The Aden Effect

A Connor Stark Novel

Fiction & Literature, Military
Cover of the book The Aden Effect by Claude G. Berube, Naval Institute Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Claude G. Berube ISBN: 9781612511108
Publisher: Naval Institute Press Publication: October 12, 2012
Imprint: Naval Institute Press Language: English
Author: Claude G. Berube
ISBN: 9781612511108
Publisher: Naval Institute Press
Publication: October 12, 2012
Imprint: Naval Institute Press
Language: English
Alpha team was gone, dead to a man. A few crewmen from Bravo team had been blown overboard. Stark reentered the pilothouse and checked the radio hoping to get out one last mayday, but the radio, like the crew, was dead….

Connor Stark was a pariah, a man without a country, a former naval officer whose career came to an unceremonious end after a court-martial resulted in a dishonorable discharge. At home and at peace in Scotland, he was determined to leave his past behind until murder, politics, and Middle East instability prompted his unexpected recall to active duty. . Set against a background of modern piracy in the Gulf of Aden, the story begins as the new American ambassador to Yemen, C. J. Sumner, is assigned to negotiate access to the oil fields off the island of Socotra and enlists Stark’s help countering pirates who are capturing ships at will off the Horn of Africa. Meeting with resistance to her diplomatic overtures, Sumner recruits Stark, who has become a mercenary after being dishonorably discharged, as her defense attaché, because he knows the region. When Stark sets up a meeting with the owner of a Yemeni shipping company and the ruling
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Alpha team was gone, dead to a man. A few crewmen from Bravo team had been blown overboard. Stark reentered the pilothouse and checked the radio hoping to get out one last mayday, but the radio, like the crew, was dead….

Connor Stark was a pariah, a man without a country, a former naval officer whose career came to an unceremonious end after a court-martial resulted in a dishonorable discharge. At home and at peace in Scotland, he was determined to leave his past behind until murder, politics, and Middle East instability prompted his unexpected recall to active duty. . Set against a background of modern piracy in the Gulf of Aden, the story begins as the new American ambassador to Yemen, C. J. Sumner, is assigned to negotiate access to the oil fields off the island of Socotra and enlists Stark’s help countering pirates who are capturing ships at will off the Horn of Africa. Meeting with resistance to her diplomatic overtures, Sumner recruits Stark, who has become a mercenary after being dishonorably discharged, as her defense attaché, because he knows the region. When Stark sets up a meeting with the owner of a Yemeni shipping company and the ruling

More books from Naval Institute Press

Cover of the book Seal Team One by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book Invading America by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book Death on the Hellships by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book The U.S. Navy Against the Axis by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book Theodore Roosevelt's Naval Diplomacy by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book OSS in China by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book Amirs, Admirals & Desert Sailors by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book Athenia Torpedoed by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book The U.S. Naval Institute on Naval Command by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book The Origins of American Strategic Bombing Theory by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book Airpower Reborn by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book Capturing Jonathan Pollard by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book On Tactics by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book The Wastrels of Defense by Claude G. Berube
Cover of the book The First Team by Claude G. Berube
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy