Watergate’s biggest mysteries remain unsolved

The 40th anniversary of the Watergate break-in is this weekend, and its two biggest mysteries remains unsolved, despite multiple theories from people close to the story.

For years, there were three questions that nagged investigators, historians and conspiracy theorists: Who was “Deep Throat,” the source used by the Washington Post?; Did President Richard Nixon personally authorize the break-in?; and Why did the break-in happen to begin with?

The disclosure by the late Mark Felt that he was “Deep Throat” solved that part of the mystery (for most people).

What remains are the final two mysteries, which are intertwined and still hotly debated.

One fact is beyond debate: On June 17, 1972, five men connected to the Nixon re-election campaign were caught by Washington metropolitan police burglarizing the headquarters of the rival Democratic National Committee, and the office of its chairman, Lawrence O’Brien.

In the two years of media coverage after the break-in until Nixon’s resignation, little attention was given to the reason for the break-in and if Nixon ordered it directly.

On the tapes made in the White House at the time, Nixon denied knowing about the break-in ahead of time, and his political and legal troubles were related to covering up his campaign’s connection to the crime – and not the break-in.

In recent years, the topics have spawned multiple theories, from ideas that Nixon was clueless about the crime or he directly ordered it, to suggestions that the burglars were looking for information related to Howard Hughes, Fidel Castro, call girls, kickbacks and skullduggery by the Democrats themselves.

Typical of the speculation was an April 2012 article by Ron Rosenbaum in Slate.com, which adheres to the theory that Nixon ordered the burglary to dig up the goods on a connection between Howard Hughes and O’Brien, the DNC chair who once worked for Hughes, and that connection could embarrass Nixon. (A quick Google search shows Rosenbaum stating the same theories in 1999.)

Rosenbaum also calls out Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in his Slate story, asking them to solve the two mysteries in their upcoming documentary with Robert Redford.

On the other end of the spectrum is John Dean, the lawyer who turned from Nixon’s White House counsel to the star witness against Nixon’s administration.

Dean wasn’t a Nixon fan, but in 2009, he told Keith Olbermann that Nixon operatives were looking for information about illegal activity by the Democrats in Miami. Dean didn’t know if Nixon ordered the break-in at the Watergate.

Also, several men on the break-in team were Cuban émigrés and they claimed they were told by GOP operatives the Democrats had some connection to money coming from Fidel Castro, and the mission was to find evidence to support that theory.

What’s for sure is that no clear “smoking gun” tape exists that explains the motives for the break-in or Nixon’s direct role.

In their first joint byline in the Washington Post in 36 years, Woodward and Bernstein discussed the Watergate break-in’s historical impact.

“At its most virulent, Watergate was a brazen and daring assault, led by Nixon himself, against the heart of American democracy: the Constitution, our system of free elections, the rule of law,” the authors wrote on June 8. But the op-ed story didn’t discuss the direct motive for the Watergate break-in.

Typical of the twisted mythology about the incident was a widely cited story by the New York Times’ J. Anthony Lucas in 1987, where he confronts three key Watergate players at a Hofstra symposium.

In Lucas’s story, Bob Haldeman says he doesn’t know why the Watergate burglary was done, then Jeb Magruder says the break-in was a fishing expedition about alleged payments from Howard Hughes to Nixon’s friend, Bebe Rebozo.

Lucas then bumps into Charles Colson, who quips that the burglars were looking for info on Hughes and Rebozo, but the break-in was done on the behalf of Hughes, and not Nixon.

However, people interested in the multiple theories could find out, at last, if there is a second Smoking Gun.

James Rosen from Fox News says a judge could soon rule on unsealing the testimony of Alfred C. Baldwin III during the original break-in trial.

Baldwin overhead conversations from a wiretap placed in the DNC offices from Nixon campaign operatives after the first break-in in May 1972. It is believed that the context of Baldwin’s testimony could reveal what the operatives were looking for.

The Justice Department and Attorney General Eric Holder oppose the release of the testimony.

Recent Constitution Daily Stories

Watergate’s biggest mysteries remain unsolved
Obama, Romney agree on one thing: Texting is good
Constitution Daily average shows Rubio leading candidate buzz

Scott Bomboy is the editor-in-chief of Constitution Daily.