Sean Dillon 18 - Judas Gate
โ Scribed by Higgins, Jack
- Book ID
- 106906180
- Publisher
- Harper Collins Ome
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- en-jm
- Weight
- 151 KB
- Series
- Sean Dillon 18
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780007320486
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
SUMMARY:
Treachery has a price, in the mesmerizing new Sean Dillon thriller from the Sunday Times bestselling author. Helmand Province, Afghanistan: a lone convoy edges its way towards a deserted mountain village, led by US Army Rangers in Mastiff APVs. Stopping to search the area, the Rangers are hit by a massive roadside bomb, and as half the patrol lie dead or injured, the rest are ambushed with military precision. A nearby British medical team responds to the call for back-up, but all are slaughtered when their Chinook helicopter is blown up. The ambush is bad, but what's worse is that, amidst the battlefield chatter picked up by Major Giles Roper, not all the Taliban voices are Afghan -- some are English, and the commander bears an Irish accent; he even names himself 'Shamrock'. Why would he commit such an atrocity, but more importantly can he be found before he masterminds another? Sean Dillon is put in charge of hunting the traitor down, with all the resources of the 'Prime Minister's private army' at his disposal. The fast and furious plot sweeps the reader from Pakistan to Algeria to London to Paris to Ireland, with many deaths along the way. The stakes are already high for Dillon and company then a familiar, deadly face makes a dramatic reappearance. This time, Dillon will not only be going to war -- the war will be coming to him, and he will learn that this Judas has al-Qaeda on his side!
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
### From Sean Dillon, the former IRA soldier and missionary who now works for the British government, has another tough case on his hands. In Afghanistan, a unit of American soldiers and British medicos were ambushed. Some of the attackers were British-born Muslims, which is bad enough, but it appe
A disturbing tape has made its way to British intelligence, and from them to the new President of the United States: battlefield chatter from an ambush in Afghanistan, in which both US and British died. Most of the voices are Afghan, but the voice of the commander bears an Irish accent. Sean Dillon