The revelation of Deep Throat's identity has only created more mysteries
Salon.com | Guessing game
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By John W. Dean
June 7, 2005 | The Bush administration prosecutes government officials who leak sensitive information, even when that information is not classified -- as I noted in my column on Jonathan Randal. The administration is also prepared to send reporters to jail when they refuse to reveal their sources to a grand jury, as I noted in another column.
I doubt the Justice Department will go after W. Mark Felt -- the 91-year-old former deputy director of the FBI -- even if he is the greatest leaker in American political history. Still, in the context of the administration's stances on leaking, the surfacing of Deep Throat at this time is rather ironic.
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Bob Woodward (and Carl Bernstein) have confirmed the Vanity Fair story, identifying W. Mark Felt as their legendary Watergate source. The best-kept secret in Washington, for three decades, is no more.
But this is not to say the mystery is resolved. To the contrary, while Mark Felt is alive, his memory for the details of his relationship with Woodward seems to be all but gone. So the revelation of his identity raises many new questions that it seems Felt himself will not be able to answer.
The game of guessing the identity of Deep Throat, which moved from the parlors of Washington to serious inquiry during the last 30 years, is over. A number of us who were fascinated by the inscrutability of it all have been forced into retirement."
Link... (You will need a Salon subscription or day pass to view the article)
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By John W. Dean
June 7, 2005 | The Bush administration prosecutes government officials who leak sensitive information, even when that information is not classified -- as I noted in my column on Jonathan Randal. The administration is also prepared to send reporters to jail when they refuse to reveal their sources to a grand jury, as I noted in another column.
I doubt the Justice Department will go after W. Mark Felt -- the 91-year-old former deputy director of the FBI -- even if he is the greatest leaker in American political history. Still, in the context of the administration's stances on leaking, the surfacing of Deep Throat at this time is rather ironic.
click here
Bob Woodward (and Carl Bernstein) have confirmed the Vanity Fair story, identifying W. Mark Felt as their legendary Watergate source. The best-kept secret in Washington, for three decades, is no more.
But this is not to say the mystery is resolved. To the contrary, while Mark Felt is alive, his memory for the details of his relationship with Woodward seems to be all but gone. So the revelation of his identity raises many new questions that it seems Felt himself will not be able to answer.
The game of guessing the identity of Deep Throat, which moved from the parlors of Washington to serious inquiry during the last 30 years, is over. A number of us who were fascinated by the inscrutability of it all have been forced into retirement."
Link... (You will need a Salon subscription or day pass to view the article)
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