It was back on March 13 that Donald Trump was asked if he felt any responsibility for the inadequate response to the coronavirus.
“I don’t take responsibility at all,” Trump said. You can read that story by Politico HERE.
The same question of responsibility might well be posed to author Bob Woodward after his jarring revelations in his new book RAGE.
Trump is now characteristically calling the book a ”POLITICAL HIT JOB”, never mind that it was based on 18 separate recorded interviews with Trump.
(As an aside, it’s entirely fair to also ask that question of Nancy Pelosi who, despite a shutdown of businesses during the pandemic, nevertheless used her position to wrangle an appointment to have her hair done at her favorite salon and then whined that she was “set up” when the owner of the salon videotaped her.)
But back to the Woodward book. Woodward is a Pulitzer Prize-winner who, along with fellow Washington Post reporter Carl Bernstein, was as responsible (there’s that word again) for the downfall of the morally and legally corrupt Nixon administration.
Trump confided to Woodward way back on February 7 that he knew the coronavirus was “deadly stuff” with the potential to be five times more deadly than the flu but that he wanted to ”PLAY IT DOWN” in order to avoid creating a public panic.
There’s plenty of blame to go around on this fiasco. White House trade adviser PETER NAVARRO and Chief of Staff MICK MULVANEY warned Trump as early as Jan. 29 of a “full-blown COVID-19 pandemic that could infect as many as 100 million Americans.”
National security adviser ROBERT O’BRIEN told Trump in late January that the coronavirus “will be the biggest national security threat you face in your presidency.”
In fact, Trump received more than half-a-dozen WARNINGS from various other members of his administration of the potential dangers of a pandemic, but nothing was done.
But as a grizzled old reporter with more than half-a-century of writing under my belt, I must admit I have a lot of problems with Woodward, who I admired for the work he and Bernstein did 46 years ago. I have both the book and the DVD of All the President’s Men. I even reviewed the movie for the Baton Rouge State-Times back in 1976 and in my naïve exuberance, predicted it would an Academy Award. (It didn’t.)
Like the public officials we report on, we share a responsibility to keep those who trust us fully informed of the truth. Woodward is no less guilty in failing to do that than Trump.
It is my conviction that Woodward can justifiably be classified with the likes of John Bolton, who refused to testify in hearings leading up to Trump’s impeachment even as he was preparing to launch his tell-all book about the Trump administration, putting his personal financial considerations above those of American citizens. Bottom line, he came off as fearing the sales of The Room Where It Happened might be dampened if he were to reveal what he knew in congressional testimony.
Likewise, Woodward knew as early as Feb. 7 that the corona virus was a deadly threat to not just America, but to the world. Yet, he said nothing. His justification of his silence being that he had no idea of the source of Trump’s information and that he was unsure of Trump was lying about that as he has so many things is a bit weak in retrospect, especially given the time span between Feb. 7 and the publication of his book.
It was Woodward, after all, that relied to heavily on his “Deep Throat” source, who turned out to be FBI agent Mark Felt (as revealed by Felt himself shortly before his 2008 death) for much of his material while working with Bernstein on the Nixon Watergate stories. So, if he could rely on unsubstantiated information back then, what prevented him from going public with information so crucial about the coronavirus pandemic?
I can come up with only one logical reason and it doesn’t reflect well on Woodward.
If politicians are to be held accountable by the media, the media should be no less accountable to the public and in this regard, Woodward failed because like Bolton, he appears to have placed his financial interests before those of the American people.
Some of the blood for more than 190,000 deaths is on his hands.
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