000 02183nam a22002057a 4500
005 20220512145847.0
008 220512b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a0552139912
040 _cAL
041 _aEnglish
082 _223
_a823.914
_bFORI
100 _aFrederick Forsyth
_936428
245 _aIcon
260 _aLondon
_bCorgi Books
_c1998
300 _a544 p.
_bPB
_c18x10.5 cm.
520 _aIt is 1999 and Russia is on the edge of total implosion. Social and moral order has collapsed and what small semblance of control there is, is being imposed by mafia-like criminal gangs. While public opinion in the West is largely indifferent, the political analysts are less sanguine - Russian meltdown will make the disintegration of the Balkans look like the collapse of a cup-cake. Out of the chaos, however, a single charismatic voice is starting to be heard - that of Igor Komarov, a visionary patriot who claims he can restore Russia's greatness and bring prosperity to the masses. He even woos Western political leaders with a rather more realistic analysis of the way forward for Russia. Komarov is set to win the next election when a document is smuggled into the British Embassy in Moscow. It's called The Black Manifesto and it appears to show Komarov's secret agenda - his political blueprint is really Mein Kampf, the rebirth of Russia will be as a New Third Reich with Komarov as Fuhrer. But can the document be authenticated? And what can the Western Alliance's most secret Trilateral Commission do about it if it is? They need to find another voice the masses will listen to and obey rather than Komarov - an icon they can cleave to and trust. Once, not that long ago, he was called the Tsar. And so develops a thrilling and increasingly frightening adventure - Jason Monk, ex-CIA, who used to run agents into the Soviet Union, is recruited and slips back into Russia, into the desperate Moscow world of poverty, luxury, gangsters and prostitutes and underneath it all, the titanic power struggle to ensure the outcome of the forthcoming election
650 _aMoscow (Russia)--Fiction
_936429
700 _aFORSYTH (Frederick)
_936430
942 _2ddc
_cGF
999 _c222900
_d222900