KHTHON FIELD INTELLIGENCE
REGION: AMERICAS / CENTRAL
CLASSIFICATION: OPEN SOURCE
13°41'N 089°13'W
ALT: 36,000 FT
PASS: 001 OF 001
SENSOR: SAR / GEOINT
MODE: SOCMINT-LED
STATUS: ACTIVE
FORENSICS: EAAF
CIVILIAN DEATHS: 75,000+
LAST UPDATED: 2024
Our Research Americas El Salvador

El Salvador

Country Overview Civil War Massacres
01 · Overview

Country / Region Overview

El Salvador's civil war (1980–1992) left an enduring landscape of mass graves across this small Central American nation.

The armed conflict between the Salvadoran military and the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) claimed around 75,000 lives. Counterinsurgency campaigns targeted entire villages, resulting in massacres such as El Mozote (1981), where more than 800 civilians were executed by the Atlacatl Battalion and buried in communal pits beneath houses, fields, and churches. Across the countryside, shallow burials and ravine disposals became common, concealing evidence of atrocities carried out by both the army and paramilitary death squads.

"El Salvador spans two eras of mass grave creation — wartime massacres and modern institutional concealment."

— Khthon Field Assessment

Excavations have been pursued by coalitions of survivors, NGOs, and international forensic teams such as the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team (EAAF), whose work at El Mozote set precedents for international accountability. The UN Truth Commission for El Salvador documented hundreds of sites, though many remain unexcavated due to political resistance. These graves are not isolated to history: the echoes of wartime violence continue to shape how the state and its institutions manage bodies today.

In the present day, the state's carceral policies have generated new burial concerns. The CECOT mega-prison, centerpiece of President Nayib Bukele's crackdown on gangs, has come under scrutiny for conditions that produce unexplained deaths and unacknowledged burials. Monitoring the handling of bodies in closed institutions like CECOT links directly back to Khthon's workflow: combining SOCMINT and HUMINT from survivors and families with GEOINT tools to detect clandestine burials at the intersection of repression, state secrecy, and mass incarceration.

75,000 Estimated civilian and combatant deaths during the 1980–1992 civil war
800+ Civilians massacred at El Mozote in December 1981 by the Atlacatl Battalion
40,000+ Inmates held at CECOT — the world's largest prison, opened 2023
1992 Year the Chapultepec Peace Accords ended El Salvador's civil war
02 · Timeline

Key Events

1980

Civil war begins — Archbishop Romero assassinated

Archbishop Óscar Romero is shot dead while celebrating Mass on March 24, 1980 — attributed to right-wing death squads. His death marks the formal outbreak of armed conflict between the FMLN and the U.S.-backed Salvadoran military.

1981

El Mozote massacre

The Atlacatl Battalion kills more than 800 civilians — including hundreds of children — in the village of El Mozote, Morazán. Bodies are buried in communal pits beneath houses and the local church. The massacre is denied by the Salvadoran and U.S. governments for over a decade.

1980–1992

Widespread atrocities by death squads and military

Paramilitary death squads, operating with military protection, conduct thousands of targeted killings of students, union members, clergy, and peasants. Shallow graves and riverine disposals become systematic across Morazán, Chalatenango, and Cabañas departments.

1992

Chapultepec Peace Accords

Peace is signed in Mexico City, formally ending twelve years of war. A UN Truth Commission is established to investigate atrocities. It documents over 22,000 acts of violence, attributes 85% to military and paramilitary forces, and calls for accountability — largely ignored by subsequent governments.

1992–Present

EAAF forensic investigations at El Mozote

The Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team begins excavations at El Mozote, recovering hundreds of sets of skeletal remains. Their work establishes forensic standards for mass grave investigation in Latin America and provides critical legal evidence for accountability proceedings.

2016

Amnesty Law struck down

El Salvador's Supreme Court strikes down the 1993 Amnesty Law that had shielded military officers from prosecution for wartime atrocities. Cases involving El Mozote and other massacres are reopened.

2022

State of Exception declared — mass gang arrests

President Bukele declares a state of exception following gang violence, suspending constitutional rights. Over 70,000 people are arrested in months. Reports emerge of deaths in custody, overcrowding, and unacknowledged burials — generating new documentation concerns for Khthon.

2023–Present

CECOT opens — ongoing monitoring

The Center for Confinement of Terrorism (CECOT) opens in Tecoluca — capacity 40,000+. Unexplained deaths, restricted access, and absence of public records make it an active site of concern. Khthon monitors via SOCMINT, HUMINT, and satellite imagery of the facility.

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