Let's analyse this text.
Dumb Ox is a political operative.
First para:
Bishop Fellay has given a conference at Econe.
He is said to have stated that he was "utterly deceived" by Benedict. The notion that Bishop Fellay admits to being deceived is not news. He said it, in equivalent terms, all across Australia when he was here a few weeks ago, in the conferences he presented. What is potentially new is his emphatic statement of it, but since we are not being given any actual quotes, we can't make anything of that.
Second and Third paras:
The "bitter arguing" appears to be Dumb Ox's interpellation, not a reference to what Bishop Fellay said in Econe.
There will be no reconciliation now until "rome" converts.
As I have explained several times, the thinking of the General Chapter regarding the "Six Conditions" was that if #1 was agreed, the rest wouldn't matter. This is why the hard-liners agreed to the soft remainder of the conditions. In the light of that, what Dumb Ox presents Bishop Fellay saying at Econe is not really news either, it's just more explicit. But again, we are given no quotes.
So, what is going on?
Well, we know that Bishop Fellay recently made his visit to see Di Noia, to deliver his formal reply to the June 13 text. We also know that the Fraternity has been threatened several times with re-excommunication and even a declaration of schism by "rome". So it seems likely that this threat was reiterated in Rome during the recent visit.
What would Bishop Fellay's reaction be to such a confirmation of this threat? Prepare the Fraternity and its faithful for new attacks by "rome". Stiffen them up, and discredit "rome" as much as possible.
What is Dumb Ox doing, then? Spinning this to place Bishop Fellay in as bad a light as possible, and to colour the communications from the Fraternity which will appear shortly. It's clear from the last paragraph, "Official announcements and explanations giving more detail are expected in the weeks to come."
This is a pre-emptive strike to undermine the image of the Fraternity as hard-line, no matter how hard-line Bishop Fellay talks in future.
Politics is ugly!