick
Book Shop in Washington Depot on Saturday, March 23, from 2 to 4 pm.
