Deep Throat

DeepthroatthenY’know, I was just talking about how they got information in All The President’s Men.

One way I didn’t mention in that post was how Woodward got info from the source dubbed "Deep Throat."

Now come to find out that they’ve up and revealed who Deep Throat was/is.

YEE-HAW!

I love a real-life mystery, and I’ve been fascinated by who Deep Throat was for years. I read John Dean’s e-book trying to crack the mystery, and I’ve ready I don’t know how many articles on it.

Turns out he was a former #2 guy at the FBI named W. Mark Felt (above). That explains how he had the dirt he did: The FBI was investigating the Watergate break-in, and Felt had access to the info that the investigation was turning up. He then used that info to carefully help steer Woodward in the right direction.

At the behest of his family Felt, now 91, finally spilled the beans in A VANITY FAIR ARTICLE.

When I first encounted the claim in press reports yesterday, I was a bit hinky as the same accounts quoted Carl Bernstein (Woodward’s former partner and one of three people other than Throat himself to know Throat’s identity) refused to confirm that Felt was Throat, saying that the existing deal with Throat would be honored and his identity wouldn’t be revealed until his death.

This set off alarm bells for me that the identification might be fake, since Woodward has said that Throat’s identity would be revealed if Throat altered the terms of the agreement and allowed it to be known earlier.

Bernstein might have been simply playing for time, though, not wanting to confirm it on his own without consulting Woodward, who was the real contact for Deep Throat.

Or Bernstein might have been fearful that Felt was being pressured to do this by his family and was not now, at 91, in a proper frame of mind to make a fully free decision in the matter.

However that may be, late in the day yesterday Woodward, Bernstein, and Ben Bradley (the third person known to know Deep Throat’s identity) CONFIRMED THAT W. MARK FELT WAS INDEED DEEP THROAT.

Bradlee, who apparently cusses as much as Jason Robards does when portraying him in All The President’s Men, said: "The thing that stuns me is that the goddamn secret has lasted this long."

While the secret lasted, it wasn’t as if nobody had speculated that Felt was Deep Throat. Reportedly, he was the person Richard Nixon most suspected. Others suspected, too. And there was a brush of suspicion a while back when it was revealed that Bernstein’s son had blurted out the identification to a friend at summer camp. (Bernstein’s then-wife tried to smooth this over by claiming that the boy had just hear he "speculating" about Deep Throat’s identity.)

While I’m pleased that we now finally know Deep Throat’s identity–and that all those who claimed that there was no Deep Throat or that the character was a composite of different sources, despite vigorous denials by Woodward and company, have been shown wrong–I must confess that I’m a little disappointed.

I look forward to learning more about Felt, but I’d always secretly harbored a kind of hope that Deep Throat would be revealed to be someone with a more prominent public profile. For example, there was considerable speculation that Pat Buchannan was Deep Throat, and I always found this an intriguing suggestion. Buchannan is such a maverick that you could easily imagine him turning on Nixon if he felt his principles required it of him. A large number of other "high-name" guesses were also made for who Deep Throat was.

I think I was attracted to such suggestions simply because I knew the names of certain people being touted as possible Deep Throats. I didn’t turn as much attention to the theories that held Deep Throat was in the FBI or the CIA because, frankly, these people weren’t as famous and I didn’t know them, so it was less intriguing to think that they might be Deep Throat. I thus tended to hurry through analyses pointing to such individuals as possible candidates.

But all’s well that ends well, and we now know who Deep Throat was.

Though I’ll always harbor a suspicion that Deep Throat was really . . .  Hal Holbrook!

MORE ON DEEP THROAT.

AND MORE.

Author: Jimmy Akin

Jimmy was born in Texas, grew up nominally Protestant, but at age 20 experienced a profound conversion to Christ. Planning on becoming a Protestant seminary professor, he started an intensive study of the Bible. But the more he immersed himself in Scripture the more he found to support the Catholic faith, and in 1992 he entered the Catholic Church. His conversion story, "A Triumph and a Tragedy," is published in Surprised by Truth. Besides being an author, Jimmy is the Senior Apologist at Catholic Answers, a contributing editor to Catholic Answers Magazine, and a weekly guest on "Catholic Answers Live."

10 thoughts on “Deep Throat”

  1. Just like all those people who refuse to believe the Third Secret of Fatima really was released, there’ll now be people who think Felt was taking the fall for someone else.

  2. Jimmy;
    Not to rain on your parade, it was a great post, but since I like people to point out errors and typos in my own blog…
    I should point out that Pat Buchanan’s name has only one n after the first a, not two.

  3. David:
    Actually, there’s only one N BEFORE the Second A (excluding the word Pat) since there are indeed two N’s after the first A, just not in a row.
    Hey. You’re the one who got all technical… 🙂

  4. It was very interesting to hear George W. Bush’s comments on “Deep Throat”… considering his has been / is the most secretive and leakproof administrations in U.S. History. Just about everything has been “no comment”, “national security”, “need to know”, or released to the public on countless Friday afternoons when the press pretty much takes the weekend off and then by Monday am, it is buried under news of the weekend.
    Please God… raise up a “Deep Throat” for our generation and our time…to bring down this administration and save our Country, which I love very much. God bless the U.S. of America.

  5. I don’t have all kinds of respect for the reporters OR deep throat. First, the “investigative reporters” didn’t do some kind of hard hitting journalism with intense digging, etc. They had their story handed to them by someone in the intellegence community who had access to all that stuff anyways. They don’t deserve to be lauded as some kind of investigative powerhouse. Second…The guy committed a fellony in giving them that info. And he was actually convicted of, then pardoned of a felony, so it’s not like he’s new to the world of working for the nation’s top law enforcement agency and breaking a few on the side himself. Third, I have a feeling deep inside that he did it out of spite, because he didn’t get the #1 FBI position after Hoover kicked it. I don’t think it was about democrats/republicans, etc. I think “Deep Throat” was acting like a little kid with a grudge.

  6. Tammy:
    If you knew anything at all about the political detachment with which Federal law enforcement officers are compelled to operate, you can understand the absolute frustration when, for whatever sense of duty one may have, a major investigation is blocked from above for what is obviously purely political reasons. When on top of that, a career law enforcement officer like Hoover (whatever one may think of him) is replaced by a political appointee who doesn’t know his way to the men’s room down the hall, it adds insult to injury. Did the guy break the law? Probably. Then again, his other choice was to sit back and do nothing while the law was broken right in front of his nose.
    It’s a tougher choice than you might think.

  7. You mean it wasn’t Betsy and Arlene, and the movie _Dick_ wasn’t the truth? 😉

  8. I went through my “Watergate curiosity” phase some years ago, having lived through Watergate the first time as “why are these men getting in the way of my morning cartoons”. As a young adult, I made my way through G. Gordon Liddy’s bio, Chuck Colson’s bio, and of course, “All the President’s Men”. I’m pleased that this secret is finally revealed, but am disappointed that it wasn’t Alexander Haig. I was never very crazy about him. Anyway, I caught a Chuck Colson soundbite, where he says that his problem is with a lack of character on Felt’s part. He felt (sorry) that Felt should have approached Nixon personally first. Would Nixon have been approachable in this way? Or was he so paranoid that the guy would have been fired?

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