Fifteen years after the start of the Afghanistan war, Pat Tillman's name is still remembered as a symbol of the great sacrifice the United States asked for from an entire generation in what is already the longest military mission in its history. Tillman had resigned from a million-dollar contract with the Football League (NFL) to enlist in the Army, following the strong impact of the September 11, 2001 attacks on him. But two years later he was shot down on a mission in southeastern Afghanistan, and the White House and pentagon used their sacrifice to ennoble the war and its motives. However, it would soon be discovered that Tillman was not killed by the Taliban, but by "friendly fire," and that the Army conspired to hide those circumstances.
Through Tillman's diaries and letters, interviews with his wife and friends, conversations with the soldiers who served alongside him, an...read more