Learning to Accept, and Master, a $110,000 Mechanical Arm
“Suddenly, he had to ask for help with buttons, zippers and shoelaces. And he loathes asking for help.”
“Suddenly, he had to ask for help with buttons, zippers and shoelaces. And he loathes asking for help.”
James Dao New York Times Nov 2012 10min Permalink
Looking for answers following a mysterious string of slayings and suicides at the base.
Maureen Orth Vanity Fair Dec 2002 40min Permalink
Army Spc. Erik Schei was shot in the head in Iraq. This is the story of his recovery.
Megan McCloskey Stars and Stripes Nov 2012 40min Permalink
Tim O'Brien's meditation on war and peace, reality and fiction, truth and lies. From The Things They Carried.
"You admire the fluid symmetries of troops on the move, the great sheets of metal-fire streaming down from a gunship, the illumination rounds, the white phosphorus, the purply orange glow of napalm, the rocket's red glare. It's not pretty, exactly. It's astonishing. It fills the eye. It commands you. You hate it, yes, but your eyes do not. Like a killer forest fire, like cancer under a microscope, any battle or bombing raid or artillery barrage has the aesthetic purity of absolute moral indifferencea powerful, implacable beautyand a true war story will tell the truth about this, though the truth is ugly."
Tim O'Brien Jan 1990 10min Permalink
Efraim Zuroff does not want to retire.
Joshua Davidovich The Times of Israel Nov 2012 15min Permalink
On the potential existence of personalized bioweapons, which could attack a single individual without leaving a trace, and how they might be stopped.
Andrew Hessel, Marc Goodman, Steven Kotler The Atlantic Oct 2012 35min Permalink
The U.S. military’s leadership problem.
Thomas E. Ricks The Atlantic Nov 2012 25min Permalink
A California martial arts instructor’s secret past.
Previously: Finding Oscar
Sebastian Rotella ProPublica Oct 2012 20min Permalink
Zaranj: the bloody border of Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Luke Mogelson New York Times Magazine Oct 2012 35min Permalink
How Barack Obama decided to green-light the operation that killed Osama bin Laden.
Mark Bowden Vanity Fair Oct 2012 40min Permalink
A Kosovar refugee must decide between love and family.
David Finkel Washington Post Jun 1999 15min Permalink
A 21-year-old UCLA math major leaves his $9,000-a-month internship to fight with the rebels in Libya.
Joshua Davis Men's Journal Sep 2012 25min Permalink
The debate over autonomous lethal drones.
Don Troop The Chronicle of Higher Education Sep 2012 15min Permalink
An American visitor reflects on a visit to Bosnia, with observations both sweet and ominous.
"We liked the weather on the ground and in the mountains and we liked the drive up Jahorena with its dismantled houses, houses whose faces were opened by bombs and tanks. We stayed in a cabin surrounded by snow and the ruined landscape of an ethnic cleansing. And on that mountain we threw paper planes and shot homemade videos and played steal the bacon until it was time for us to go to sleep, then wake up again feeling safe in the cold house with an unfed, wood-burning stove."
Chad Patton Commas Colons Jan 2012 Permalink
The emotional toll on drone pilots.
Elisabeth Bumiller New York Times Jul 2012 Permalink
How a group of men with nicknames like “Emperor” and “Spear Carrier” tipped the balance in South Sudan’s fight for independence.
Rebecca Hamilton Reuters Jul 2012 20min Permalink
Drone strikes and their consequences.
Three women bribe a Red Cross driver for a ride to a battlefield to identify the lost men in their lives.
"They climbed into the back of the Red Cross truck, carrying small bags of lunch and the knickknacks they hoped to bury. The interior smelled of disinfectant, of cigarettes. The metal seats offered only the ache of ice. Underneath their unwashed winter coats, they wore clothing for the dead -- Carmen in Savic's favorite dress, the one he always begged her to wear without a bra, and now much too thin for this cold; Marina in jeans and a sweater, wearing her brother's skiing cap and a large cross around her neck, folding and unfolding her spotted hands; Gisele bundled up, zipped up, buttoned up with all the clothing she could wear, not a bit of wife showing."
Robert Shuster Witness Jan 2012 25min Permalink
Revealing the murder of 109 Vietnamese civilians during a 1968 search-and-destroy mission on a rumored Viet Gong stronghold, often referred to in military circles as Pinkville, actually the village of My Lai.
Seymour Hersh The St. Louis Post-Dispatch Nov 1969 20min Permalink
During World War II, a young soldier gives a dance lesson to General Eisenhower.
"The two MPs walked him to the door, which opened as they reached it, and a dapper-looking lieutenant asked Kelly to come in and have a drink. He said that his name was Lieutenant Mason, and that he was General Eisenhower’s aide-de-camp. The MPs noted carefully the look on Kelly’s face. They went away with their chins clenched in an effort to suppress belly laughter."
Michael Chabon New York Times Jan 2001 10min Permalink
On the escape of hundreds of insurgents from Kandahar’s Sarposa Prison through a tunnel dug from the outside, and an unlikely suspect: the jail’s former warden.
Luke Mogelson GQ Jun 2012 25min Permalink
The cold, forgotten realities of “conventional warfare.”
Paul Fussell The Atlantic Aug 1989 40min Permalink
A man living in the Boston suburbs learns he could be one of the only survivors of a 1982 massacre in Guatemala.
Sebastian Rotella ProPublica May 2012 40min Permalink
Inside Moammar Gadhafi’s secret surveillance network.
Matthieu Aikins Wired May 2012 25min Permalink
A profile of former Bosnia Serb military commander Ratko Mladic, whose war crimes trial began, and was abruptly suspended, this week.
Robert Block The New York Review of Books Oct 1995 20min Permalink