1. The Bomb Squad
After the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Staff Sergeant Williams James (Jeremy Renner) is transferred to the Bomb Squad of the Army's Outlaw Company to replace a colleague who has just died in Baghdad on a mission. The other two men on the bomb disposal team, Petty Officer Samborn (Anthony Mackay), who is in charge of liaison, and Special Forces soldier Owen (Brian Geraghty), who is in charge of cover, are quite disgusted with the spirited Williams.
But during a bomb-disarming operation at a U.N. building, Williams, who resists orders to force the bomb to be disarmed, is applauded by Colonel Reed (David Moss). During a warehouse bomb-disarming mission, Williams believes that the young Iraqi boy being used as a body bomb is Beckham (Christopher Shay), a pirate DVD seller he knew from his barracks. The death of the young Beckham drives Williams even more crazy, going so far as to leave the barracks and enter the city single-handedly to investigate.
2. That Place Iraq
Series of television episodes about the war in Iraq, produced by the American television network FX. The content is a depiction of what happens to an ordinary squad of the US Army's 3rd Machine Infantry Division in Iraq, which includes the squad leader (Staff Sergeant Lion King), two female pilots (Sister B and Sister Erkuan), and a few other ordinary GIs (Dummy, Old Smokey, Angel, Taye, and Bo), and very in-depth depictions of their lives in Iraq.
3. The Green Zone
In 2003, the Iraq war broke out. Saddam's government was hit hard, and weapons of mass destruction (WMD) became a powerful excuse for the U.S. to send troops into Iraq. Roy Miller's (Matt Damon) team is ordered to search for WMDs in Iraq, but numerous searches turn up nothing, making Miller suspicious of the source of the tip-offs.
On one occasion, he meets a local one-legged man, Farhadi, and learns that a group of key Iraqi figures are gathering at a location where they will find Al Rawi (Yigal Naor), who appears to have a complicated relationship with the U.S. government, on a poker card. Against all odds, Miller launches an independent investigation and discovers that the so-called WMD is nothing more than a lie wrapped in a myriad of ugly truths.
4. Saving Private Lynch
Jessica Lynch, 20, serves in the U.S. Army's 507th Mechanic Company, 3rd Mechanical Infantry Division. On March 23rd of this year, just a few days after the war in Iraq started, her column encountered the Iraqi army in Nasiriyah, southern Iraq, Lynch was seriously wounded and captured, and was sent to a nearby hospital for medical treatment. on April 2nd, U.S. Army Special Forces directed a real-life version of "Saving Private Ryan" to save Lynch from being rescued. The incident was stormed by the media at the time, and Lynch became the most recognizable hero of the Iraq War.
However, it wasn't long before some people questioned Lynch's "heroism," saying it was a show by the U.S. Army to promote its "heroism. Army Hospital in Washington, D.C., on July 21 to receive the Purple Heart. Lynch, a captured female soldier who was rescued from the Iraq War, left the Army hospital on July 22 and returned to her home in West Virginia.
5. Body of Lies
Roger Ferris (Leonardo DiCaprio), a former war correspondent who traveled through gunfire, is now employed by the CIA as a sleeper agent on the U.S. side of the Iraqi border, keeping track of infamous terrorist operative Al-Salim (Alon Aboutboul). Aboutboul). His boss, Ed Hoffman (Russell Crowe), sits in the distant United States, where he controls the big picture with a computer in his hand.?
Through the confession of a terrorist who doesn't want to be a human bomb, Logue learns that Alsalem is planning a new terrorist attack. In the ensuing clash, Logue's assistant is tragically killed and he himself is wounded multiple times. Just before he can recover, he is sent to Oman again by Hoffman. On the other hand, his rivals keep spreading rumors of cooperation with the U.S. military, which puts Logue, who is in the tiger's den, in great danger.