Josh Marshall, who usually has the best intuition in the business, muses about the dark matter in the Plame universe:
. . . one thing seems more and more clear to me. This isn't a judgment made on particular reporting, more a sense or just intuition. So let me just briefly share it with you.
I think there's a whole part of the Times' story that we're not yet aware of. Let me try an analogy. If my memory is correct, when astronomers plot the location of black holes in space, they can't see them directly. It's impossible. No light escapes from them; so there's nothing to see. You can tell where they are by plotting the effects of their gravitation pull on nearby stars and celestial bodies.
There's something similar going on here.
When you read the Times Sunday article plus Miller's apologia, there's too much there that is simply inexplicable in terms of what we already know. Going into this mess Miller's reputation was already severely checkered and her journalistic judgment very much in question. And yet Sulzberger and Keller (the first in the van, the second following with an odd passivity) staked the reputation of the Times itself on her.
Simple poor judgment doesn't explain that for me. Something else is up.
I wrote to Josh regarding what that thing is composed of. Like astronomers, I can't tell what it means, but I think I can tell you what its composed of:
Josh:
Everyone’s speculation about this case revolves around what we know from the reporters, not from the internal records of the wrongdoers themselves. That’s why we have this strange situation. It appears that there is some evidence of a crime, but nothing worthy of a Special Prosecutor going all the way to the Supreme Court to compel the testimony of some of biggest names writing and appearing in and on some of the biggest news outlets in the country. We do know that the judges who looked at the cases thought it sufficiently grave to grant the Special Prosecutor the leeway to go as far as he has. We also know that the attorneys for some of the putative targets have felt it necessary to leak information certainly damaging to their own clients and to bring those clients again and again before the grand jury in a last ditch attempt to protect their clients or others within the Administration. This is not the behavior of attorneys who are holding really good hands. Finally, we have seen how truly sad the spin machine’s response to these damning allegations has been. Amateur hour, at best. The whiny denials were pathetic shadows of the bold posturing we are used to seeing from this group.
All of this leads to the conclusion that Patrick Fitzgerald either has a great hand, or is the best bluffer in the business. The fact that not a whisper has leaked from his camp indicates that he is a mixture of both. Some very important people are suddenly very, very afraid of what he might be holding. All of our speculations should therefore be informed by the fact that Fitzgerald has more than what the targets of the investigation can leak regarding their own testimony—he has at least some of the records of the principle alleged wrongdoers, which are what remains to be seen in this case.