Graham described the pressure she was under when editor Ben Bradlee received portions of the Pentagon Papers shortly after the government had obtained a criminal injunction against The New York Times for publishing parts of it. Against the wishes of the Post’s lawyers, she decided to allow Bradlee to publish the papers.
“I felt that … the editors would really be demoralized, that the floor would be demoralized, and that a great deal depended on our doing it,” she explained. “I said, ‘Why can’t we wait a day, the Times discussed this for three months.’ And they said, ‘Because of keeping up the momentum, we gotta go. And we gotta go tonight.’ So I had about a minute to decide, so I said, ‘Go.’”
Additional Interviews With Katharine Graham
Graham talked about her relationship with President Johnson with Joe B. Frantz of the Lyndon Johnson Presidential Library in March 1969.
Graham discussed “Personal History” with Brian Lamb of C-Span’s “Booknotes,” Feb. 16, 1997.
To learn more about Katharine Graham, visit her profile on findingDulcinea.
Comments