Axis Editorial: Two more U.S. soldiers were killed today in Iraq. But apparently their deaths are no longer considered to be "newsworthy" by the pro-war corporate media. For the first time, the major, corporate News media have stopped reporting the deaths of U.S. soldiers in Iraq - at least not on their front pages.
The following media did not report the deaths of two U.S. soldiers today: AP Reuters The New York Times washingtonpost.com USA TODAY U.S. News & World Report and NPR.
Today's Boston Globe followed it's parent corporation, the NYT, with articles about the new archbishop "reaching out" to New England Catholics and a headline about the $30 million reward paid to the snitch who gave up Saddam Hussein's sons - but no mention of the two U.S. soldiers killed. Other "news" by the corporate media has the Washington Post propping up Tony Blair with "Blair stands firm despite a tumble in the polls" and "Iraqi Scientists Cooperating". They feature Tony stating that "the vast majority of Iraqis are 'overjoyed' to be rid of the old government".
The U.S. government "old faithful" - The front page of the U.S. News & World Report boasts a 58% increase in Mobil-Exxon profits as Iraqi oil flows westward, but no mention of the blood being spilt by soldiers who thought they went into the military to get a college education.
Axis of Logic predicts that this pattern of silence on deaths of U.S. soldiers will continue as the U.S. government and it's fourth branch of government - the corporate media try to make the illegal war on the Iraqi people a material and moral success.
Even the global news corporations Associated Press and Reuters make no mention of the two U.S. soldiers killed today in Iraq.
It is predictable that as Iraqis continue to kill U.S. soldiers just as they continue their broad-based resistance against the U.S. occupation, the reports these attacks will begin to disappear from the major media - at least from the front pages.
Following an extensive search of today's corporate news media, Axis of Logic was able to turn up two reports on the U.S. men killed in Iraq today. One can be found in the nearly inaccessible Knight-Ridder corporation, if one goes to their Washington Bureau outlet. The other is the obscure AFP. Both filed the following report of the two soldiers killed, but tempered with the "good news" that the U.S. scheduled elections for "mid-2004" - just prior to the next U.S. presidential elections in the U.S - "making it all worthwhile"! - LMB
US sets mid-2004 target for Iraq elections, two soldiers killed
BAGHDAD (AFP) - The United States aimed for elections by mid-2004 in Iraq (news - web sites), but a new regional council set up in toppled dictator Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s heartland met with indifference locally, as two more US troops were killed in guerrilla attacks.
Meanwhile some 2,000 Polish troops prepared to boost the US-led coalition's forces in the country on a mission which President Aleksander Kwasniewski said was to help the Iraqi people rebuild their country and repay a "moral debt" to Western democracies for helping Poland when its communist regime collapsed.
But in a new political blow to the coalition, the US Central Intelligence Agency (news - web sites) was expected to reveal that interviews with Iraqi scientists have failed to back Washington's case for war, saying there is no evidence that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction.
US troops inaugurated a 44-member regional council for Al-Anbar province, location of the flashpoint towns of Ramadi and Fallujah, as they seek to calm one of the main battlefields in the war with insurgents.
"Today is a very historic day for Al-Anbar," said Colonel David Teeples, commander of the Third Armoured Cavalry Regiment.
But in an indication that US efforts to foster democratic participation in a free Iraq may be falling on deaf ears, people of the provincial capital Ramadi said they knew nothing about the first meeting of their civic representatives.
The chief administrator of the new Iraq, Paul Bremer, expressed confidence that nationwide elections could be held in less than a year, clearing the way for the coalition forces to withdraw.
"It is certainly not unrealistic to think that we could have elections by mid-year 2004," Bremer told reporters at the inauguration of a new foreign ministry in Baghdad.
"And when a sovereign government is installed, the coalition authority will cede authority to the government and my job here will be over," said the 61-year-old diplomat.
Following the July 13 unveiling of a 25-member interim Governing Council, the next step will be the drafting of a new Iraqi constitution to be approved by referendum followed by nationwide elections, Bremer said.
The pace of the rebuilding effort has come under fire in the United States as a deadly insurgency by Saddam loyalists has now cost the lives of 52 soldiers since major combat was declared over on May 1.
Although US troops have arrested more than 700 people in raids since Monday, in a bid to track down Saddam and his supporters, they appear unable to stop the deadly attacks.
A US soldier was shot dead and four more wounded in an ambush northeast of Baghdad late Wednesday, while a second soldier was killed and three wounded Thursday on the road to Baghdad airport, a frequent site for attacks.
In the second incident, the US military said an armoured personnel carrier hit a landmine, but witnesses said the weapon used was a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) fired in a brazen mid-day attack from a car which drove up alongside.
A mission of Japanese lawmakers left Tokyo for Iraq to study the security situation and the nation's reconstruction needs ahead of an historic troop deployment expected this year.
In the debate over whether Saddam's Iraq posed a credible threat to the United States, the Washington Post reported that Iraqi scientists have failed to support the US and British justification for war.
Ahead of an appearance in Congress on Thursday by the CIA (news - web sites)'s David Kay, who returned from coordinating the hunt in Iraq for weapons of mass destruction (WMD), the Post said no information had so far been gleaned.
"All of the scientists interviewed have denied that Hussein had reconstituted his nuclear weapons program or developed and hidden chemical or biological weapons since United Nations (news - web sites) inspectors left in 1998," the paper said.
On Wednesday, US President George W. Bush (news - web sites) told reporters on Iraq's yet unfound WMDs that he was "confident the truth will come out."
A Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll published Thursday found that Bush's popularity may have slipped to 56 percent from 62 percent in May, but 69 percent of Americans still think he did right in Iraq.
On the economic front, Iraq's main pipeline from the oil centre of Kirkuk to the Turkish Mediterranean terminal of Ceyhan, wrecked in a post-war sabotage attack, will reopen the first week of August, a coalition official said.
"It will have a capacity between 200,000 and 300,000 barrels per day (bpd)," the official said.
In another boost, Iraq signed major contracts with 12 foreign companies for 650,000 bpd, an oil ministry official told AFP.
In Vienna, ministers of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed to leave the cartel's official output ceiling of 25.4 million barrels per day unchanged and review production again in September, an OPEC (news - web sites) official said.
More than three months after the fall of Baghdad, world markets are still waiting for the return of Iraqi oil exports in any significant quantity after looting and sabotage hampered efforts to rebuild the country's oil industry.
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