If the exposé had gone public, Nixon might have been defeated and spent the next 20 years in prison—instead of winning re-election with the third largest electoral landslide in U.S. history
By Michael Steven Smith
Numerous American presidents have illegally co-opted public agencies and their staffs to carry out personal and often nefarious activities on their behalf. None of them was ever punished for doing so. Except (so far) Richard Nixon.
Nixon got his comeuppance when he sent his plumbers into the Watergate complex to steal documents that linked him to illegal Greek campaign contributions before they could derail his political career.
After months of stunning revelations in the media led by Woodward and Bernstein, Nixon was exposed and forced to resign. But Woodward and Bernstein, with all their research on the subject, never discovered the real reason Nixon engineered the Watergate burglary.
That is just one of the fascinating hidden stories told for the first time in a new “thriller” biography, The Greek Connection: The Life of Elias Demetracopoulos and the Untold Story of Watergate, by James H. Barron.
Barron describes Demetracopoulos as “a journalist, information broker, lobbyist, trusted advisor, suspected foreign agent, impassioned democracy and free speech advocate—a man with friends and sources spanning the political spectrum.”
Demetracopoulos (who died in 2016 at age 87) was a teenage Greek freedom fighter who survived torture and a Nazi death sentence during WWII, then emigrated to America to live a colorful and sometimes dangerous life as an investigative reporter who hobnobbed with the Washington, D.C., power elite in the evening, then skewered them like Athenian shish kabob in the morning edition.
He encouraged government officials who were shocked and disgusted by the corruption of their powerful bosses to blow the whistle on their crimes, which otherwise would remain hidden. One might almost call him Julian Assange avant la lettre.
But the price he had to pay was being targeted for destruction by Richard Nixon, who used the State Department, IRS, and CIA to harass his friends, smear his character, fabricate false evidence against him, and undermine his financial stability.
Yet for all its breathless excitement, the book by attorney and investigative reporter James H. Barron, is exhaustively researched and beautifully written.
As a teenager Elias was involved in the anti-fascist resistance in Athens during World War II.
At age 12 he joined a clandestine group and helped gather intelligence, facilitate propaganda, organize escape networks for allied operatives and prisoners of war, and engage in small acts of sabotage.
Barron writes that “he was quick witted and had a fierce work ethic and his fluency in English was equal to most others in the group.”
Elias was arrested and sentenced to death by the German fascists for the sabotages he had performed and for having kept weapons and a secret radio transmitter in his home.
He was imprisoned before his scheduled execution. Barron writes, “It is impossible to describe how the Greek patriot suffered. For two weeks, morning, noon, and evening, Elias underwent the most inhumane torture of the inquisition.
Yet, he did not utter a sound, did not even open his mouth. He groaned and bit his tongue, to cut it off if necessary. But until the last day when he was bound and taken to an auditorium for trial and sentenced to death Demetricopolous bore all torture bravely.”
To his torturer, a Greek collaborator with the Nazis, he said, “You can kill me, but you won’t get anything from me. One day you will pay for your crimes, traitor.” Then he spit in his face.
Because of the intervention of Archbishop Damaskinos, the spiritual leader of Athens and all of Greece, Elias’s life was spared as part of a Christmas goodwill package. He was but 15 years old.
He was transferred to an institution for the mentally ill and imprisoned there for nearly a year, finally being released in October 1944 when “the German occupiers, fearful of the advancing Red Army, withdrew from Athens and mainland Greece.”
After the war as a young man Elias wanted to be an investigative reporter, one who would be the first to uncover important stories. He got a job with Kathimerini, the conservative and most prestigious and influential newspaper in Greece. He was 21 years old. He became a top diplomatic reporter.
The fragile Greek democracy was overwhelmed by a military coup in 1967. The brutal junta was headed by Colonel Georgios Papadopoulos. Elias went into hiding for a month. He had no income and no job. The military saw the press as an extension of the government. The critical press then was, and is, in Donald Trump’s words, “an enemy of the people.“
Elias was a “zealous democrat who supported political freedom and human rights.” He believed there were four “essential elements of a functioning democracy: majority rule, with free and fair elections; respect for minority rights; independent judiciary; and a free press able to investigate and criticize the government. The new regime failed on all four accounts.”
Elias fled for his life seeking refuge in the U.S. Barron writes that he “thought the junta’s justification for intervention—allegedly to prevent an eminent communist takeover—deceitful, their overblown metaphor of Greek democracy as a sick patient needing medical intervention stupid, and their claim to be trustees of morality and Christianity fraudulent.”
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