This Cold War espionage story starts with Alexis, a Russian spy embedded in the administrative staff of a Washington insider, receiving a phone call summoning him to a meeting with his old mentor from his Moskow training days. This is undoubtedly related to the fact that Alexis is about to receive a copy from a NATO memorandum, smuggled out from a think tank by the discontented analyst Chuck Kelso, a document that could discredit the West's position on détente. But the older man ends up getting mugged and wounded immediately after their encounter in Central Park. Under the influence of anesthetic, he mumbles something in Russian, and it becomes clear that there is an espionage angle.
Alexis manages to get his hands on the entire memorandum, including an analysis that reveals the identity of NATO's highest-ranking "agent in place" in Moskow. Will that agent be able to escape from Moskow before the KGB comes for him?
It appears that he does, since a few weeks later he is living in Menton in France. Is it a coincidence that the think tank that employed Chuck Kelso is now opening a center in that same town? Tony Lawton, a British Intelligence agent, travels to France to keep an eye on the situation.
This book is clearly inspired by the true stories of the Pentagon Papers, Watergate and various defections and betrayals during the Cold War. For me, the book lacked structure. The hero, Tony Lawton, appeared rather late in the book. The subplot, whereby Tom Kelso, Chuck's brother, is briefly suspected of having leaked the memo, is weak. The last part of the book, which has to do with spiriting the defector out of Menton and into Brussels, was a confusing mix of three or four different vessels, people coming and going in various disguises, bugs planted in watches... I couldn't really figure it out.