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IRAQER SHOCKER: AP to report good news from war

August 16th, 2005 by Dorrk.com

Here’s a welcome segment from today’s Best of the Web:

The
Good News Is, the Good News May Get Reported

A heartening piece of metajournalism appeared in yesterday’s New York Times.
It seems the Associated Press has come under pressure from American editors
about the negativity of its coverage from Iraq. Rosemary Goudreau, editorial
page editor of the Tampa Tribune, received numerous copies of a mass e-mail
listing accomplishments in Iraq, and this prompted her to contact the AP:

Ms. Goudreau’s newspaper, like most dailies in America, relies largely on
The Associated Press for its coverage of the Iraq war. So she finally forwarded
the e-mail message to Mike Silverman, managing editor of The A.P., asking
if there was a way to check these assertions and to put them into context.
Like many other journalists, Mr. Silverman had also received a copy of the
message.

Ms. Goudreau’s query prompted an unusual discussion last month in New York
at a regular meeting of editors whose newspapers are members of The Associated
Press. Some editors expressed concern that a kind of bunker mentality was
preventing reporters in Iraq from getting out and explaining the bigger picture
beyond the daily death tolls.

"The bottom-line question was, people wanted to know if we’re making progress
in Iraq," Ms. Goudreau said, and the A.P. articles were not helping to answer
that question.

"It was uncomfortable questioning The A.P., knowing that Iraq is such a dangerous
place," she said. "But there’s a perception that we’re not telling the whole
story."

The fault here, though, does not lie entirely with the AP. Silverman says he
researched the e-mail and found that in the Times’ words, "most of the
information in the anonymous e-mail message had been reported by The A.P., but
the details had been buried in articles or the articles had been overlooked."
The Times piece concludes by noting that Goudreau conceded that by the end of
the meeting, "editors were acknowledging that even in their own hometowns,
‘we’re more likely to focus on people who are killed than on the positive news
out of a school.’ "

And indeed, here’s an AP Baghdad dispatch that moved yesterday on the AP wire:

The capital’s Sadr City section was once a hotbed of Shiite Muslim unrest,
but it has become one of the brightest successes for the U.S. security effort.

So far this year, there has been only one car bombing in the neighborhood,
and only one American soldier has been killed.

A year ago, militiamen garbed in black and armed with automatic weapons and
rocket-propelled grenades roamed the streets in open revolt against the American
presence. But U.S. troops quelled the uprising, and today calmly patrol the
district, aided by loyalists of the radical cleric who spurred the violence.

A Google News search–which is wide-ranging but not comprehensive–turned up
only two newspapers that have published the Sadr City story: the Chicago
Sun-Times
and the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
. The story is not terribly time-sensitive, so let us hope that
other papers will pick it up.

One additional bit of context: It was in Sadr City that Casey Sheehan was killed
in action in April 2004. America’s success there is further evidence that he
did not die in vain.

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