All Fall Down

Bob Woodward, the one time investigative reporter and Watergate star, and more lately propagandist and apologist for the powerful, has been an agressive critic of the Fitzgerald investigation into the Plame/Wilson affair. Now it turns out that he was apparently the very first reporter told of Wilson's identity.

To me there is something particularly loathsome about the reporter who sells out. The fact that Woodward was a particularly accomplished and famous reporter is an aggravating rather than mitigating circumstance.

It seems to me that the stories of Bob and Judy, and perhaps others, are part of a commentary on the sorry state of American journalism today.

UPDATE: Let me make clear what I object to in Woodward's current behavior. He has been on the radio and on television criticizing the special prosecutor and the prosecution. A reporter who is a secret participant in a criminal activity (even though his own part was not criminal) is ethically way out of bounds in commenting or judging the investigation of that activity.

I don't know the answer to Wolfgang's question (see comments) but my guess is that Novak sang like a bird to the special prosecutor - but that's only a guess.

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