A Solid Work of Action/Adventure
I had not yet read any fiction by Chris Ryan, the former SAS soldier and survivor of the ill-fated Bravo Two Zero recon mission during the first Iraq War. I chose “Ultimate Weapon” due to its unique plot device: linking the 1991 Gulf War with the 2003 invasion of Iraq via its two lead characters, Nick and Jed.
Nick is a survivor of a botched SAS mission during the Gulf War. After being captured and suffering intense torture, post-traumatic stress hit Nick so hard he took to the bottle. This indirectly caused the death of his wife.
His wife's death and his alcoholism alienated his daughter Sarah, whom he affectionately nicknamed "Silver Girl" after a verse in the Simon and Garfunkel song "Bridge over Troubled Waters."
Fast-forward to 2003: war clouds are again hovering over Iraq, and SAS member Jed has just returned from a risky recon mission to Iraq to photograph a plant suspected of manufacturing weapons of mass destruction. He reports what he saw and photographed to the British intelligence group known as The Firm. They are not satisfied with his findings, however, and demand more intelligence. Meanwhile, both Nick and Jed discover that Sarah -now a physics student at Cambridge University- has vanished.
Both men don't like each other that much; Nick thinks Jed is not good enough for his daughter. But soon they find themselves having to cooperate as they wind up “boots on the ground” inside Iraq in search of both Sarah and the key to the mystery behind the suspected WMD plant: cold fusion. An energy source so potent that the oil industry would collapse overnight if turned loose on the world. Saddam Hussein knows this, and intends to use it to blackmail Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the other Arab oil-producing nations into backing Iraq - or else. But will Laura -a high-ranking (and seductress) member of The Firm give Nick and Jed the help they need, or is does she have her own agenda that deems them -and Sarah- expendable assets?
Apart from a somewhat repetitive tone (how many times do we need to know that sugar pumps energy into Nick and Jed’s bloodstream?) Ryan's prose is crisp; the plot action-packed; and the ending a page-turning corker, though I felt the epilogue dragged a bit.
Ryan clearly interpolated his experiences with Bravo Two Zero into the character of Nick, which made reading "Ultimate Weapon" all the more interesting to me.