President Obama won’t discuss publicly the National Security Agency’s bugging of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cell phone. He won’t even confirm that the bugging occurred, even though
a.) It apparently began under his predecessor, George W. Bush, whose brusque treatment of U.S. allies Obama turned into a campaign issue in a 2008 speech—delivered, as it happens, in Berlin;
and
b.) According to the Wall Street Journal, Obama ordered the bugging discontinued as soon as he learned about it this past summer.
The Obama administration says it’s reviewing NSA policies, but it won’t say what those policies are. Peculiar though this reticence may seem, it’s entirely in keeping with past practice, in Democratic and Republican White Houses alike. Call it Oval Office Omertà: Presidents have always kept the secrets of their predecessors, even when circumstances appeared to warrant ratting them out.
Take Lyndon Johnson. As president, Johnson kept mum after he learned that the Central Intelligence Agency had, during the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations, plotted to assassinate Fidel Castro. Johnson kept this secret even though Eisenhower was a Republican and even though Johnson had reason to suspect that his political nemesis and rival, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, had participated in the foiled plots.
Johnson came to believe that John F. Kennedy’s assassination was engineered by Castro in retaliation against the CIA plots (which half a century later looks pretty unlikely). Yet Johnson still held his tongue, at least publicly, until 1973—four years after he left the White House, five years after RFK’s death, and 10 years after JFK’s death—when he famously told the Atlantic that “we had been operating a damned Murder, Inc. in the Caribbean.”
Then there was Richard Nixon. Not the most bipartisan of souls, Nixon, similarly, fought tooth and nail to prevent publication of the Pentagon Papers, the government’s secret history of the Vietnam war, even though the many lies it documented emanated not from Nixon’s own Republican administration but from Johnson’s Democratic one. (That’s not to say Nixon didn’t himself tell lies about Vietnam; merely that the Pentagon Papers were compiled before Nixon took office.)
And don’t forget President George W. Bush, who, within a year of assuming office, issued an executive order giving former presidents veto power over release of their presidential papers. This action, though aimed at preventing disclosure of Reagan-era documents, also benefited, at least theoretically, Bush’s predecessor, Democrat Bill Clinton. But Clinton made clear his opposition to the executive order, and a judge later overturned it.









