
Richard Milhouse Nixon has earned a place in history, not for the right
reason though: he is the only US president to have resigned from post,
which he did to avoid the impending ignominious impeachment. The scandal
that ended the career of an otherwise very successful US president,
Watergate, has now become synonymous with political cover-ups. Nixon,
the 37th US President, credited with ending the American involvement in
the Vietnam war, visited China in 1972 heralding a new era of
Sino-American relationship, initiated détente and signed an
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty with the Soviet Union and presided over
the Apollo 11 moon landing. On the negative side, he supported the coup
in Chile that ousted the democratically elected Marxist President,
Salvador Allende, propelling to power Augusto Pinochet, who turned out
to be a cruel dictator. Nixon was re-elected in 1972 with a landslide,
polling more than 60% of the popular vote and losing only one state, out
of the 50, and the District of Columbia to his opponent. So, what went
wrong?
Watergate scandal
To ensure his re-election, many in his administration carried out
undemocratic activities which included "dirty tricks" campaigns like
bugging the offices of political opponents, the harassment of activist
groups and political figures. These activities were brought to light
after five men were caught breaking into the Democratic party
headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C. on 17 June
1972. Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward of the Washington Post newspaper,
relying on an informant known as "Deep Throat", later revealed to be an
associate director at the FBI, linked the men to the Nixon
administration. Though Nixon downplayed the scandal as mere politics,
calling news articles biased and misleading, a series of revelations
made it clear that the Committee to Re-elect Nixon and the White House
was involved in attempts to sabotage the Democrats. As it happened, this
was totally unnecessary, as he won with a landslide. But worse was to
come.
A Special Counsel was appointed to investigate when one of the White
House aides testified, under oath, that Nixon has recorded all
conversations in the Oval Office and these will show that Nixon was
aware of what happened, though he denied any knowledge. He was reluctant
to release the tapes and released partial transcripts. Finally, under
pressure, when Nixon released the tapes there was a gap of 18 ½ minutes,
which his personal secretary claimed, she accidentally erased, which
was considered a dumb excuse. After a protracted battle, as it became
clear that Nixon attempted a cover-up, there was no choice but to start
impeachment proceedings but before this happened, Nixon resigned on 9th
August 1974. He was forced to resign not because of the break-in or any
of the other "dirty tricks" but because of the cover-up.
Central Bank Bond scam
Not one, but two bond scams occurred when Ranil was in charge of the
Central Bank with his chosen friend as the Governor. On the basis of the
available facts, which I need not repeat as are very well known, most
will come to the inevitable conclusion that Ranil, if not actively
involved, was well aware of the scam. Of course, the hard-core UNPers,
who still harbour the delusion that Ranil is ‘Mr. Clean’, would never
accept this and will come up with all sort of fancy defences. A
governent spokesman has already claimed that what they robbed is
nothing, as Rajapaksas played out much more, though Rajapaksas’ scams
are yet to be proved. Those who came to power on the promise of
eradicating corruption, indulging in ‘minor’ corruption is justified!
What sort of logic is that!! Do they think that Sri Lankans are
grass-eaters?
Deception
The appointment of Mahendran itself was full of deception. Originally,
it was claimed that he was a Sri Lankan citizen. Then it was told that
he is a dual citizen but when it was pointed out that Singapore does not
allow dual citizenship a totally different story emerged with a
question. If the UK can have a Canadian as the Governor of the Bank of
England, why cannot Sri Lanka have a Singaporean as the Governor of the
Central Bank? If that was the case, why was Ranil not bold enough,
instead of giving lame excuses, to state this in the first instance?
Can Mahendran and Mark Carney be compared? Certainly not! Before moving
to the UK, Mark Carney was the Governor of the Bank of Canada from 2008
to 2013. The equivalent of the Central Bank in Singapore is the Monetary
Authority of Singapore. Mahendran has not held any top positions;
either that of the Chairman or the Manging Director. Therefore, the
comparison drawn is ludicrous and a means of deception.
Mahendran has run away and is not answering summons. If he is innocent
why should he abscond? As the person who appointed him, should Ranil not
take responsibility? Surely, when Ranil visited Singapore recently for
investment promotion, he could have met his old friend and persuaded him
to return to Sri Lanka.
Cover-up
What should be blatantly obvious to everyone is the cover-up. There is
absolutely no doubt about it. When the Bond Scam surfaced, Ranil
appointed a committee of three ‘eminent’ lawyers to investigate. Their
conclusion was that the Governor was not involved and laid the blame on
senior officials of the Central Bank, which infuriated many honest but
helpless officials in the Central Bank. If not for President Sirisena’s
afterthought to appoint a commission of inquiry as the public outcry was
not going away, the cover-up would have succeeded. When the
Presidential Commission of Inquiry found the truth, at least partly,
those lawyers did not put there hands up and tender an apology. Well,
they may say, as lawyers, they looked after the interest of their
client!
I do not want to make comparisons between Ranil and Nixon. Nixon, to his
credit, took responsibility for his actions, though belatedly and
resigned.
Isn’t it time for Ranil to show that he has some self-respect left in
him, take responsibility, and resign, obviating the need for
no-confidence motion? For all I know, he will win and carry on
regardless.