One reason for compiling the above list is to identify areas where questions should be asked. Here are examples of some questions I would like to see asked and answered, to clear up some of the vagueness and ambiguities in the above-listed assertions:
I. Some questions for AP:
In regards to Jamil Hussein, your statements have used the word we (as in "we have talked with him"), implying more than one reporter has done so, but this has not been clearly stated. How many of your reporters have talked to Jamil Hussein? How many of your reporters have met with Jamil Hussein at the al-Yarmouk police station? If it is only one, by what method did you confirm that the reporter had actually met with Hussein?
Clearing up this point would make it clearer whether to give much weight to AP's statement of support for their reporter. If, despite their previous assurances, it turns out that only one reporter has actually met with and talked with Jamil Hussein, that would reduce the weight AP's statement should receive to nil.
You say your reporter also spoke with Jamil Hussein by telephone. It is implied (but not specifically stated) that the reporter had a number at which he could reach Jamil Hussein. Is this so? And, if it is so, was this an office phone at the police station, or was it located elsewhere? (If it was a phone in the police station, did calls go through the station switchboard, or did the line connect directly?)
If the AP reporter did have an office phone number which connected to the police station, that would lend a good deal of weight to the claim that Jamil Hussein is a genuine police officer. If the phone rang through a switchboard and the reporter had to ask for Jamil Hussein by name in order to be connected, that would lend a good deal of weight to the claim that Jamil Hussein is the real name of this police officer.
Did the reporter talk with any police officers other than Jamil Hussein while at the al-Yarmouk police station? Were other police officers nearby or present while the reporter talked with Jamil Hussein?
If the reporter was able to talk with other officers while at the station, that supports the idea that Jamil Hussein is an actual police captain. If the reporter was restricted to talking only to the person claiming to be Jamil Hussein, that lends weight to the possibility the reporter was being conned. I am assuming the AP reporter had to check in with a desk sergeant on arrival at the station, and give the name of the person he was there to see, but this has not been clearly stated.
AP said hospital and morgue workers corroborated the story. How did they do this?
I assume these workers confirmed that burnt dead bodies had been brought in that day, but this is not explicity stated in AP statements and it would be good to nail this point down.
II. Some questions for Michael Dean and Abdul-Karim Khalaf:
Describe the investigations you conducted to determine if people had been burned alive in Hurriyah. Please name the investigating officers. Could these officers be made available to to the media to answer questions about who they talked to and what they were told?
The answers (or non-answers) to these questions will will help us decide how much weight should be given to the fact the MOI investigation turned up no evidence of 6 Sunnis being burned to death at the mosque. If the officers went to the neighborhood and talked with residents, that would add weight; if they conducted the investigation by phone, that would drastically reduce the weight.
Equally important: the (alleged) victims and witnesses were Sunni, and the (alleged) attackers were Shiite. Therefore people in the neighborhood would probably be considerably more likely to talk to Sunni officers and considerably less likely to talk with Shiite officers. If MOI sent Sunni officers to do the investigation, then the failure to find any evidence of the burnings would carry more weight; if the MOI sent Shiite officers, the failure to turn up evidence would carry little to no weight.
Describe the records check you did on Jamil Hussein. Specifically, explain what records were consulted. Did the search include a check of pay records for the al-Yarmouk station? A check of all people who have worked at the al-Yarmouk police station over the past two years? A check of all people who have worked as police captains at the al-Yarmouk police station over the past two years?
Dean has said MOI did a records check, but he and Khalaf both conspicuously failed to mention what records were checked. Until someone is willing to specify clearly which records were searched, little to no weight should be given to Dean's statement.
Some of you are
assuming that the MOI checked pay records, or that they checked employment records, or that they checked the al-Yarmouk duty roster. It's possible that MOI checked one or more of these things -- but that has not been established yet. The only list they have specifically referred to in the statements I've read is the recently created list of people authorized to speak to the media.
Did you talk with police officers at al-Yarmouk police station to see whether they were familiar with Jamil Hussein and knew who he was? If so, whom did you speak with and what did they say?
This is a logical and obvious thing for Dean and MOI to have done if they were genuinely trying to ascertain if Jamil Hussein exists. If they did carry out such a check, that would lend support to their claim that they tried to find out if Jamil Hussein really was an Iraqi police captain and were not able to find any evidence of his existence.
When and how did you first learn that Jamil Hussein was being quoted in AP news stories as a police captain in al-Yarmouk? If you were aware of this prior to the November, why was no mention made before then? If you were not aware of it until November, why were you not aware until then?
This is the part of the Dean/MOI story which makes the least sense. Jamil Hussein was a quoted source on dozens of important stories -- stories which bloggers are now saying were clearly enemy propaganda -- and
no one noticed this until the Sunni burning story? Does no one in the al-Yarmouk police station read the paper or follow the news? Does no one at MOI read the paper or follow the news?
The idea that Jamil Hussein was
not authorized to speak to the media, and so was flagged for having previously spoken to them when MOI began enforcing its new policy, makes sense. The idea that Jamil Hussein was
non-existent does not.
III. Some matters I would like to see investigated, but realize it would probably be rather pointless to ask questions about:
Is MOI threatening to take action against AP and other media outlets if they pursue this story?
Is MOI threatening to take action against Jamil Hussein if he speaks to the media again?
We know this happened under Saddam Hussein. Is it happening again? That would account for AP's silence on a number of questions.
The problem with simply asking the question directly is that if MOI
is not making such threats, the answer would be no; and if MOI
is making such threats, the answer would also be no.
What is the deal with the person who originally claimed to be an eyewitness to the burnings, but retracted his story after a visit from MOI people?
Neither AP nor MOI is talking about this. Why not?
The obvious assumption is that MOI threatened him with jail or other sanctions if he stuck to his story. That raises the obvious question: did he recant because he was lying and they could prove it, or did he recant even though he was telling the truth because they intimidated him? I think both are plausible explanations.
The lack of follow-up on this man's recantation stands out as something which should be probed. What did he say to the MOI?
Oops, you're right, now that I think about it I guess that isn't what I saw after all. I really need to get a new pair of glasses. This is not a matter one accidentally gets wrong. And yet there is no news about MOI pressing charges against him, nor is MOI having him repeat his recantation to the media even though his admission of lying would be strong support for their claim no burning of Sunnis occurred.
The recantation is interesting enough just by itself; but the silence by both MOI and AP is fascinating -- in a frightening and disturbing way.