"CAULDRON" by Larry Bond and Patrick Larkin
This being 2017, 20+ years since this novel was written, it seems easy to say with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight that an ultranationalist and militaristic "EurCon" consortium of France and Germany (especially one wherein the latter plays subordinate and second fiddle to the former) bullying and waging war against Eastern Europe seems awfully farfetched.
But then again, with the current rising tide of populist nationalism and anti-EU sentiment sweeping across Europe, maybe not 100% implausible either.
In any event, a highly entertaining, engrossing, and action-packed thriller, although Larry Bond does commit a few semantic and technical blunders that I wouldn't expect from a former Naval officer (elaborated upon below).
RANDOM STREAM OF CONSCIOUSNESS NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS (and noteworthy passages):
--Obviously this book was written before the common currency of the EU (the Euro €) went into effect, which makes it a bit dated, but what the heck.
--p. 18: "Alsatian," not to be confused with the other name for the GSD. Aahh yes, the disputed Alsace-Lorraine region of France & Germany.
--p. 21: "Every field operative had only a limited reservoir of courage. When it was used up, you were finished, fit only for a sterile, useless desk job....Action would burn through the fear. It always did."
--p. 40: Lookup: is AA Flt 128 the real-life American Airlines flight from LHR to Dulles?
--p. 41: "Flying first-class had its compensations, and beating the mad rush through carry-on bag-choked aisles was the one he prized most....Huntington believed that coach seats could only have been designed with midgets and screaming children in mind." Haha, oh-so-true! Viva First Class!
--p. 46: "Ever since the time of Louis XIV, the Sun King, the French had shown a taste for being ruled by powerful, domineering men. Even under the republic, its presidents functioned more like elected kings than public servants."
--p. 47: Nicolas Desaix, DGSE = a French version of Vladimir Putin?
--p. 52: "Russian drivers were used to living dangerously and driving badly. Driving defensively would have been out of character." Haha, kinda like GCC drivers!
--p. 93: "Flocks of startled birds and well-dressed bureaucrats scattered out of its path." Ha, interesting descriptive pairing.
--p. 106: Place of Skulls in Moscow: real-world location, and if so, named for the Biblical Golgotha?
--p. 107: "sword and shield," as in KGB?
--p. 115: "Sanctimonious speeches had never toppled a dictatorship or defeated an aggressor." How so very true!
--p. 121: Um, "Stars and Bars" as markings on a U.S. Air Force asset, especially one not assigned to a Southern base??
--p. 139: "The smile she gave him would have launched a thousand special couriers." Ha.
--p. 141: "per square inch?" Wouldn't Poles be using the metric system.
--p. 144: "Politicians, like other finned scavengers, homed in on the first taste of blood in the water." Hey, c'mon now, don't insult sharks by equating them with politicians!
--p. 150: House Majority Leader Richard "Dick" Pendleton (D-MO) = Dick Gephardt? (Except for the silver hair, of course)
--p. 153: "'Germans don't even piss without asking for a receipt.'" Haha, ach Scheisser (or would that be "Ach Pisser?")!
--p. 165: Lookup: German battleship Schleswig-Holstein ("fired the first shots of World War II").
--p. 244: "Lieutenant Dan Maguire"...."with two years of Navy experience under his belt." Wouldn't that make him an LT (j.g.) as opposed to a full LT?
--p: 257: a Frenchman accusing the Germans of being "too soft;" oh, the irony!
--p. 266: Throat-punch, hooah!
--p. 365: "Dziekuje" = Thank you
"Porucznik" = 1st Lieutenant
--p. 411: "Hatchet" Mann already an O-5 in his early thirties? Sounds iffy.
--p. 451: Haha, BCGs!
--p. 518: "Rank should not confer immunity from risk." Amen, or as Demo Dick Marcinko would say, "Lead from the front, not from the rear!"
--p. 553 "mess tin" and not MREs?
--p. 629: An Army NCO using naval slang ("Skipper") to address an Army CPT?!?!
--p. 634: The U.S. Army still had full-auto M16s (as opposed to 3-shot burst M16A2s ) in 1997??
--p. 679: Ahem, that's Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), not Chief of Naval Staff (CNS). C'mon Larry (and Patrick)!
--p. 693: Dragon missile "near-worthless," really?!
CENTRAL CASTING: Jean-Claude Van Damme as Major Paul Duroc and Gerard Depardieu as Michel Woerner, Joseph Ward Haney III as Joseph Ross Huntington III, Joss Ackland as Marshal Kaminov, Alex Lind as Alex Banich, Edward West Headington as the POTUS, Julianne Moore or Heather Graham as Erin McKenna, Harris Yulin as SECSTATE Harris Thurman, Robert O'Quinn as CIA Director Walter Quinn, Michael Lonsdale as Desaix, Ron Levy as SECDEF John Lucier, Robert Shaw (R.I.P.) or Rutger Hauer (R.I.P. again) as Oberstleutnant Willi von Seelow, Billy Dee Williams as Gen. Reid Galloway