On June 15, 1971, President Richard M. Nixon and John N. Mitchell talked on the telephone from 6:35 pm to 6:38 pm. The White House Telephone taping system captured this recording, which is known as Conversation 005-086 of the White House Tapes.
Transcript (AI-Generated)This transcript was generated automatically by AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Do not cite this transcript as authoritative. Consult the Finding Aid above for verified information.
Attorney General.
Yes, Mr. President.
I wondered if you had any success with Rogers.
Yes, he's agreeable to do it.
We've got people from Defense, Justice, and his counsel over there, Stevenson, working on it.
Good.
And he understood the point and was perfectly happy to do it.
And he'll get out a sort of a general statement of some sort?
Yes, sir.
It will not be limited solely to the foreign affairs.
I think what is very important in this is to find a way to get some strong language, like a massive breach of security, things of that sort, so that we can get something in the public mind.
We're not just interested in making the technical case for the lawyers.
Exactly.
Something where they can see what is really involved here is...
irresponsible you know use some really high-flown adjectives that's what i'd hope you can get some people to work on that uh we will and of course bill has the understanding that it'll be sent over to the white house to be looked at before it goes out right so your phrase coiners and word makers can get a crack at it well i'll tell you john it's uh one of those fights where you don't know whether you've
You don't know how it's going to affect you, but boy, it's one we had to make, and by God, it's one I enjoy.
These bastards have gone too far this time, don't you think?
It is certainly my opinion.
You had to do it, and the important thing is to work at it like you've suggested, to try and structure it so that the import of it and the nature of it gets through to the public.
Right.
And I believe that...
The press is going to be reasonably fair on this.
I don't mean the Times and the Post, but I mean the rest of the press.
I don't know.
I think they'll understand how far they have gone.
Yeah, well, thank God.
They're going to understand there's no paper in the country that's for us.
We're going to fight it.
Okay.
Thanks, John.
We've got a good judge on it, Murray Gerfein, who is Tom Dewey's counselor.
I know him well.
Smart as hell.
Yeah, and he's new, and he's appreciative.
Good.
We ought to work it out.