
During the 1980s, El Salvador was engaged in a brutal civil war between the right-wing anti-communist government and various groups of left-wing guerrillas. The U.S. President at the time, Ronald Reagan, was a vehement anti-communist and supplied the El Salvadoran government with more than $7 billion in aid.
In addition to money, weapons, and international support, the U.S. government also trained Salvadoran troops at the U.S. Army's School of the Americas, then located in Panama. It was these soldiers, trained by the United States, that committed some of the worst atrocities of the war. The massacre at the village of El Mozote is but one example.
Before proceeding, it is essential to understand the village of El Mozote itself. El Mozote was not a guerrilla town. Guerrilla support among the religiously devout was often created through the work of left-wing priests teaching Catholic liberation theology, but El Mozote was a stronghold of Protestant evangelicalism. As evangelicals, the people of El Mozote did not pledge allegiance to either side; they simultaneously tried to remain on friendly terms with both government soldiers and rebels.
On December 10, 1981 members of the the Atlacatl Battalion, an elite American-trained Salvadoran group notorious for its brutality, arrived at the rural village of El Mozote. Upon entering the town, the Atlacatl Battalion ordered everyone to lay face down in the dirt while the soldiers stole everything of value. The civilians were then ordered back into their houses until the next day.
On the morning of December 11, everyone was ordered back outside. Men were forced into the church while the women and children were put in the house of one Alfredo Marquez. A handful of men were tortured and decapitated while the majority were taken out into the forest, forced to lie down, and shot in the head. Meanwhile, soldiers picked out young women and girls and proceeded to rape them. The rest of the women were marched into the house of Israel Marquez where they were executed; the house was burned to the ground.
In regards to killing the children, one soldier remarked, “If we don’t kill them now, they’ll just grow up to be guerrillas.” The children were summarily executed and some were hung from tree branches. In all, around 1,000 civilians were murdered.
When reports of the killing appeared in El Salvador, the Salvadoran government denied all accusations, claiming that the incident was a "guerrilla trick." Soon, however, the Salvadoran government could no longer deny what happened and instead falsely claimed El Mozote was a guerrilla stronghold.
The Reagan administration, under pressure to explain the massacre, was being ambiguous at best. A cable from Washington stated,
“It is not possible to prove or disprove excesses of violence against the civilian population of El Mozote by Government troops . . . no evidence could be found to confirm that Government forces systematically massacred civilians in the operation zone.”
Reagan himself publicly stated that the Salvadoran government was “making a concerted and significant effort to comply with internationally recognized human rights.” At the time Reagan was busy petitioning Congress for even more military aid for the Salvadoran government.
After the war ended in 1992, a Truth Commission determined that at least twenty-four people participated in the massacre at El Mozote and that the guns and ammunition used in the massacre were produced in Lake City, Missouri.





