Fox News host Bill O'Reilly slammed the Mother Jones journalist, who accused him of lying about reporting from the Falklands War. O'Reilly's former colleague, Eric Engberg, also added fuel to the fire, saying O'Reilly "behaved unprofessionally."
O'Reilly, 65, used a whole 10-minute segment of his Friday
episode of the O'Reilly Factor to tear Corn apart for the article
at the left-leaning magazine Mother Jones that features
investigative and breaking news reporting. The dispute came just
a week after NBC news anchor Brian Williams took himself off air
for lying about his time in Iraq.
O'Reilly, a former CBS News reporter, pointed out: "Mother
Jones, which has low circulation, is considered by many the
bottom rung of journalism in America. However, in this internet
age, the defamation they put forth gets exposure."
"And so I have to deal with this garbage tonight. I'm
sorry," he added, calling Corn "an irresponsible
guttersnipe."
Mother Jones alleged in its report by David Corn and Daniel
Schulman on Thursday that "for years, O'Reilly has recounted
dramatic stories about his own war reporting that don't withstand
scrutiny—even claiming he acted heroically in a war zone that he
apparently never set foot in."
O'Reilly replied on his show: 'Basically David Corn, a liar,
says that I exaggerated situations in the Falklands War and
Salvadoran War. Here is the truth...'
He said that after learning of the surrender [Argentina's to
Great Britain], "angry mobs in Buenos Aires stormed the
presidential palace, the Casa Rosasa, trying to overthrow the
government of General Leopoldo Galtieri."
Please, Fox News, don't reprimand Bill O'Reilly. To do so would imply Fox cares about facts and truth. Why start now? http://t.co/a1RmpHzeh3
— Michael Moore (@MMFlint) February 22, 2015
"I was in the street with my camera crews," O'Reilly
recalled, adding that "violence was horrific, as Argentine
soldiers fired into the crowds, who were responding with violent
acts of their own."
According to O'Reilly, his video of the combat led the CBS
Evening News with Dan Rather that night. Later, he sent a report
that ran nationwide. To prove his words he showed an internal
memo from CBS News praising his coverage of the protest.
The trust and credibility that O'Reilly hasn't even remotely come close to building up over the course of his career is gone.
— Frank Conniff (@FrankConniff) February 22, 2015
"I never said I was on the Falkland Islands, as Corn
purports, I said I covered the Falklands War, which I did,"
the Fox News host said.
A retired CBS correspondent, Eric Jon Engberg, wrote in a Facebook post that “we -
meaning the American networks - were all in the same, modern
hotel and we never saw any troops, casualties or weapons” in
Buenos Aires, which, according to O'Reilly's former colleague was
nothing but an "expense account zone.”
Devastated to learn Bill O'Reilly didn't single-handedly win Falklands War after all. But they can't take his Vietnam medals away! #OhReally
— Irvine Welsh (@IrvineWelsh) February 22, 2015
"Somewhere it has been reported that O'Reilly has claimed he
was the only CBS News reporter who had the courage to go into the
street because the rest of us were hiding in our hotel,"
Engberg wrote.
“If he said such a thing, it is an absolute lie,”
Engberg wrote. “Everyone was working in the street that
night, the crews exhibiting their usual courage. O'Reilly was the
one person who behaved unprofessionally and without regard for
the safety of the camera crew he was leading,” he added.
Two quotations. Bill O'Reilly debates Bill O'Reilly on the topic of Bill O'Reilly. pic.twitter.com/LuUVDOsjX5
— JRehling (@JRehling) February 22, 2015
“This account from a veteran CBS News correspondent and a
former colleague of O’Reilly - who witnessed O'Reilly's short
stint in Buenos Aires at the end of the Falklands War - is
additional confirmation of what we reported and raises additional
questions for O’Reilly,” Mother Jones' Corn told The
Huffington Post.
O'Reilly told TVNews on Thursday that Corn belongs "in the
kill zone," for which Mother Jones demanded an apology.
O'Reilly explained his phrase was "simply a slang
expression."
When they ask #FoxNews Bill O'Reilly what he did to make a difference in the world, he can say he stole valor from war veterans #StolenValor
— ViewFromWise (@ViewFromWise) February 22, 2015