From The Atlantic 1982
By Seymour Hersh
''Seymour M. Hersh, a former correspondent for
The New York Times, won the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting
in 1970, for his revelation of the massacre at My Lai, in South Vietnam.
He is the winner of virtually every major journalism award, including
the George Polk Award, which he has received four times—more than any
other reporter in the history of the Polk Awards. His new book,
which will be published early next year by Summit, is a history of
Henry Kissinger's service as national security adviser to Richard Nixon,
during Nixon's first term. The article below is drawn from that book;
it deals with White House wiretapping activities and with the White
House internal-security unit known as the Plumbers. A second Atlantic article
by Mr. Hersh, to be published later this year, will be concerned with
one aspect of the Nixon-Kissinger foreign policy during Nixon's first
term.''
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