U.S. Military Pays to Run Stories in Iraqi Press

Employees at Al Mada said that a low-key man arrived at the newspaper's offices in downtown Baghdad on July 30 with a large wad of U.S. dollars. He told the editors that he wanted to publish an article titled "Terrorists Attack Sunni Volunteers" in the newspaper.

He paid cash and left no calling card, employees said. He did not want a receipt. The name he gave employees was the same as that of a Lincoln Group worker in the records obtained by The Times. Although editors at Al Mada said he paid $900 to place the article, records show that the man told Lincoln Group that he gave more than $1,200 to the paper.

Al Mada is widely considered the most cerebral and professional of Iraqi newspapers, publishing investigative reports as well as poetry.

Zaki said that if his cash-strapped paper had known that these stories were from the U.S. government, he would have "charged much, much more" to publish them.

From: [identity profile] anitsirk.livejournal.com


completely unrelated to the article:

i was browsing on 20sknitters and saw your name and figured you must be from mass and went to your info page.

anyhow... you went to smith. so i'm betting that you were in northampton for a while.

i just discovered webs. yikes! yarn heaven! i'm going back tomorrow- twice in one week and it's about 80 miles away.
.

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