Check into the Kristof article... apparently he's not so sure anymore that Wilson declared the documents forgeries... imagine that, a reporter... wrong.
So Kristof's doubts mean that the Pincus article (Washington Post, June 14, 2003) was inaccurate? Wilson himself has not claimed such.
Also, Wilson gave an evening keynote lecture to the Education for Peace in Iraq Center (EPIC) on June 14, 2003. In his lecture, he said, in part: “I just want to assure you that that American ambassador who has been cited in reports in the New York Times and in the Washington Post …” Wilson knew who the American ambassador was who was cited in the Washington Post—him.
Therefore, since his statement to EPIC shows that that American ambassador was the same for both the NYT and Washington Post articles, that means Wilson was also the so-called anonymous source for the NYT article. Only now he’s not anonymous. So you cannot truthfully say that the “anonymous source” is just a CLAIM by the reporters.
And why didn't Wilson clear up the mess at that time? The NYT article was published May 6, 2003, and the WP article was published June 14, 2003, more than a month later.
That blog you linked to shows a letter from Wilson. And what is that letter? Another group of claims! You are using circular reasoning. You’re attempting to prove Wilson’s claims by using Wilson’s claims.
In the Senate report, Wilson says he “misspoke” to Pincus. Reading documents means you have them in your hands or on a computer. It takes time and effort to evaluate them so you can tell whether they are legitimate or forgeries. It is an active process. It is hard work. You compare the info to other sources of info. You mentally evaluate various items individually and again in various relationships to each other. And you reach a conclusion. You don’t read those kinds of documents and determine they are forgeries in 30 seconds.
Wilson claimed he did things that didn’t happen. He claimed he did things that are PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE for him to have done. He didn’t see the documents. He didn’t evaluate the documents. He didn’t do anything with the documents at all: no touching, no reading, no evaluating, no drawing of conclusions. Nothing.
Misspoke? His spin on this issue is like me telling my buddies on June 14, 2003, “I went to the gun store, bought that Colt M4 they had, bought some ammo, and spent the rest of the day cleaning the gun and checking it out.” And then on July 6, 2003—22 days later—saying, “I misspoke when I said I did all those things. I did none of them. In fact, I didn’t even go to the gun store.”
In other words, none of those things was true. The claimed events didn’t happen. It was PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE for them to happen because I never went to the gun store, just like Wilson never saw the documents. Where I come from, and everywhere I’ve been, that kind of discrepancy is called “a lie.”
Wilson clearly lied, and I don’t trust what he says. And until you resolve the issue of your inaccurate and misleading statement, your statements don't hold water for me.