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Paths of Dissent

Soldiers Speak Out Against America's Misguided Wars

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

American veterans who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan offer invaluable firsthand perspectives on what made America's post-9/11 wars so costly and disastrous.
Twenty years of America's Global War on Terror produced little tangible success while exacting enormous harm. In Iraq and Afghanistan, the United States sustained tens of thousands of casualties, expended trillions of dollars, and inflicted massive suffering on the very populations that we sought to "liberate." Now the inclination to forget it all and move on is palpable. But there is much to be learned from the immense debacle. And those who served and fought in these wars are best positioned to teach us.
Paths of Dissent collects fifteen original essays from American veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan—hailing from a wide range of services, ranks, and walks of life—who have come out in opposition to these conflicts. Selected for their candor and eloquence by fellow veterans Andrew Bacevich and Daniel A. Sjursen, these soldiers vividly describe both their motivations for serving and the disillusionment that made them speak out against the system. Their testimony is crucial for understanding just how the world's self-proclaimed greatest military power went so badly astray.
A Macmillan Audio production from Metropolitan Books

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 2, 2022
      Historian Bacevich (After the Apocalypse) and retired army officer Sjursen gather in this grim and often gripping essay collection U.S. soldiers’ indictments against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Contributors include Erik Edstrom, who attended West Point out of “a conflated mix of economic necessity and idealistic do-goodery” and eventually came to believe that the “war on terror” was “illegal, immoral, self-perpetuating, and counterproductive.” Joy Damiani enlisted at age 19 and spent two years in her division’s public affairs offices in Georgia, “making PR look like news and an unwinnable war look like a victory,” before being sent to Baghdad, where she was rarely permitted to leave the base for her reporting and never allowed to use the word failure in print. Elsewhere, Dan Berchinski describes losing both his legs to an IED in Afghanistan, and Kevin Tillman details how the Bush administration lied about his brother Pat Tillman’s death from friendly fire. Full of potent criticism and anguished admissions of guilt—“We shot at noncombatants. We tortured prisoners. We blew up civilian structures. We ran over, mutilated and took pictures of dead Iraqis. Frankly we did whatever the fuck we wanted”—this is a visceral takedown of America’s forever wars.

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  • English

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