AP: Screw the Facts, Protect the Narrative
As noted Saturday, the Associated Press has ceased being a wire service of journalists, and has fallen to become little more than an agency of lazy transcriptionists.
Seeking an excuse to explain why AP would run a faked claim of a sectarian massacre based purely upon hearsay, Associated Press Director of Media Relations Paul Colford attempted to claim that these anonymous sources were reliable (obviously, they aren't) and claim that an American military spokesman supported those claims. He has, despite a specific request to do so, failed to provide the name of the alleged military source. Further, Colford stated that the Associated Press did not run Michael Yon's Bless the Beasts and Children exposure of a real massacre because:Ah... no press release, then no story? Why, then, do we need the Associated Press at all? Sadly, Colford's transcriptionists could have easily verified the story, if they were so inclined. I'm sure you remember the old axiom, "A picture says a thousand words." Presented in context, this photo shows everything that is wrong with the Associated Press.
With regard to Michael Yon, the Iraqi police and the U.S. military – to our current knowledge – have issued no statements to the AP about 10-14 bodies being found on June 29 in a village outside Baquba, even though the military, according to Mr. Yon’s online account, were involved in the discovery.

Update: Michael Yon has posted his latest dispatch from Baquba, where he discovers that the number of bodies at at al Hamira (or as he later found out the correct spelling, al Ahamir) may have been much larger than the 10-14 originally thought:
It will be interesting to see if that claim turns out to be accurate. But this isn't the only item of note by Yon. While Paul Colford and the Associated Press earlier seem to intone that they had no account of the al Ahamir discovery of the bodies of beheaded, massacred families (and thus, were waiting for military PAOs to drop the story), it appears an Iraqi stringer working for AP was in the area the entire time. He places the massacre body count as being much higher (read Yon for the details), and says he informed AP in Baghdad. Guess who is at AP HQ in Baghdad? Kim Gamel.
Today, there are indications that the massacre might be much bigger than what I initially reported in “Bless the Beasts and Children.” Shortly after I published “Bless the Beasts and Children,” I asked a local Iraqi official about the village and the graves. The Diyala Provincial councilmen, Abdul Jabar, went on video explaining why he believes that there might be hundreds of people buried in the area, and he said the correct spelling is actually al Ahamir. (Most Iraqis’ names seem to have variant spellings.)
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 10:53 AM
Comments
An information outlet can produce news or opinion or they can print news that is selected and written in such a way as it reinforces an overall opinion and that is basically what AP does.
They have a political agenda that is pretty clear. Once you accept that, the frustration melts away. Just read alternative sources of news.
Posted by: crosspatch at July 09, 2007 12:32 PM (y2kMG)
Posted by: Chuck Simmins at July 09, 2007 02:54 PM (hASmp)
Posted by: McCarroll at July 09, 2007 03:55 PM (LcLIn)
The problem is that most people seem to think that the AP et al are still "objective" or "neutral", when in fact they've become captive to one political point of view.
And so the nation's perception of the fighting in Iraq gets poisoned by the AP's (and others') lies, and John Q. Public doesn't have a clue.
Worse, he doesn't seem to want a clue.
So don't just tune the Lame-stream Media out, pass the word around that there's more to these LSM stories than meets the eye or ear.
Posted by: Hale Adams at July 09, 2007 04:26 PM (pmRe8)
Posted by: Capitalist Infidel at July 09, 2007 04:29 PM (Lgw9b)
Posted by: Capitalist Infidel at July 09, 2007 04:30 PM (Lgw9b)
Posted by: DirtCrashr at July 09, 2007 05:02 PM (VNM5w)
Posted by: crosspatch at July 09, 2007 05:43 PM (y2kMG)
They haven't hit us with a "Free Bilal Hussein" screed in a while. Did their favorite jihad insider get sprung, or did he confess?
Ap is really hoping that the rule of law does NOT get established in Iraq. They have blood on their hands -- American blood, other Coalition blood, and veritable buckets of Iraqi blood.
The Iraqi courts haven't been shy about giving out death sentences. Justice for Bilal Hussein sounds great. Heck, it swings.
Posted by: Kevin R.C. O'Brien at July 09, 2007 06:10 PM (M0UTi)
Posted by: John Bryan at July 09, 2007 07:14 PM (yGOyP)
AP is not to be trusted without multiple, reliable sources for confirmation on anything. Until they can find their code of ethics and hold themselves to it and demonstrate it, that is how I treat them. An unethical organization with no standards to speak about, and that goes for *everything* they do.
Posted by: ajacksonian at July 09, 2007 08:39 PM (oy1lQ)
Posted by: John Riddell at July 10, 2007 08:50 AM (j/p6S)
If he isn't going to mention these (Which happened the day of the interview), why on Earth would he mention the Yon story?
I know that if it bleeds it leads, but in Iraq there is so much blood splashing about it is hard to see why this story is so exciting. If you want to big up a story about Iraq improvements, why pick one where, basically, US troops arrive too late to save anyone or catch the bad guys, rather than the one above where Iraqi troops catch and engage a bunch of IED layers.
Posted by: Rafar at July 10, 2007 09:19 AM (kkgmI)
http://www.iraqslogger.com/index.php/post/3516/Iraq_Security_Developments_-_Monday
So why should everyone write about Yon's story when they all pretty much ignore the events in the article above? The descriptions are viceral and the pictures evocative, I'll admit, but, when the stories above are pretty much ignored, what is so special about it?
Posted by: Rafar at July 10, 2007 09:26 AM (kkgmI)
Which of course all happened within walking distance of newly found mass graves, right?
Posted by: Purple Avenger at July 10, 2007 09:39 AM (bwMN7)
You want to walk 4 miles around there?
But no, they all happened that day. And similar happened the day before. And the day before that. And....
In fact Simpson didn't mention any security incidents at all in his piece. Reporters rarely do if you notice. It has become background noise. But he should have mentioned this story because...because what?
Does it not seem likely that people aren't shouting about Yon's story because it is a "Dog bites man" story?
Posted by: Rafar at July 10, 2007 10:01 AM (kkgmI)
I'd probably take a jeep with A/C.
But no, they all happened that day.
Wow - compelling! I'll bet lots of things happened on that day. Within 4 miles of the reporter though? Not so much.
Posted by: Purple Avenger at July 11, 2007 06:49 AM (bwMN7)
I'm completely missing your point now I suspect.
Simpson didn't mention any security incidents at all in his report. It wasn't that sort of report, but this lack of mentioning Yon's story is being stitched into the "The MSM want us to lose" storyline regardless.
Just so I can check, while I may not understand your point, you do get mine, don't you? That Yon's story of Al-Q killings is just background noise in terms of a normal day in Iraq.
Posted by: Rafar at July 11, 2007 08:02 AM (kkgmI)
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