6/02/2005 03:44:00 PM|||kim|||
It goes without saying (but, I'll go ahead and say it, anyway) that today's Birth of Deep Throat article is a real page-turner, certainly up there with le Carre's Among Friends.
As we learn from this (Washington Post) Ben Bradlee on-line chat, Woodward didn't just dash this off since Tuesday, it's part of an article that Bradlee and Woodward had agreed on for the future passing of Mark Felt.
Also in the on-line chat was this Q&A:
Las Vegas, Nev.: I watched your Nightline interview with great interest. In explaining how you were all but convinced Nixon was lying, you said, "That national security red flag is -- I've heard it before and I'm just sick of it."
In saying,"I'm just sick of it," it sounded for all the world as though you were about to draw a parallel between Nixon's lies and rationalizations and others you're hearing in 2005.
Your thoughts on this? Thank you.
Ben Bradlee: It's very hard to stand up to the government which is saying that publication will threaten national security. People don't seem to realize that reporters and editors know something about national security and care deeply about it. I spent almost four years on a destroyer in the Pacific ocean during World War II and it makes my blood boil when some guy who maybe ran an insurance company in the Midwest becomes an assistant secretary of this or that and tells me about national security.
It is my experience that most claims of national security are part of a campaign to avoid telling the truth. Remember that Nixon's first comment about Watergate claimed that he was going to be unable to answer questions about Watergate because Watergate involved "matters of national security." That was baloney and Nixon knew it, but the charge convinced some people otherwise. Too bad.
I have no idea how many times the Bush administration has played the national security wildcard, but it must lay somewhere in the gap between countably infinite and uncountably infinite. Is winning so important to Republicans that they're willing to overlook that Bush, Cheney, Rove et al may have been just as Nixonian as Nixon in the lead up to the Iraq War? Are they so afraid of the answer that they're not even willing to ask the question?|||111774273667895266|||Woodstein le Carre Save Template Changes.