If all you know of Nixon is Watergate, you know next to nothing.
Most people today do not know anything of Nixon before he was president. Six Crises is Nixon's first book. It is first and foremost a first person account of pinch points in history from one of the most influential players in that history.
Before he entered the world stage, Nixon was a varsity letterman in Football and, near and dear to my heart, he was also a champion debater. His debate skill carried him on through his legal and pollical careers.
When war came, Nixon first served as an attorney for the Office of Emergency Management in Washington, D.C., He worked there until he secured an appointment as Lieutenant junior grade in the United States Naval Reserve on 15 June 1942. Looking for more excitement, Nixon volunteered for sea duty and reported to Commander Air Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet where he was assigned as Officer in Charge of the South Pacific Combat Air Transport Command at Guadalcanal in the Solomons, and later at Green Island. He received commendations for the efficiency of the units under his command, and mustered out as a commander in the Naval reserves.
Nixon was "In the Arena" and a World Leader before he was President. Nixon first went to Congress where he was an eloquent and effective Cold War Warrior. While Senator McCarthy sought headlines and Hollywood scalps, Nixon sought evidence and actual government spies. While Nixon's telling of the Alger hiss story here is compelling, the full breadth of that story was told by his key witness Whitaker Chambers in his classic, Witness. The fact that the key evidence was secured from a hollowed-out-pumpkin in a Maryland pumpkin patch, lent an air of intrigue to the affair which Hollywood could not improve upon.
This is were the battle between Nixon and the liberal press began. Nixon outlived most of his most vitriolic antagonists and staged an unprecedented comeback after Watergate and died as an honored statesman respected by republicans and democrat leaders alike for his sage advise regarding world crises up until the time of his death. History proved Nixon right when documents released after the fall of the Soviet Union proved, not only that Hiss was in fact a spy, but that some of his most vociferous supporters in the media were also fellow travelers and/or spies in contact with the Soviet Union.
The Fund Crisis and the Checkers speech are windows into the evolution of money politics, and a text book for crisis management. Nixon's defense was a detailed factual one. It was the debater's version of marching through the accusations like Sherman marching through Georgia. And no, Nixon was not going to give back the family dog Checkers, even if it cost him the VP nomination. Nixon proved one good speech could save a political career. His 1969 Inaugural Address is comparable in quality and effect to Churchill's Finest Hour and Never Surrender speeches.
Nixon was IKE's VP after crushing the Checker's Speech and then crushing it on the campaign trail for IKE. In his first four years in office as VP, Nixon made world tours including allies and adversaries. He knew the best way to manage a crisis is to prevent one, and that misunderstanding and miscalculation of either an adversary or an ally could prove fatal not just for a political career but for the world. Nixon later wrote a book, Leaders, which provides a first person assessment of some of the other World Leaders during his time on the World State, some of who you may not even be aware of, given the parochial attention of American journalism.
When IKE had a heart attack, Nixon served as de facto President during his recovery. It is hard to appreciate with the passage of time, how critical this service was. The World was on the precipice of Nuclear War. An error in being to belligerent or too weak could have triggered a cataclysm. Unlike Al Haig's infamous "reassurance" that he was "in charge" after Reagan was shot, Nixon systematically reassured allies and cautioned adversaries, which was made exponentially easier because Nixon had worked with each of them as IKE's roving ambassador in the years before the crisis. This event proved the importance of both relationships and preparation.
His experience came with considerable risk to his person. In January 1958, there was a revolution in Venezuela in which the communist party was a driving force. In May, Ike sent Nixon on a "Good Will" (read crisis management) tour of Central and South America. The Soviets and their client state Cuba, were working hard to turn desire for democracy into a desire for communism. It was generally acknowledged that it was easier to replace a tyrant with communism than democracy, because the tyrant had crippled the building blocks of democracy. In practice there is little difference between a communist thugocracy and a fascist dictatorship.
In another first person account by Press Attaché Robert Amerson, he remembered the day:
"Who can forget the sight of those crowds that had been bused down by the professional agitators and organizers, the banners that had been printed up for it, their stationing themselves in the balcony above where the Nixons and the official party had to pass."
"This arrangement allowed the demonstrators to throw things down, shout epithets and even spit on the visiting Vice President and his wife. This agitation escalated into a major security problem by the time the motorcade reached the city and could have cost lives — including those in the Nixon party."
"Venez nixonstoned31Fortunately, in that mob scene, the cars did not turn over. They were badly beaten upon and dented, windows smashed, spittle all over them. They were a sight to behold! (I was just looking at a Life Magazine of that time a couple of days ago and it brings back the realities.) The official Nixon party finally took refuge in the American Ambassador’s residence."
[Nixon cancelled a potentially volatile wreath laying at the tomb of Simon Bolivar, who led what are currently the countries of Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Panama and Bolivia to independence from the Spanish Empire].
"There was a question as to whether the VP should give a press conference; this he did, and he conducted himself with great dignity. He’s never been higher in my esteem than he was at that moment, speaking with such reserve and calm about it not being easy to see one’s wife being spit upon, and that kind of thing, but still statesmanlike in his reaction although he was obviously seething beneath it all."
Nixon stood in the South American breach, assailed but undaunted. The domino did not fall.
Next Nixon presents the Kitchen Debate, one of the most riveting moments of the Cold War, when Richard Nixon at a Trade Fair in the Soviet Union, engaged Nikita Khrushchev in an impromptu Lincoln-Douglas style debate, in which Nixon highlighted the freedom and variety of choices in the American Way of Life and the prosperity for average citizens (returning veterans and steel workers), in contrast to the one size fits all top down structure of Soviet. life. Nixon was a leading Cold War warrior who understood that this war was as much about hearts and minds as it was about soldiers and weapons.
The final crisis was his close loss to JFK in 1960. This election brought forth the televised debate. Views favored JFK listeners Nixon. Among other things, JFK was more lighting sand make up savvy. TV changed politics and Nixon changed with it. As a side note: Nixon was a friend of JFK who had sent Nixon an autographed copy of his Profiles in Courage (displayed at the Nixon library). Nixon could have contested the election and particularly the chicanery of Hughey long in Louisiana and Richard Dailey in Illinois. Unlike Gore or Trump, Nixon new the risks of a contested election on the eve of the Missile Crisis, and conceded the highly contestable election.
It is also a tale of rise, fall, and renewal.
Many great leaders spent "Time in the Wilderness" when all seemed lost, a tide missed and a future lost. Nixon and Churchill proved the exceptions to the rule. Both returned from the Wilderness to eclipse prior accomplishments.
Many of us, have gone from peaks to valleys in our lives as well. For Nixon, dedication to something bigger than himself was always the path back from defeat. If you are in a Valley, I highly recommend this as a template for renewal.
January 9, was Richard Milhouse Nixon's birthday. This review is dedicated to his memory.