“Because history is more art than science, it is remembered now only as it was chronicled then; this unfortunately is not always as it actually happened.”
Following his election as the 37th President of the United States in November 1968, Richard Nixon chose H. R. “Bob” Haldeman to be his Chief of Staff.
After the announcement, Haldeman was encouraged by a close friend, and presidential scholar, to faithfully record each day’s events, and his thoughts regarding them.
Deeming it worth the commitment, the result of his endeavour is nothing short of extraordinary.
Alongside power struggles and tragedies are recorded triumphs and hope, from the inroads made with China and Russia to the Vietnam peace talks.
But it is Watergate that traditionally defines the era, and as the 1972 election passed with Nixon’s re-election the entries show how its hold on the political arena became unshakeable.
Although we know the story’s end, Haldeman’s reveal of how events unfolded from inside the White House — and the processes involved — is no less gripping.
The definitive insider’s account, The Haldeman Diaries is both meticulous and candid as it charts the Nixon Administration, putting it into a more complete perspective.
Praise for H R Haldeman:
'The most shattering political book of the decade.' — The Daily Mail
'Ought to be required reading for every student of American politics.' — The Sunday Times
'Haldeman’s book does not disappoint; it is as nasty a portrayal of a nasty politician as one might expect …' — New Statesman
'The book is fascinating and needs to be read not only because of the unexpected insights of the White House but also because it goes a long way to explain America’s continuing political malaise …' — The Guardian
H. R. Haldeman (1926-1993) was White House Chief of Staff to President Richard Nixon between 1969 and 1973. He was also the author of The Ends of Power — about Watergate —written whilst serving a prison sentence for perjury. In the years that followed he became a successful businessman.
Harry Robbins "Bob" Haldeman better known as H. R. Haldeman was an American political aide and businessman, best known for his service as White House Chief of Staff to President Richard Nixon and his consequent involvement in the Watergate Affair. His intimate role in the Watergate cover-up precipitated his resignation from government; subsequent to which he was tried on counts of perjury, conspiracy and obstruction of justice; found guilty and imprisoned for 18 months. Upon his release he returned to private life and was a successful businessman until his death from cancer in 1993.
The only real drawback--and it is unfortunately a LARGE one--is that the book contains a very sketchy list of players at the start. I mean, I've read a fair amount about this stuff, and I was getting frequently lost. Your only hope was to look up the name in the index, turn to the first appearance and hope that the individual's identity was provided in italics; this proved to be rather a forlorn hope much of the time. The oral history of Nixon's White House was much better in this regard. Also just who was saying what in conversations often became a difficult call, given the host of indefinite "he"'s in the text; this problem was exacerbated by the fact that there were three important Johns (Mitchell, Ehrlichman and Dean).
Having said that though, this "amazingly frank" account (as stated in the Reeves book, although as I recall the bibliographic essay was not written by him) makes for one heckuva read. We see Nixon's constantly resentful nature, ever concerned with screwing this and that, as well as his inability to brook confrontation (thus eternally sending off his subordinates to get the word out and pass messages to others from him). We are also inundated with the Tricky One's obsession with PR and his image, with getting the positive word out, punctuated occasionally by a despairful collapse of all such attempts as he decides that no one will ever like him anyway. Oh yes, and we also see that Kissinger was often one giant flaming nutball.
H R Bob himself comes across as being surprisingly more than a bit on the droll side (as when he says that Nixon emphasized three main points in his upcoming speech--and then named four). Indeed, one of the most startling things in all of this was several pictures of Haldeman grinning, even laughing. Ehrlichman was frequently waggish too, and even Mitchell was apparently possessed of quite a dry wit, yet at the time they all seemed to be about as human as Mt Rushmore. Speaking of PR and image...if only the public had seen this side of the administration more (or at all), they might have proven more forgiving of Nixon and his cronies.
And of course, it isn't simply the story of RN's presidency but of any presidency in its daily grind, as well as the bumping from unforseen crisis to crisis and the attempt to apply damage control where needed. You want to know what it would be like to be president for a day? Here goes:
"Busy day of appointments, Caldera farewell (which P wants to be the last farewell meeting on State visits); Presidential scholars (a high-school-grad group who announced their opposition to P's policy before the White House meeting); a signing of Crime Executive Order; greeting group of Iowa businessmen; a boys choir from Pennsylvania; the Prime Minister of Morocco; F Murphy. In between a couple of vital staff sessions about saving the Penn Central Railroad, and a meeting with Cap Weinberger about his taking on top budget job."
Then there's this whole business of politics:
"Connally called to say that Marvin Watson had told him that Ed McCormick in Boston had told him that [Boston mayor] Kevin White had called to say that McGovern had called him last night and said it would be Larry O'Brien for VP."
And a further bit of tongue-in-cheekiness from H R:
"Colson originally, though, told E he had a tape recording of this interview, but when I called him to say I'd like to hear the tape, he said he didn't have a tape, he had a transcript, so I said he should bring the transcript over and we'd review it, and he said, well, he didn't actually have the transcript, but someone else did, so I asked him if he'd get it, and he backed off on that and said he'd try but wasn't sure he could. Which sort of shoots some holes into his story."
"It would be goddamn easy to run this office if you didn't have to deal with people." --Richard Nixon (in 1971)
While this is not my kind of normal book to read, I went ahead and read it anyway. So, little have I read on the Nixon years that I found something to read. While I found it informative on the Pentagon Papers, Watergate cover-up and the Vietnam exit. Much of it was it was, in one manner of speaking, on proverbial cat fights. If you are interested on the inner workings of a presidency gone awry, this may be a book for you. I am glad I read it, but not much of a diary reader, myself.
Since their publication in 1994, H.R. Haldeman's White House diaries have been a cornerstone of research for Nixon biographers and historians of the '60s. Haldeman, Nixon's ruthless, crew-cut chief of staff (whom Nixon dubbed his "Lord High Executioner" and who once called himself "Nixon's Bastard") recorded a minutely detailed chronicle of his four years in the Nixon White House which makes for fascinating reading. The principle takeaways confirm other accounts of Nixon's management of the presidency: an obsession with image and PR, political strategy at once brilliant and cynical, paranoia towards perceived enemies and flights of foreign policy insight, individual acts of compassion and, occasionally, even stirring leadership. What's most interesting to the reader is how Haldeman, so humorless and robotic in his public image, possesses a wry sense of humor about his boss's foibles and petty obsessions (from lighting and sound at public appearances to White House decor and menu selections), the infighting of Nixon's staff and cabinet (he's quite funny whenever chronicling Henry Kissinger's egotistical whining) and the sense of unreality as Watergate comes crashing down on the Administration. This helps to humanize the author better than his earlier, rather poor memoir, The Ends of Power, or other books and interviews managed to do. Yet twinned with this is a matter-of-fact willingness to serve as Nixon's hatchet man, taking the President's enemies as his own, reflecting and at times enlarging upon his boss's prejudices (especially towards Jews and Blacks) and viewing "dirty tricks," intimidating media outlets, obstruction of justice and other skullduggery as a matter of course. It's unlikely that a casual reader will read the book from cover-to-cover, perhaps browsing the index or searching out dates of specific interest (May 9th, 1970, the date of Nixon's night time sojourn to the Lincoln Memorial - "The weirdest day so far," Haldeman notes), but even in such digest form the book affirms its value as a readable, comprehensive if unintentionally damning portrait of the most controversial President of the 20th Century.
Straight from someone at the power centre of Nixon's White House, Haldeman writes of the tumultuous times from the inauguration until his resignation in 1973. He shows the positive and negative of Nixon's administration, all ending under a cloud. As a Nixon fan I can see how he inspired loyalty, but the troubles of Watergate sent many of the president's men scurrying. A third-rate burglary it was, Nixon was an amateur next to the skullduggery of his predecessors, but it's the liberal media that writes the history now. Sadly his role as a great statesman gets obscured by those still fighting the culture wars.
This book taught me more about politics than any other. Haldeman was Nixon's Chief of Staff. In his thorough and painfully honest diaries, he set down an insider's account of the White House.
The cynicism behind the rherotic, the realpolitik behind the politics, the infighting within the administration, the personalities behind the personae: it's all here in living color.
It's odd how jarring and revelatory a small dose of candor can be in the world politics.
These diaries were clearly never meant to be published; the real question is: how did they come to be published?
I was attracted to it by two things; my deep interest in all things and in the politics in particular of the 1960s and 70s; and by my interest in the role of Chief of Staff within a presidential administration. Haldeman was arguably the first modern White House Chief of Staff and his tenure set the standard for the level of seriousness and professionalism that come with the job. He did what he could to manage the mercurial and self sabotaging nature of one of America's oddest presidents and doing some of the hard parts of the job that Nixon couldn't handle - including being "the president's son-of-a-bitch" as he infamously described himself.
The Haldeman Diaries is a book unlike any I've read before. The format alone was particularly intriguing. "Bob," as he was called by some, kept extremely detailed daily journals throughout his time serving Richard Nixon in the White House - recording his thoughts on the news of the day, his interactions with the president, his dealings with other members of the senior staff and the cabinet, or occasionally injecting a brief description of a particularly funny instance or a beautiful landscape. A man of a direct nature, Haldeman uses a clipped, no nonsense style of prose in many of his journal entries, getting across the essential points of his thoughts and interactions at the very end of grueling 12, 14, and 18 hour days.
This is a very interesting book written by someone who was at the heart of American politics. It details a lot of the daily grind of what the President does which is very interesting. It contains a lot of information about Nixon and how he reacts to things, his obsession with image, his hatred of the Ivy League Universities and most of the people who attended them, his loathing of the Kennedys. The trouble with the book is it has an enormous cast of characters and it is very hard to keep track of what is going on and who is saying what to who. The Watergate stuff is the most confusing part of all. So much of the text is the sort of thing where he said such and such to him about how someone was doing or saying something else to someone else and it is very hard to keep track of all the names and who these people are. I found the book very interesting but very confusing.
The book gives a unique perspective into the Nixon White House. Major themes are the attempts to end the Viet Nam War, the trip to China, and the constant troubles with Henry Kissinger. Watergate starts out as a minor blip, but eventually becomes all consuming. If only Nixon had had today's Supreme Court he would have had nothing to worry about.
I'll add that the book does humanize HR Haldeman considerably. He had a dry sense of humor and clearly at times got annoyed at the principals.
On the other hand, the book really is only of interest to Nixon historians, and even then there is a lot of detail that is uninteresting or difficult to interpret due to lack of context.
Nevertheless, this gets 5 stars because it is a one of the kind.
An interesting document of the Nixon administration but it's not as insightful as I was hoping it might have been. At just shy of a thousand pages it can be a bit of a slog to get through, especially if you have only a cursory understand of the period. Someone with a greater knowledge might draw more information.
It was a struggle - cause the last about 150-175 pages are all Watergate and for a diary, Haldeman really gets into the details. The first 500 breezes by, interesting insights of the RN presidency. John Connally’s name comes up a lot, that blowhard. I’m glad to be done.
So far I am just into this book and it is fascinating. I will update this review when I'm done with it.
Update: This is very readable. Like someone talking - which for the most part it actually is, because Haldeman recorded his diary on tape (!).
You find out what a complex man Richard Nixon was. He was a workaholic and would have made a good president had he not had that fatal streak of paranoia. As it was, the last part of the book is all Watergate all the time. They sat up there in the White House and conspired their heads off. This book gives the view of someone who was there and thought everything they did was justified and morally right.
With the 2012 election fast approaching, I have been reading material that gives behind the scenes insight into politics at the Executive level. This book written by the Chief of Staff for the Nixon administration seemed like it would be an enjoyable read, but it wasn't. As stated in the title, it is the "diaries" of the author. At many times it contains fragmented thoughts and introspections that lack details. I got through 226 pages before I decided that this book's best purpose is for the sake of research.
Who can read this stuff? Daily diaries of "The Brush" an obsessive control freak in the Nixon White House. Hard-core holier than thou righty. You can use these diary entries to deconstruct the Nixon intrique, if you trust that he didn't doctor them before publication. I don't. He kept his mouth shut until the grave.
Inisder's account on Nixon's time in office from his Chief of Staff. Haldeman kept a diary for every day he served the President, including the days history will remember the most. Nothing about Watergate was edited out apparently.