At the outbreak of the
Spanish–American War, Bell was a first lieutenant acting as
adjutant to General Forsyth, then commanding the
Department of the West, with headquarters at
San Francisco. He was commissioned as a major of volunteers in May 1898 and sent to the Philippines, where he participated in the attack on the Spanish forces in Manila from August 1 to 13. In 1925, Bell was posthumously awarded the
Distinguished Service Cross for having conducted detailed reconnaissance of
Fort San Antonio Abad on August 10, 1898. This delayed award had originally been proposed as a
Medal of Honor by General
Wesley Merritt. After a few months in the Philippines, Bell was promoted to
brigadier general of volunteers in December 1899, outranking many officers previously his senior. In 1900, a short documentary film debuted by
American Mutoscope & Biograph of Bell's driving a pack of mules across the
Agno River. The film catalog reports this to be "one of the most notable incidents of the Philippine War," and the film reportedly "made a decided sensation wherever it has been shown."
Concentration camp policy In late 1901, Bell was made commander of U.S. forces in the provinces of
Batangas and
Laguna by Philippine Governor-General
William Howard Taft. In response to guerrilla attacks by general
Miguel Malvar, Bell implemented
counterinsurgency tactics, destroying crops and slaughtering livestock in order to starve insurgents into submission. Bell ordered all civilians in the area to relocate to internment camps, stating, "all able-bodied men will be killed or captured... old men, women and children will be sent to [concentration camps]". Living conditions in the camps were poor, with inadequate sanitation leading civilians to fall ill with a multitude of diseases, including
cholera,
smallpox,
beriberi, and
bubonic plague. One of Bell's subordinate officers described the camps as "some suburb of hell". In response to disease outbreaks in the camps, Bell ordered a mass public
vaccination campaign in Batangas. Bell also forced all civilians to co-operate with occupying U.S. forces, stating that, "Neutrality should not be tolerated", and anyone accused of being part of the insurgency could be executed. Between January and April 1902, 8,350 people died in the camps out of a population of 298,000. Some camps experienced mortality rates as high as 20 percent. According to American historian
Andrea Pitzer, Bell's reconcentration policy was "directly responsible" for over 11,000 deaths. Bell's tactics mirrored similar civilian reconcentration policies previously carried out by the Spanish in
Cuba and by the British in
South Africa during the
Second Boer War. According to a legal brief written for the
United States Senate Committee on the Philippines in 1902 by
Julian Codman and
Moorfield Storey of the
American Anti-Imperialist League, Bell said in an interview with
The New York Times on May 3, 1901, that one-sixth of the population of Luzon had been killed or died of dengue fever in the previous two years of war. This would be 616,000 deaths according to Codman and Storey. However, according to
Gore Vidal in a 1981 article for
The New York Review, his researchers found no reference to Bell in
The New York Times on that date. Luzon's population rose from 3,666,822 in 1901 to 3,798,507 in the 1903 census. ==Service in America and World War I==