George Packer
George Packer is an American journalist, novelist, and playwright renowned for his reporting on U.S. foreign policy, particularly the Iraq War, and his nonfiction analyses of American political and social decay.[1][2]
As a staff writer for The New Yorker from 2003 to 2018, Packer embedded in Iraq, documenting the occupation's challenges and earning Overseas Press Club awards for articles on Iraq's reconstruction and Sierra Leone's civil war atrocities.[1]
He transitioned to The Atlantic in 2018, where he has critiqued fractures in American liberalism, including the rise of identity-focused ideologies that he argues undermine broader civic solidarity.[2]
Packer's seminal works include The Assassins' Gate: America in Iraq (2005), a critical account of the war's mismanagement that received the Helen Bernstein Book Award and was listed among The New York Times' ten best books of the year, and The Unwinding: An Inner History of the New America (2013), which won the National Book Award for Nonfiction by chronicling institutional erosion through personal narratives from the 1970s onward.[1][3]
Other key books encompass the biography Our Man: Richard Holbrooke and the End of the American Century (2019), awarded the Hitchens Prize, and Last Best Hope: America in Crisis and Renewal (2021), which proposes a pragmatic liberal renewal amid cultural polarization.[2]
His early support for the Iraq invasion, followed by disillusionment revealed in his writings, highlights a pattern of empirical reassessment over ideological fidelity, while his recent essays decry elite media and academic capture by performative moralism that obscures material realities.[1][2]