The
Outing of Deep Throat
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: A
Nation Arms Itself – For What?
As the 40th
anniversary of Watergate impends, we are to be bathed again in the
great myth and morality play about the finest hour in all of American
journalism.
The myth?
That two heroic
young reporters at the Washington Post, guided by a secret
source, a man of conscience they dubbed "Deep Throat," cracked the
case and broke the scandal wide open, where the FBI, U.S. prosecutors
and more experienced journalists floundered and failed.
Through their
tireless investigative reporting, they compelled the agencies of
government to treat Watergate as the unprecedented constitutional
crisis it was. No Pulitzer Prize was ever more deserved than the
one awarded the Post in 1973.
These young
journalists saved our republic!
However, the
myth, fabricated in All
the President's Men and affirmed by the 1976
film of the same name, with Robert Redford as Bob Woodward and
Dustin Hoffman as Carl Bernstein, has a Hellfire missile coming
its way.
Leak:
Why Mark Felt Became Deep Throat is an exhaustive study
of the reporting of Woodward and Bernstein and the leaking by the
FBI's Mark Felt, whose identify as Deep Throat was revealed in 2005.
Leak
author Max Holland zeroes in on the last great unanswered question
of Watergate: Why did Felt, an FBI No. 2 on the short list to succeed
J. Edgar Hoover, risk reputation and career to leak secrets to the
Post?
Woodward and
Bernstein paint Deep Throat, writes Holland, as a "selfless high-ranking
official intent on exposing the lawlessness of the Nixon White House."
But this is self-serving nonsense.
The truth was
right in front of Woodward. His refusal to see it made him a willing
or witless collaborator in the ruin of the reputation and career
of an honorable pubic servant, Patrick Gray.
Felt was consumed
by anger and ambition. When Hoover died, a month before the break-in,
Felt, who had toadied to Hoover, saw himself as Hoover's successor.
But President Nixon went outside the bureau to name Gray from the
Department of Justice acting director.
Concealing
his rage and resentment, Felt wormed himself into Gray's confidence,
and then set out to destroy Gray.
Felt's method:
Leak discoveries of the Watergate investigation to a cub reporter
at the Post, which everybody in Washington read, rather than
to veteran journalists known to be FBI outlets.
This would
cover Felt's tracks.
Published in
the Post, the leaks of what the FBI was uncovering would
enrage Nixon and make Gray appear an incompetent unable to conduct
a professional investigation. This would make it unlikely that Nixon
would ever send Gray's name to the Senate for confirmation as permanent
director.
And if Gray,
an outsider, fell because he couldn't keep the FBI from leaking,
Nixon might turn to Felt, the ranking insider who could button up
the bureau like Hoover did.
By ingratiating
himself with Gray as he set out to discredit and destroy him, Felt
expected that when Gray was passed over by Nixon, he would recommend
to Nixon that he appoint his loyal deputy, Felt, as director.
Even if cynical
and vicious, the scheme was clever.
Until Nixon
found out Felt was the leaker in late 1972, he was considering Felt
for the top job. Felt's machinations and deceptions at the apex
of the FBI make Nixon's White House appear in retrospect to have
been a cloistered convent of Carmelite nuns.
More revolting
than the ruin of Gray's reputation was what Felt did to the good
name of the bureau he professed to love. By leaking what agents
were learning about Watergate, he was discrediting the FBI.
Inside the
government, he made the FBI look like an agency of bumblers who
could not keep secrets. Outside the government, the FBI looked like
a three-toed sloth, while a fleet-footed and fearless Washington
Post was unearthing the truth.
The FBI appeared
beaten at every turn by the brilliant Post, when it was the
FBI's homework Felt was stealing and the Post was cribbing.
Woodward and
Bernstein were glorified stenographers.
And though
Deep Throat was portrayed as a man sickened by the wiretaps and
break-ins by the White House, Felt himself, writes Holland, "authorized
illegal surreptitious entries into the homes of people associated
with the Weather Underground."
In 1979, Felt
was prosecuted and convicted and then pardoned by Reagan.
In The
Secret Man, Woodward calls Felt "a truth-teller." That's
quite a tribute to an FBI man who lied to Pat Gray, lied to all
of his FBI colleagues and lied to every journalist who asked him
for 30 years whether he was Deep Throat.
If
Felt was a hero, why did he not come forward to tell the country
what he had done and why?
Because he
was no hero.
Mark Felt was
a snake. He used the Post to destroy his rivals and advance
his ambitions, and the Post didn't care what his motives
were because Felt was assisting them in destroying their old enemy.
Yes, indeed,
the finest hour in American journalism.
April
11, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
The
Best of Patrick J. Buchanan
|