WASHINGTON - It was the scandal du jour. The year was 1972, the Vietnam War was still raging, nearing its bitter finale, and Congress and press were in full-throated pursuit of a supposedly "rogue" general who'd exceeded his authority and waged his own air war over North Vietnam.
Air Force Gen. John D. Lavelle would be recalled from Saigon, busted down two grades in rank -- to major general -- and forced to retire. Special inquiries by the House and Senate would follow.
In the White House, however, where President Richard Nixon was gearing up for re-election, a different story was known -- and discussed behind closed doors by the president and top aides Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig.
Nixon had, in fact, authorized Lavelle, the commander of the Seventh Air Force, to conduct what were known as "protective reaction strikes" -- airstrikes on surface-to-air missile positions and other North Vietnamese emplacements threatening U.S. reconnaissance aircraft, even though at the time, the United States had halted the bombing of North Vietnam to encourage peace talks.
Secret White House tape recordings, reported by Air Force magazine in February 2007, show that Nixon knew Lavelle was getting a raw deal, but for political reasons, the president shied away from intervening.
"Frankly, Henry, I don't feel right about our pushing him into this thing and then, and then giving him a bad rap," Nixon told Kissinger on June 26, 1972, as the Senate was preparing hearings on the issue.
Nixon concluded: "I want to keep it away if I can ... but I don't want to hurt an innocent man."
On Wednesday, more than 38 years after Lavelle was forced into retirement, and 30 years after his death, President Obama nominated the general posthumously for advancement to the grade of four-star general. The nomination must be approved by the Senate, which in 1972 refused Lavelle's request to be retired as a lieutenant general rather than major general.