Everything about Pentagon Papers totally explained
The
Pentagon Papers is the popular name for a 7,000-page
top-secret United States government report about the history of the Government's internal planning and policy concerning the
Vietnam War. The documents became famous when
State Department officer
Daniel Ellsberg gave them to the
The New York Times to publish in early
1971.
Background
The
Pentagon Papers ' true title is
United States–Vietnam Relations, 1945–1967: A Study Prepared by the Department of Defense, a 47-volume, 7,000-page, top-secret
Department of Defense history of the United States' politico-military involvement in the war in Vietnam, from
1945 to
1967.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara commissioned the study in 1967, and appointed
Leslie Gelb (
Pentagon international security affairs policy planning-arms control director) as study supervisor. Gelb hired 36 military officers, civilian policy experts, and historians to write the study's monographs. The
Pentagon Papers included 4,000 pages of actual documents from the 1945–67 period.
The leak
Daniel Ellsberg gave most of the Pentagon Papers to
New York Times reporter
Neil Sheehan, with Ellsberg's friend
Anthony Russo assisting in their copying. The NYT began publishing excerpts as an article-series on
June 13. Political controversy and lawsuits followed; on
June 29,
U.S. Senator Mike Gravel (
Democrat,
Alaska) entered 4,100 pages of the Papers to the record of his Subcommittee on Public Buildings and Grounds. These portions of the Papers were subsequently published by
Beacon Press, the publishing arm of the
Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations.
The importance of recording the Papers to the
Congressional Record was that,
Article I, Section 6 of the
United States Constitution provides that "for any Speech or Debate in either House, [aSenator or Representative] shan't be questioned in any other Place", thus the Senator couldn't be prosecuted for anything said on the
Senate floor, and, by extension, for anything entered to the
Congressional Record, allowing the Papers to be publicly read without threat of a
treason trial and conviction.
Later, Ellsberg said the documents "demonstrated unconstitutional behavior by a succession of presidents, the violation of their oath and the violation of the oath of every one of their subordinates", and that he'd leaked the papers in the hopes of getting the nation out of "a wrongful war."
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Impact of the 'Pentagon Papers'
The Pentagon Papers revealed many things, among them, that the US deliberately expanded its war with airstrikes against
Laos, coastal raids of
North Vietnam, and
U.S. Marine Corps attacks — before
President Lyndon B. Johnson informed the American public, though promising to not expand the war. The revelations widened the
credibility gap between the U.S. government and its people, hurting the
Nixon administration's war effort.
Anthony Lewis comments in the law course taught by
James Goodale (ex-NYT-house-counsel),
Old Media, New Media, that the
NYT was legally advised to not publish. Goodale counselled otherwise: the press had a
First Amendment right to publish information significant to the people's understanding of their government's policy. Yet,
President Nixon argued that Ellsberg and Russo were guilty of
felony treason (per the
Espionage Act of 1917), because they'd no authority to publish classified documents.
A credibility gap of which the
NYT wrote was that a consensus to bomb
North Vietnam had developed in the Johnson administration on
September 7,
1964, before the U.S. presidential elections, however, per the Papers, none of the consensus actions recommended on September 7 involved bombing North Vietnam. On
June 14 1971, the
NYT said the Johnson administration began last plans for the bombing in November.
Another controversy was that President Johnson sent combat troops to Vietnam by
July 17,
1965, after pretending to consult his advisors on
July 21–
27, per the cable stating that
Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus Vance informs McNamara that President had approved 34 Battalion Plan and will try to push through reserve call-up. In
1988, when that cable was declassified, it revealed:
there was a continuing uncertainty as to [Johnson's] final decision, which would have to await Secretary McNamara's recommendation and the views of Congressional leaders, particularly the views of Senator .
U.S. Government's reaction
The
New York Times' publication of the Pentagon Papers article-series angered President Nixon; he told
National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger:
people have gotta be put to the torch for this sort of thing ... and
let's get the son-of-a-bitch in jail. After failing to persuade the
NYT to voluntarily cease publication,
U.S. Attorney General John N. Mitchell and President Nixon obtained a federal court injunction forcing the
NYT to cease publication. The newspaper appealed the injunction, and the case quickly rose through the U.S. legal system to the
Supreme Court.
On
June 18,
1971, the
Washington Post began publishing its own series of articles based upon the Pentagon Papers; Ellsberg gave portions to editor
Ben Bagdikian. That day, Assistant U.S. Attorney General
William Rehnquist asked the
Washington Post to cease publication; they refused; Rehnquist sought an injunction; the U.S. district court refused him; the Government appealed the refusal.
On
June 26, the Supreme Court agreed to hear both cases, consolidating to the
'New York Times Co. v. United States' (403 US 713). On
June 30,
1971, the U.S. Supreme Court decided, 6–3, that the injunctions were unconstitutional
prior restraint and that the Government failed to meet the heavy
burden of proof required for prior restraint injunction. The nine justices wrote nine opinions disagreeing on significant, substantive matters; while generally a victory for First Amendment free speech absolutists, others felt it a mild legal victory of little protection for publishers against
national security claims to prior restraint of publishing.
Thomas Tedford and Dale Herbeck summary of the editorial and publishing reaction of the time:
Bibliography
- Neil Sheehan (1971). The Pentagon Papers. New York: Bantam Books. As published in The New York Times. ISBN 0-552-64917-1.
-
(1971–1972). The Pentagon Papers: The Defense Department History of United States Decisionmaking on Vietnam. Boston: Beacon Press. 5 vols. "Senator Gravel Edition"; includes documents not included in government version. ISBN 0-8070-0526-6 & ISBN 0-8070-0522-3.
- Daniel Ellsberg (2002). Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-03030-9
- George C. Herring, ed. (1993). The Pentagon Papers: Abridged Edition. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-028380-X.
- George C. Herring, ed. (1983). Secret Diplomacy of the Vietnam War: The Negotiating Volumes of the Pentagon Papers.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Pentagon Papers'.
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