Secret White House Tapes

780–7

About this recording

780–7
  • President Richard M. Nixon
  • H. R. Haldeman
  • Charles W. Colson
  • Stephen B. Bull
  • Henry A. Kissinger
  • UNKNOWN
  • Alexander P. Butterfield
  • Ronald L. Ziegler
September 16, 1972
Conversation No. 780-7

Date: September 16, 1972
Time: 9:26 am - 10:20 am
Location: Oval Office

The President met with H.R. (“Bob”) Haldeman.

The President talked with Charles W. Colson between 9:26 am and 9:27 am.

[Conversation No. 780-7A]

Washington Post article
-National Archives

Indictment of White House aide
-Harry S. Truman aide
-Jail term
-Harry H. Vaughan
-Missouri
-Mathew J. Connelly
-Press secretary
-Jail term
-Research
-Kennneth W. Clawson
-Lyndon B. Johnson aide
8

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Walter W. Jenkins

The President's schedule
-Kissinger

[End of telephone conversation]

Washington Post article
-Colson
-The President’s view
-Media coverage
-National Archives

Bull entered at an unknown time after 9:27 am.

The President's schedule
-Kissinger meeting
-Haldeman

Bull left at an unknown time before 9:46 am.

Kissinger


*****************************************************************

BEGIN WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 1
[Personal returnable]
[Duration: 10s ]


END WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 1

*****************************************************************


Kissinger's trip
-Previous meeting with the President
-Kissinger's schedule
-Talks with Le Duc Tho
-Talks with Leonid I. Brezhnev
9

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Talks with Georges J.R. Pompidou
-Talks with Edward R.G. Heath
-Talks with Willy Brandt
-Comparison to the President
-Negotiations
-Kissinger's meeting with William P. Rogers
-Kissinger's negotiating results
-The President’s view
-Importance of press briefing
-Peter G. Peterson
-Government agencies
-The President’s re-election
-State Department
-Commerce Department

Possible leaks
-Alexander M. Haig, Jr.
-Dan Rather’s story
-Kissinger
-Leaked documents
-Central Intelligence Agency [CIA]
-Blockade
-Effectiveness
-Tonnage shipped into Vietnam
-David R. Young, Jr.
-The President’s instructions
-Richard M. Helms
-Distribution of documents
-William H. Rehnquist
-Document distribution
-Distribution of documents
-Kissinger, Haig
-Personal action
-Young
-Federal Bureau of Investigation [FBI] investigation

White House personnel
-John W. Dean, III
-John D. Ehrlichman
-The President’s view
-Lawrence F. O'Brien, Jr.
10

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Ehrlichman
-O’Brien
-The President’s view
-Dean
-The President’s view
-Differences between Dean and Ehrlichman
-Haldeman’s view
-Ehrlichman
-Firing of personnel
-Walter J. Hickel
-President’s view
-Dean
-Haldeman’s view
-Image
-Social relations
-Rock music
-Discotheques
-Hollywood
-Kissinger
-The President’s view
-Judgement of people
-Haldeman’s view
-Frank C. Carlucci
-The President’s view
-Compared to Robert Stripling, House Un-American Activities Committee
[HUAC] investigator
-The President’s view
-Actions
-Second term
-Dean
-Fredric V. Malek
-Colson
-Carlucci
-Haldeman’s view
-White House personnel
-Ronald L. Ziegler
-Ehrlichman
-Staff actions
-Ziegler
-Performance as press secretary
-The President’s view
11

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-George E. Christian
-John B. Connally
-Aid to the President
-Writing ability
-Foreign policy speech
-Style
-White House speech writers
-The President’s view
-Working relations
-Haldeman’s view
-Speech style
-The President's style
-Compared to Connally
-White House speech writers
-Raymond K. Price, Jr.
-The President’s view
-Dean
-Second term plans
-Cleanup period
-Schedule
-Vacancies
-Cuts
-Changes in personnel
-White House staff cuts
-Jobs outside administration
-Promotions
-Departmental jobs
-H. Dale Grubb
-National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NASA]
-Haldeman aide
-Study of agencies
-Appointments by the President and Cabinet officers
-Central Intelligence Agency [CIA]
-Changes
-Cutbacks
-Caspar W. (“Cap”) Weinberger
-Role
-Reduction-in-force [RIF]
-State Department
-Congressional relations
-Revision in philosophy
12

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Effect of 1972 election victory margin
-White House Congressional liaison
-Cutback
-Attitude
-Johnson years
-Bryce Harlow
-Edward C. Nixon


*****************************************************************

BEGIN WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 4
[Personal returnable]
[Duration: 29s ]


END WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 4

*****************************************************************

-Edward Nixon
-Protocol office
-East wing
-Capabilities
-Relations with public
-Possible role
-Relations with business groups
-Teachers
-Roger E. Johnson
-Capabilities
-Relations with people
-Image as the President's friend

Watergate
-Media coverage
-Television report
-Interview of Cubans
-Communist conspiracy
-Democratic Party
-George S. McGovern
13

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

Henry Kissinger entered at 9:46 am.

Greetings

US-Soviet Union relations
-Timing of announcements
-Haig
-Rogers’s reaction to negotiations
-US-Soviet Union trade agreement
-Kissinger’s meeting with Roger’s
-October 1972
-Normal diplomatic routes
-European Security Conference
-Mutual and Balanced Force Reductions [MFBR]
-Agreement date
-Rogers
-Meetings with foreign ministers
-Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty [SALT]
-Diplomatic channels
-Announcement
-State Department prepatory work
-Rogers’s reaction
-European Security Conference
-MBFR
-SALT II
-Trade agreement
-Haldeman’s view
-SALT
-Ceremony
-Andrei A. Gromyko
-Meeting with Kissinger
-Timing
-Publicity
-Leonid I. Brezhnev meeting with the President
-SALT ceremony
-Anatoliy F. Dobrynin
-Gromyko
-Trip to Camp David
-Dinner arrangements
-New facilities
-Message to Brezhnev
14

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Press reaction
-White House meeting
-Rogers
-US embassy in Moscow
-Personnel
-Dinner arrangements
-Timing of announcements
-SALT
-US-Soviet Union trade agreement
-Announcement date
-Haldeman’s view
-Legal discussions
-US-Soviet Union Trade Agreement
-Rogers
-Reaction to breakthrough
-Scope of agreement
-Kissinger’s view
-Monetary figures
-Trade center in Moscow
-Facilities
-International arbitration
-Announcement
-Businessmen conference
-Donald McI. Kendall
-Peter G. Peterson’s role
-Armand Hammer
-Komitet Gossudarstvennoi Bezopastnosti [KGB] allegation
-Support for President’s policy
-Pre-notification concerns
-Haldeman’s view
-Grain sale to Soviet Union
-Problems
-Soviet Union actions
-Public perception
-Grain dealers
-Profit
-Earl L. Butz
-Retroactive policy
-US Business in the Soviet Union
-Arbitration
-Soviet courts
15

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Timing of announcements
-Maritime agreement
-European security conference
-SALT II
-Announcement
-Trade agreement
-Media coverage
-Soviet view
-Options
-European security conference and MBFR
-Rogers
-Soviet negotiating style
-The President’s schedule
-SALT II
-East Germany/West Germany treaty
-Berlin
-Impact on US
-Brezhnev message to the President
-Lin Piao
-Airplane crash
-Possible bomb
-Photographs
-Dental and medical work in the Soviet Union
-Brezhnev gift to the President
-Tray
-State flags
-Semi-precious stones
-Pictures of presidents
-George Washington
-Abraham Lincoln
-The President
-White House gift
-Tray with state flags
-The President’s gift to Brezhnev
-Coins
-Presidential flag
-Brezhnev
-Relations with the President
-Kissinger’s view
-Minister for Shipping
-Maritime agreement
16

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Timetable for conclusion
-Visit to Camp David
-Laurel lodge
-Possible May 1973 arrival

1972 election
-Pompidou
-French television
-Comments on Vietnam War
-1972 Presidential election
-Abram Chayes
-England
-Edward R.G. Heath
-Reports
-Pompidou
-Chatham House meeting
-George S. McGovern position
-Left-wing Labor Party
-Reaction
-Kissinger’s forthcoming press conference
-European relations with US
-Approach
-Meeting with the President after 1972 election

Kissinger’s press forthcoming conference
-1972 accomplishments
-Relations between great powers
-World peace
-US negotiations
-PRC and the Soviet Union
-Basis of relations
-Direct confrontation
-Cooperativeness
-Importance
-Meeting with Japanese
-Latin American
-Africa
-Messages from the President
-Paris Herald-Tribune editorial
-Kissinger’s trip to Moscow
-The President’s initiative
17

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Announcements
-White House initiative

Haldeman left at 10:00 am.


-Trade agreement negotiations
-Peterson’s efforts
-Dealing with other powers
-Efforts at highest level
-Second-level negotiations
-Kissinger’s effectiveness
-Qualities
-Kissinger’s role
-Relationship to the President
-Trade ministers
-PRC
-Chou En-Lai
-US current relations
-Chou En-Lai
-Brezhnev
-Pompidou
-Heath
-Brandt
-Attitude towards US
-Television appearance with Kissinger
-The President’s policies
-Kissinger’s schedule
-Haircut
-Negotiations
-Timetable of breakthroughs
-Kissinger’s wording
-The President’s suggestions
-The President’s review of progress
-Lend-lease
-SALT
-MBFR
-Brezhnev and the President’s previous summer in Moscow
-Communique
-Kissinger’s meeting with Brezhnev
-Interchange of messages
18

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-State Department
-Presidential level talks
-Details
-Issues
-Trade agreement
-Brezhnev
-Soviet Jewish emigration
-Lend-lease
-Monetary figures
-Timetable for payments by Soviets
-Five-year plan
-1976
-Commodity credit corporation credit [CCC]
-Press relations
-Publicity
-Kissinger’s view
-Maritime agreement
-Most-favored nation status [MFN] for Soviet Union

Kissinger’s schedule
-Barber

Kissinger’s forthcoming press conference
-US-Soviet Union relations
-Maritime agreement
-MFN
-Lend-lease agreement
-Trade center
-Negotiations
-The President’s communications with Brezhnev
-Kissinger’s communications with the President
-Cables
-Commercial channels
-MBFR
-Communiqué
-Haig
-Rogers
-Paris negotiations
-Proposals
-North Vietnamese proposal for public release
-International Control Commission [ICC]
19

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Possible leak
-Kissinger’s forthcoming negotiations
-Timing
-US domestic impact

Vietnam peace talks
-North Vietnam
-Possible settlement
-Kissinger’s views
-Concerns
-Motivations
-Meeting length
-Meeting length
-Le Duc Tho
-Ziegler’s briefing
-Timetable for negotiating
-The President’s trip to west coast
-News coverage
-Campaign finance dinner
-Timetable for negotiations
-News coverage
-The President’s view
-Ziegler
-Announcement
-North Vietnamese proposal
-Administration response
-McGovern
-Disclosure of peace talks

Photograph session
-Ziegler
Vietnam peace talks
-Settlement
Kissinger’s conversation with Le Duc Tho

An unknown woman entered at an unknown time after 10:00 am.

Photograph session
-Ziegler
-Timing
-Kissinger
20

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Haircut

The unknown woman left at an unknown time before 10:15 am.

Vietnam peace talks
-Kissinger’s schedule
-Le Duc Tho
-Administration’s interest
-Rogers
-North Vietnamese
-The President’s view
-Behavior in war

Vietnam
-Leak of blockade story
-Source
-CIA
-State Department
-Ray S. Cline
-State Department
-Background
-CIA
-Rogers
-Study
-Purpose
-Kissinger

Alexander P. Butterfield and Ziegler entered at 10:15 am.

Kissinger’s schedule
-Haircut

Butterfield left at 10:16 am.

Folders for Haig

Ziegler left at 10:18 am.

The President’s schedule
-Trip to New York
-Invitation to Kissinger
21

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL MATERIALS STAFF

Tape Subject Log
(rev. Oct-06)

-Camp David

Kissinger meeting with Peterson
-Peterson’s role

Vietnam peace talks
-North Vietnamese position
-Perception of US in negotiations
-Bombing of North Vietnam
-The President’s view
-Sorties
-Kissinger’s view
-October, November 1972
-Effects of blockade on North Vietnam
-CIA study
-Oil
-Railways
-Bombing
-North Vietnam
-The President’s re-election
-Louis P. Harris poll
-Bombing
-Mining
-Communist government in [South Vietnam]

Ziegler entered at an unknown time after 10:18 am.

The President's schedule
-Papers

The President, Kissinger and Ziegler left at 10:20 am.
Secret White House Tapes |

780–7

This recording is currently not available on millercenter.org. To listen to it, please email Mike Greco at mdg4u@virginia.edu

More Richard M. Nixon Recordings

View all Richard M. Nixon tapes
211–12
audio icon
211–13
audio icon
211–14
audio icon
211–15
audio icon
211–16
audio icon
211–17
audio icon
211–18
audio icon
211–19
audio icon
211–20
audio icon
211–21
audio icon