This Oscar nominated documentary by Glenn Silber and Teté Vasconcellos is an interesting examination on the American intervention on El Salvador
during a critical civil war period in the early 1980's and how similar such intervention was if compared to U. S. involvement in Vietnam. It's a quite
summarized project, but one must take into account that this made way early and what happened during the decade would only escalate more and more
between the El Salvador armed forces fighting the Communist guerrillas leaving a long trail of killings on the way.
Those who studied better the situation in El Salvador will definitely reach better and smarter conclusions than me, but I always wonder about
many issues revolving U. S. relations with the country and either some naivety or some obscure agenda that made them react badly to everything that
went down there, even with the loss of American people there, most notably the four nuns brutally killed. Like in Vietnam, the idea on the surface
is to get rid of the spread of Communist throughout the world and to each certain nation there were ways of stopping them, either through sponsored
dictatorships or waging wars.
The problem with El Salvador and Nicaragua comes when the U. S supplies with training and money to the armed forces but
they don't get to inspect with a closer look as to whom those forces are acting out against, which is usually poor people who have nothing to do
with the rebels cause - and in the end the population is most obvious to favor the guerrillas but they have more in common than a government that
leaves them in poverty and kills them for no reason. And what's America's profit in all of this? Don't know fully except that it exploded badly with
the Contras but that's another story that has some similarities with what went down on El Salvador.
For those interested on the topic and with a different angle I also recommend "In the Name of the People", which follows the guerrillas in great detail
and shows how important and noble were their cause. This one follows the American perspective in all of the conflict and how it could escalate into a
war of disastrous consequences. There are many great archive images and interviews, but it kept me wanting for some more insights, maybe some political
analyst to make some conjectures as if there were chances of the conflict becoming a potential war or ways to prevent it. Guess it didn't because the
media hit hard when Americans started to get killed there - and also the U. S. military complex probably wouldn't want things to take a step further, for
reasons. A good and sad report. 7/10.