Talk:Thomas Hinman Moorer
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[edit] Source of Information?
There is a stament made in the article which has no source.
- 1 Information without source
- "While Chair, Moorer received unauthorized material taken from the White House offices of the National Security Council."
Does anybody know anything about such an incident and can provide sources? It would appear that it should be removed if no source is forthcoming.--TGC55 00:20, 7 March 2006 (UTC)
- No citation. Removed as unverified. —ERcheck @ 04:42, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
It's true.
"Yeoman Charles E. Radford, a young Navy stenographer who had been working with Kissinger and his staff, had confessed to a Department of Defense interrogator that for more than a year he had been passing thousands of top-secret Nixon-Kissinger documents to his superiors at the Pentagon. Radford had obtained the documents by systematically rifling through burn bags, interoffice envelopes, and even the briefcases of Kissinger and Kissinger's then-deputy, Brigadier General Alexander Haig. According to Radford, his supervisors—first Rear Admiral Rembrandt C. Robinson and then Rear Admiral Robert O. Welander—had routinely passed the ill-gotten documents to Admiral Thomas H. Moorer, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and sometimes to Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, the chief of naval operations. It was, in short, an unprecedented case of espionage that pitted the nation's top military commanders against their civilian commander in chief during wartime."
Jeffrey Rosen, "Nixon and the Chiefs", Atlantic Monthly. See http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200204/rosen
64.105.124.2 (talk) 21:15, 6 March 2008 (UTC)captcrisis

