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Clash of the Gods: A Novel
Book Review by Michael Scheuer, November 2008
"My ardent desire," the greatest American
explained in 1795, "is to keep the United States
free from political connections with every other country,
to see them independent of all and under the influence
of none." While tens of millions of Americans ignore
this advice, and many more millions are unaware of it
given the feel-good fantasy our schools teach in lieu
of U.S. history, Charles Sutherland and Jonathan Slevin
offer the readers of "Clash of the Gods" -
who ought to be legion - a chilling, sobering reminder
of the enormous price Americans are sure to pay in blood
and treasure for the self-not-nation-serving foreign
policies their bipartisan leaders have pursued for 30
years and more.
Set in the post-George W. Bush era, "Clash of the
Gods" is a unique and marvelous combination of
the spy/adventure novel - worthy of John Buchan, the
craft's master - and a morality tale like that of Christian's
painful-but-eye-opening journey to reality in John Bunyan's
"The Pilgrim's Progress." Creating characters
that are believable and multi-dimensional, the authors
spin a page-turning tale that is at once riveting and
distressingly realistic; theirs is a story that matters
and one that induces justifiable pessimism about America's
future. In these pages, a Bible-toting, Israel-adoring
U.S. president and his senior colleagues - especially
the secretaries of defense and state and CIA's chief
- are well portrayed as they travel a harrowing path
from self-deception and wishful thinking to a maddeningly
impotent reality. Along the way, they incrementally
learn just how powerless the sole superpower is because
its anachronistic-but-sacrosanct foreign policy failed
to defend national security by keeping options open.
Senior U.S. leaders in "Clash of the Gods"
are left holding the bag for their predecessors' feckless
policies; one which, for example, finds Washington backing
to the hilt Arabs and Israelis in a religious war-to-the-death
where no U.S. interests are at stake. These men and
women are cornered by America's dependence on the foreign
oil controlled by Arab tyrants and Russian oligarchs;
they fight internal policymaking battles pitting those
working for U.S. security against those willing to see
America hurt as long as the imagined dictates of Bible
and Torah are met; they are trumped at every turn by
Israel's successful purchase - via its U.S.-citizen
surrogates in AIPAC - of Congress and its suborning
of the Defense Department; and they watch helplessly
as Israel trades U.S. technology and intelligence data
to China and Russia for its own benefit. Quite appropriately,
the book's blindly pro-Israel and evangelical U.S. president
and his Jewish defense secretary find at day's end that
Israel has played them for fools.
All but paralyzed by the comeuppances of prolonged
foreign-policy failure, the most these U.S. leaders
can do is grope for a bare understanding of an unfolding
disaster. Fine CIA work nets information that allows
the president and his advisers to simultaneously discern
the nearing nuclear catastrophe and recognize they are
powerless to affect, let alone stop, the tragedy. In
the book's searing denouement, readers learn why history
will justly vilify the legacies of three unnamed but
easily identified former presidents, each of whom knowingly
and even willfully failed to secure the former Soviet
Union's nuclear arsenal.
The book's preventable calamity calls to mind John
Buchan's repeated warnings that there is but a thin,
easily fractured veneer separating civilization and
barbarism, and that only selflessness and moral courage
in political leaders when defending national interests
can keep the shield in place. In "Clash of the
Gods," Buchan's veneer is thinner and more vulnerable
than ever, and the reader is left wondering whether
there are men and women willing to do hard, unpopular
things in a timely manner for the sake of the country
and its posterity, even at the cost of their political
or bureaucratic posts.
"Clash of the Gods" should be read by all
members of the next presidential administration. It
truthfully details the hell for which America is bound
because its leaders ignored George Washington's above-noted
advice and followed a politically expedient road that
has put Americans and their economy in the thrall of
several foreign countries and a flamboyantly traitorous
domestic fifth column, each ready to manipulate and
undermine the United States if it suits their interests.
On taking their oaths, the new president and his Cabinet
will find that they are - as are the novel's U.S. protagonists
- hamstrung and optionless because of Arab and Russian
tyrants, oil, Middle East politics, American evangelicals,
Israel, and AIPAC. They will face the choice of acquiescing
in a failed foreign policy that regularly facilitates
re-election and a bare-knuckled battle to regain U.S.
independence of action; a choice, in other words, between
assuring either self-interest or America's viability
as a well-defended nation-state.
I think Mr. Sutherland and Mr. Slevin would agree that
another piece of the greatest American's guidance is
implicit in "Clash of the Gods" and ought
to be central in the next administration's deliberations.
"It should be the highest ambition of every American,"
George Washington said in 1789, "to extend his
views beyond himself, and to bear in mind that his conduct
will not only affect himself, his country, and his immediate
posterity; but that its influence may be co-extensive
with the world, and stamp political happiness or misery
on ages yet unborn." As "Clash of the Gods"
unsparingly and even brutally shows, it is past time
that current U.S. leaders adopt pro-American foreign
policies and thereby begin to lessen the misery their
self-serving predecessors have piled up for their countrymen
yet unborn.
Michael Scheuer ran CIA operations against al-Qaeda,
is a senior fellow at the Jamestown Foundation and an
adjunct professor of security studies at Georgetown
University. His latest book is "Marching Toward
Hell: America and Islam After Iraq."
http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/nov/02/defending-americas-interests/
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