On AP's "Death of a Marine"
The American public has a right to know what our fighting men and women are doing in our name, and what is happening to them. And as citizens, we have a responsibility to look, even when it shocks and discomfits us.
The American public has a right to know what our fighting men and women are doing in our name, and what is happening to them. And as citizens, we have a responsibility to look, even when it shocks and discomfits us.
Greg Mitchell | Posted 11.10.2009 | Media
I chronicled the controversy over a photograph shot in Afghanistan that captured the moments after a U.S. Marine was mortally wounded by a grenade. It's fascinating to look at one case study.
AP | ALFRED de MONTESQUIOU and JULIE JACOBSON | Posted 10.20.2009 | Politics
DAHANEH, Afghanistan — The pomegranate grove looked ominous. The U.S. patrol had a tip that Taliban fighters were lying in ambush, and a Marine...
Brian Palmer | Posted 11.14.2009 | Media