RIP Daniel Ellsberg, Who Told the World the Truth About the Vietnam War
The Pentagon Papers leaker risked prison to reveal that American military officials were lying to Congress and the public about Vietnam. He died today at age 92.

Daniel Ellsberg was in the midst of a federal trial, facing the prospect of a long prison term, when he sat down with Reason in the summer of 1973 to talk about his decision to leak a trove of documents. Those documents, known as the Pentagon Papers, showed that top American officials, including President Lyndon Johnson, had lied constantly about the country's war in Vietnam.
"The only thing that I could personally hope to achieve by my own efforts was to make these documents available to the American public for them to read and to learn from," Ellsberg told Reason. But he had a "very important secondary objective": halting what he saw as a dangerous trend of "executive secrecy" that had allowed successive presidents to "steal away so much power from the Congress and the public and to free itself from the kinds of checks and balances that were intended in the Constitution."
By giving those 7,000 pages to The New York Times two years earlier, Ellsberg changed the course of a war and shifted the American public's view of the presidency. He may not have succeeded in the larger project of containing executive power, but he earned a place in the whistleblower hall of fame: one of a select few who, when entrusted with damning secrets, recognized that his patriotic duty was to tell the American people a difficult truth their leaders would rather have kept hidden.
Ellsberg died Friday at his home in Kensington, California, according to multiple media reports, after a monthslong bout with inoperable pancreatic cancer. He was 92.
Though the Pentagon Papers exposed a myriad of official lies about America's role in the Vietnam War, the big lie at the center of it was one that sounds all too familiar to those of us who came of political age during the post-9/11 wars: that America was winning. Privately, top military officials, including Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, knew this was not true. From his post at the RAND Corporation, Ellsberg obtained access to reports from 1967 and 1968 showing that the best-case scenario was a long-term stalemate—a stalemate that would eventually kill more than 58,000 Americans and more than 2 million civilians in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia.
It was a trip to Saigon in 1965 as one of McNamara's advisers that first suggested to Ellsberg that something was wrong. After witnessing the chaos of the war firsthand, Ellsberg—a Harvard graduate and former Marine—tried to work within the system to change American policy. In 1970, after photocopying the secret Pentagon report that would make up the bulk of the Papers, he gave partial copies to several high-ranking senators. The effort went nowhere, leading Ellsberg to eventually leak the full report to a Times reporter, Neil Sheehan.
"A system that allows some secrets has to be a limited one, because relatively few secrets can be kept from the American people if we are to remain a democracy; and it must have safeguards built in against the abuse of it," Ellsberg told Reason in that 1973 interview. "You come down to the principle that no one man, even the President, should be allowed to decide without review that certain kinds of information cannot be known to American citizens."
Ellsberg was arrested for espionage, conspiracy, and other charges that could have meant a lifetime behind bars. He escaped prosecution due to some of the same executive overreach that had inspired him to leak the documents in the first place. The Nixon administration sent operatives—the same ones later implicated in the Watergate scandal—to break into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office, and the FBI illegally wiretapped his phone. When this misconduct came out, Judge William Byrne dismissed all the charges against him.
Ellsberg remained an outspoken anti-war activist for the rest of his life. He warned frequently of the dangers of nuclear annihilation. Two years ago, he released another secret government study that he'd photocopied long ago: a 1958 plan for a nuclear strike against China in retaliation for shelling Taiwan.
He opposed the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq—"What we've done to the Middle East has been hell," he said in 2018—and criticized the post-9/11 increases in executive power and secret-keeping.
When Edward Snowden leaked details of the National Security Agency's domestic spying regime in 2013, Ellsberg was effusive in his praise. "In my estimation, there has not been in American history a more important leak than Edward Snowden's release of NSA material—and that definitely includes the Pentagon Papers 40 years ago. Snowden's whistleblowing gives us the possibility to roll back a key part of what has amounted to an 'executive coup' against the US Constitution," Ellsberg wrote in The Guardian.
In an era of unprecedented levels of executive power and an ever-expanding national security state, America and the world could use more people like Ellsberg, who was willing to prioritize the truth over all else.
In his final interview with Reason, conducted in 2017, Lucy Steigerwald asked Ellsberg to consider his legacy.
"I would like others to believe that they have the power—and the obligation, really—as patriots, as human beings, to reveal what they themselves know are unjustified dangers to human existence," he said. "And not simply, for reasons of career and promises to superiors, to conceal dangers of that nature. In other words, to be truth tellers."
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"I would like others to believe that they have the power—and the obligation, really—as patriots, as human beings, to reveal what they themselves know are unjustified dangers to human existence," he said. "And not simply, for reasons of career and promises to superiors, to conceal dangers of that nature. In other words, to be truth tellers."
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If he’d done what he did only a decade ago (during the tenure of most libertarian president in history) he’d be hiding out in Russia now.
Imagine had it been President Ellsberg!
He would have gotten the JFK treatment.
Airport/Stadium named after him, 50 cent coin, Eternal Flame??
Extended Ecuadorian embassy exile.
I would like others to believe that they have the power—and the obligation, really—as patriots, as human beings, to reveal what they themselves know are unjustified dangers to human existence," he said. "And not simply, for reasons of career and promises to superiors, to conceal dangers of that nature. In other words, to be truth tellers."
Boy. I bet Daniel died depressed.
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How did the author manage not to draw the obvious parallel between Ellsberg and Julian Assange? Ellesberg even defended Assange because of the situational similarity!
Seems like either rotten Reason writing, or a certain kind of editorial guidance…
Now why would a magazine funded by a billionaire want to do that?
Well, they don’t do it so they can help hollow-out the corpse so shitty authoritarians can skinsuit around and reinforce the fake liberal gleichshaltung.
Did Eric Boehm say Ellesberg is not like Assange?
Jesus Christ do you always have to be fucking retarded?
Yes. Yes he does.
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DIVISION: LGBTQ teachers forbidden from spreading their gender and sexual ideologies are moving to New York and California. Democrat-controlled states give LGBTQ activists the freedom to indoctrinate children - something that is vital to the left.
[Link]
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LOS ANGELES- A huge group of Catholics and Christians have already arrived outside of Dodger Stadium to pray in protest of the Dodgers honoring the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.
A drag group that has repeatedly mocked Christ and the Catholic faith:
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A Muslim group would have sorted this out properly.
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"...repeatedly mocked Christ and the Catholic faith.."
Something that has been going on for at least the last 1800 years...
Maybe its the intututionalized raping of children?
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Is Ukraine about to become a Forever War?
In preparation for a meeting of NATO allies in Vilnius next month, Secretary of State Blinken has been floating a proposal to give "Israel status" to Ukraine. This consists of long-term security guarantees (which run for ten-year intervals in Israel’s case) including weapons, ammunition, and money “not subject to the fate of the current counteroffensive or the electoral calendar.” In other words, America won’t reassess support even if the counteroffensive fails. Indeed, support won’t cease even if voters want to make a change in the next election.
Some observers may see here a classic bait and switch. Last year, after Ukraine retook land around Kharkiv and Kherson, the American people were assured that the Ukrainians would complete the job in the spring and summer of 2023. This new Ukrainian counteroffensive would roll back Russian territorial gains, perhaps even threaten the Russian hold on Crimea, and thereby drive Moscow to the negotiating table and end the war. Many Americans supported the $100+ billion in appropriations for Ukraine on this basis. The implicit promise was that this was a one-time expense, not the baseline for an annual appropriation in a new Forever War.
Now a difficult start to the counteroffensive coupled with a proposed multi-year deal at Vilnius makes clear that this was a lie or a pipe dream. But isn’t this what always happens? Administrations ease us into war with promises of quick and easy victory, and then once involved, tell us we can’t back out no matter the cost because American credibility is at stake. It’s Vietnam, Afghanistan or Iraq all over again, except this time with a nuclear-armed adversary creating the heightened risk that the war could escalate into WWIII at any point.
For more on this subject, check out my first article for @RStatecraft @QuincyInst:
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The problem is they're running out of Ukrainians for cannon fodder. They're gonna need open boarders and massive immigration. Maybe Fiona can help.
https://twitter.com/TPostMillennial/status/1669787198105722905?t=xqYiHViNWSAplZr_pyF3fA&s=19
Biden: “Down in Philadelphia and New York, areas I know well, like up here, you’d see a truck pull up, pull to the curb and selling weapons, selling guns, selling AR-15s.”
[Video]
That dastardly Cornpop is at it again!
https://twitter.com/DeSantisWarRoom/status/1669833583559573505?t=AXkPAuP1XzV0lsqZ8N-WZA&s=19
NEW: A convicted terrorist financier was just released from prison *early* despite saying he "would be proud" to fund terrorism again.
Why was he released? Trump’s First Step Act.
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https://twitter.com/BerryRazi/status/1669848551395053569?t=Af5VvG3-jjVp8ePAkT4qpA&s=19
More untruths from Ron’s comms. Biden is who made changes to the First Step act
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An important point: the charismatic dictator was the least important and characteristic element of totalitarianism, but if you take that part away it becomes invisible to the boomer mind
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I admire Ellsberg for his actions, but the release of the Pentagon Papers actually had little impact on American support for the war. I remember the era vividly, having just returned from the RVN shortly before the Papers first appeared in the New York Times. As I read the articles, I felt that I wasn't learning much that was new. Support for the war had nosedived more than a year earlier, thanks to the Tet Offensive, which made all the "light at the end of the tunnel" pronouncements from high officials appear as ridiculous in hindsight as they had always been.
What the Pentagon Papers really did was to allow the media to tee off on the Nixon administration, after having largely held its fire during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. This is something captured surprisingly well in Steven Spielberg's film "The Post". Sadly, the lessons "learned" thanks to the Pentagon Papers had zero impact on the military interventions managed by both Bush administrations and the Obama administrations as well. Both the NYT and the WP were enthusiastic backers of these diastrous policies, something they have rarely admitted, much less apologized for.
Having grown up during that era, I thought the veneration of an "independent" press who "spoke truth to power" and rooted out lies and corruption was normal.
Movies about heroic reporters chasing down a story were common. Hardboiled reporters who would go the extra mile for a story were everywhere in TV shows.
So I thought this was how the world always was. Reporters were impartial but passionate truth-seekers. They would always fight those with power and expose their secrets.
Now the TV shows have moved on to the FBI.
Yeah I grew up back then too. The claims of Walter Cronkite and Dan Rather were treated as gospel. As Glenn Greenwald keeps reminding us the media today are nothing more than propagandists for the IC. In retrospect I suspect that the takedown of Nixon was a straight up deep state operation and WAPO and the rest were fully briefed.
Yeah the "lesson of Vietnam" didn't last long. But this time it's different. Somehow. Every time.
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Nixon was a dope for not sitting back and letting LBJ and JFK fry in the revelations.
He felt he had a sacred duty to protect the "presidency" and his hubris eventually led to his expulsion AND being blamed for the war.
I have to say that I don’t particularly admire the government officials who leak secret documents that embarrass administrations. Although, obviously, they undertake considerable personal risk to do so, there is a taint of the “tattletale” in their stories. Ratting out a friend, snitching on your brother, selling out, squealing; they all have a negative connotation that ruins the more heroic aspects of whistle-blowers like Ellsberg. Although it’s true that few of the millions of documents marked “classified” are actually dangerous to the legitimate interests of America, everyone who leaked secrets to the press violated an oath and betrayed a trust in doing so. The “lesson” that should have been learned was not about Vietnam. The American people should have learned to declassify their government and devolve the power that they intentionally or negligently gave away as their birthright.
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Such a fucking phony, he could have released the "Pentagon Papers" in 1968 but he didn't want to tank LBJ/Humpty Humphey's chances. LBJ went to his death claiming the war could still be won and criticizing Milhouse's peace agreement. Humphrey was a jabbering idiot as (Dr) Hunter S. Thompson opined in 1972
"Hubert Humphrey is a treacherous, gutless old ward-heeler who should be put in a goddamn bottle and sent out with the Japanese current.”
Milhouse actually ended the war, got the POW's' back, and ended the draft.
Frank "Nixon's the one (who did all that) "
"Milhouse actually ended the war, got the POW’s’ back, and ended the draft."
Yes he did. It wasn't all pretty but nowhere near as bad as Biden's Afghanistan shitshow. And I was 17 when he ended the draft. If not for that I'd be speaking Canadian now (yikes!).
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It wasn't just the lies about the success of our war in Vietnam! It was the long string of larger lies including the Monroe Doctrine, the Yellow Peril, the domino theory, American exceptionalism, making the world safe for democracy, the war on drugs and, most recently, the Global War on Terrorism that have been used by generations of power hungry politicians to justify their power grabs, eroding the checks and balances built into the Constitution. And this does not even include the bogus policies undermining the federalist structure of the Constitution internally. The damage has been done and will not be easily undone, if at all. Thanks for trying, Daniel.
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