AP Had a Secret Propaganda Deal with the Nazis

ven the Associated Press has its secrets.
A recent report, declassified by the AP itself, discloses information about the news outlet's coverage of WWII, and the role that Nazi soldiers may have had in it. According to the internal report released Wednesday, the AP made a deal to exchange photos with Nazi soldiers. The photos were run in American newspapers, without crediting their origins. In turn, AP photos were used by Nazi soldiers for Nazi propaganda.
An investigation was open into the long-secret arrangement after German historian Harriet Scharnberg published an article in March of 2016 accusing the AP of Nazi cooperation. Scharnberg's research pointed out that pictures supplied by the AP were being published in propaganda publications, such as "Der Untermensch" (The Subhuman). Scharnberg also stated that by submitting to "Schriftleitergesetz" or editors law, the AP relinquished control of the content that they released to German publications. Therefore, the AP's content fell under instruction not to print any material "calculated to weaken the strength of the Reich abroad or at home."
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