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Rieder: Now O'Reilly's under fire for exaggerations

Rem Rieder
USA TODAY
FOX News commentator Bill O'Reilly

Saw that one coming.

In the wake of the flap over NBC anchor Brian Williams exaggerating his exploits while covering combat, another prominent TV news figure has been accused of doing the same thing. This time it's Fox News' Bill O'Reilly.

Mother Jones magazine said Thursday that O'Reilly has his own "Brian Williams problem" because he has said a number of times that he covered combat on the Falkland Islands during the war between Britain and Argentina in 1982.

For example, In his 2001 book, The No Spin Zone: Confrontations with the Powerful and Famous in America, O'Reilly wrote, "You know that I am not easily shocked. I've reported on the ground in active war zones from El Salvador to the Falklands."

Trouble is, no U.S. reporters got to the remote islands where the fighting took place. Only about 30 British journalists, accredited by the British government, made it there. Most of the journalists dispatched to cover the bizarre conflict did so from the safe confines of Buenos Aires, 1,200 miles away.

Predictably, O'Reilly's response to the allegations was to come out fighting, directing heavy artillery at one of the article's authors, David Corn. Asked why he wouldn't respond to Mother Jones' request for comment on the story, the blustery host told The Washington Post, "Because David Corn is a guttersnipe liar." O'Reilly then said of Corn, "For years he's been trying to get Fox News. I would never speak to the man about anything at any time. He's a disgusting piece of garbage."

O'Reilly concedes he never did set foot on the embattled islands. What he meant by the "active war zones ... (in) the Falklands" was the tumultuous street demonstrations in Buenos Aires that erupted after the war.

To which Corn responded in the British newspaper the Guardian, "O'Reilly more than once said he was in a war zone. But the war was on an island. It was not in Buenos Aires. It's like saying you were in a war zone during the Vietnam War because you were in Washington."

O'Reilly tried another approach in an interview with Mediaite. "If you were assigned to a war, you put on your résumé you covered the Falklands, the Middle East, El Salvador, wherever it is where you were sent," he said. "This is what journalists do."

It will be fascinating to see whether this contretemps has legs. O"Reilly clearly is guilty of stretching the truth. He readily concedes he wasn't in the Falklands. And street protests are a far cry from covering combat. His language was a long way from precise.

Interestingly, O'Reilly came to Williams' defense in the wake of news that the NBC anchor had falsely said he was in a helicopter during the Iraq War that came under enemy fire and was forced down. Williams had to retract the story and has been suspended without pay for six months.

"There's a lot of people that seem to be real happy that his career has gone down the drain," O'Reilly said on Jimmy Kimmel Live, "and that disturbs me."

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