The second season starts again with more dramatic events, as things are not good in Mali. In that period, it is assumed that four US Special Forces and an interpreter were killed in an ambush where things seem to turn through that to a strange turn. Now, all of this delays a purchase deal in Washington. Nathan Miller seems to be the deep state activist who is making sure everything is planned, while also struggling to keep his family at that time.
Wouldn't it be refreshing, perhaps, one day, to find a thriller that less assiduously serviced such Western liberal guilt and paranoia and even dared to suggest there are other forces at work than our own corrupted governments presenting a real threat?