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Analysis Of Dirty Wars: The World Is A Battlefield By Jeremy Scahill

659 Words3 Pages

Throughout modern times, one of the American government’s greatest influences in social and political conflicts internationally is the use of covert operations. In the documentary Dirty Wars, based on Jeremy Scahill’s novel, Dirty Wars: The World Is a Battlefield, Scahill’s main goal as an American war journalist is to uncover what NATO or National Atlantic Treaty Organization is hiding beneath all the battles in Afghanistan. What NATO tells war journalists when it comes to night raids are the only times at which they took place. This lead Scahill to investigate in a city named Gardez in Afghanistan that was recently attacked in a night raid, and this event will alter Scahill’s viewpoint on American government policies worldwide. While visiting Gardez, Scahill is shocked as residents told him of U.S soldiers shooting and killing innocent people without a warning or a reason as to open fire and then leaving without ever leaving a trace of there being U.S …show more content…

Scahill begins his research by finding his rank and name being Vice Admiral William McRaven. However, other than that nothing else is known about him. McRaven is not from NATO Headquarters, the Eastern Regional Command, and his RO1 insignia seemed unfamiliar. Scahill then found an old press briefing from the Department of Defense that mentioned McRaven’s election to lead an obscure unit within the military called JSOC. This was all new information to Scahill, as he had never heard of JOSC before. JSOC, or Joint Special Operations Command was designed to be the most covert operations unit in the military and the only one that reports directly to the White House. Over the next couple of weeks, more night raids were carried out and it is reported that in the last three months over 1700 night raids were filed. Scahill knew that JSOC’s power and influence was growing but he did not know just how far they would

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