haven't had a chance to look at your link, Jim, in class this weekend.
But here's an interesting and thoughtful look at Deep Throat from A
Nixon administration insider...

http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/06/03/dean.deepthroat/

John Dean: Deep Throat revelation creates another mystery
By John W. Dean
FindLaw columnist
Special to CNN.com
Friday, June 3, 2005 Posted: 2:15 PM EDT (1815 GMT) 


      
 
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(FindLaw) -- The Bush administration prosecutes government officials
who leak sensitive information, even when that information is not
classified.

The Bush administration also is 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.

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.

A tribute to good sleuthing -- now ended
The game of guessing the identity of 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.

Adrian Havill, a freelance author who did some good digging, most
recently thought Throat could be no less than former president George
H. W. Bush.

Leonard Garment, my successor as Nixon White House counsel, focused
his considerable intellect and keen intuition on the issue, and first
thought Throat must have been former Nixon White House aide John
Sears. Later, however, Garment was convinced that Throat had to be a
composite (a hypothesis which has yet to be shown to be incorrect -
but has been denied by Woodward and Bernstein).

Similarly, yours truly (the senior Throat sleuth) has made several
incorrect runs at Throat's true identity. So I tip my hat to former
Los Angeles Times reporter Jim Mann, who figured it out, and wrote
about Felt in a 1992 Atlantic Monthly essay. Tim Noah of Slate was not
far behind, forcing Felt to deny.

When I took a hard look at Felt years ago, I concluded he could not
have known what Throat knew when the information was given to
Woodward, particularly since he was gone from the FBI at the end, and
scratched him off the list of viable candidates.

In fact, so sure was I that, even after reading the Vanity Fair piece
and before Woodward had confirmed Felt's identity, I bet an NBC news
person $100 it was not Felt, the morning the Vanity Fair story broke.

Fortunately, though, I knew my bet was covered, for I'd made an early
wager, also for $100, with former Chicago Tribune investigative
reporter William Gaines. Gaines, who now teaches journalism at the
University of Illinois, has used Throat sleuthing as a teaching tool,
but I was confident that he was wrong in naming my former Nixon White
House deputy Fred Fielding as Throat.

Scrutiny of Throat and those at the Post
Woodward disliked this sleuthing. Now that the issue of Throat's
identity appears resolved, I suspect Woodward is going to be even less
enchanted with those who focus on his journalism. And Throat himself,
Mark Felt, is going to be probed as he might never have dreamed.

I'm among those who believe Woodward is truly one of the great
journalists. (Not an opinion shared by many of my former White House
colleagues.) No Washington reporter has so consistently had access to
those in power - meaning Woodward has often had uniquely compelling
stories to tell. And Woodward's reporting is fair and honest - one
reason he may maintain the access he has.

Still, Woodward's use of unidentified sources - a controversial
practice, and one now banned at Newsweek after the "Koran desecration
debacle" -- has been extreme. And because Woodward's key Watergate
source was unidentified, until now, no one could test his Watergate
reporting.

Bob once told me that when I learned who, in fact, Deep Throat was,
all my questions would be clarified. That, however, has not happened.
To the contrary, I only have more questions now that I know Throat was
Mark Felt.

I will raise a few of them here, in the hope of getting some answers,
while Woodward is still out and about doing talk shows.

But first, for those not following this story closely, a little
background is in order:

Felt's position -- and power -- during Watergate
At the time of Watergate, Mark Felt was the Deputy Director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. Former Director J. Edgar Hoover, who
had elevated Felt to this post, had died only weeks earlier. President
Nixon had selected the Assistant Attorney General of the Civil
Division, L. Patrick Gray, to serve as the Acting Director of the FBI.

Even before Hoover's death, however, Felt was for all practical
purposes running the FBI -- as Hoover wanted it run, with a few
exceptions. For example, when Hoover wanted to end surreptitious black
bag jobs (entries onto premises without a court warrant), Felt
continued them.

Later, Felt would be indicted and convicted by President Carter's
Justice Department for continuing the practice of illegal searches,
only to be pardoned by President Ronald Reagan for the practice. One
wonders if Felt would have been pardoned by Reagan had it been known
he was Deep Throat. Plus, I seriously doubt former President Richard
Nixon would have testified on Felt's behalf - as indeed he did -during
his trial, had he known of Felt's actions as Deep Throat. Deep Throat
had earned top ranking on Nixon's post-presidency enemies list (one
notch above yours truly.)

When Pat Gray became Acting Director of the FBI, I don't believe he
had a clue how to run the place. In fact, he did not really focus on
trying to do so. Rather, he spent much of his time traveling
throughout the country literally campaigning at various FBI Field
Offices to win the support of rank-and-file FBI agents for the job of
Director. Thus, during much of the Watergate investigation, Gray was
not even in Washington.

When I talked to Gray during the Watergate investigation, he typically
said he would have to check with Felt and get back to me. No one at
the Nixon White House believed Gray had any control whatsoever of the
FBI. To claim otherwise, as Felt apparently did with Woodward, is
absurd.

What Felt told Woodward
Notwithstanding the article in The Washington Post (from his
forthcoming book) about Mark Felt, Bob Woodward, so far, has told us
little of his working relationship with Felt. Given Felt's aging
memory, which is widely acknowledged to be less than razor sharp, it
will be Woodward's story -- not Felt's.

Yet we do know something about the information Felt, as Deep Throat,
provided to The Washington Post from Woodward's book, All The
President's Men. Woodward reports some fourteen meetings (depending on
how they are counted).

Recently, I went through the book again, and pulled out every fact --
or factoid -- that Throat/Felt shared with Woodward, and noted when
the information exchange had occurred. For a list of these facts - and
an indication of which of them I believe may well be untrue -- please
see the Appendix to this column.

This summary of what Throat told Woodward and when, according to All
The President's Men, is particularly illuminating now that we know
Throat's identity. It, along with a few more clues Woodward has
dropped since confirming Felt's role, raises new questions about the
Watergate investigations and about Felt's leaking to Woodward.

Here are just a few questions that need to be answered:

How could Felt get so many things wrong?
In his position as the No. 2 man in the FBI, and the man running the
Watergate investigation for the FBI, Felt saw virtually all the raw
data from the FBI's field investigations. In the few days since the
revelation of his identity, I have not had an opportunity to compare
the material from the FBI's Watergate investigation with the
information that Felt gave Woodward to see if it is possible to
determine how he got it wrong. But such a comparison will doubtless be
fascinating.

Woodward, it appears, was seldom in a position to correct information
that Felt gave him that was wrong. But when writing All The
President's Men, he did correct one major false statement from Felt.
Sometime in early May, 1973, Felt told Woodward "In early February,
[Patrick] Gray went to the White House and said, in effect, 'I'm
taking the rap on Watergate.' He got very angry and said he had done
his job and contained the investigation judiciously, that it was
unfair that he was being singled out to take the heat.

He implied that all hell could break loose if he wasn't able to stay
in the job permanently and keep the lid on. Nixon could have thought
this was a threat, though Gray is not that sort of guy. Whatever the
reason, the President agreed in a hurry and sent Gray's name up to the
Senate right away. Some of the top people in the White House were dead
set against it, they couldn't talk him out of it."

It appears that Felt has invented this statement out of whole cloth -
or was seriously misinformed. It never happened this way, as the Nixon
White House tapes make clear.

To reflect this, Woodward did add a footnote in this instance, stating
that Pat Gray's attorney advised Woodward that the suggestion Gray had
pressured or blackmailed Nixon was "outrageously false."

But most of Felt's bad information has never been corrected. In fact,
a few writers about the period have quoted Felt's bad information as
historical fact. As can be seen from the Appendix, some of these
inaccuracies are minor (although I doubt not so minor to persons
erroneously maligned by Felt). But some are not.

Given the complexity of Watergate, it is not difficult to understand
how Felt made some mistakes when meeting with Woodward in the dead of
the night. Yet in other instances, it is not easy to comprehend how
the No. 2 man in the FBI could have provided such bad information,
knowing it could become public. And why has Felt let this bad
information sit on the historical record for the past three decades?

My opinion as to which information, provided by Felt, is wrong is
based on my many years of reviewing great swathes and stacks of
documents about the Watergate investigation. The Appendix speaks for
itself. But here, allow me to flag just one (of several) particularly
egregious sessions where Felt gave Woodward appalling information,
apparently to try to manipulate Woodward and The Washington Post.

Was felt trying to frighten The Washington Post?
It must be noted, according to Woodward's reports, that Felt
frequently told Woodward -- falsely -- they he and The Washington Post
were under surveillance. And based on Woodward's most recent article
about Felt, it seems Felt equated Nixon with Hitler, and that he saw
the Watergate investigation as a Nazi hunt (harking back to his
pre-FBI days in the military).

A month before Felt retired from the FBI, he had one of his more
remarkable sessions with Woodward. On May 16, 1973 (as reported at
pages 317-18 of All The President's Men), Woodward says Felt has
become "transformed" by the Watergate investigation, and talks to him
almost in a monologue. When finished, Felt departs; Woodward wrote it
all down in a notebook, which he later typed out for Bernstein.

It is one of the most dramatic scenes in the movie, "All The
President's Men": With a Rachmaninoff piano concerto playing in the
background, a frightened Woodward types his notes from this session
with Felt. Woodward's dread is understandable. The No. 2 man at the
FBI has told him - now, it clearly seems, falsely -- "Everyone's life
is in danger . . . electronic surveillance is going on and we had
better watch it. The CIA is doing it." The CIA role in Watergate was
investigated, and had this occurred, it would be known today.

The report continues: "Dean talked with Senator Baker after [the]
Watergate committee formed and Baker is in the bag completely,
reporting back directly to [the] White House." This is absolutely
false. I never spoke with Baker. And Baker certainly was not in the
bag.

Felt says that the "President threatened Dean personally and said if
he ever revealed the national security activities the President would
insure he went to jail." This never happened, a fact that can be
corroborated by Nixon's tapes.

As my Appendix notes, the flow of false facts continued. At one point
Felt says, "The covert activities involve the whole U.S. intelligence
community and are incredible," although he refused to give Woodward
any details, claiming "it is against the law." In fact, no such
operation was ever directed out of the Nixon White House.

Even more absurd are Felt's claims that those involved in the
Watergate cover up were "chipping in their own personal funds. And
Mitchell couldn't meet his quota [so] . . . they cut Mitchell loose."
Absurd, too, is his claim that "these guys in the White House were out
to make money and a few of them went wild trying."

Because Woodward could not quote Felt directly, none of the surprising
number of false statements highlighted in my Appendix made their way
into The Washington Post, but apparently Woodward believed them
sufficiently to include them in his book.

If Felt was not trying to manipulate the Post, it is not clear what he
was doing. Surely, he had to know - or at least, should have known --
that much of his information was worse than speculative; it was plain
wrong.

In short, the amount of bad information that Felt gave Woodward is
alarming. How and why did it happen?

Was Felt working alone?
Woodward reports -- in The Washington Post story recently excerpted
from his forthcoming book on Throat/Felt -- how he and Felt devised a
system indicating that Woodward needed to talk to Felt, since Felt did
not want him calling his office.

"If you keep the drapes in your apartment closed, open them and that
could signal me, [Felt] said. I could check each day or have them
checked, and if they were open we could meet that night at a
designated place." (Emphasis added.) But because Woodward liked to
keep his drapes open, they agreed that Woodward would place a
flowerpot with a road construction flag in it on his balcony as the
signal.

Clearly, Woodward suspects that Felt, who would have been extremely
busy running the day-to-day activities of the FBI, was not checking
his apartment balcony daily himself. Woodward writes, "How [Felt]
could have made a daily observation of my balcony is still a mystery
to me. * * * The Iraqi Embassy was down the street, and I thought it
possible that the FBI had surveillance or listening posts nearby.
Could Felt have had the counterintelligence agents regularly report on
the status of my flag and flowerpot? That seems highly unlikely, if
not impossible."

I don't think it is impossible at all. To the contrary, I believe that
Felt had to have one or more persons working with him. Thus, others in
the FBI must have known Felt was feeding The Washington Post.

This is evident from the last reported conversation in All The
President's Men between Throat and Woodward. Felt retired from the FBI
five months before this last contact during the first week of November
1973. As a result of the conversation, Woodward (breaking his prior
agreement not to quote Felt directly) uses his words in the Post
story, which told of gaps of "a suspicious nature" in Nixon's secret
tapes that "could lead someone to conclude that the tapes have been
tampered with."

How did Felt, no longer in the FBI, get information that "one or more
of the tapes contained deliberate erasures"? And when reporting this
story in The Washington Post, on November 8, 1973, why did Woodward
quote Felt as an anonymous "White House source"? Was Woodward by this
time aware that Felt had an agent inside the White House, or a mole?

What is Felt's legacy?
There has been much discussion, on television in particular, as to
whether Mark Felt is a hero or villain, not to mention what his legacy
will be now that we know Throat's identity. Clearly, he is history's
supreme whistleblower.

Because of my own involvement in Watergate, my knowledge of how those
who sought to discredit my testimony (particularly before the Nixon
tapes surfaced) operate, and my knowledge of the historical record, I
know that Nixon apologists will attack Felt -- and Woodward.

These attacks will be senseless (but that has long been the operative
word with Watergate). It is time to learn from what happened, not
refight battles Nixon has, for good reason, lost.

As my Appendix shows, the quality of Felt's information -- at least as
reported so far and what is found in All The President's Men -- is of
questionable value, given the amount of misinformation. It seems it
was Felt's position alone that gave Woodward, and in turn, Woodward's
editor at The Washington Post, Ben Bradlee, confidence in pursuing a
story that other news organizations initially largely ignored.
(Initially, Bradlee only knew Woodward had a source who was a high
official in the Department of Justice - and Bradlee did not learn more
until after Nixon had resigned).

To me, a true hero of Watergate is Ben Bradlee, who not only supported
Woodward and Bernstein, but had the trust of the Post's owner,
Katharine Graham. Initially, the rest of the national media and the
nation ignored the story. Although The Washington Post never "cracked
the case," their keeping the story in the news within the Beltway had
a great influence on the Congress, making it an important story. Had
Bradlee not done so, history might have been much different.

We still need to know much more about Mark Felt's activities, not to
mention his accomplices, to understand the Byzantine workings of the
FBI of that era. I hope Bob Woodward will answer these questions --
about which he has knowledge -- sooner rather than later, while there
is still interest in the story. For it is information that is as
uniquely relevant today -- with the current White House hell-bent on
returning the presidency to the imperial status it occupied before
Watergate.

  
John W. Dean, a FindLaw columnist, is the former counsel to President
Nixon who has written extensively on Watergate.
 



On 6/3/05, Jim Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Daily Show "Deep Throat" story (slow loading, but funny)
> 
> http://movies.crooksandliars.com/The_Daily_Show_Deep_Throat.mov
> 
> - Jim
> 
> 

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