by Les Payne
The best-kept secret of the Watergate scandal is that it was Bob Woodward - not the newly revealed FBI official Mark Felt - who was in fact the real "Deep Throat." The revelations of Woodward's new book, "The Secret Man," confirm this in detailing the relationship between the veteran agent and the young Washington Post reporter.
It is the journalist, to stick with the porn-flick metaphor,
who figuratively and literally
emerges as the Linda Lovelace of the piece.
Woodward came humbly on his knees to Deputy Director Felt in search of guidance, news tips and proper names. <SNIP> Felt, on the other hand, was never much given to humility. The older man clearly maintained control. He set the rules of engagement, insisted upon ruses and decided exactly what details to reveal and when. "He was stern and strict about those rules, Woodward wrote, "which he issued with a booming, insistent voice. I promised." <SNIP> "I suspect that
in Felt's mind," Woodward wrote, "
I was his agent."
Indeed he was. Upon first meeting Felt at the White House as a Navy courier, Woodward tells us he essentially began developing the FBI man as a mentor and subsequent Watergate source dubbed "Deep Throat." We haven't heard Felt's side of this encounter yet, but it's a good bet that
this veteran spymaster was also
sizing up his young protégé as a "recruit" for his own purposes down the line.
In Woodward, he had gained an influential voice whispering into the ears of millions of Americans. His agenda was not always apparent when dealing with The Washington Post, but on several occasions it was clear and present. <SNIP> Felt gleefully floated damaging stories <against L. Patrick Gray> that would clear the way for <Felt> being named director. <SNIP>
In addition, Felt held a general distaste for the Nixon White House - which, as an insider, he knew to be riddled with corruption, and, according to Woodward, a menace to individual liberties. (As a key black-bag operator for director Hoover, however, Felt himself was not exactly a guardian of civil liberties.) <SNIP> Assessing the complex relationship, Woodward said, "
I used Mark Felt; reporters always use sources. ... At the same time, Mark Felt was using me."
More at
http://www.newsday.com/news/opinion/ny-oppay164346283jul17,0,7774600.column?coll=ny-viewpoints-headlines