Cori doesn’t seem to think that it’s right for a columnist at the paper to break news while the reporters sit on their hands. Don’t read the St. Louis Post-Dispatch then, where columnists routinely break news that their reporters show little interest or ability to cover.

But what’s more important is what’s actually reported — the progress in the talks between the political parties in Iraq to forge a government:

The political agreements are fragile, and they will be blown away if the factions can’t form a government soon to put them in practice. Meanwhile, beyond the Green Zone, Iraqis are still being slaughtered every day in the streets. But given where Iraq was six months ago — when Sunni and Shiite leaders were barely talking — their agreement on the framework for a unity government is important. These negotiations may not succeed, but they are not a fairy-tale fantasy, as some critics argue.

We Americans are an impatient lot. From my meagre experiences abroad, time takes on a different meaning once you leave the country.

I’m wondering if that chick at the AP will take Mr. Ignatius to task for the “as some critics argue” line. OK, that was a rhetorical device because I’m not wondering at all, since she didn’t note that President Bush was following the lead of the reporting about him which is routinely larded up with “some critics claim” constructions without ever naming the critics.