Inside The Pentagon Papers By Anthony Lewis Inside the
Pentagon Papers, edited by John Prados and Margaret Pratt
Porter, University Press of Kansas, 248 pp, $29.95.
Editor’s Note: The Vietnam War returned to the front page of
The New York Review of Books
in its April 7 issue. The occasion
was a lengthy essay and review of Inside the Pentagon Papers, a
book published by the University Press of Kansas that sprung out
of a one-day conference at the National Press Club in June 2001
on the Pentagon Papers and the events surrounding the
publication of the Papers. This conference was envisioned,
sponsored, and developed by Vietnam Veterans of America.
VVA
decided on roundtables and selected speakers. VVA arranged for
guests to speak at the symposium. VVA gave shape and form to a
relatively unknown aspect of the Vietnam era. So it was not
surprising that VVA Veteran editor Mokie Porter joined with
long-time VVA Veteran contributer and historian John Prados to
edit those proceedings and make them more accessible to a
general audience.
When the New York Review of Books, one of
America’s most prestigious literary journals, decided to review
(and praise) this product of Vietnam Veterans of America, we
thought our readers might be interested in reading it. In the
review, which is reprinted with NYRB’s permission, Anthony Lewis
talks about what we talk about: the Vietnam War, how it changed
the landscape of America, and how it is still relevant today
both to our lives and the lives of those far too young to
remember it but who are certainly affected by it.
It was June
13, 1971, when The New York Times began publishing long
articles on, and excerpts from, what came to be known as the
Pentagon Papers: a secret history of the Vietnam War, prepared
in the Pentagon. The uproar occasioned by the publication is dim
and distant now; even among those who remember it, many probably
think the whole episode did not matter much in the end. But it
mattered a lot.
Presidential power was one thing affected by the publication and
the controversy that followed. President Nixon saw what the
Times and then other newspapers did as a challenge to his
authority. In an affidavit in 1975 he said the Pentagon Papers
were “no skin off my back”—because they stopped their history in
1968, before he took office. But, he said, “the way I saw it was
that far more important than who the Pentagon Papers reflected
on, as to how we got into Vietnam, was the office of the
Presidency of the United States.”
Nixon
ordered his lawyers to go to court to stop the Times from
continuing to publish its Pentagon Papers series. Then, angry
because J. Edgar Hoover was less than enthusiastic about acting
against possible sources of the leaked documents, especially
Daniel Ellsberg, Nixon created the White House unit known as the
Plumbers. They arranged a break-in at the office of Ellsberg’s
psychiatrist to get his records. (They also discussed, but did
not carry out, the idea of fire-bombing the Brookings
Institution in Washington and sending in agents dressed as
firemen to look for connections to the leak.) The lawlessness of
the Plumbers, and the presidential state of mind they reflected,
led to Watergate and Nixon’s resignation in 1974. One lesson of
those years was seen to be that presidents are not above the
law.
Public
disclosure of the Pentagon Papers challenged the core of a
president’s power: his role in foreign and national security
affairs. Throughout the cold war, until well into the Vietnam
era, virtually all of the public had been content to let
presidents—of both parties—make that policy. As the Vietnam War
ground on, cruelly and fruitlessly, dissent became significant.
The Pentagon Papers showed us that there had all along been
dissent inside the government. Thomas Powers, in an essay in
Inside the Pentagon Papers, says that their disclosure “broke a
kind of spell in this country, a notion that the people and the
government had to always be in consensus on all the major
[foreign policy] issues.”
The courts
were another institution changed by the Pentagon Papers. Judges
tend to defer to executive officials on issues of national
security, explaining that they themselves lack necessary
expertise. But here, in a case involving thousands of pages of
top secret documents, they said no to hyperbolic government
claims of damage that would be done if the newspapers were
allowed to go on publishing—soldiers’ lives lost, alliances
damaged. The government’s request for an injunction against
publication was turned down by a federal trial judge in New
York, by a trial judge and the Court of Appeals in Washington in
the Washington Post case, and finally by the Supreme Court.
Floyd Abrams, one of the assisting lawyers who went on from the
Times case to become a leading First Amendment lawyer, has said
that “the enduring lesson of the Pentagon Papers case . . . is
the need for the greatest caution and dubiety by the judiciary
in accepting representations by the government as to the
likelihood of harm.”
The press was also profoundly affected by the Pentagon Papers.
In the Washington of the 1950s and 1960s, correspondents and
columnists shared the government’s premises on the great issues
of foreign policy, notably the cold war. The press believed in
the good faith of officials and their superior knowledge. The
Vietnam War undermined both those beliefs. The young
correspondents in the field, David Halberstam and the rest, knew
more about what was happening and reported it more honestly than
generals and presidents. But would an establishment newspaper
like the Times go so far as to publish thousands of pages from
top secret documents about the war?
Professors Harold Edgar and Benno Schmidt, Jr., of the Columbia Law School wrote that
publication of the papers symbolized the passing of an era in
which newsmen could be counted upon to work within reasonably
well understood boundaries in disclosing information that
politicians deemed sensitive.
There had been, they said, a
“symbiotic relationship between politicians and the press.” But
The New York Times, by publishing the papers…demonstrated that
much of the press was no longer willing to be merely an
occasionally critical associate devoted to common aims, but
intended to become an adversary threatening to discredit not
only political dogma but also the motives of the nation’s
leaders.
Thirty years on, do we need another book about the
Pentagon Papers? We do. The issues raised by the 1971
publication and its aftermath—presidential power, the role of
the courts and the press, government secrecy—are all still with
us. And this book throws fresh and important light on the
issues. John Prados and Margaret Porter call themselves its
editors, because they include comments from participants in the
events. But they really are authors also, providing a running
account and analysis that goes beyond what has been written
before.
They begin with a description, much of it new, at least
to me, and fascinating, of how the papers were prepared in the
Pentagon. In 1967 Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, by
then beginning to have doubts about the war, told one of his
military assistants, Lieutenant Colonel Robert G. Gard, that he
wanted “a thorough study done of the background of the Vietnam
War.” Gard brought in a former Senate staff member with a
Harvard Ph.D., Leslie H. Gelb, as director of the project. The
idea at first was to put together a collection of documents on
the war. Gelb added a series of studies on what the documents
meant. McNamara wanted answers to hard questions: Are we lying
about the number of the enemy killed? Can we win the war? To do
the studies, Gelb hired experts: some from within the Pentagon,
including military officers, and some from the RAND Corporation
and other outside institutions. Each wrote about a period in the
war’s history.
Prados and Porter include contributions from a
number of the study’s authors in their book. An especially
interesting one is by Melvin Gurtov, who came from RAND and did
the study on the years from the end of World War II and the
French return to Indochina to the Geneva Conference of 1954, at
which Vietnam was partitioned. He offers some general
conclusions he draws from the Pentagon Papers.
“The crux of
these documents,” Gurtov writes, was what they revealed about
the duplicity of U.S. leaders, who consistently lied to the
American people, the Congress, and the press about many aspects
of the war in the Kennedy and Johnson years. Presidents and
their national security advisers knew the war was being lost,
knew their Vietnamese opponents had popular support while their
allies in Saigon did not, and knew that military firepower was
no substitute for political legitimacy. But they told the
American people the opposite.
Gurtov also praises Daniel
Ellsberg for getting the papers to the public. It was “an act of
great courage,” Gurtov says, to which I would add, one for which
Ellsberg paid a heavy price in right-wing attacks unaffected by
the realities of the losing war in Vietnam.
A second section of
Inside the Pentagon Papers considers what
happened inside The New York Times. Neil Sheehan of its
Washington bureau, who had been one of the remarkable young
correspondents in Vietnam, got the Pentagon Papers from Daniel Ellsberg. Altogether there were forty-seven volumes: four
thousand pages of documents and three thousand of the
accompanying studies. But Ellsberg withheld four volumes on
peace negotiations; neither the Times nor any other newspaper
ever had those. In the forty-three volumes there was a thread:
the United States had consistently professed support for a
unified, independent Vietnam but just as
consistently aided France in opposing Vietnamese independence,
sabotaged the Geneva agreement for national elections, and so
on.
Sheehan spent two weeks in a Washington hotel reading the
papers before, on April 20, describing them to
the managing editor of the Times, A.M. Rosenthal. Sheehan and
other reporters were then secretly installed in a suite in the
New York Hilton, with a guard at the door, to prepare for
possible publication. But whether the Times would publish was
still an open question. The reporters and editors who were in on
the secret all pressed for publication. That included Rosenthal,
even though Hedrick Smith, another Times reporter involved in
the project, says in this book that Rosenthal personally favored
the Vietnam War; journalism was what mattered. But some
executives of the paper were opposed; and so was the law firm
that had long represented the Times, Lord, Day & Lord. (Details
of the debate inside the Times were first published in Sanford Ungar’s 1972 book,
The Papers and the Papers.)
The Times
Washington bureau chief, Max Frankel, frustrated by the lawyers’
respect for secrecy stamps, wrote a memorandum arguing
persuasively that military, diplomatic, and political reporting
always used “secret” material. The memorandum was later filed as
an affidavit in the court case. On the other hand, it was not
customary for the Times to use material from such an enormous
breach of classification rules, related to a war that was still
going on. That was what gave the Times’s publisher, Arthur Ochs
Sulzberger, a former U.S. Marine, pause. But in the end he
decided in favor of publication.
On the evening of the second
day of publication, June 14, Attorney General John N. Mitchell
sent a telegram to the Times saying that the Pentagon Papers
series violated a criminal statute, the Espionage Act. He asked
the Times to stop—and to “return . . . these documents to the
Department of Defense.” Again there was conflict inside the
Times about whether to comply. Sulzberger was in London on a
long-planned trip; reached there, he ordered publication to
continue. A five-column headline in the Times on Tuesday morning
said, “Mitchell seeks to Halt Series on Vietnam But Times
Refuses.” According to Ungar, Rosenthal said later, “If the
headline had been ‘Justice Department Asks End to Vietnam Series
and Times Concedes,’ I think it would have changed the history
of the newspaper business.”
James Reston, the Washington columnist and former executive
editor, was the most respected figure on the paper. His position
on the Pentagon Papers shows how things had changed. Reston had
had many scoops as a reporter, but he had customarily worked
with officials. He knew about U-2 flights over the Soviet Union
for years but wrote nothing about them until one of the planes
was downed in 1960. Now he pressed for publication of the
Vietnam series. If the Times did not publish, he said at one
meeting, he would publish the Pentagon Papers in the Vineyard
Gazette, the Martha’s Vineyard weekly that he owned.
A similar
debate took place inside The Washington Post when it got much of
the Pentagon Papers material after the Times was enjoined from
continuing to publish. The editors wanted to go with the story.
Financial executives, especially concerned because the Post
was
about to put its stock on the public market for the first time,
were opposed. Katharine Graham, the publisher, made the decision
to publish.
Don Oberdorfer, a longtime
Post foreign and
diplomatic correspondent, contributes his recollections to this
book. The decision to publish, he concludes, made the Post a
newspaper to be taken seriously by the informed. It made it easy
for the Post to go with the Watergate stories a year later. All
told, Oberdorfer says, the Pentagon Papers had a signal effect
on the press. It was the moment at which newspapers “became
independent of the government on the war.”
Why were editors and publishers who had worked with presidents
on national security disclosures—the Times holding off, for
example, on its knowledge of the Cuban missile crisis—now not
telling officials what they had? Why had the Times gone so far
to keep its secret from the government that it had its reporters
working in a guarded hotel suite? The Vietnam War is a large
part of the answer. But I also think the lack of trust in
Richard Nixon and his people mattered. Would the Times and the
Post have done the same if John F. Kennedy had been president?
Next, Prados and Porter describe what went on in the White
House. Some of the material has been disclosed before, but it is
wonderful to have the quotations from President Nixon and his
aides gathered here in all their morbid splendor.
On the morning
of the first day, June 13, Nixon told his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, that the administration should keep clear of the
Times
series—which after all focused on previous administrations. But
shortly after noon, Alexander Haig, his deputy national security
adviser, telephoned to give Nixon the latest Vietnam casualty
figures. Then he spoke of the “goddamn New York Times exposé of
the most highly classified documents of the war.” It was, he
said, “a devastating security breach.” In mid-afternoon Henry Kissinger, the national security adviser, telephoned. He
discussed several important matters, including the Vietnam peace
negotiations in Paris. Nixon raised the Times story. Kissinger
at first said it would “if anything…help us a little bit,
because this is a gold mine of showing how the previous
administration got us in there” and “pins it all on Kennedy and
Johnson.” But Nixon, evidently reflecting Haig’s comment, said
that the “bastards that put it out” had done something
“treasonable.” Kissinger reversed himself. “It’s treasonable,”
he said, “there’s no question.”
By the next day Kissinger was in a rage about the Pentagon
Papers. He told Charles Colson, according to Colson’s memoir:
There can be no foreign policy in this government, no foreign
policy, I tell you. We might just as well turn it all over to
the Soviets and get it over with. These leaks are slowly and
systematically destroying us.
According to Haldeman’s memoir,
Kissinger told him that Daniel Ellsberg “had weird sexual
habits, used drugs, and enjoyed helicopter flights in which he
would take potshots at the Vietnamese below.” Haldeman reckoned
that Kissinger was trying to ward off attacks from Nixon because
he knew Ellsberg, and Nixon already suspected Kissinger’s staff
as a source of leaks. Nixon suspected Kissinger as well. In a
taped conversation with Haldeman on June 14, Nixon said, “Henry
talked to that damn Jew Frankel all the time.”
In his memoir
The White House Years, Kissinger says his strong
reaction against the Times series was based on fear that it
would upset the approach to China, which was being negotiated at
that time, with his secret trip to Beijing to follow. “Our
nightmare at that” he writes, “was that Peking might conclude
our government was too unsteady, too harassed, and too insecure
to be a useful partner. The massive hemorrhage of state secrets
was bound to raise doubts about our reliability in the minds of
other governments, friend and foe, and indeed about the
stability of our political system.” (There is no evidence that
Mao Zedong cared about the Pentagon Papers.)
John Ehrlichman,
second only to Haldeman among Nixon’s assistants, thought
Kissinger was responsible for Nixon’s decision to act against
the Times. “Without Henry’s stimulus…,” Ehrlichman said, “the
President and the rest of us might have concluded that the
Papers were Lyndon Johnson’s problem, not ours.”
Next came the legal battle. Lord, Day & Lord advised that the
government would bring a criminal prosecution. Indeed, its
lawyers refused to look at what the Times had lest they be
prosecuted under the Espionage Act. But the Times’s general
counsel, James Goodale, an early and strong advocate of
publication, said correctly that what the paper had to expect,
and fear, was an injunction to stop publication. That this was
the government’s strategy was made clear by an assistant
attorney general, Robert Mardian, in a telephone call to the
Times that Monday evening, June 13. Goodale telephoned Lord, Day
& Lord to have a lawyer in court the next morning. But its
senior partner, Herbert Brownell, Jr., said the firm would not
represent the Times. He gave as a reason that, as attorney
general in the Eisenhower administration, he had written the
basic executive order on classification—an explanation that
convinced no one. Goodale, in a comment in this book, says that
Attorney General Mitchell had telephoned Brownell and told him
in effect that it would not be good for the Republican Party if
he took part in the case.
Goodale then turned to Professor
Alexander M. Bickel of the Yale Law School, reaching him about
midnight. Bickel agreed to argue for the Times and was at the
federal courthouse in Foley Square the next morning. By lot—the
spinning of a wheel by the court clerk—the case was assigned to
a new judge, Murray Gurfein, in his first day on the job. That
evening Attorney General Mitchell told Nixon that Gurfein was
“new, and, uh, he’s appreciative.” Ten minutes later, in a
telephone conversation with Secretary of State William Rogers,
Nixon said that Gurfein might be thinking of promotion, which
would be up to the president.
Mitchell and Nixon could not have
been more wrong about the corruptibility of Murray Gurfein.
Times lawyers were concerned because he had been a military
intelligence officer. But if that played any part in Gurfein’s
attitude, it was to make him skeptical, demanding that the
government’s lawyers point to something potentially dangerous in
the Pentagon Papers. Government counsel at first would not cite
dangerous passages. Their strategy was to seek an all-out
victory, a judicial decision that publication of highly
classified documents was impermissible without any
particularized examination of their content. But Judge Gurfein
kept asking for particulars. On that first day, Tuesday, he
granted a temporary restraining order that stopped publication.
On Friday the Post began publishing. The same day, Judge Gurfein
held a day-long hearing on whether to follow his temporary
restraint of the Times with a longer-lasting injunction. Bickel
told the judge about the Washington Post story and said: “The
Government’s position in this court, your Honor, was that grave
danger to the national security would occur if another
installment of a story that the Times
had were published. Another installment of that story has been
published. The Republic stands. And it stood the first three
days.”
The next day, Saturday, Judge Gurfein rejected the government’s
call for an injunction. His opinion included an eloquent passage
that the authors use as an epigraph for this book: A
cantankerous press, an obstinate press, a ubiquitous press must
be suffered by those in authority in order to preserve the even
greater values of freedom of expression and the right of the
people to know.
The Times lost in the Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit, which reversed Judge Gurfein. The Post won in
the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. On
Friday morning, June 25, the Supreme Court granted review in
both cases, setting argument for the next morning at 11. There
was one crucial moment in the argument. Justice Potter Stewart
asked Professor Bickel this question: Let us assume that when
the members of the court go back and open up this sealed record
we find something there that absolutely convinces us that its
disclosure would result in the sentencing to death of 100 young
men whose only offense had been that they were 19 years old and
had low draft numbers. What should we do?
Bickel said there
should be a statute authorizing injunctions in specific terms;
the absence of one had been a main theme of his argument. But
Justice Stewart persisted. Suppose there was no relevant
statute. “You would say the Constitution requires that it be
published, and that these men die, is that it?” Bickel gave an
answer that troubled some First Amendment purists but that may
have won the case for the newspapers.
“No,” Bickel said, “I am
afraid that my inclinations to humanity overcome the somewhat
more abstract devotion to the First Amendment in a case of that
sort.”
The Supreme Court decided the cases on June 30: just fifteen
days after the litigation began in Judge Gurfein’s courtroom. It
was not, as often assumed, a clear victory for the First
Amendment. Justices Hugo L. Black and William O. Douglas took a
seemingly absolute view that the First Amendment bars
injunctions against the press. Justice William J. Brennan, Jr.,
said only proof that publication “must inevitably, directly and
immediately” have disastrous consequences could justify even an
interim restraining order. Justice Thurgood Marshall agreed with
Bickel that there was no statute authorizing this kind of
injunction and said it was up to Congress, not the courts, to
decide whether there should be one. That was four votes for the
newspapers. Justices Stewart and Byron White said they were
convinced that some items in the Pentagon Papers raised the
possibility of danger to the national security. But the First
Amendment had been interpreted to disfavor prior
restraints—injunctions—and there was no showing here, as Justice
Stewart put it, of likely “direct, immediate, and irreparable
damage to our nation or its people.” Justice White added that a
criminal prosecution would face a less demanding constitutional
test—virtually inviting one, to the distress of the newspapers.
The importance of the 6-to-3 vote for the newspapers, for all
its diverse bases, is clear if one considers what a Supreme
Court judgment enjoining further publication would have done to
judicial and press attitudes in the following years.
Were there
in fact any dangerous secrets in the Pentagon Papers? Erwin N.
Griswold, who as solicitor general argued the case for the
government in the Supreme Court, wrote later, “I have never seen
any trace of a threat to the national security from the
publication.” David Rudenstine concluded otherwise, somewhat
ambiguously, in his scholarly 1996 book, The Day the Presses
Stopped: A History of the Pentagon Papers. He argued that though
the papers’ history stopped on March 31, 1968, there were
passages that could have done some injury to national security
in 1971. Prados and Porter disagree. They say that Rudenstine
analyzed only government claims and testimony, not the documents
themselves. They publish for the first time, with only a few
redactions, what was the ultimate government argument for
secrecy: Griswold’s secret brief in the Supreme Court, listing
eleven parts of the Pentagon Papers that he said “involve a
serious risk of immediate and irreparable harm to the United
States and its security.” (Griswold wrote the brief overnight,
with little knowledge of the material.)
The first of those
eleven items was the four whole volumes of the papers on
attempted peace negotiations—volumes, Prados and Porter point
out, that were not part of the leak and were never seen by the
newspapers. Another of the eleven was an assertion that the
papers included names of “CIA agents still active in Southeast
Asia.” Prados and Porter note that almost all the names were of
well-known officials such as Richard Helms, and others of men
who were no longer with the CIA. They deal effectively with all
the other supposed dangers in the Griswold list.
One episode
during the Pentagon Papers litigation showed dramatically that
skepticism is in order when officials claim that disclosure will
bring disaster. During the argument before the Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia, a government lawyer pointed to a
communications intercept from the Gulf of Tonkin incident as a
secret The Washington Post might publish. That certainly had the
aura of a genuine secret. When the judges left the bench to
confer, the Post’s Pentagon reporter, George Wilson, who was
there, pondered it. It seemed familiar. He looked at a
congressional committee report that he had with him. There, in a
published report, was the intercept. The Post’s lawyers sent the
committee report in to the judges. The secret was exploded.
Inside the Pentagon Papers tells a wonderful story, and it is a
significant book today. For the effects that the Pentagon Papers
controversy had on some institutions in our society seem to have
worn off.
The press, for one, has retreated from the boldness it
showed in 1971. The New York Times and The Washington Post have
apologized for having failed adequately to examine the
government’s claims in the run-up to the Iraq war. The press was
slow to give serious coverage to the Bush administration’s
assaults on civil liberty, such as the claim that the President
can imprison American citizens indefinitely as alleged “enemy
combatants” without trial or access to counsel. (Newspapers have
more recently emerged from their torpor, for example in
vigorously reporting the widespread torture of prisoners held by
the U.S. in Iraq, Guantánamo, and Afghanistan, and the Bush
administration’s legal memoranda that opened the way to torture.
Even there, though, some of the breakthrough reporting came from
Seymour Hersh and Jane Mayer in The New Yorker.)
The crucial
lesson of the Pentagon Papers and then Watergate was that
presidents are not above the law. So we thought. But today
government lawyers argue that the president is above the law
that he can order the torture of prisoners even though treaties
and a federal law forbid it. John Yoo, a former Justice
Department official who wrote some of the broad claims of
presidential power in memoranda, told Jane Mayer recently that
Congress does not have power to “tie the president’s hands in
regard to torture as an interrogation technique.” The
constitutional remedy for presidential abuse of his authority,
he said, is impeachment. Yoo also told Ms. Mayer that the 2004
election was a “referendum” on the torture issue: the people had
spoken, and the debate was over. And so, in the view of this
prominent conservative legal thinker, a professor at the
University of California law school in Berkeley, an election in
which the torture issue was not discussed has legitimized
President Bush’s right to order its use.
The notion that we have
a plebiscitary democracy in this country would have astonished
James Madison and the other Framers of the Constitution, who
thought they were establishing a federal republic of limited
powers. So would the idea that the president can ignore laws
passed by Congress. One of the fundamental constitutional checks
against abuse of power, as the Framers saw it, was the
separation of powers in three branches of the federal
government: executive, legislative, judicial. If one
overreached, they thought, another would curb its abuse.
Congress as an institution has hardly exercised its checking
power since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. It gave
President Bush greatly expanded investigative and prosecutorial
authority in the Patriot Act. It has only intermittently
challenged the unprecedented secrecy he has imposed on
government activity.
That leaves the third branch, the courts.
In the context of the “war on terrorism,” would they decide a
case like the Pentagon Papers the same way today? No one can be
sure. But lately there have been signs that judges are unwilling
to be cowed by the claims, made since September 11, of unreviewable presidential power. The Supreme Court ruled last
year that citizens held without trial as “enemy combatants” must
have an opportunity to answer official suspicions, and held that
prisoners at Guantánamo Bay may file petitions in federal courts
for release on habeas corpus.
The Supreme Court made its
decision on citizens held without trial in the case of Yaser
Esam Hamdi. Rather than tell him its reasons for holding him and
letting him answer, the government sent Hamdi back to his home
in Saudi Arabia. Then, the other day, a federal district judge
in South Carolina ordered the release of the other American held
as an “enemy combatant,” Jose Padilla. The judge—Henry F. Floyd,
nominated by President Bush in 2003—said: “The court finds that
the president has no power, neither express nor implied, neither
constitutional nor statutory, to hold petitioner as an enemy
combatant.” To allow that, Judge Floyd said, would not only
offend the rule of law and violate this country’s tradition, but
it would also be a betrayal of this nation’s commitment to the
separation of powers that safeguards our democratic values and
individual liberties.
It was only a trial judge speaking, and
officials immediately said they would appeal. His decision
affected one American citizen while mistreatment of prisoners
overseas during interrogation, as FBI reports among other things
have shown, remains inadequately investigated, much less
forbidden. But that a trial judge reached those conclusions, and
had the courage to express them, meant something. Perhaps, in
the courts, the spirit of the Pentagon Papers lives.