Yet another of Bill O'Reilly's former colleagues from CBS News
disputes his active war zone claims. Even back then, his colleagues
thought he was "grandstanding" …
Joe Strupp at Media Matters
got yet another of Bill O’Reilly’s former colleagues from CBS News to
talk about the Fox News host’s alleged “combat situation” coverage in
Buenos Aires during the Falklands War, calling his description of his
reporting “absurd.”
Even back then, O’Reilly’s colleagues thought he was “grandstanding”. From Media Matters:
Charles Krause, a CBS News correspondent from 1980 to 1983 who reported from Buenos Aires during the same period as O’Reilly, is the latest to contradict the Fox News host. In an interview with Media Matters, Krause called O’Reilly’s descriptions of his reporting “absurd.”He also recalls O’Reilly being there for a short period of time and not having “any significant role in our coverage of the war.”
“I don’t recall him doing any major story that anybody remembers and he was there a very short time, then he was recalled, I don’t know why,” Krause said. “He wasn’t a team player and people thought he was grandstanding, basically.”
Yes, that sounds like our Bill O’Reilly. He has never been known as a team player by people inside the industry.
Krause joins the half a dozen journalists and personnel from CBS who were working with O’Reilly in Buenos Aires and who dispute his claims.
O’Reilly has countered reality with two Fox personalities vouching for
him and calling David Corn names, which says more about how Fox conducts
itself and its standards than it does about reality.
This morning, Fox News issued a statement standing behind the embattled host.
O’Reilly wasn’t anywhere near the actual war, but he
has tried to turn a protest a thousand plus miles away into a “combat
situation” in order to justify repeatedly claiming to have reported from
“on the ground” in a war zone. His colleagues who were there dispute
this description.
Kraue told Media Matters that the reporters were not
in any danger, “The only danger that we were in was we were staying at
the Sheraton Hotel, which was this massive, modern tower overlooking the
city. We were in no danger whatsoever.”
Also, in spite of O’Reilly’s bombastic descriptions
of an injured cameraman — “I was in a situation one time, in a war zone
in Argentina, in the Falklands, where my photographer got run down and
then hit his head and was bleeding from the ear on the concrete. And the
army was chasing us. I had to make a decision. And I dragged him off,
you know, but at the same time, I’m looking around and trying to do my
job, but I figure I had to get this guy out of there because that was
more important” — Media Matters reports, “Krause also said he does not
recall any CBS cameraman being injured and bleeding.”
Krause isn’t alone in this. Former CBS correspondent Eric Engberg, who was in Buenos Aires with O’Reilly, told CNN host Brian Stelter on Sunday,
“It wasn’t a combat situation by any sense of the word that I know.
There were no people killed. He said that he saw troops fire into the
crowd. I never saw that, and I don’t know anybody who did, and I was
there on the scene. What’s interesting is not only did I not hear any
shots, I didn’t see any ambulances. I didn’t see any tanks. I didn’t see
any armored cars. All of the things that you would have expected to see
had people been shot.”
So no one else who was there covering the conflict
from Buenos Aires can corroborate O’Reilly’s claims. In fact, they do
the opposite.
Even if he had been involved in a violent protest, a protest is not “an active war zone.” A protest is not “on the ground” in an “active war zone.”
This statement alone is evidence of O’Reilly’s mischaracterization of
himself as a war correspondent who covered the Falklands War “on the
ground” from “combat” situation and war zone.
Update: Bill O’Reilly’s only defense just fell apart. Bill Meislin is now disputing
Bill O’Reilly’s version of his report from The Times that he read on
the air on Sunday, writing on Facebook, “Bill O’Reilly cut out an
important phrase when he read excerpts of my report from The Times on
air Sunday to back up his claim that Buenos Aires was a “war zone” the
night after Argentina surrendered to Britain in the Falklands war.” So
dies the “report” conservatives have been desperately hawking as proof
that O’Reilly wasn’t lying.
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