Politics > Politics-USA > Nixon on his *****-kissing spy Fred "Lousy Actor" Thompson: "dumb as hell."
| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"Harry Hope" |
| Date: |
07 Jul 2007 10:09:24 PM |
| Object: |
Nixon on his *****-kissing spy Fred "Lousy Actor" Thompson: "dumb as hell." |
From The Associated Press, 7/7/07:
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070707/D8Q7VK680.html
Fred Thompson Aided Nixon on Watergate
By JOAN LOWY
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Fred Thompson gained an image as a tough-minded investigative counsel
for the Senate Watergate committee.
Yet President Nixon and his top aides viewed the fellow Republican as
a willing, if not too bright, ally, according to White House tapes.
Thompson, now preparing a bid for the 2008 GOP presidential
nomination, won fame in 1973 for asking a committee witness the
bombshell question that revealed Nixon had installed hidden listening
devices and taping equipment in the Oval Office.
Those tapes show Thompson played a behind-the-scenes role that was
very different from his public image three decades ago.
He comes across as a partisan willing to cooperate with the Nixon
White House's effort to discredit the committee's star witness.
It was Thompson who tipped off the White House that the Senate
committee knew about the tapes.
They eventually cinched Nixon's downfall in the scandal resulting from
the break-in at Democratic headquarters in the Watergate complex in
Washington and the subsequent White House cover-up.
Thompson, then 30, was appointed counsel by his political mentor,
Tennessee Sen. Howard Baker, the top Republican on the Senate
investigative committee.
Thompson had been an assistant U.S. attorney in Nashville, Tenn., and
had managed Baker's re-election campaign.
Thompson later was a senator himself.
Nixon was disappointed with the selection of Thompson, whom he called
"dumb as hell."
The president did not think Thompson was skilled enough to interrogate
unfriendly witnesses and would be outsmarted by the committee's
Democratic counsel.
This assessment comes from audio tapes of White House conversations
recently reviewed by The Associated Press at the National Archives in
College Park, Md., and transcripts of those discussions that are
published in "Abuse of Power: The New Watergate Tapes," by historian
Stanley Kutler.
"Oh s---, that kid," Nixon said when told by his chief of staff, H.R.
Haldeman, of Thompson's appointment on Feb. 22, 1973.
"Well, we're stuck with him," Haldeman said.
In a meeting later that day in the Old Executive Office Building,
Baker assured Nixon that Thompson was up to the task.
"He's tough. He's six feet five inches, a big mean fella," the senator
told Nixon.
Publicly, Baker and Thompson presented themselves as dedicated to
uncovering the truth.
But Baker had secret meetings and conversations with Nixon and his top
aides, while Thompson worked cooperatively with the White House and
accepted coaching from Nixon's lawyer, J. Fred Buzhardt, the tapes and
transcripts show.
"We've got a pretty good rapport with Fred Thompson," Buzhardt told
Nixon in an Oval Office meeting on June 6, 1973.
The meeting included a discussion of former White House counsel John
Dean's upcoming testimony before the committee.
Dean, the committee's star witness, had agreed to tell what he knew
about the break-in and cover-up if he was granted immunity against
anything incriminating he might say.
Nixon expressed concern that Thompson was not "very smart."
"Not extremely so," Buzhardt agreed.
"But he's friendly," Nixon said.
"But he's friendly," Buzhardt agreed.
"We are hoping, though, to work with Thompson and prepare him, if Dean
does appear next week, to do a very thorough cross-examination."
Five days later, Buzhardt reported to Nixon that he had primed
Thompson for the Dean cross-examination.
_________________________________________________
My goodness. Freddie? Dumb as hell?... heh heh
Harry
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| User: "Nemesis" |
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| Title: Re: Nixon on his *****-kissing spy Fred "Lousy Actor" Thompson: "dumb as hell." |
08 Jul 2007 08:33:14 AM |
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In article <tal0939b8ssjf08ff4ctng2v4r5652om3s@4ax.com>, Harry Hope
<rivrvu@ix.netcom.com> wrote:
From The Associated Press, 7/7/07:
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070707/D8Q7VK680.html
Fred Thompson Aided Nixon on Watergate
By JOAN LOWY
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Fred Thompson gained an image as a tough-minded investigative counsel
for the Senate Watergate committee.
Yet President Nixon and his top aides viewed the fellow Republican as
a willing, if not too bright, ally, according to White House tapes.
Thompson, now preparing a bid for the 2008 GOP presidential
nomination, won fame in 1973 for asking a committee witness the
bombshell question that revealed Nixon had installed hidden listening
devices and taping equipment in the Oval Office.
Those tapes show Thompson played a behind-the-scenes role that was
very different from his public image three decades ago.
He comes across as a partisan willing to cooperate with the Nixon
White House's effort to discredit the committee's star witness.
It was Thompson who tipped off the White House that the Senate
committee knew about the tapes.
They eventually cinched Nixon's downfall in the scandal resulting from
the break-in at Democratic headquarters in the Watergate complex in
Washington and the subsequent White House cover-up.
Thompson, then 30, was appointed counsel by his political mentor,
Tennessee Sen. Howard Baker, the top Republican on the Senate
investigative committee.
Thompson had been an assistant U.S. attorney in Nashville, Tenn., and
had managed Baker's re-election campaign.
Thompson later was a senator himself.
Nixon was disappointed with the selection of Thompson, whom he called
"dumb as hell."
The president did not think Thompson was skilled enough to interrogate
unfriendly witnesses and would be outsmarted by the committee's
Democratic counsel.
This assessment comes from audio tapes of White House conversations
recently reviewed by The Associated Press at the National Archives in
College Park, Md., and transcripts of those discussions that are
published in "Abuse of Power: The New Watergate Tapes," by historian
Stanley Kutler.
"Oh s---, that kid," Nixon said when told by his chief of staff, H.R.
Haldeman, of Thompson's appointment on Feb. 22, 1973.
"Well, we're stuck with him," Haldeman said.
In a meeting later that day in the Old Executive Office Building,
Baker assured Nixon that Thompson was up to the task.
"He's tough. He's six feet five inches, a big mean fella," the senator
told Nixon.
Publicly, Baker and Thompson presented themselves as dedicated to
uncovering the truth.
But Baker had secret meetings and conversations with Nixon and his top
aides, while Thompson worked cooperatively with the White House and
accepted coaching from Nixon's lawyer, J. Fred Buzhardt, the tapes and
transcripts show.
"We've got a pretty good rapport with Fred Thompson," Buzhardt told
Nixon in an Oval Office meeting on June 6, 1973.
The meeting included a discussion of former White House counsel John
Dean's upcoming testimony before the committee.
Dean, the committee's star witness, had agreed to tell what he knew
about the break-in and cover-up if he was granted immunity against
anything incriminating he might say.
Nixon expressed concern that Thompson was not "very smart."
"Not extremely so," Buzhardt agreed.
"But he's friendly," Nixon said.
"But he's friendly," Buzhardt agreed.
"We are hoping, though, to work with Thompson and prepare him, if Dean
does appear next week, to do a very thorough cross-examination."
Five days later, Buzhardt reported to Nixon that he had primed
Thompson for the Dean cross-examination.
_________________________________________________
My goodness. Freddie? Dumb as hell?... heh heh
Harry
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WHEN was "dumbness" not an asset to an aspiring Conservative politico?
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| User: "Darkee" |
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| Title: Re: Nixon on his *****-kissing spy Fred "Lousy Actor" Thompson: "dumb as hell." |
08 Jul 2007 12:15:43 AM |
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On Sun, 08 Jul 2007 03:09:24 GMT, Harry Hope <rivrvu@ix.netcom.com>
wrote:
From The Associated Press, 7/7/07:
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070707/D8Q7VK680.html
Quotes mean nothing -- tell us what you know.
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