They have openly said they view reporting official statements as news, which is fair enough. But they have a duty to try and verify those facts, otherwise point out the one-sidedness of articles.Eugene Wrayburn wrote:In defence of the newspaper editors (now that's a phrase I don't use often) they didn't have the full facts and knew that they didn't. They were still trusting Tony that there was some evidence, although some clearly would have been happy for HMG to set regime change as their goal and hang the consequences.
With regards to Iraq, a huge amount of the justification came from Bush's list of "suspicious" sites. I'm not sure how it was reported in the UK at the time but 3 months prior to the invasion 2 independent reporters on different trips visited every site on the list, found absolutely nothing and sent those articles out on the AP. Quite simply, they weren't picked up.
A year before the invasion there was also an interview with the lead weapons inspector in Iraq involved in de-weaponising the regime in the late 90s, he did a video interview bluntly saying there was absolutely zero chance Saddam had chemical or long range weapons (more than 150 miles) as the time that had passed since he gave the sign off was insufficient to develop them. Apparently every news channel skipped the interview except te BBC, who aired it once at 2am British time.
We'll never know, but I suspect these editors had knowledge of a lot of the doubts and holes in the stories but questioning official lines often results in priveleged being removed; they want to stay on side with officials so they get priority of information etc...