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[[Image:DanielEllsberg-1.jpg|thumb|Daniel Ellsberg ©1990 Jock McDonald]]
{{lowercase|title=seaQuest DSV}}
{{infobox television |
| show_name = seaQuest DSV
| image = [[Image:Seaquest.gif|250px]]
| caption = The seaQuest logo
| format = [[Science fiction]]
| runtime = 45 minutes per episode
| creator = [[Rockne S. O'Bannon]]
| starring = [[Roy Scheider]]<br>[[Jonathan Brandis]]<br>[[Michael Ironside]]
| country = [[United States|USA]]
| network = [[NBC]]
| first_aired = [[12 September]], [[1993]]
| last_aired = [[9 June]], [[1996]]
| num_episodes = 55
| imdb_id = 0106126
| tv_com_id = 351
}}
'''seaQuest DSV''' was an American [[science fiction television]] series created by [[Rockne S. O'Bannon]]. It originally aired on [[NBC]] between 1993 and 1996. In its final season, it was renamed '''''seaQuest 2032'''''.
Set in "The Near Future", ''seaQuest'' mixed high drama with realistic scientific fact. It starred [[Roy Scheider]] (best known for his role as Police Chief Brody in ''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]'') as Nathan Bridger, captain of the [[eponym]]ous high-tech [[submarine]] ''seaQuest DSV 4600''.
 
'''Daniel Ellsberg''' (born [[April 7]], [[1931]]) is a [[Jewish]] American former military [[analyst]] who precipitated a national uproar in [[1971]] when he released the [[Pentagon Papers]], the [[United States Armed Forces | US military]]'s account of activities during the [[Vietnam War]], to ''[[The New York Times]]''. His release of the Pentagon Papers succeeded in substantially eroding public support for the war.
The series had a troubled beginning. Without the interest of [[Steven Spielberg]], who acted as an [[executive producer]], it might never have made it to the screen at all. Filming of the first season was marked by producer disputes, changes at the helm (on- and off-screen), and even an [[earthquake]]. On its debut, it was slated by the critics, who dubbed it "Voyage to the Bottom of the Ratings" (in reference to a similar 1960s TV series, ''[[Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea]]''), and criticised everything from the characterisation of the show's female characters to Darwin, the show's [[dolphin]]. Fans, however, loved it, and "Questies" tuned in to NBC every week to watch the show develop.
 
== Plot overview History==
Ellsberg grew up in [[Detroit]] and attended [[Cranbrook Kingswood School]], then attended [[Harvard University]], graduating with a [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]] in [[Economics]] in [[1959]] in which he described a paradox in [[decision theory]] now known as the [[Ellsberg paradox]]. He served as a company commander in the [[United States Marine Corps|Marine Corps]] for two years, and then became an analyst at the [[RAND|RAND Corporation]]. A committed [[Cold War]] warrior, he served in [[the Pentagon]] in [[1964]] under [[United States Secretary of Defense|Secretary of Defense]] [[Robert McNamara]]. He then served for two years in [[Vietnam]] as a civilian in the [[United States Department of State|State Department]], and became convinced that the Vietnam War was unwinnable. He further believed that nearly everyone in the Defense and State Departments knew, as he did, that the United States had no realistic chance of achieving victory in Vietnam, but that political considerations prevented them from saying so publicly. McNamara and others continued to state in press interviews that victory was "just around the corner". As the war continued to escalate, Ellsberg became deeply disillusioned.
 
==The Pentagon Papers==
The series follows the adventures of the high-tech [[submarine]] ''seaQuest'' operated by the United Earth Oceans organization (UEO), a global federation of nations, similar to the [[United Nations]], which was created following a major global conflict that occurred circa 2010. The ''seaQuest'' was built by NORPAC (a military organization mentioned in the pilot) and given to the UEO after its creation. The storyline begins in the year 2018, after mankind has exhausted almost all [[natural resources]], except for the ones on the [[ocean floor]]. Many new [[colonies]] have been established there and it's the job of the ''seaQuest'' and its crew to protect them from hostile nonaligned nations and to aid in mediating disputes.
Working again at Rand, Ellsberg managed to procure, [[Photocopying|photocopy]], and return a large number of [[Classified information|classified]] papers regarding the execution of the war. These documents later became collectively known as the [[Pentagon Papers]]. They revealed the knowledge, early on, that the war would not likely be won and that continuing the war would lead to many times more casualties than was admitted publicly. Further, the papers showed a deep cynicism towards the public and a disregard for the loss of life and injury suffered by soldiers and civilians.
 
Ellsberg knew that releasing these papers would most likely result in a conviction and sentence of many years in prison. Throughout [[1970]], Ellsberg covertly attempted to convince a few sympathetic [[United States Senate|Senators]] (among them [[J. William Fulbright]]) to release the Pentagon Papers on the Senate floor, because a Senator cannot be prosecuted for anything he says on record before the Senate. No Senator was willing to do so.
{{spoilers}}
 
Finally, Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to ''The New York Times''. On [[June 13]], [[1971]], the ''Times'' began publishing the first installment of the 7000 page document. For 15 days, NYT was prevented from publishing its articles on the orders of the Nixon administration. However, the Supreme Court soon ordered publication to resume freely. Although the ''Times'' did not reveal Ellsberg as their source, he knew that the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation|FBI]] would soon determine that he was the source of the leak. Ellsberg went underground, living secretly among like-minded people. He was not caught by the FBI, even though they were under enormous pressure from the [[Richard Nixon|Nixon]] Administration to find him.
== Changes after season 1 ==
 
===Fallout===
[[Image:seaquest3.jpg|frame|Roy Scheider and Steven Spielberg on the set of NBC's seaQuest DSV (1993)]]
The publication of the papers greatly detracted from public support for the war in Vietnam. This was a primary reason that President Nixon decided to make discrediting Ellsberg a high priority. Nixon's [[Oval Office]] tape from [[June 14]] shows [[H. R. Haldeman]] describing the situation to Nixon.
In the first season finale, the ''seaQuest'' was sacrificed by Bridger to prevent an [[ecological disaster]], and for a short time it was not known if the show would be renewed for another season. When it was decided the show would return, NBC and [[Universal Studios|Universal]] used this opportunity to tinker with the show's format. Both [[Royce D. Applegate]] and [[John D'Aquino]] were fired by NBC as the network wanted a younger cast for the show's second year (D'Aquino subsequently returned for a guest appearance in the third season). [[Stacy Haiduk]], who was not happy with her character's development, informed producers she did not wish to return if the show went on to a second season. [[Stephanie Beacham]], who as Dr. Kristin Westphalen was one of the first season's strongest characters, had been asked back for the second year, contrary to popular rumour; however, she quit when it was decided the show would move production from Los Angeles to Florida. (The move also changed the show's location from Pearl Harbor, to [[New Cape Quest]]) Beacham also blamed poor writing and continued fighting between the network and the show's producers as major reasons why she did not return. The series had suffered in the ratings, pitted as it was against ''[[Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman|Lois and Clark]]''.
 
: ''To the ordinary guy, all this is a bunch of gobbledygook. But out of the gobbledygook comes a very clear thing: you can't trust the government; you can't believe what they say; and you can't rely on their judgment. And the implicit infallibility of presidents, which has been an accepted thing in America, is badly hurt by this, because it shows that people do things the president wants to do even though it's wrong, and the president can be wrong.''
The studio wanted more [[sci-fi]] oriented episodes, a direction moved towards at the end of season one, when ''seaQuest'' encountered a million-year-old alien ship buried in the ocean floor. The marine trivia presentations during the credits by oceanographer [[Robert Ballard|Bob Ballard]] were now presented by the principal cast of the show. These changes did attract a new audience, but many of the original fans of the first season were unhappy at the show's change from "sci-fact" to "sci-fi" and abandoned the show.
 
The release of these papers was politically embarrassing, not only to the incumbent Nixon Administration, but also to the previous [[Lyndon Johnson|Johnson]] and [[John F. Kennedy|Kennedy]] Administrations. [[John N. Mitchell|John Mitchell]], Nixon's [[Attorney General]] almost immediately issued a telegram to the ''Times'' ordering that it halt publication. The ''Times'' refused, and the government brought suit against them.
By the end of season two, ''seaQuest DSV'' was again suffering, partly attributed to a decrease in the quality of the writing. The season's heavily sci-fi climax, "Splashdown", saw the crew inexplicably transported to another planet, where the majority of them died. Or so it seemed. The threat of cancellation loomed large. Universal took one last gamble with the series, and gave it one more chance.
 
Although the ''Times'' eventually won the trial before the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]], an [[appellate court]] ordered that the ''Times'' temporarily halt further publication. This was the first successful attempt by the federal government to restrain the publication of a newspaper; this was remarkable because [[prior restraint]] has historically been viewed as the most oppressive form of [[censorship]]. Ellsberg released the Pentagon Papers to other newspapers in rapid succession, making it clear to the government that they would have to obtain injunctions against every newspaper in the country to stop the story.
== Changes after season 2 ==
 
==Trial dismissed because of government misconduct, 1973==
Another revamp resulted in the third season, the series now called ''seaQuest 2032''. Once again, several cast changes took place. [[Roy Scheider]] had been vocal in his anger of the show's new direction and wanted out. However, Scheider had a contract with the network so it was decided that Bridger would make several appearances throughout the season. [[Rosalind Allen]] was fired as her character, Dr. Wendy Smith, proved to be very unpopular amongst fans. [[Marco Sanchez]] was also fired after NBC decided it wanted the principal cast number dropped from 10 to 8. [[Edward Kerr]] was fired for the same reason as Sanchez, however, he was asked to play his character for the first 5 episodes so they could kill him off for dramatic effect. The marine trivia presentations at the end of the show were cut. The ''seaQuest'' reappeared, its crew intact, ten years after their abduction at the end of season two. Captain Bridger stepped down to raise his grandson (although Scheider appeared in two further episodes of the season), and [[Michael Ironside]] entered the fray as the more militaristic Oliver Hudson, as the UEO faced the threat of the Macronesian Alliance. Much darker than the previous series, many felt that ''seaQuest'' had finally found its feet, successfully blending science, drama, and fantasy. However, Universal and NBC didn't see it that way, and after only 13 episodes, the series was cancelled.
On [[June 28]], Ellsberg publicly surrendered to the US Attorney's Office in [[Boston, Massachusetts]]. He was taken into custody believing he would spend the rest of his life in prison; he was charged with theft, conspiracy, and espionage.
 
In one of Nixon's actions against Ellsberg, [[G. Gordon Liddy]] and [[E. Howard Hunt]] broke into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office in [[September]] [[1971]], hoping to find information they could use to discredit him. The revelation of the break-in became part of the [[Watergate scandal]]. On [[May 3]], [[1972]], the White House secretly flew a dozen [[Cuba]]n [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] "assets" to [[Washington DC]] with orders to "totally incapacitate" Ellsberg. (They backed out because the crowd was too large.) Because of the gross governmental misconduct, all charges against Ellsberg were eventually dropped. The judge who presided over the trial, [[William M. Byrne]] died on January 12, 2006.
==DVD Release==
 
==Later life==
Fans of seaQuest have long been campaigning for the release of the series on DVD. Universal Studios, which owns the distribution rights to the series, had at one time stated that it had no plans to release the show on DVD.
Daniel Ellsberg has continued as a [[Activism|political activist]], giving lecture tours and speaking out about current events. Recently he garnered criticism from the [[George W. Bush]] administration for praising [[Katharine Gun]] and calling on others to leak any papers that reveal deception regarding the [[2003 invasion of Iraq]]. Ellsberg currently serves as a senior research associate at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]]'s [[Center for International Studies]].
 
Daniel Ellsberg also testified in 2004 at the [[conscientious objector]] hearing of [[Camilo Mejia]] at [[Fort Sill|Fort Sill, Oklahoma]].
Over the past few years, illegal [[bootleg recording]]s of the series have been sold on [[eBay]] and other online auction sites in VCD and DVD format. eBay believes that there have been more bootleg copies of seaQuest sold on their site than any other TV show or movie.{{dubious}}
 
''The Pentagon Papers'' is a 2003 movie documenting Ellsberg's life starting with his work for Rand Corp and ending with the day on which the judge declared his treason trial a mistrial.
In 2005 Universal announced that the first season of seaQuest would be released on DVD on [[December 26]], 2005 along with a week long marathon of the show on the SciFi channel. Universal credited the fans with changing their minds about a DVD release. However, some also credit the successful sales of bootleg copies of the series.
The DVD release included numerous deleted scenes as well as alternate versions of broadcast scenes.
 
Ellsberg was arrested in November 2005 for protesting against [[George W. Bush]]'s conduct of the [[War in Iraq]]. [http://news.yahoo.com/fc/world/antiwar_movement]
==Trivia==
 
He recently signed a public statement comparing [[George W. Bush]] to [[Hitler]] and calling for his "regime" to be driven from power. [http://www.worldcantwait.net/]
* The show's first season theme song was nominated for an [[Emmy Award]], and in 2000 was named the 48th best theme song of all time by [[TV Guide]].
* Two of the show's cast members died tragic deaths in 2003. [[Royce D. Applegate]] (Chief Manilow Crocker) died in a [[New Year's Day]] house fire, and [[Jonathan Brandis]] (Lucas Wolenczak) committed suicide in November.
* Edward Kerr's character, Lieutenant James Brody, was named after Police Chief Martin Brody, played by castmate Roy Scheider, in ''[[Jaws]]''.
* Unsure if the show would be picked up for another season upon the conclusion of the first, the writers decided to destroy the ''seaQuest'' in the first season finale; had the show been cancelled, it would have ended with a note of finality, and had it been picked up, another ''seaQuest'' could have been built. The latter eventually came to pass.
* Roy Scheider had not been pleased with the direction of the show in the second season (moving more away from science-fact and towards heavy science-fiction), and had been vocal about his displeasure with the show. Although he had a contract with NBC, Scheider was allowed to bow out in the third season, only obligated to reappear occasionally as a recurring character.
* Michael Ironside had considerable input as to the direction of the show during his season.
 
== Works by Daniel Ellsberg ==
==Cast==
* Daniel Ellsberg. 2002. ''Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers.'' New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-03030-9
*[[Roy Scheider]] as Captain Nathan Hale Bridger (seasons 1-2, 3x01, 3x07, 3x09)
* Daniel Ellsberg. 2001. ''Risk, Ambiguity and Decision'' Routledge. ISBN 0815340222 (Ellsberg's 1962 PhD was released as a book)
*[[Michael Ironside]] as Captain Oliver Hudson (season 3)
*[[Don Franklin]] as Commander Jonathan Ford
*[[Stacy Haiduk]] as Lt. Commander Katherine Hitchcock (season 1)
*[[Jonathan Brandis]] as [[Lucas Wolenczak]] (later Ensign Lucas Wolenczak, third season only)
*[[Stephanie Beacham]] as Dr. Kristin Westphalen (season 1)
*[[Rosalind Allen]] as Dr. Wendy Smith (season 2)
*[[Marco Sanchez]] as Sensor Chief Miguel Ortiz (seasons 1-2)
*[[Ted Raimi]] as Lieutenant Tim O'Neil
*[[Kathy Evison]] as Lieutenant Lenore Ellen "Lonnie" Henderson (seasons 2-3)
*[[John D'Aquino]] as Lieutenant Benjamin Krieg (season 1, 3x02)
*[[Edward Kerr]] as Lieutenant James Brody (seasons 2-3)
*[[Royce D. Applegate]] as Chief Manilow Crocker (season 1)
*[[Elise Neal]] as Lieutenant J.J. Fredericks (season 3)
*[[Peter DeLuise]] as Dagwood (seasons 2-3)
*[[Michael DeLuise]] as Seaman Anthony Piccolo (seasons 2-3)
*[[Dustin Nguyen]] as Chief William Shan (season 1)
*[[Richard Herd]] as Admiral/Secretary General William Noyce (season 1)
*[[Frank Welker]] as voice of Darwin
*[[Robert Ballard|Bob Ballard]] as himself, marine trivia during credits (season 1)
 
Additionally, ''seaQuest DSV'' employed a significant amount of guest stars familiar with the sci-fi genre, many of whom would go on to star in other shows. Notable guest stars included [[William Shatner]] ([[Captain Kirk]]), [[Charlton Heston]] (star of ''[[Planet of the Apes]]'' and other classic 1960s-70s SF films), [[Tim Russ]] (later [[Tuvok]] in ''[[Star Trek: Voyager]]''), [[Seth Green]] (later Scott Evil in the ''[[Austin Powers]]'' films and [[Chris Griffin]] on ''[[Family Guy]]''), [[Kent McCord]] (Captain Troy of ''[[Galactica 1980]]'', Unger in ''[[Airplane II: The Sequel]]'', and later [[Jack Crichton]] of O'Bannon's ''[[Farscape]]''), [[W. Morgan Sheppard]] (numerous appearances in ''[[Star Trek]]'', ''[[Max Headroom]]'' and ''[[Babylon 5]]''), and [[Mark Hamill]] of [[Star Wars]] fame. Additionally, Richard Herd is also notable for the recurring role of Admiral Owen Paris on the aforementioned ''Star Trek: Voyager''.
 
==Episodes==
===Season 1 (1993-1994)===
# To Be or Not to Be <small>(90 min)</small>
# The Devil's Window
# Treasures of the Mind
# Games
# Treasure of the Tonga Trench
# Brothers and Sisters
# Give Me Liberte
# Knight of Shadows
# Bad Water
# The Regulator
# seaWest
# Photon Bullet
# Better Than Martians
# Nothing But the Truth
# Greed for a Pirate's Dream
# Whale Song
# The Stinger
# Hide and Seek
# The Last Lap at Luxury
# Abalon
# Such Great Patience
# The Good Death
# Higher Power
 
Episodes were not aired in production order. As a result, the episode "Last Lap of Luxury", saw Admiral Noyce become the head of the UEO -- but it aired after two previous episodes in which Noyce had already appeared in this position.
 
===Season 2 (1994-1995)===
# Daggers <small>(90 min)</small>
# The Fear That Follows
# Sympathy for the Deep
# Vapors
# Playtime
# The Sincerest Form of Flattery
# By Any Other Name
# When We Dead Awaken
# Special Delivery
# Dead End
# Meltdown
# Lostland
# And Everthing Nice
# Dream Weaver
# Alone
# Watergate
# Something in the Air
# Dagger Redux
# Blindsided
# The Siamese Dream
# Splashdown
 
===Season 3 (1995-1996)===
# Brave New World
# In the Company of Ice and Profit
# Smoke on the Water
# Destination Terminal
# Chains of Command
# SpinDrift
# Equilibrium
# Resurrection
# Good Soldiers
# Second Chance
# Brainlock
# Reunion
# Weapons of War
 
=="Watergate" Song Lyrics==
This song was performed in the second season episode "Watergate" and was performed by guest star [[Dawn Robinson]].
 
To ease her grief with comfort,<br>
To say something,<br>
To turn her hurt and pain away,<br>
Sighs often,<br>
His heart being moved by his great love, most deeply,<br>
And still the Gods give orders,<br>
He obeys them,<br>
He goes back to his fleet,<br>
To his fleet.<br>
By night, by day, the portals of darkness stand open,<br>
It is easy by descending,<br>
Down to all the news,<br>
His heart being moved by his great love, most deeply,<br>
And still the Gods give orders,<br>
He obeys them,<br>
He goes back to his fleet,<br>
To his fleet.<br>
 
==External links==
* [http://www.ellsberg.net Official website for "''Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers''"]
===Official===
* [http://www.ellsberg.net/truthtellingproject.html The Truth-Telling Project] - Project formed by Ellsberg for [[whistleblower]]s
*[http://www.seaquestdsvdvd.com/ seaQuest DSV DVD Official Universal Studios Site]
* [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0330760/ The Pentagon Papers TV, (Ellsberg played by James Spader) 2003]
 
===Unofficial===
*[http://www.newcapequest.com/ New Cape Quest] - fan site
*[http://atlantisdsv.newcapequest.com/ Atlantis DSV] - fanfiction site
*[http://www.scifidirectory.net/cat-81.html SciFi Directory - seaQuest] - Links
*[http://www.tv.com/seaquest-dsv/show/351/summary.html TV.com - seaQuest DSV]
*[http://tviv.org/wiki/SeaQuest_DSV TVIV.org - seaQuest DSV] - show info and episode listing
*[http://www.ataritimes.com/nonmisc/fame.html An Extra's Story] - An extra remembers his time on the show. Photos.
 
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[[Category:Living people|Ellsberg, Daniel]]
[[Category:United States Marine Corps officers|Ellsberg, Daniel]]
[[Category:Vietnam War people|Ellsberg, Daniel]]
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[[Category:Watergate figures|Ellsberg, Daniel]]
[[Category:Whistleblowers|Ellsberg, Daniel]]
 
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Revision as of 00:11, 9 March 2006

File:DanielEllsberg-1.jpg
Daniel Ellsberg ©1990 Jock McDonald

Daniel Ellsberg (born April 7, 1931) is a Jewish American former military analyst who precipitated a national uproar in 1971 when he released the Pentagon Papers, the US military's account of activities during the Vietnam War, to The New York Times. His release of the Pentagon Papers succeeded in substantially eroding public support for the war.

History

Ellsberg grew up in Detroit and attended Cranbrook Kingswood School, then attended Harvard University, graduating with a Ph.D. in Economics in 1959 in which he described a paradox in decision theory now known as the Ellsberg paradox. He served as a company commander in the Marine Corps for two years, and then became an analyst at the RAND Corporation. A committed Cold War warrior, he served in the Pentagon in 1964 under Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. He then served for two years in Vietnam as a civilian in the State Department, and became convinced that the Vietnam War was unwinnable. He further believed that nearly everyone in the Defense and State Departments knew, as he did, that the United States had no realistic chance of achieving victory in Vietnam, but that political considerations prevented them from saying so publicly. McNamara and others continued to state in press interviews that victory was "just around the corner". As the war continued to escalate, Ellsberg became deeply disillusioned.

The Pentagon Papers

Working again at Rand, Ellsberg managed to procure, photocopy, and return a large number of classified papers regarding the execution of the war. These documents later became collectively known as the Pentagon Papers. They revealed the knowledge, early on, that the war would not likely be won and that continuing the war would lead to many times more casualties than was admitted publicly. Further, the papers showed a deep cynicism towards the public and a disregard for the loss of life and injury suffered by soldiers and civilians.

Ellsberg knew that releasing these papers would most likely result in a conviction and sentence of many years in prison. Throughout 1970, Ellsberg covertly attempted to convince a few sympathetic Senators (among them J. William Fulbright) to release the Pentagon Papers on the Senate floor, because a Senator cannot be prosecuted for anything he says on record before the Senate. No Senator was willing to do so.

Finally, Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times. On June 13, 1971, the Times began publishing the first installment of the 7000 page document. For 15 days, NYT was prevented from publishing its articles on the orders of the Nixon administration. However, the Supreme Court soon ordered publication to resume freely. Although the Times did not reveal Ellsberg as their source, he knew that the FBI would soon determine that he was the source of the leak. Ellsberg went underground, living secretly among like-minded people. He was not caught by the FBI, even though they were under enormous pressure from the Nixon Administration to find him.

Fallout

The publication of the papers greatly detracted from public support for the war in Vietnam. This was a primary reason that President Nixon decided to make discrediting Ellsberg a high priority. Nixon's Oval Office tape from June 14 shows H. R. Haldeman describing the situation to Nixon.

To the ordinary guy, all this is a bunch of gobbledygook. But out of the gobbledygook comes a very clear thing: you can't trust the government; you can't believe what they say; and you can't rely on their judgment. And the implicit infallibility of presidents, which has been an accepted thing in America, is badly hurt by this, because it shows that people do things the president wants to do even though it's wrong, and the president can be wrong.

The release of these papers was politically embarrassing, not only to the incumbent Nixon Administration, but also to the previous Johnson and Kennedy Administrations. John Mitchell, Nixon's Attorney General almost immediately issued a telegram to the Times ordering that it halt publication. The Times refused, and the government brought suit against them.

Although the Times eventually won the trial before the Supreme Court, an appellate court ordered that the Times temporarily halt further publication. This was the first successful attempt by the federal government to restrain the publication of a newspaper; this was remarkable because prior restraint has historically been viewed as the most oppressive form of censorship. Ellsberg released the Pentagon Papers to other newspapers in rapid succession, making it clear to the government that they would have to obtain injunctions against every newspaper in the country to stop the story.

Trial dismissed because of government misconduct, 1973

On June 28, Ellsberg publicly surrendered to the US Attorney's Office in Boston, Massachusetts. He was taken into custody believing he would spend the rest of his life in prison; he was charged with theft, conspiracy, and espionage.

In one of Nixon's actions against Ellsberg, G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard Hunt broke into Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office in September 1971, hoping to find information they could use to discredit him. The revelation of the break-in became part of the Watergate scandal. On May 3, 1972, the White House secretly flew a dozen Cuban CIA "assets" to Washington DC with orders to "totally incapacitate" Ellsberg. (They backed out because the crowd was too large.) Because of the gross governmental misconduct, all charges against Ellsberg were eventually dropped. The judge who presided over the trial, William M. Byrne died on January 12, 2006.

Later life

Daniel Ellsberg has continued as a political activist, giving lecture tours and speaking out about current events. Recently he garnered criticism from the George W. Bush administration for praising Katharine Gun and calling on others to leak any papers that reveal deception regarding the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Ellsberg currently serves as a senior research associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Center for International Studies.

Daniel Ellsberg also testified in 2004 at the conscientious objector hearing of Camilo Mejia at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.

The Pentagon Papers is a 2003 movie documenting Ellsberg's life starting with his work for Rand Corp and ending with the day on which the judge declared his treason trial a mistrial.

Ellsberg was arrested in November 2005 for protesting against George W. Bush's conduct of the War in Iraq. [1]

He recently signed a public statement comparing George W. Bush to Hitler and calling for his "regime" to be driven from power. [2]

Works by Daniel Ellsberg

  • Daniel Ellsberg. 2002. Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-03030-9
  • Daniel Ellsberg. 2001. Risk, Ambiguity and Decision Routledge. ISBN 0815340222 (Ellsberg's 1962 PhD was released as a book)

External links