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Blood Runs Through Bragg. Investigating Violence and Drug Networks in Military
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- Nombre de pages160
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-40689-0
- EAN9783565406890
- Date de parution13/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
Between 2020 and 2021, Fort Bragg - home to the United States Army's most elite special operations units, including Delta Force - recorded 109 fatalities, the highest death toll of any American military installation during that period. An investigation by Iraq war veteran and journalist Seth Harp found that behind those numbers lay a web of unexplained killings, suspected drug trafficking networks, and alleged law enforcement complicity stretching from the base itself into the supply chains of international narcotics cartels.
What began as a murder inquiry became an excavation of institutional rot. The Fort Bragg cases are not aberrations. Across the American military, elite soldiers have leveraged their training, operational security knowledge, and logistical access to embed themselves within criminal networks of extraordinary reach. A Green Beret trained at Bragg was convicted of trafficking narcotics with the Sinaloa cartel across the Arizona border.
A Fort Bragg career counselor - twenty years in post - was convicted of recruiting soldiers directly into cartel employment and trafficking methamphetamine. Delta Force operator Phillip Lanning, arrested on six felony charges and still retained on active duty, admitted to using his surveillance and operational security training to serve as bodyguard, enforcer, and intelligence asset for major drug trafficking organizations operating in North Carolina.
In each case, the culture of silence and elite-unit loyalty that defines special operations - assets in combat - became liabilities in accountability.
What began as a murder inquiry became an excavation of institutional rot. The Fort Bragg cases are not aberrations. Across the American military, elite soldiers have leveraged their training, operational security knowledge, and logistical access to embed themselves within criminal networks of extraordinary reach. A Green Beret trained at Bragg was convicted of trafficking narcotics with the Sinaloa cartel across the Arizona border.
A Fort Bragg career counselor - twenty years in post - was convicted of recruiting soldiers directly into cartel employment and trafficking methamphetamine. Delta Force operator Phillip Lanning, arrested on six felony charges and still retained on active duty, admitted to using his surveillance and operational security training to serve as bodyguard, enforcer, and intelligence asset for major drug trafficking organizations operating in North Carolina.
In each case, the culture of silence and elite-unit loyalty that defines special operations - assets in combat - became liabilities in accountability.



















