Posted on 08/10/2002 1:29:48 PM PDT by Destro
China Attacks, by Chuck DeVore and Steven W. Mosher
www.BuyBooksontheweb.com; 2nd edition (July 2001). 415 pages. . $19.95. ISBN:0741404303.
Hegemony: The predominant influence of one state over others.
Chuck DeVore (a California National Guard officer and Republican politician) and Steve Mosher (director of the Claremont Institute's Asian Studies Center) present an interesting scenario for a mainland Chinese military attempt to take Taiwan using a combination of conventional, unconventional and innovative means (like hang-glider riding commandos, EMP weapons and cargo ships converted to fire support boats). The prose is reasonably Clancy-esque and lends itself for good "beach reading", with some plot twists requiring an open mind and those requiring a suspension of disbelief reasonably few.
The authors are part of a growing chorus of observers who think China sees itself as a threat and potential competitor to America, so their book is a warning thinly veiled as fiction. I received my review copy of Chuck DeVore's CHINA ATTACKS on 8 September 2001, in what might as well be considered a different world. Pre-War On Terrorism, many considered mainland China to be America's most credible adversary, but ten months later the Beijing threat has disappeared from the front pages. Meanwhile, Beijing quietly continues to prepare for the 21st century and bides her time.
I recently re-read CHINA ATTACKS while Russia was inking a $4 billion sale of Su-30MKK fighters, S300 PMU2 SAMs and eight Kilo class diesel subs to mainland China. Yet there are just as many current articles about societal stress fractures appearing in that communist country (which incidentally are a major subplot in the book). CHINA ATTACKS is a well-told piece of art imitating life: will the Asian dragon triumph in the Pacific before shattering under the weight of it's own flaws?
Reviewer: Adam Geibel
The Riddle of the Sands - FICTION CLASSICS
The Riddle of the Sands. By Erskine Childers. For almost a century,
The Riddle of the Sands has held a special place in the affections ...
www.sheridanhouse.com/catalog/ fictionclassics/riddleof.html - 5k - Cached - Similar pages
He was active in Irish politics and died in Dublin before an Irish Free State firing squad on November 24, 1922.
Prose & Poetry - Erskine Childers Updated - Sunday, 17 February, 2002 Erskine Childers (1870-1922), the author of a popular pre-war adventure novel concerning a German invasion of Britain, served with the Royal Navy during World War One before becoming involved in Irish politics as an Irish republican following the war. Born in London in February 1870 Childers was brought up in Annamoe in County Wicklow at his cousin's home before being educated at Haileybury and at Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1894 he took up employment in the House of Commons as a committee clerk before taking up a career in the British army, during which time he served in the South African War of 1899-1902, being wounded in 1900. A skilled yachtsman Childers published in 1903 a fictional account of a planned German invasion of England, The Riddle of the Sands. In a current climate of fear concerning a potential surprise German attack Childers book became an instant bestseller and may even have informed subsequent naval reaction. The following year, 1904, Childers married Marry Ellen Osgood of Boston; six years later he resigned his work at the House of Commons to concentrate instead on political work, and in particular on his developing interest in Irish Home Rule politics. On 26 July 1914 - in the midst of the European pre-war July Crisis - Childers sailed into Howth in his own yacht, the Asgard, bearing 900 rifles and 14,000 rounds of ammunition, supplied from Germany by a representative of the Irish Volunteers. Despite his belief in the cause of Irish Home Rule Childers nevertheless signed up with the Royal Navy for the duration of World War One; in 1916 he was awarded the DSO medal. The armistice brought Childers' demobilisation from the navy and re-entrance to Irish politics, this time as a fully-fledged republican. Returning to Dublin therefore in March 1919 he joined Sin Fein, working with the party to secure a hearing for Ireland at the planned Paris Peace Conference. In 1921 Childers was elected to the Dail Eireann as TD for County Wicklow; in March that year he was appointed Dail Minister for Publicity and editor of the Irish Bulletin, a republican newsletter. A principal secretary in the Irish peace delegation to London in late 1921 Childers himself strongly opposed the terms of the proposed treaty. In the ensuing Irish Civil War he supported the republican IRA and was appointed the latter's Director of Publicity. While visiting his cousin's home in County Wicklow in November 1922 Childers was arrested by Irish Free State troops and imprisoned in Wicklow Jail before being transferred to Portobello Barracks in Dublin where he was tortured. Court-martialled on 17 November on a charge of possession of a revolver given to him by Michael Collins , he was consequently sentenced to death. An appeal pending in the High Court, Childers was nonetheless executed by firing squad in Portobello Barracks on 24 November 1922.
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