New York Times Journalist Demoted for Exposing El Mozote Massacre in El Salvador

Discussion in 'Media & Commentators' started by Horhey, Apr 30, 2012.

  1. Horhey

    Horhey Well-Known Member

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    [video=youtube_share;vwCo-zsJo3Y]http://youtu.be/vwCo-zsJo3Y[/video]

    During Washington's war against the population of El Salvador (my contributions), on January 27, 1982, New York Times correspondent Raymond Bonner informed us:

    Human Rights Watch observes:

    In January 1981, the United States took over the training of the Salvadoran armed forces and the strategic planning of the war. At the Salvadoran High Command, U.S. Army combat and combat support majors and lieutenant colonels prosecuted the war operationally and with intelligence:

    -Clearly the wrong story for the United States..

    [​IMG]

    Shortly after this report, Bonner was dispatched to the Financial desk, where he labored for one year before taking a leave of absence to write a book about El Salvador. Upon returning to the Times, he first was sent back to the Financial desk, then later to the Metropolitan desk, a clear demotion. He resigned from the New York Times on July 3, 1984. Asked in an interview with Mark Hertsgaard why he had recalled Bonner from El Salvador in the first place, Abe Rosenthal, then-Managing Editor of the New York Times, explained:

    For another account of Bonner's firing, see Mark Danner, "The Truth of El Mazote," New Yorker, December 6, 1993, pp. 50f. An excerpt (pp. 122-123):

    Note that Rosenthal's most angry denial, which follows, conveniently sidetracks the central issue. Rosenthal declared (pp. 121-122):

    See also, Robert Parry and Peter Kornbluh, "Iran-Contra's Untold Story," Foreign Policy, Fall 1988, pp. 3-30 at p. 6:

    The Footnotes for the Book: UNDERSTANDING POWER
     
  2. Horhey

    Horhey Well-Known Member

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    I literally just just dug this article out of the bowels of the archives and it took me about 2 hours to do it. Im just putting it here so it can be in the accessable public record..

    In the conservative journal of the London Spectator in 1986, correspondent Ambrose Evans-Pritchard explained the reasons for the changes that occured in the pattern of murder and torture in this US-terror state. He reports an "improvement" in El Salvador:

     

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