In the War on Terror, it is often difficult to tell who the enemy is. Sometimes your fiercest opponent isn't an insurgent or a fanatic bent on making a statement in blood, but a chain of command that is pursuing goals and objectives that have nothing to do with your unit's stated mission. Nathan Dixon finds out just how true this is when a new battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel Robert Delmont, convinces his superiors that he has an all but foolproof plan for defeating Islamic terrorists in the Philippines-a plan that will ensure Delmont's promotion to full colonel and beyond. ? But the 3rd Regiment of the 75th Ranger battalion is pitted against no fool. Determined to create a fundamental Islamic state in Southeast Asia, a charismatic terrorist by the name of Hamdani Summirat unites the various Islamic factions into a confederation. Their aim is to drag the United States into a protracted war of attrition that the Americans cannot win. Summirat's factions play out a deadly game of cat and mouse, drawing the American forces into ambushes and small, bloody encounters with a small but highly trained core of Islamic fighters. ? Lieutenant General Scott Dixon, Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations with the US Army - and Nathan's father-soon finds that these enemies are practically impossible to hunt down. They are killing American troops almost at will. He realizes quickly that if the mission continues, many more Americans will be wounded or killed - perhaps even his own son. But his pleas to his Commander-in-Chief are practically ignored. ? This dual game of cat and mouse is played out both in the jungles of Mindanae and in the forward operations base. Nathan Dixon must deal with a battalion commander who is determined to see his plan through, regardless of the price Nathan and his company must pay, while Scott Dixon must deal with a chain of command that refuses to alter a plan of attack in the face of a losing effort.?
Best of Coyle's Dixon series since God's Children. Captain Nathan Dixon is the star of the series now and is commanding a Ranger company sent to fight Muslim Terrorists in Southeast Asia. His new Batallion commander is a major jerk and a major problem for Dixon, who is also having challenges in his marriage. Scott Dixon is more father here than Lt General, and there is a great scene with father and son towards the end of the book. I would like to have seen more action and suspense, and I don't like the way key players in past books are discarded: I'll never forgive Coyle for killing off Cerro, and where is Nancy Kozac? still in the Guard somewhere? Find a way to resurrect Cerro and the character we loose in this book, reactivate Kozac, throw in Young Dixon, and my life will be complete again. Also, less military minutiae and more interaction between the soldiers would be nice, too.
More mouse than cat
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
A good yarn and well thought out. Harold Coyle at his normal level of writing. Sad to see a major character of previous books fade away. good pace to the story
Cat & Mouse review
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
This is an excellent book, as usual with Coyle's books, I've come to expect with all of his books. It is unfortunate what happened but it furthers the plot in all. Thanks again to Mr. Coyle for an excellent book.
Coyle does it again
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
As usual, Coyle does a nice job of making you feel like you're there. Lots of twists and turns make this book interesting. Seems to end a bit quick, after building for most of the book...
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