Releasing 4100 pages of “Top Secret” military reports into the public record might ruffle a few feathers in the U. S. government. No, not talking about WikiLeaks release of army intelligence in 2010 — this was June 29, 1971, when freshman U.S. Senator Mike Gravel from Alaska entered the so-called “Pentagon Papers“, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara’s comprehensive study of the United States involvement in the Vietnam War, into public record.
Gravel co-authored a memoir about his experiences: “A Political Odyssey: The Rise of American Militarism and One Man’s Fight to Stop It“, and his daughter, Lynne Mosier, talks to Jan Miyasaki about the activist’s history following Gravel’s recent death at the age of 91.