Daniel Ellsberg (born April 7, 1931) is a former American military analyst employed by the RAND Corporation who precipitated a national uproar in 1971 when he released the Pentagon Papers, the US military's account of activities during the Vietnam War, to The New York Times. The release awakened the American people to how much they had been deceived by their own government about the war.
Ellsberg knew that releasing these papers would most likely result in a conviction and sentence of many years in prison. Throughout 1970, Ellsberg covertly attempted to convince a few sympathetic Senators (among them J. William Fulbright) to release the Pentagon Papers on the Senate floor, because a Senator cannot be prosecuted for anything he says on record before the Senate.
When these efforts failed Ellsberg finally leaked the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times. On June 13, 1971, the Times began publishing the first installment of the 7,000 page document. For 15 days, NYT was prevented from publishing its articles on the orders of the Nixon administration. However, the Supreme Court soon ordered publication to resume freely. Although the Times did not reveal Ellsberg as their source, he knew that the FBI would soon determine that he was the source of the leak. Ellsberg went underground, living secretly among like-minded people. He was not caught by the FBI, even though they were under enormous pressure from the Nixon Administration to find him.
Recent statements by Vietnamese officials have called into doubt the primary assertions of the Pentagon Papers that the war was unwinnable. After the stunning victory by American forces in the Tet Offensive, the Viet Cong soon realized that their cause was being served by anti-war activists within the United States. The release, publication, and widespread promotion of the Pentagon Papers became a fulcrum for the anti-war movement which upset the war efforts in American public opinion and ultimately on the battlefield itself. An excess of 20,000 American soldiers died during the active period of the Pentagon Papers.
The release of these papers was politically embarrassing, not only to the incumbent Nixon Administration, but also to the previous Johnson and Kennedy Administrations. John Mitchell, Nixon's Attorney General, almost immediately issued a telegram to the Times ordering that it halt publication. The Times refused, and the government brought suit against them.
Although the Times eventually won the trial before the Supreme Court, an appellate court ordered that the Times temporarily halt further publication. This was not the first successful attempt by the federal government to restrain the publication of a newspaper as Lincoln illustrated during the civil war; this was remarkable because prior restraint has historically been viewed as the most oppressive form of censorship. Ellsberg released the Pentagon Papers to other newspapers in rapid succession, making it clear to the government that they would have to obtain injunctions against every newspaper in the country to stop the story. The right of the press to publish the papers was upheld in New York Times Co. v. U.S..
In one of Nixon's actions against Ellsberg, G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard Hunt, members of the White House Special Operations Unit (also called the "White House Plumbers") broke into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office in September 1971, hoping to find information they could use to discredit him. The revelation of the break-in became part of the Watergate scandal. According to Ellsberg's autobiography, on May 3, 1972 the White House secretly flew a dozen Cuban CIA "assets" to Washington DC with orders to "totally incapacitate" him. (They backed out because the crowd was too large.) Because of the gross governmental misconduct, all charges against Ellsberg were eventually dropped. White House counsel Charles Colson was later prosecuted and pled no contest for obstruction of justice in the burglary of Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office.
The Pentagon Papers is a 2003 movie documenting Ellsberg's life starting with his work for Rand Corp and ending with the day on which the judge declared his espionage trial a mistrial.
Ellsberg was arrested in November 2005 for violating a county ordinance for trespassing while protesting against George W. Bush's conduct of the War in Iraq. *
1931 births | American anti-Vietnam War activists | American anti Iraq War activists | Living people | United States Marine Corps officers | Vietnam War people | Vietnam War veterans | Watergate figures | Whistleblowers | Economists
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