13 September 2011

Oops is now a political term

Sam Roberts has an article in The New York Times about Attica:
Hours after a thousand New York State troopers, sheriff’s deputies, and correction officers stormed Attica prison to crush a four-day inmate revolt in 1971, Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller telephoned President Richard M. Nixon to claim victory unambiguously. At the time, it appeared that State Police sharpshooters who had fired on the prison yard had killed mostly inmates, not some of the prison guards who had been held hostage inside. And because the inmates were black and the guards white, the governor and the president seemed to suggest, the American public would undoubtedly endorse the state’s assault on Attica. “They did a fabulous job,” Rockefeller told Nixon. “It really was a beautiful operation.”
In a follow-up conversation the next day, as grimmer details began to emerge about the assault, in which 29 inmates and ten hostages were killed, a more subdued Rockefeller acknowledged that his initial boast about the sharpshooters’ precision was premature. “Well, you know, this is one of those things,” Rockefeller said. “You can’t have sharpshooters picking off the prisoners when the hostages are there with them, at a distance with tear gas, without maybe having a few accidents.”
“Well, you saved a lot of guards,” Nixon replied. “That was worth it.”
Recordings of the conversations, which are being published in full for the first time, provide insights into the nation’s bloodiest prison uprising, which remained an indelible blot on Rockefeller’s fifteen-year record as governor, and ended forty years ago. In the recordings, the governor speaks with seeming candor about some unexplained elements of the episode, including his decision not to go in person to the prison, in western New York, to broker a peaceful resolution, as the inmates and their negotiators had asked. Rockefeller is also heard striking an ingratiating tone with the president, predicting to Nixon, who was preparing his re-election campaign, “You’re going to have a great year.”
The revolt began on 9 September 1971, precipitated by unaddressed inmate complaints about grievance procedures, educational opportunities and other issues, investigations concluded. Though an agreement appeared near on many of the inmates’ demands, Rockefeller approved the assault when negotiations over amnesty had stalled and it appeared that the hostages’ lives were in danger. (Inmates were found to have killed one guard and three fellow inmates during the uprising.)
Nixon’s strategy for dealing with the Attica massacre was to minimize press coverage, to spin the story in favor of the government, and to assail members of the press,” said Theresa C. Lynch, an adjunct professor of history at the University of New Hampshire at Manchester who is writing a book about Attica and discovered the tapes at the National Archives in Washington. “I think the tapes reveal that. He also began a campaign to convince the American public that Rockefeller had acted correctly in not going to Attica to quell the uprising and in retaking the prison by storm. This campaign was based on racism and lack of concern and callous disregard for the lives of prisoners.”
Rockefeller reveals in the tapes that he proceeded with the assault even as state officials had figured that an armed assault might cost the lives of all the 39 hostages and hundreds of inmates. And he discusses his refusal to consider granting amnesty or going to the scene— a gesture recommended by his own correction commissioner— suggesting that he did not want to capitulate to the inmates and set a precedent. “This separated the sheep from the goats,” Rockefeller declared.
Sixty-two inmates and one guard were charged with crimes stemming from the revolt, and eight inmates were convicted. Charges against the guard were dismissed. A state commission criticized the governor for not going to Attica, while acknowledging that his presence might not have prevented the violence. The commission found that the riot was driven by black inmates unwilling to bow to the “petty humiliations and racism that characterize prison life” and that guards inflicted brutal reprisals after the prison was retaken.
In 1976, Governor Hugh L. Carey pardoned seven former Attica inmates, commuted the sentence of an eighth, and said no disciplinary action would be taken against twenty state troopers and guards involved in the assault. Inmates who were beaten sued the state, which settled in 2000 for $8 million. Five years later, the state settled for $12 million with surviving guards and the families of slain hostages.
Richard Norton Smith, who is completing a biography of Rockefeller, said of the governor’s version of the events: “Some of this is tailored, clumsily, to impress Nixon. But it also, sadly, reflects the fact that Rockefeller, by this stage of his governorship, bore little resemblance to the eager, straight-talking, ambitious yet principled rookie of 1959 and 1960.”
Professor Lynch shared the tapes she had discovered with Scott Christianson, a former New York criminal justice official who has written on Attica, and who made the tapes available to The New York Times.
The first conversation came when the President returned a call from the Governor, who wanted to brief him. Nixon knew the call was being recorded; Rockefeller apparently did not. “The courage you showed and the judgment in not granting amnesty, it was right, and I don’t care what the hell the papers or anybody else says,” Nixon said. “If you would have granted amnesty in this case, it would have meant that you would have had prisons in an uproar all over this country.”
Rockefeller also told Nixon that seven guards who had been taken hostage had been killed and that “quite a few of those were killed prior to this.” Both conclusions proved to be wrong.
The next day, even after it was becoming clear that hostages had also been killed by sharpshooters, Nixon told Rockefeller: “You just stand firm there and don’t give an inch. Because I think in the country, you see, the example you set may stiffen the backs of a few other governors that may have a problem. But also in the country, too, I think that it might discourage this kind of a riot occurring someplace else. Tell me,” Nixon asked, “are these primarily blacks that you’re dealing with?”
“Oh, yes,” Rockefeller replied, “the whole thing was led by the blacks.”
Later that afternoon, Nixon asked H. R. Haldeman, his chief of staff, whether reports from the prison included “the fact that it’s basically a black thing. That’s going to turn people off awful damn fast,” Nixon said, “that the guards were white.”
Years later, Rockefeller, who had run against Nixon for the Republican nomination in 1968 and would become vice president in 1974 after Nixon resigned, expressed regret about not retaking the prison sooner and with less-lethal force. But, to Nixon, he suggested that the revolt was part of a nationwide conspiracy and was characterized by cruelty on the part of the inmates. “We’re really developing this in a way,” he said, “that I think will give a lesson to all of us.”
Rico says that, while the 'uprising' was sad and, ultimately, tragic, the cluelessness of some politicians is worse...

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