Preview

Analysis Of The Silent War By James Bamford

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
189 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Analysis Of The Silent War By James Bamford
This week I read “The Silent War”, which is an article written by James Bamford. This article is about the cyberwar that the US has been preparing for years. The articles states the resources available now to win the war, and what has been done so far to protect US interests. With the boom of the internet, the digitalization of the sensitive information, the increase of electronic communication, and the electronic monitoring of nuclear weapons, it becomes available to launch different types of cyberattacks. An example is given in the story about a cyberattack against the Iranian nuclear system with the collaboration of the Israeli. Also, the story gives a biography of the general Keith Alexander who led the National Security Agency (NSA) for

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    There is a passage from day two of the novel, July 2nd. Chamberlain demands a bayonet charge. This scene is such a sacrificial move because the Union army is running out of ammo and therefore Chamberlains initiates a daredevil barrage attack straight for the enemy troops. This move is game-changing in the war because it turns the Confederate army back and as a result helps the Union armies defeat them in the battle. Shaara presents this as possibly the reason the Union…

    • 83 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the first chapter, right away it is revealed that the book is told in first person point of view. The narrator, along with other men fighting in the war, is resting and is five miles away from the line of fighting. They had been fighting for the last fourteen days; one hundred fifty men went, but only eighty survived. He mentions how when they are fighting, they barely get any sleep and that the war wouldn’t be as bad if they had more time to rest. Certain charaters are then introduced: Albert Kropp, Müller, Leer, (and the narrator) Paul Baümer. They are all nineteen-year-old volunteers for the war and were from the same class. Additionally, there are Tjaden, Haie Westhus, Detering, and Stanislaus Katczinsky. During meal time, the cook had prepared food for 150 men, but when the cook realizes that only 80 remained after the rest died in battle, the second company is delighted to have more to eat.…

    • 480 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In “The Long Shadow of War” Terrance Hayes considers what makes someone family while discussing the time he not only found out his ‘father’ was not his blood, but also when he first met his birth father. He makes the claim that “the word father had nothing to do with blood.” Later he writes “I wondered how much of who my brother was had to do with blood.” In both of these instances he questions whether or not blood is what makes someone family, while also discussing how both of his fathers had served in the military.…

    • 189 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Entry #2: Chapters 5-11 Summary: It starts out with Maggie giving birth and Will reminiscing about how he met Emma and hints at conflict at moving back into this town. Then it shifts to Iris’s side of that night where she goes and sees an old war movie, almost reminiscent of the war they’re in right now, and then flirting gets serious with Harry. Maggie dies after giving birth, and Will decides to go to London to help out with people who’ve been hurt because of the war.…

    • 546 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In All Quiet on the Western Front, author Erich Maria Remarque reinforces the idea that war is horrific, through his use of visual, auditory, and tactile imagery. Towards the end of the second chapter of the book, Remarque begins to disillusionize the glorious imagery of war by describing the death of Kemmerich, a German soldier and a fellow classmate of the protagonist Paul. Paul and his other classmates that enlisted sit by Kemmerich's deathbed, illustrating the mourning for their comrade by saying “Franz Kemmerich looked as slight and frail as a child...There he lies...Nineteen and a half years old, he does not want to die!” (29) Remarque uses words such as “slight” and “frail” to describe the condition in which Kemmerich is in. As you approach twenty years old, you should be in prime shape, ready for or already in college, strong and independant, not “slight” nor “frail.” When you are twenty, it should be the start of your life, not the end of it.…

    • 864 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    “Their accounts conflict on significant details. But one thing they all agree on: the event provoked a seismic response” (Eksteins 10). Similarly, there are many accounts of what happened during The Great War, however, there is no accurate description of soldiers’ experiences. There are many resemblances between the opening night of Le Sacre du printemps and The Great War, but the resemblance that stands out the most is the different experiences each spectator had from both of these events. In “All Quiet on The Western Front,” Erich Remarque conveys a war account that focuses on the insightful depiction of the inner and social experiences faced by soldiers during the Great War rather than the physical combat. Therefore Remarque’s fictional…

    • 1709 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The setting in All Quiet on the Western Front takes place around the battlefield of the war, mainly the trenches. It was dark, morbid, chaotic and hopeless. Trench life was dreadful according to Paul. There was so much blood, mud and clamor from the blasts and bombs. The constant pounding of those bombs lasted for days, rumbling in those soldiers' ears. Moldy bread was served and was the only source of nutrition, which caused rats to run about, and also the water supply was scarce. It’s not unusual for soldiers to go insanely mad while cramped in those tiny little ditches while all…

    • 1221 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    My knowledge of World War One was solely built on the works of European writers, which I had a chance to read in high school and university. The books such as All Quiet on the Western Front by German writer Erich Maria Remarque, Death of a Hero by English poet Richard Aldington, Doctor Zhivago by Russian novelist Boris Pasternak and The Good Soldier Švejk by Czech satirist Jaroslav Hašek shaped my view on the subject, giving me a chance to see the history from many different perspectives. However, only this semester, taking the course with professor Gendal, I finally got an opportunity to learn about American view on this historic event. Among all the books we have read, Company K by William March stood out the most; this book got my full attention from the first page. Company K is an intense…

    • 1239 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In every Disney movie, the villain is portrayed as a horrendous beast who was once a human. The thing is, every wicked witch or horrendous beast was once a human with a kind soul who suffered a traumatic event. In All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, the German soldiers shift from fresh-out-of-high-school kids to shameless killing machines after witnessing the horrors of World War I. In The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien, while fighting the Vietnam War without understanding its purpose the soldiers are changed after experiencing war’s brutality. Even though one cannot undergo the experience of being in a war zone or fighting for one’s homeland, many lessons can be learned from reading literature.…

    • 1476 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Timothy Findley’s book The Wars is one that has many reviews based upon the methods he uses to convey world war one from various different viewpoints. For instance, Margaret Atwood reviews and writes about Findley’s novel in a chapter of her book “Second Words”. In this chapter she presents three reasons why The Wars is a big narrative occasion. Atwood approaches the novel with three arguments first, the importance of the publication. The second point she makes is how the novel is being critic in literary newspapers and third, the significance of the text itself. This paper will focus on an assessment of Margaret Atwood’s excerpt, specifically on her arguments and methods to prove the points she is making.…

    • 809 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    “It will simply try to tell of a generation of men who, even though they may have escaped shells, were destroyed by the war” [Remarque]…

    • 1506 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    During Gene’s time at Devon School, World War II was raging in Europe and in other places and as the boys were getting closer to drafting age they feared of going to war and that fear grew much larger and scarier as the boys were getting closer to going to war. The boys that were getting ready to go off for war were treated a little better, for example the boys were allowed to go smoke without any adults saying anything to them. Eventually it got to the point that the war was all that was on anyone’s mind at the time during school especially in the latter part of the book during Gene’s senior year.…

    • 336 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    After reading All Quiet on the Western Front, my thought on warfare has changed completely. At first, I thought in 1914, if you were wounded severely, you just had to lie there and no one would try to help you. Now I know that there was many people within your “compound’ that were willing to risk their own lives to save yours. Also, I didn’t think that a medical vehicle was used in 1914-1916, I didn’t think that they were made for that much abuse yet.…

    • 174 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In All Quiet on the Western Front, different attitudes are betrayed from different people. Attitudes that come from various walks of life. When someone lives in a certain area and is surrounded by certain things, I believe it forms your opinion about life and people. That attitude can either make you or break you. War is definitely an example of a situation that can change your thoughts, actions, and emotions.…

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    All Quiet on the Western Front, written in 1929 by Erich Maria Remarque, is superficially the story of one soldiers’ journey in World War 1 and his eventual death. Beneath this, however, Remarque has composed a literary treasure which, above all, seeks to illustrate war as that which is engrained in the nucleus of humanity and through the hugely negative effects of war depicted, seeks to question humanities apparent advancement through its need to engage in such a futile exercise as war. Remarque’s Liberal Humanist ideology is given expression through the correlation between war and nature, thus emphasizing the innate position of war within man, the ultimate paradox contained within an advanced mankind engaging in primitive conflicts and the ironic search for an omniscient being derived from man’s reduction to the barest quest for survival. In addition through the examination of the negativities surrounding the social institutions and hierarchies set up in the absence of god, All Quiet on the Western Front becomes much more than an emotive and well constructed piece of historical realism. In All Quiet on the Western Front, the connections between war and the natural surroundings in which it is fought give rise to the position of war the collective psyche of mankind. The military jargon of the ‚the white puffs of smoke from the tracer bullets‛ is followed by the natural imagery of ‚the sun shining on them‛ in order to emphasize the apparent synchronization between war and nature. The colour imagery of white of the bullets and yellow of the sun, being light colours, connote the harmonious relationship between nature and war. Through the proximity of phrases describing both war and nature in an endearing fashion we are led to conclude that war and nature, or that which is primitive, are fundamentally linked. The gaian imagery ‚Earth, with your ridges and holes and hollows into which a man can throw himself , where a man can hide‛ is ironic as it takes a man-made…

    • 2090 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays