Did Bill O’Reilly Cover Up a War Crime in El Salvador?
Did Bill OReilly Cover Up a War Crime in El Salvador?
Greg Grandin on February 9, 2015 - 2:34 PM ET
Before Bill OReilly was, well, Bill OReilly, he worked for a time as a foreign correspondent for CBS Nightly News, anchored by Dan Rather. OReilly talks about that period of his career in two of his books, and in both mentions that in early 1982 he reported from northeastern El Salvador, just after the infamous El Mozote Massacre. When the CBS News bureau chief asked for volunteers to check out an alleged massacre in the dangerous Morazán Territory, a mountainous region bordering Nicaragua, I willingly went.
El Mozote is a small, hard-to-reach hamlet. The massacre took place on December 11, 1981, carried out by US-trained Atlacatl Battalion, which was not just trained but created by the United States as a rapid response unit to fight El Salvadors fast-spreading FMLN insurgency. El Mozote was a liberation-theology village, supportive of the guerrillas. The killing was savage beyond belief: between 733 and 900 villagers were slaughtered, decapitated, impaled and burned alive.
The story of the massacre was broken on the front page of The New York Times by the journalist Raymond Bonner and in The Washington Post by Alma Guillermoprieto; both stories were published on January 27, 1982, and accompanied by photographs taken by Susan Meiselas. Bonner and Meiselas got to El Mozote, after hearing about the massacre, by walking for days in from Honduras. Guillermoprieto wrote about seeing countless bits of bonesskulls, rib cages, femurs, a spinal column poking out of the rubble. Bonner noted the charred skulls and bones of dozens of bodies buried under burned-out roofs, beams, and shattered tiles. Later, Mark Danner reported on the massacre in detail, first in a lengthy New Yorker essay and then in a book.
Aside from the brutality of the killing, El Mozote is distinguished by the fact that Washington moved quickly to cover it up. It was, in a way, the first massacre of the second Cold War, the Reagan administrations drive to retake the third world; what My Lai was to the 1960s, El Mozote was to the 1980s (later, in 1989, Atlacatl would commit another infamous crime: the execution of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper and her daughter)
In addition to describing the massacre, Danner documents the cover-up in detail: the US embassy in El Salvador immediately disputed Bonners and Guillermoprietos reporting, as did New Right organizations like Accuracy in Media. Thomas Enders, Reagans assistant secretary of state for inter-American Affairs, and Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for human rights, denied the killing. Abrams said it appears to be an incident that is at least being significantly misused, at the very best, by the guerrillas. The Wall Street Journal called Bonner overly credulous and out on a limb and placed the word massacre in scare quotes. The Times sided with the critics, and Bonner eventually left the paper, after first being transferred to the business section.
More:
http://www.thenation.com/blog/197401/did-bill-oreilly-cover-war-crime-el-salvador#
Thor_MN
(11,843 posts)All the people braying about Brian Williams should also be talking about Billious... He said on the record that he had been in combat.