Whatever their motives, Mark (Deep Throat) Felt; Woodstein (Bob and Carl); Judge John Sirica, who refused to accept the notion that the Watergate break-in began and ended with the men arrested inside the Watergate complex (and the two White House aides who recruited them); Senator Sam Ervin, with the battered copy of the US Constitution in his pocket; Senator Howard Baker, who asked what did the President know and when did he know it; John Dean, who did much to answer that question--all of these, and a constitutional process involving a cast of thousands, deserve history's thanks for helping to reveal that something was rotten in President Nixon's Beltway.
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The Experts Speak on Iraq
Victor Navasky & Christopher Cerf: To mark the fifth anniversary of the Iraq War, some daily inspiration from the experts who led us there.
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Who Said the War Would Pay for Itself?...
Victor Navasky & Christopher Cerf: Unwise words from the "experts" who promised a cost-free war.
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Fourteen Little Words
Victor Navasky: First Amendment biographer Anthony Lewis brings glad tidings: despite Bush, US commitment to free speech "is no longer in doubt."
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Hiss In History
Victor Navasky: Although many historians have condemned Alger Hiss as a Soviet spy, the facts of his story remain obscure.
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Hiss in History
Victor Navasky: Although many historians have condemned Alger Hiss as a Soviet spy, the facts of his story remain obscure.
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Schlesinger and 'The Nation'
Victor Navasky: Remembering an eminent activist historian whose passing has left the public sphere much poorer.
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Mission to Caracas
Victor Navasky: Hugo Chávez's critics may mock his ideas of twenty-first-century socialism as empty rhetoric. Perhaps it's more like magical realism--still a fiction, but one to be nourished as a realizable ideal.
So while there is much room for congratulation on the self (or family) outing of Deep Throat and all he represented, and for appropriate ruminating on the benefits and problematics of journalists' using anonymous sources, there are even more urgent/ample grounds for cogitation on the underlying lessons for the democratic process of this bizarre episode in our history.
Some years ago, in his magisterial study The Age of Surveillance, the late Frank Donner, a frequent contributor to this magazine, documented how in the pre-Watergate years the FBI "twisted history's arm" and won itself a permanent grant of authority to engage in subversive-activities intelligence, a franchise it regularly abused. Nor was the bureau alone in pursuing this pattern of systemic intrusion on liberty in the name of national safety and the use of "intelligence"--in theory, the gathering of information--as an instrument of control. Those same years saw the CIA exploit countersubversion to discredit the peace movement for political purposes, even as it institutionalized its own illegal domestic surveillance system.
At a moment when Congress is asked to sign a new blank check to the intelligence community in the name of combating the latest threat to national safety (a k a the renewal of the USA Patriot Act), it is imperative to acknowledge these radical departures from the democratic process if we are to avoid their recurrence. Speculation on whether Deep Throat is a good guy or a bad guy is fun and games, but ultimately a distraction from this more critical focus.

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