The Warriors of God
-
- 6,99 $
-
- 6,99 $
От издателя
This acclaimed 1992 thriller amazingly anticipated the terrorist scourge of the next decade. Now brought up to date by the author and available again as Iran defies the world by pursuing nuclear weapons, it’s plot may just be the stuff of tomorrow’s headlines.
The long-simmering conflict between the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran finally turns hot with an act of terrorism against a U.S. navy ship in the Persian Gulf. American military retaliation shuts down Iranian oil production, and it is war. But not the war we’ve known in the past. Not the war of armies, ships, and planes. No, the war we’ve come to know today. The war of the weak against the strong. War in the shadows. With battles aimed not at the destroying the enemy’s armies, but bent on making headlines.
A handpicked team of elite Iranian commandos are silently making their way to the United States. To Washington D.C. Their target is the President of the United States. In the White House.
The US president is in the crosshairs in “this pulsing techno-thriller . . . a genuine page-turner” from the acclaimed author of A Single Spy (Publishers Weekly).
Major Ali Khurbasi of the Iranian Army leads the assault team. Tough, experienced, American-educated and ready to die for a mission whose wisdom he secretly doubts. Former Marine officer Richard Welsh is the Pentagon liaison to the FBI investigation that begins once it is clear that some violent force has landed on our shores. It is a headlong race as the Iranians fight to reach their objective and the elite of America’s law enforcement and military struggle to stop them.
The White House was burned by the British Army in the War of 1812, an act that shook the new American nation to its core. Could such a thing happen again?
Because if the most powerful man in the world is not safe in the most famous and heavily defended building in the nation, then who of us is?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the near-future setting of this pulsing techno-thriller, Iranian frogmen sink a U.S. amphibious assault ship. The Americans, in turn, destroy the oil facilities on Kharg Island in the Persian Gulf. Iranian retaliation is spectacular: an elite commando force infiltrates the U.S.--first to raid the Marine base at Camp Lejeune, N.C., then to attack the White House and kill the president. So audacious is the plan that Richard Welsh, an obscure civilian in a marginal Pentagon job, is the only one to take the threat seriously. First novelist Christie tells an intriguing story in straightforward fashion, presenting Welsh as a conventional techno-thriller hero, the maverick ignored until almost too late. More distinctively, however, Christie establishes a convincing blend of religious zeal and combat professionalism in his characterization of the Iranians, particularly military leader Ali Khurbasi. The strike on Camp Lejeune is all too credible in its details, and the climactic battle for the White House is a genuine page-turner.