John V. "Jack" Brennan is a retired
American
Marine officer and political aide.
He is best known as
President Richard Nixon's post-
resignation chief of staff.
Early life
Brennan
was born in Fall River, Massachusetts
and attended Providence College
, a Catholic
college in Providence
, Rhode
Island
, where he graduated in 1959. He served with the
United States Marine
Corps during the Vietnam War, where
he earned a Bronze Star and
Purple Heart at the Battle of Khe
Sanh
.
Marine Corps Aide to the President
In 1969, then-
Major Brennan
was appointed as a Marine Corps Aide to President Nixon; during
that time he rose to
Colonel.
During his time as
Marine Corps Aide, Brennan accompanied Nixon on his historic trip to China in 1972,
which opened up the country to the United States; he was the first
Marine to step foot in the People's Republic of China
and met Mao
Zedong.He made a positive impression on
Soviet
General Secretary Leonid
Brezhnev, who described Brennan as having "
machismo." In addition, he met
Pope Paul VI; he later said that, as a
Catholic, it was a special honor for him.
Brennan remained
attached to Nixon during his resignation after the Watergate scandal in 1974; he was aboard
the helicopter and airplane that flew the Nixon family back to
their home state of California
.
Nixon's Chief of Staff
When Nixon
returned to La Casa
Pacifica
in San Clemente,
California
, nicknamed the "The Western White House" during his
administration, Brennan left the Marines and served as the
ex-president's chief of staff. He originally refused the
position after some of Nixon's associates made it sound like a
business proposal; the financial aspect was not of interest to
Brennan. However, after repeated requests from Nixon, Brennan
agreed to leave his career of over 16 years and join the former
president's staff. In the role of chief of staff, Brennan managed
the small staff, appointments, mail and budgets, and was the
liaison to the
General
Services Administration and members of the
United States Congress who wanted
information for any ongoing investigations from the former
President's Administration. Due to the circumstances of Nixon's
departure, he did not receive the level of information and courtesy
offered to previous former presidents. During this period he was
also Nixon's
golfing partner and
confidant.
During his time with the Nixons, Brennan helped the family with two
major health crises: Richard Nixon suffered from a dangerous case
of
phlebitis in 1974, and former
First Lady Pat Nixon
suffered a
stroke in 1976. Both recovered.
When
Bob Woodward and
Carl Bernstein released their 1976 book,
The Final Days, Brennan felt
that it did not correspond with his own time with the former
President, but he stated "as a fictitious novel, it reads
well."
Role in Frost/Nixon interviews
While chief of staff, Brennan negotiated the
1977 Nixon Interviews with British
journalist
David Frost; the interviews
paid Nixon $600,000, equal to approximately $2 million in 2009.
Brennan was initially concerned because Frost had the right to edit
the interview tapes however he wanted, and could thus edit them to
change the focus of what was said and potentially make Nixon look
bad; however, he was able to relax his concerns upon getting to
know Frost. The initial 24 hours of recorded interviews did not go
well for either side: Frost's side did not gain any new, meaningful
information on the Watergate scandal, while Nixon's side realized
they had not offered anything that would begin to repair his
shattered reputation. Frost's producer,
John
Birt, approached Brennan about extending the interview. Brennan
originally turned the idea down, but after discussing the situation
with his staff, agreed that Nixon should voluntarily go further and
that some expression of regret for Watergate needed to be put on
record. Nixon himself was resistant to the idea. Brennan explained
to him "if this ends the way it has, the world is going to say,
there goes the same old Nixon." Nixon was eventually convinced to
offer one more additional interviewing session; in the time in
between, Brennan observed Nixon prepare himself for a difficult
statement that would not be a confession or an admission of guilt,
yet would express regret for what had happened. However, once the
final interview began, Nixon became resistant again. Concerned that
the interviews would again be disappointing, Brennan held up a
hand-written notice to Frost that read "Let him talk." Frost
misread the sign as "Let us talk" and called for a break. During
the short interval, Nixon's team persuaded him to overcome his
reticence and make a statement of regret; Frost, meanwhile, was
persuaded to take a more sympathetic tone. On return from the
break, Frost coaxed Nixon into conceding that he had participated
in the cover up and lied to the world about it, and that he had
"let the American people down." Frost's top researcher,
Robert Zelnick, credited the moment to
Nixon's staff.
The Nixon interviews drew the largest television audience for a
political interview in history. Those interviews became the basis
for a 2006
Tony Award-winning play,
entitled
Frost/Nixon,
which itself was turned into a 2008
Academy Award-nominated
movie of the same name. Brennan felt
Frost's own book about the interviews, which served as writer
Peter Morgan's basis for the play and
movie, was "fairly accurate"; however, he felt Morgan's scripts
were "a complete fiction" based on actual events.
Brennan was consulted for the film version. His input led the
set designer to remove a bar from the
Nixon house set (Nixon almost never drank); he also met with actor
Kevin Bacon, who played him in the film
(he was played by
Corey Johnson in the
original stage play). While accepting the film as a work of
fiction, he was displeased with two particular aspects of the film:
the film shows Nixon drunk at one point, and it showed him using
more frequent and different profanity than the real person ever
used. He also noted that a scene in the film, where he is portrayed
threatening Frost over the phone if he got the facts wrong, never
occurred and made up by Morgan for dramatic purposes; however, at
the time he did warn Frost, in person over lunch, not to re-edit
the footage to change the focus to make Nixon look bad. Journalist
Diane Sawyer, who helped Nixon prepare
for the interviews in 1977, noted that, unlike his portrayal as a
stern military personality in the film, Brennan is "the funniest
guy you ever met in your life, an irreverent, wonderful guy."
Later years
Brennan
currently resides in Palm Springs, California
and spends summers in Little
Compton, Rhode Island
. He is a
booster
for the
Providence College Friars
and donated his papers from his work for Nixon to the school's
archives. At his request, a Friars basketball jersey was placed in
his office set in the film
Frost/Nixon, but it was not
visible in the film.
References
- Michael Janusonis, Is Frost/Nixon true? Let's ask PC grad Jack Brennan
— he was there, The Providence Journal, January 23,
2009, Accessed January 25, 2009.
- Harry Benson, Ex-Leatherneck Jack Brennan Talks About Life with
the Former President He Still Chooses to Serve,
People, August 16, 1976, Accessed January 25, 2009.
- Jonathan Aitken, Nixon v Frost: The true story of what really
happened when a British journalist bullied a TV confession out of a
disgraced ex-President, Daily Mail, January 24, 2009,
Accessed January 27, 2009.
- Lynn Sherr, Diane Sawyer on Fact vs. Fiction in
Frost/Nixon, The Daily Beast, December 6, 2008, Accessed
January 27, 2009.