This is the sort of thing that is important to know, a little bit for its own sake and more for the sake of the light it sheds on what is possible to be true.
There is no reason to doubt the article, although I feel that Richard B. Frank doesn’t have a clue as to George Polk’s motives. Whatever they were, it is probably important for understanding what George Polk did. They are probably worse - or more cynical - than anything Frank cares to attribute to him. I feel it is highly doubtful that George Polk simply slipped into this because he once ran out of fuel.
It is clear that George Polk told different lies to different people - and was rather careful who he told what.
What’s really amazing is that he resorted to forgery. You wonder what other secrets he had and who and what kind of people he knew.
There may be even more interesting stories buried there, if you could find them out. Maybe there are clues scattered in places. I would think it affected his writing (but it won’t be too obvious)
By the way, and people probably haven’t picked up on this idea, but, as he writes, George Polk was actually a genuine war hero - clearly much more of a hero than either John Kerry or John Murtha -
AND YET HE LIED.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
(Frank thinks this is a kindness toward Polk but actually saying that Polk was a genuine war hero should put the end to any thought of giving special consideration for Kerry or Murtha.)
This deserves more attention than it has gotten. Keep this going. Never mind that almost nobody knows now who George Polk was.
One lesson to draw from this - or rather to corroborate because it is not enough to demonstrate it by itself -is this:
There are always likely to be MORE conspiracies and lies around than people think, not LESS.
If you hear something that seems credible - a very important caveat - about some politician - more bad is likely to be true, not less (and this person is more honest and upright than it appears)