- Paperback: 288 pages
- Publisher: Jove Books (Dec 2000)
- Language English
- ISBN-10: 0515129755
- ISBN-13: 978-0515129755
- Product Dimensions: 17 x 10.7 x 2.3 cm
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 862,330 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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This book has a great idea, a new attack of Pearl Harbor with an occupation, taking advantage of the overconfidence that seeps back in over time. With a bit of background (that was not included), it could have had as much plausibility as the idea that Argentina might attack a British Island (which it did). But, that was not there, so you wonder just why any of this is happening. Even then, I could have ignored that had the book's approach to the battle made any sense.
One other major complaint about this book is that all action is local and seems small. There does not seem to be any help from the Air Force, who could have fighters in the area in hours, from satellite surveillance (they actually send two civilians in a pleasure boat to figure out what the bad guys are doing), from military intelligence, or from anyone. The air battles seem to include only four planes on each side. The task force seems to ignore all support ships and the ships that left Pearl other than one we use late in the story. We know the SEAL team has a big thing going on, but we only get reports that they have done this and that impossible thing. The addition of nuclear weapons to the story seems to ignore the potential retaliation elements or any political issues and what the Chinese decide to do with the bomb is so absolutely ridiculous you have to wonder who would think up something so dumb.
Then there are the military elements that were really far fetched. This book is written as technical as possible, which I liked, but I really don't think the author knows much about what he is talking about. The approaching small craft would not be handled by the carrier; some escort ship would take care of it. I doubt a US hunter-killer submarine would lose a diesel sub once it had located it and it definitely would not miss if it shot a torpedo at it, nor would it have failed to sink the Chinese ships consider they knew where they were. The US carrier uses cell phones to communicate sensitive information? The Chinese carrier uses sophisticated electronics to locate the US carrier, when it's made clear later in the story that they are within visual distance of each other (which would NEVER happen). Oh, and the glossary was nice, but did not include the terms I didn't know, it only included basic ones I already knew.
All in all, a very frustrating book.
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