AMADEO MARTINEZ SANCHEZ (MASSACRE SURVIVOR, TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): Around 7 or 8 a.m., the helicopters started flying around. Around 9 a.m. we heard them start to kill the people of El Mozote. Suddenly we saw some soldiers coming down the hill. First they took two young women toward the river. They raped them and the girls screamed. Then they came to take the children out, pulling them by the arm, almost dragging them. One of the kids cried out, My mom is left behind! They sent two soldiers to see, and shortly afterpum! We heard gunshots. And I saw writing on the wall in the blood of those who were murdered. One dead child, one less guerrilla.

TEXT ON SCREEN:

MASSACRE IN EL SALVADOR

WRITTEN AND PRODUCED BY KIT R. ROANE

ARCHIVAL (ASSOCIATED PRESS, 12-3-82):PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN: Very simply, guerrillas are attempting to impose a Marxist, Leninist dictatorship on the people of El Salvador.

NARRATION: The story of one of the worst massacres in the modern history of Latin America began in December 1981.

It was in the midst of the Cold War.

The United States was supporting the government of El Salvadors fight against Communist-backed rebels, known as the FMLN.

SUSAN MEISELAS: There were a lot of risk involved. There were targeted killings of people who organized, peasants, organized labor, organized within their churches.

SUSAN MEISELAS (LOOKING AT PHOTOS): So, this is more of Mozotes houses.

NARRATION: Photojournalist Susan Meiselas was covering the war when she began hearing rumors of a government attack on civilians in a remote village.

ARCHIVAL :RADIO ANNOUNCER (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): We bring you from the people of El Mozote, a new testimonial

NARRATION: She and her colleague foreign correspondent Raymond Bonner, who was working for the New York Times decided to go behind rebel lines.

SUSAN MEISELAS (LOOKING AT PHOTOS): I think thats you.

NARRATION: With the help of FMLN fighters, they crossed into the Salvadoran mountains.

SUSAN MEISELAS: We heard about something, but we didnt really know. And the question was, how do we even find out? Could we even find out, or find a means of a path to try and find out?

We were walking in a terrain that was completely unknown to us. There was no path. There was no map. But because we felt compelled, we just had to dig deeper, we had to know more.

We walked into a tiny pueblo that was completely evacuated. All the houses had been burned to the ground. You saw the remains of people. You, you felt like it was a ghost town. It was eerie. It was like time was frozen.

NARRATION: The village was called El Mozote.

RAYMOND BONNER: I remember their bodies lying in the cornfield. It was clear this had been a, you know, a scorched earth policy, if you will, theyd come through and just killed every man, woman and child they found.

SUSAN MEISELAS: There was nothing that explained what happened except the remains. You know? The remains couldnt speak to us.

SUSAN MEISELAS (LOOKING AT PHOTOS): You remember that guy who showed us that?

NARRATION: They soon met a woman named Rufina

SUSAN MEISELAS: And thats Rufina.

RAYMOND BONNER: Right.

NARRATION: sitting in the middle of the village, in shock.

SUSAN MEISELAS: Rufina, the next day or two, spoke to us and filled in what we were seeing.

RUFINA AMAYA MARQUZ (AUDIO INTERVIEW, TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH, DECEMBER, 1981): When they took us all out and lined us up to be killed I stayed behind, I hid, and the assassins didnt see me. And then they killed every single woman. After they killed all the adults, they started talking about how they were going to kill the children. And I saw the ropes they were making to hang the children after they were done killing the others. In the end, no one but me emerged from El Mozote.

NARRATION: Rufina was one of the few survivors, and told the reporters of how government soldiers had laid siege to her town.

SUSAN MEISELAS: She talked about seeing her husband pulled away, the kids screaming. She was so numb. I dont think she even shed a tear in the telling. Could we believe this woman, a peasant woman, sitting in the middle of the field, pretty much in shock, herself?

NARRATION: After two weeks of reporting in the region, Bonner and Meiselass story landed on the front page of the New York Times.

It detailed the massacre of over 700 people in El Mozote and surrounding villages, by an elite Salvadoran military unit the Atlacatl Battalion.

RAYMOND BONNER: It was the most elite unit in the El Salvadoran army.

ARCHIVAL (ASSOCIATED PRESS, 12-3-82):NEWS REPORT: They have been specially trained by the United States Green Berets and they are undoubtedly the cream of the Salvadoran army.

RAYMOND BONNER: It was an American-trained battalion. And equipped. All their uniforms, all their M16 rifles, the helicopters that flew them into El Mozote, all supplied by the United States.

NARRATION: The U.S. backed Salvadoran government quickly denied the allegations. But inside the American embassy they realized they had a problem.

TODD GREENTREE: The news doesnt get any bigger than this. Front page of the New York Times, front page of the Washington Post.

NARRATION: At the time, Todd Greentree was a junior officer at the embassy.

TODD GREENTREE: There was a lot going on at the time. I mean, they were death squad killings every day. We were associated with a government of which major elements were conducting state terror. And if it meant killing women and children, well, they were just the byproduct of this. So, it was in that context that I received a message that there had been this massacre.

NARRATION: The news reports about the massacre in El Mozote were explosive: they landed just days before Congressional hearings on continuing aid to El Salvador. The Reagan administrations Cold War strategy in Central America was on the line.

TODD GREENTREE: It was a sense of realization from the start that whats at stake is the entire policy. That was the problem.

NARRATION: As worries grew, Greentree and a military attache were sent to find out what happened in El Mozote.

TODD GREENTREE: So, we flew out in a helicopter. And could see, you know, fairly wide amount of destruction. So, it was obvious there had been a military operation. We went out to a displaced persons camp, where people had fled El Mozote, and were gathered. That was a bit of a tricky situation, because were being transported by Salvadoran soldiers. It was obvious that the people in that camp were traumatized, there was no question.

I pretty much concluded that something had happened, something bad had happened.

NARRATION: But Greentree and his partner wanted to reach El Mozote itself, which was in dangerous rebel-held territory.

TODD GREENTREE: We finally got to a point where the sergeant who was in the jeep with us, just stopped and said, Thats it, were not going any farther. They were-they were scared to death, basically. So, we never reached the site.

NARRATION: Back at the embassy, Greentree wrote up what he had seen.

TODD GREENTREE: I drafted a report that basically said, We can conclude from the evidence, from what weve seen, what people said, that there was a massacre.

NARRATION: But thats not the report that reached Congress days later when U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Thomas Enders went to testify.

ARCHIVAL (3-14-93):THOMAS O. ENDERS (FORMER ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE): There is no evidence at all to confirm that government forces systematically massacred civilians in the operations zone or that the number of civilians killed even remotely approached the 733 or 926 victims variously cited in the press.

NARRATION: Greentrees initial report was never released, and to this day he says he doesnt know who changed his findings. The final draft, which Enders read from, described what happened as a military operation that resulted in civilian casualties.

The U.S. would continue funding the Salvadoran military.

TODD GREENTREE: Congress was not about to cut aid outright. Theyre not going to take responsibility for losing another country in Central America to communism. It wasnt going to that wasnt going to happen.

NARRATION: Having averted the crisis, the Reagan Administration went after the reporters for The Times and Washington Post whod broken the El Mozote story. They had already been critical of how the press was covering Americas involvement in El Salvador.

ARCHIVAL (1-14-81):ROGER FONTAINE (REAGAN LATIN AMERICAN POLICY ADVISOR): Its not just El Salvador. If we took the New York Times approach, I would guess that all of Central America, at least all of Central America, would be in the hands of governments that are manifestly unfriendly to the United States.

SUSAN MEISELAS: Nobody believed Rufina. The denial, first to the State Department, and then, you know, the attacks, more on you than on me, for writing what they accused you to have written as, you know, leftist propaganda, communist propaganda, whatever.

RAYMOND BONNER: The reaction was fury, vicious, and they attacked us as reporters. The Wall Street Journal did a whole editorial damning me. A reporter out on a limb. No, I was not prepared for that.

The United States Government was going to back the Salvadoran government come what may. And this was just another blip on the way to the support, so of course they were going to claim we were lying.

SUSAN MEISELAS: It really wasnt until the bones were exhumed that people believed.

NARRATION: For the next decade, the story of El Mozote receded, as the civil war in El Salvador raged on.

Then in January 1992, the government and the rebels reached a peace agreement. As part of the deal, both sides agreed to let the U.N. investigate alleged atrocities during the war.

A U.N. sponsored forensic team starting digging in El Mozote.

ARCHIVAL (ABC NEWS, 10-22-92):NEWS REPORT: In what used to be the local church, they have now found more than 40 skeletons, nearly all children and infants.MERCEDES DORETTI: Theres also kids just like three, four, five or six years old.

NARRATION: Mercedes Doretti was one of the forensic anthropologists at the site.

MERCEDES DORETTI (FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGIST): As we start digging, we start finding the children. One after the other one, after the other one. It was an extremely difficult situation to see. You see all these little dresses. Well have to look at the pockets of the girls and little boys. And we found, you know, toys, all kinds of little things that kids will have. You know, there were babies, the average age that was established was six years old.

And we found 263 cartridge cases inside the convent or immediately outside. The majority of the ammunition that was found there, was coming from the U.S. government. All the evidence pointed to large-scale extrajudicial execution.

ARCHIVAL (ABC NEWS, 10-22-91):NEWS REPORT: The forensic scientists say everything they have found is consistent with what human rights groups have said for years. That American-trained Salvadoran troops went on a four-day rampage, massacring 800 to 1,000 civilians while in search of leftist guerrillas.

RAYMOND BONNER: That had a very big impact. I mean, Rufina Amaya was there during that. She said, Now we see the truth. Now we have the proof of what happened.

MERCEDES DORETTI: The exhumation of the convent attracted an enormous amount of international press and seeing all these little skulls and little remains of, of all these kids, I think that the government wanted to stop that kind of images and that kind of news to come out.

NARRATION: A U.N. report would go on to accuse senior members of the Salvadoran military of human rights violations during the war including at El Mozote.

Within days of the report, the Salvadoran congress passed a sweeping law granting amnesty to anyone implicated in the atrocities.

CARLOS DADA: I was 21 years old. I wrote it down, right, the day they passed the amnesty law. And I wrote, All esta la patria bailando con la muerte de sus hijos. Here is our homeland dancing with the deaths of its own kids. That was the amnesty law for me. A party made up over dead people. I still feel the same.

NARRATION: Carlos Dada founded the investigative news site, El Faro. He and his colleagues kept pursuing the story, pushing for someone to be held accountable.

CARLOS DADA: The fact that you pass an amnesty law or the fact that the official narrative is, Lets leave behind everything and move on, doesnt take the victims anywhere. They are still there. Theres still thousands of mothers looking for their disappeared. There are still thousands of people that feel they have not been served justice. Well, they still remember their killed children, their killed husbands, their killed neighbors.

What happened in El Mozote was the worst massacre post World War II in all Latin America. Thats what happened at El Mozote. What happened after the massacre is the coverup of the massacre, but I dont think you can hide the killing of 1,000 people. I just dont think you can do that.

NARRATION: Over the following years, victims remains were returned to their families, and the government apologized, but there was little movement towards holding anyone accountable.

Then, in 2016 35 years after El Mozote – the Supreme Court of El Salvador sided with human rights groups and victims lawyers and overturned the Amnesty law.

CARLOS DADA: The Supreme Court ruled that the amnesty law wasnt constitutional and this allowed for the opening of some of the cases that had been left into oblivion by the amnesty law. The first of those cases was El Mozote.

NARRATION: Ray Bonner, now working for Retro Report and ProPublica, returned to El Salvador to cover the developments.

RAYMOND BONNER: The last time I was here, I walked in.

NARRATION: He visited the scene of the massacre, where people were streaming in to pray at a memorial that had been erected.

RAYMOND BONNER (READING FROM MEMORIAL PLAQUE): 140 had been children less than 12 years old.

BONNER (SPEAKING TO A WITNESS): Did you see them killed?

WITNESS (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): Yes, my mother, my siblings, my wife, my children. Its tough to see such things without being able to do anything about it.

NARRATION: Bonner tracked down a witness who was going to testify in a preliminary hearing about the massacre.

Amadeo Martinez Sanchez was 8-years-old when Salvadoran soldiers killed 24 of his relatives, including his mother and his siblings the youngest only a year old.

AMADEO MARTINEZ SANCHEZ (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): They die without knowing why they were brutally assassinated, starting with the children, who were angels. The feeling is always with you. You cant pretend and try to be tough.

NARRATION: Days later, pre-trial hearings were getting underway in the nearby town of San Francisco Gotera for more than a dozen former high ranking military officers.

Bonner joined El Faro journalist Nelson Rauda in the tiny courthouse.

NELSON RAUDA: Were a country that maybe has some sort of amnesia with a history. Theres still people that say El Mozote, what was going on was a fight between the guerrilla or the army, or that Mozote the amount of bodies in the Mozote is explained by because it was a clandestine cemetery.

NARRATION: All the officers contested the charges against them, and the hearings would stretch on for several years.

Then, there was a breakthrough: former Air Force commander, General Juan Bastillo, said in court that Salvadoran soldiers carried out the massacre.

NELSON RAUDA: The trial is a landmark in, in our democracy. It might set a new page for El Salvador, and build upon from there, that killing 989 people, the majority of children cannot go without punishment in our country.

NARRATION: After nearly five years of pre-trial hearings, the judge in the case, Jorge Guzman was on the verge of taking the case to trial.

But the President of El Salvador had other plans.

ARCHIVAL:NAYIB BUKELE (PRESIDENT OF EL SALVADOR, TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): We must all begin to create the El Salvador we want to see.

President Nayib Bukele has described himself as the worlds coolest dictator.

Hes made bitcoin an official currency of El Salvador, rallied the military behind him, and pushed his country towards authoritarianism.

NELSON RAUDA: The Bukele Administration has gained control over everything that they can control, and the things they cannot control, they attack.

NARRATION: In the summer of 2021, he effectively purged the judiciary, paving the way for allies to be appointed by his hand-picked Supreme Court.

Among the casualties was Judge Guzman.

ARCHIVAL:NAYIB BUKELE (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): And now they come here to talk? To restore justice and historical memory?

NARRATION: Bukele had been critical of those whod brought the El Mozote case.

ARCHIVAL:NAYIB BUKELE (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): Theyre scoundrels and they dont care. They come to show their faces after 40 years and tell lies.

NARRATION: The president had even had blocked Judge Guzman from accessing military records despite a court order.

NELSON RAUDA: The president attacked the judge, he attacked the victims, he attacked the organizations, he attacked the lawyers of the victims and he attacked the press. We are now at a state where Judge Guzman had brought the case to nearly the brink of having a decision. To a point where we dont know if the case is going to continue and if it continues, how it will continue.

NARRATION: The judge spoke to Rauda before leaving the case.

JUDGE GUZMAN (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): Even after 40 years of these events, and the other events that followed, we have not had the capacity to investigate them. A great danger in this country is that authoritarianism prevails and is allowed to governs our nation.

RAYMOND BONNER: The current president of El Salvador does not want this case to go forward. The elite in that country, the ruling class in that country does not want accountability. Its that simple. They didnt want it in 1982 and they dont want it today.

NARRATION: As for the United States, many Salvadorans say that it should be doing more to challenge Bukeles actions, and given Americas history in their country, it should at least issue an apology.

NELSON RAUDA: Imagine if you had 24 of your relatives killed and the U.S. government says nothing happened there. The U.S. kept backing up a government that were violating human rights because of a greater goal of stopping communism. And after it occurred, the U.S. government tried to cover up the massacre.

SUSAN MEISELAS: Unfortunately we dont see the implications of much of what we do in the world. Its always beyond our sight. Can the truth help Salvador outlive hate? This is the important thing.

NELSON RAUDA: If you cant have justice in the El Mozote trial, can you have justice in El Salvador? I think the answer is clearly no.

AMADEO MARTINEZ SANCHEZ (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): How many old people have died seeking justice that never comes? Look, we as victims, are going to keep demanding justice so this historical memory is never forgotten. Because of this massacre that happened in El Mozote were going to keep fighting forever forging forward because if we backtrack, weve lost.

(END)