On Jan. 17, 1973, codefendant Anthony Russo (right) listened as Daniel Ellsberg gave a news conference in Los Angeles.
(Associated Press/file)
Anthony J. Russo, 71; aided in leak of Pentagon Papers
On Jan. 17, 1973, codefendant Anthony Russo (right) listened as Daniel Ellsberg gave a news conference in Los Angeles.
(Associated Press/file)
LOS ANGELES - Anthony J. Russo, a Rand researcher in the late 1960s who encouraged Daniel Ellsberg to leak the Pentagon Papers and stood trial with him in the Vietnam War-era case that triggered debates over freedom of the press and hastened the fall of a president, has died. He was 71.
Mr. Russo, who lived in Santa Monica, Calif., for many years, died Wednesday of natural causes in his native Suffolk, Va., according to a spokesman for the Suffolk Police Department. Mr. Russo had been in poor health since a heart attack three years ago.
In 1971 Mr. Russo helped Ellsberg copy a classified government history of the Vietnam War that Ellsberg later supplied to The New York Times and other newspapers. Called the Pentagon Papers after the Times published extensive excerpts and analysis, the secret study provided evidence of lying by government officials, including several presidents, about the scope and purposes of the war.
Ellsberg went on to become an antiwar icon, sought-after lecturer, and author, but Mr. Russo was relegated to a few lines in history books. His supporting role status - "the notion that I had just been a Xeroxer" - rankled him to the end.
Mr. Russo was born in Suffolk. He studied aerophysics at Virginia Tech in the late 1950s before earning a scholarship to Princeton University, where he shifted his focus to engineering and public affairs. In a foreign relations course during his third year at Princeton, he learned about the Rand Corp.'s work in Vietnam. The tumult of the '60s was underway and Mr. Russo decided to leave school and apply to Rand.
At the Santa Monica think tank Mr. Russo was assigned to the Viet Cong Morale and Motivation Project. His research in Vietnam radicalized him. His support of the Viet Cong, the communist army opposed by the United States and South Vietnamese government, was controversial and sparked the interest of Ellsberg, a former Defense Department analyst who by 1968 was also working at Rand.
Ellsberg, who described Mr. Russo as his best friend at Rand, asked his colleague to brief him on the Viet Cong project. "I explained how the so-called enemy, the Viet Cong, and the North Vietnamese, were actually the legitimate parties and how the US presence was illegal, immoral, and unwise. I supplied him with reams of documentation," Mr. Russo later wrote in a personal account of the period. He was fired from Rand a short time later.
During one conversation with Ellsberg, he learned of a secret study commissioned by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara that chronicled the origins of the war. Ellsberg said it showed that the United States had falsely charged North Vietnam with an act of unprovoked aggression in the Gulf of Tonkin, the basis for President Johnson's broadening of US involvement in the war in 1964.
Mr. Russo said that when he heard about the fabrication of the Tonkin Gulf incident, he urged Ellsberg to "turn that over to the newspapers."
What followed were several weeks of furious copying behind locked doors. The documents were given to New York Times reporter Neil Sheehan in March 1971. When the excerpts began running in June, the FBI launched a manhunt for Ellsberg and the Nixon administration made an unprecedented attempt to restrain the newspaper from publishing any more of the information Ellsberg had provided.
Mr. Russo was harassed by police and followed. When he was subpoenaed by a grand jury, he refused to testify against Ellsberg and was jailed for 45 days. A few days before Christmas 1971, both men were indicted on charges of conspiracy, theft, and espionage.
Although Mr. Russo's name was listed before Ellsberg's in the court papers filed by the government, everyone called it the Ellsberg trial. This description only added insult to injury, as far as Mr. Russo was concerned. He believed that Ellsberg wanted to keep the limelight to himself and saw Mr. Russo as "horning in on his thing."
The codefendants were quite unalike in many ways. Mr. Russo was large and rumpled, Ellsberg trim and elegant. Mr. Russo spoke in the rhetoric of a left-wing rebel, while Ellsberg, a former Marine, was far more measured.
The case against them was dismissed on May 11, 1973, after the court learned that a covert unit had broken into the offices of Ellsberg's psychiatrist looking for information to discredit the star defendant. The break-in had been committed by operatives from the White House, whose crimes had come at the behest of Nixon and his top aides. Nixon ultimately resigned from office on August 9, 1974.
Mr. Russo, who worked for the Los Angeles County probation department after leaving Rand, returned to work for the county when the trial was over. After his retirement and his mother's death in the early 1990s, he moved back to Suffolk but continued as an activist for peace and other causes. He was married and divorced twice and had no children.
On Thursday, Ellsberg sought to give his former colleague and codefendant his due. "The fact is I will be eternally grateful to Tony for his courage and partnership in what proved to be a useful action," Ellsberg said. "He set an example of willingness to risk everything for his country and for the Vietnam that he loved that very few, unfortunately, have emulated."![]()


