Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador

Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador

Jacob Miller - September 26, 2017

The Salvadoran Civil War was a conflict between the military-led government of El Salvador and the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMNL), a coalition of five left-wing guerrilla groups.

In the late nineteenth century, coffee exportation became a vital source of income for El Salvador, comprising of 95% of the country’s income. The coffee revenue, however, was only divided among 2% of the population creating stark wealth inequality. In 1932, the Central American Socialist Party was formed and lead to a peasant uprising. The Salvadorian government suppressed this uprising in what became known as La Matanza, the massacre, in which the military murdered between 10,000-40,000 people. This uprising gave the Salvadorian military cause to take control of the government. As a result of the 1973 oil crisis and rising food prices, land reforms were attempted to redistribute farmland to the peasant population. These reforms failed because of opposition from the elite and malcontent with the government was reinforced more deeply among the populace.

The 1977 election held on February 20, which saw the victory of General Carlos Humberto Romero and the National Conciliation Party was marred by blatant fraud and voter intimidation by the government-sponsored paramilitary ORDEN. The disenfranchised population staged protests against the election fraud and on February 28, security forces killed between 200-1,500 demonstrators and bystanders alike.

On October 15, 1979, the Revolutionary Government Junta (JRG) deposed President Gen. Romero in a coup. The United States gave the JRG a military training team and $5.7 million. The JGR restricted land holdings, nationalized the banking, coffee and sugar industries, scheduled elections, and disbanded the paramilitary death squad ORDEN.

“The immediate goal of the Salvadoran army and security forces—and of the United States in 1980, was to prevent a takeover by the leftist-led guerrillas and their allied political organizations. At this point in the Salvadoran conflict, the latter were much more important than the former. The military resources of the rebels were extremely limited and their greatest strength, by far, lay not in force of arms but in their “mass organizations” made up of labor unions, student and peasant organizations that could be mobilized by the thousands in El Salvador’s major cities and could shut down the country through strikes.”
– Central America, US Policy. Bureau of Public Affairs

As the military government began to expand its violence towards its citizens, not only through death squads but military enforcement as well, anybody that questioned official policy, were viewed as hostiles. The FMLN began their insurrection on January 10, 1981, with attacks on military targets throughout the country. The JRG declared martial law in May 1979. Between January 12 and February 19, 1981, 168 people were killed by security forces for breaking curfew.

In efforts to defeat the insurgency, the Salvadoran Armed Forces targeted the civilian population by displacing or killing civilians in order to remove any possible base of support for the rebels. “This may be an effective strategy for winning the war. It is, however, a strategy that involves the use of terror tactics—bombings, strafing, shelling and, occasionally, massacres of civilians.” (Americas Watch Committee)

Beginning in 1983, guerilla strongholds were found by U.S. reconnaissance planes that relayed intelligence to the Salvadoran military. Amnesty International identified “regular security and military units as responsible for widespread torture, mutilation and killings of noncombatant civilians from all sectors of Salvadoran society.”

In 1982, the FMLN began calling for a peace settlement that would establish a “government of broad participation” while at the same time increasing their attacks on the government military. The United States Embassy estimated the damage to the economic infrastructure at US$98 million.

The Apaneca Pact was signed on 3 August 1982, establishing a Government of National Unity, whose objectives were peace, democratization, human rights, economic recovery, security and a strengthened international position. Lack of agreements within this tentative government prevented any substantive changes from being made. During 1982-1983, government forces killed about 8,000 civilians per year. In the 1984 elections, Christian Democrat Jose Napoleon Duarte won the presidency with two million dollars of CIA financial support.

After 10 years of war, more than one million people had been displaced out of a population of 5.3 million. The death squad activities continued to escalate into the 1990s. In 1991, President Bush authorized $42.5 million in military aid to the Salvadoran armed forces. By April 1991, negotiations resumed and the Salvadoran Civil War ended in 1992 with the signing of the Chapultepec Peace Accords.

Between 1980-1992, the Commission on the Truth for El Salvador concluded that more than 70,000 people were killed. More than 25% of the populace was displaced as refugees. Despite mostly killing peasants, the Government readily killed any opponent they suspected of sympathy with the guerrillas—clergy (men and women), church lay workers, political activists, journalists, labor unionists (leaders, rank-and-file), medical workers, liberal students and teachers, and human-rights monitors.

FMLN continuously violated the human rights of many Salvadorans and other individuals identified as right-wing supporters, military targets, pro-government politicians, intellectuals, public officials, and judges. These violations included kidnapping, bombings, rape, and killing.

Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
Gen. Carlos Humberto Romero, military president of El Salvador (1977-1979). His presidency was characterized by increased civil unrest and government repression. Wikipedia
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. 1980. Waiting for the bus on the road to La Libertad. (EL SALVADOR, page 41) ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. Arcatao, Chalatenango province. EL SALVADOR. Arcatao, Chalatenango province. 1980. Mano Blanca, the signature of the death squads left on the door of a slain peasant organizer. Susan Meiselas, Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. San Salvador. 1982. Literacy class at San Jose de la Montana Refugee Camp. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. Sonsonate. 1980. Streets of Sonsonate. ©Susan Meiselas: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. 1979. Blood of student slain while handing out political leaflets. ©Susan Meiselas: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. 1979. Collecting contributions for families of the disappeared in front of the Metropolitan Cathedral. ©Susan Meiselas: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. 1979. Demonstrator. ©Susan Meiselas: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. 1980. Soldiers search bus passengers along the Northern Highway.©Susan Meiselas: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. El Triunfo. 1982. The funeral procession for a member of the civil defense. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. El Mozote, January 1982. A few weeks after El Mozote massacre, a villager inside a burned housed looks at charred remains under the fallen ceramic roof tiles. According to neighbors and survivors of the massacre, the house belonged to Don Ambrosio Claros. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. Sonsonate. 1983. Survival training of US-trained Atlacatl Battalion. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. San Vincente. 1981. Peasant guerrillas train in the countryside. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. Cabanas. 1983. Soldiers under fire. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos

Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. Dolores. 1983. Mother of a dead soldier receiving his coffin. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. Atlacatl. 1983. Firing range used by U.S.-trained Atlacatl Battalion. ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
Arrest of auto repair mechanic for failure to carry an ID card, San Salvador, 1979-83 © John HoaglandCollection of the International Center of Photography
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
Gang members make a revenge pact over the grave of a slain leader. San Salvador, 1996. Donna De Cesare: New York Times
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Government soldiers disembark from an armored personnel carrier in the wealthy suburb of Escalon. Guerrillas had taken over a number of houses there during the November Offensive. Here, government forces helped wealthy residents evacuate before shelling started. This illustrated the difference in how the government treated rich and poor residents. In poor neighborhoods, many civilians were shot if they were in the way, 1989. © Larry Towell / Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SANTA MARTA, El Salvador—A young FMLN guerrilla enters the village to visit family and friends. Rural Campesinos had no access to running water or electricity for their homes. Laundry is done at communal water holes, wells, and streams, 1991. © Larry Towell / Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
MORAZAN, El Salvador—Young guerrilla recruits from Segundo Montes rise in the morning to brush their teeth and bathe after sleeping on the forest floor. Peasants remained in strong support of the FMLN guerrillas throughout the war, 1991. © Larry Towell / Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SANTA MARTA, El Salvador—A boy runs with the only TV set in Santa Marta to plug it into the village’s only electrical socket and watch coverage of peace talks in Mexico City between government and guerrilla representatives, 1991. © Larry Towell / Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR—Guerrillas in the streets, 1985. © Jean Gaumy: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
MORAZAN, El Salvador—A guerrilla woman with a gun and oranges, 1991. © Larry Towell: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—A student stands near revolutionary graffiti painted on a wall inside a San Salvador University building. The painting shows an oppressed woman gestating a guerrilla fetus, 1988. © Larry Towell: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Child guerrillas in a Soyapango neighborhood during the November Offensive, 1989. © Larry Towell: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Marines in front of the U.S. Embassy following a protest against U.S. intervention, 1979. © Susan Meiselas: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SUCHITOTO, El Salvador—Government soldiers in a church in an area very near the Guazapa Mountain guerrilla stronghold. The Catholic Church suffered persecution because it spread liberation theology, 1986. © Larry Towell: Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Young guerrillas in need of prosthetics take refuge inside El Calvario Church during the November Offensive. While awaiting transportation to Cuba for treatment, they were trapped by the government army, 1989. © Larry Towell / Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—A former government soldier learns to cane chairs after the war. During the 12-year civil war, several thousand soldiers lost their feet to homemade land mines laid by guerrillas, often made from the nitrogen in imported fertilizer. A homemade land mine would normally only maim, while the U.S.-made Claymore land mines, used by government forces against guerrillas, usually killed the person who tripped them. The brief “job-training” offered after the war was inadequate to help the maimed find meaningful work again. Most of the government soldiers had been forcibly conscripted. Most were rural peasants. After the war, disabled guerrillas and government soldiers united to lobby for more government aid, 1995. © Larry Towell / Magnum Photos
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
Mercenary, El Salvador. Derek Hudson
Death Squads: The Nightmare of El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. El Mozote. 1993. The Memorial at El Mozote. The plaque reads, “They did not die, they are with us, with you and with all humanity.” ©Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos

Advertisement