This week, Hillary Clinton testified before the House Benghazi committee. If you're a Democrat, you're certain by now that the investigation exists only to embarrass her. If you're a Republican, you think journalists intentionally bury every Democratic sin and exaggerate every GOP gaffe. Either way, the chances are that you ascribe a single unsavory motivation to the other side.
A useful if perhaps unintentional corrective to such dangerous simplicity is "The Last of the President's Men," Bob Woodward's brisk, provocative and often frustrating portrait of Richard Nixon as seen through the eyes of his trusted aide Alexander Butterfield. Although history barely remembers him, Butterfield is the man who told the Senate Watergate Committee about Nixon's tapes, thus ensuring the embattled president's downfall. Toward the end of the book, Woodward asks Butterfield why he did it.
The answer is of considerable importance because of our habit of viewing the past through the lens of today's knowledge. As Woodward reminds us, until the tapes came to light, some two-thirds of American adults thought Nixon innocent of involvement in the Watergate coverup. The secret was known only to three or four top White House staffers, along with the small team of Secret Service technicians who installed the microphones and serviced the machines. Nixon, in his autobiography, insists that he never thought the public would learn that the tapes existed. Without the inculpatory evidence they contained, the chances are good that he would have clung to office.
Politically, Butterfield had been a true believer, recruited from the Air Force by his friend H.R. Haldeman to man a desk right outside the Oval Office. He managed Nixon's paper flow and, as time went on, carried out his smallest whims — including installing a spy within Edward Kennedy's Secret Service detail. When Butterfield decided he wanted something more, Nixon rewarded him with the job of head of the Federal Aviation Administration, adding a promise that Secretary of the Navy was likely in his future.
Why would such a man betray his boss?
The committee didn't know about the tapes. One lawyer for the Republican side suspected, but nobody was sure. Had Butterfield parried the lawyer's questions, which he very easily could have done, the secret might very well have stayed safe. Butterfield assures us that the others on the senior staff who knew — Haldeman and Larry Higby — would never betray the president. So what was his motive?
Butterfield proves elusive. He just thought it was time that the truth came out. Or maybe he held a grudge against Nixon, who was often rude and dismissive. Perhaps at heart he's an honest man. The fits and starts go on for pages.
Part of the problem may be that Butterfield himself comes across as not terribly self-examining: "I don't feel I had a motive. I'm not sure I like the term 'motive.' I was just the guy who happened to know all this stuff and I had a bad start with Nixon."