LGF, etc are merely bringing the issue up. Iraqi police and coalition sources are the ones that are saying AP's named source does not exist.
AP has made a claim; they need to back it up with confirmed sources. If they cannot than they should retract it. It's really just as simple as that.
Actually, there are several claims.
First, we have the claims by AP. (1) AP claimed in the first story to have talked to a person -- named in the story as Jamal Hussein, and identified as an Iraqi police captain. (2) AP claimed this person told them a story about 6 Sunnis being burned alive.
Second we have claim by US military officials. (1) They claim there is no one by that name working as an Iraqi police captain. (2) They claim they have not confirmed that 6 Sunnis were burned alive.
No lying is necessary in order for the US military officials to be mistaken. They basically claim they are
unaware of certain things. It is quite possible for them to be unaware of those things, and those things to be true.
AP, on having its story challenged,
re-checked. And they stand by the original report. In order for AP to be wrong on this, not only does the original report need to be wrong, but also the follow-up report -- in which Hurst reports that AP reporters have talked to police captain Hussein
in his office .. at the police station .. on several occasions, and that they talked with him again in his office following this challenge to their story.
Story challenged. Story checked. Story confirmed, unless the reporter who reported having checked the story is lying. Which is possible, but if so that is a claim which in itself requires some evidence. At some point the claim that AP is lying when it says it has talked to Jamal Hussein, in his office, at the police station, on more than one occasion, needs to be supported by some evidence. Otherwise we can go on endlessly, with reporter after reporter re-checking the work of the previous reporter, only to have their reporting challenged.
Is there any evidence that the AP reporters who claim to have talked to Hussein are lying? Have they, for instance, refused to take along a reporter from an independent (i.e. non-AP) source to verify they have indeed talked to a police captain by this name?
One reporter reported a story from a named source. Another reporter reported having verified that the first reporter had indeed talked to that source. Do you want a third reporter to check into whether the second reporter actually did check into the first reporter's story? Will you then want a fourth reporter to check the third reporter's story?
It's possible that AP is lying through its teeth. It's possible the people who claim AP is lying are mistaken. I can easily believe a
single AP reporter being careless or dishonest in reporting, but I have difficulty believing that additional AP reporters, assigned to confirm the challenged story, also lied. I need some evidence before I accept that claim. And I'm not seeing any.
AP says it has checked and says the facts are as they first reported. The ball is now in the court of the US military officials who claimed AP was wrong. What is their evidence, and how reliable is it?