**Disclaimer: although I have had Twitter communication with the author, this review was not solicited and I purchased the book on Amazon at my own expense.**
I first came across J.J. Patrick through Twitter, after someone I followed retweeted something he’d posted to warn against fake pro-EU accounts used to spread false information. Patrick, a former police officer turned whistleblower and investigative journalist, had just published a book called ‘Alternative War’, the result of an extensive investigation on how Russia, ‘fake news’ and psychometric data effectively got Donald Trump elected and influenced the EU referendum vote, leading to Brexit.
There is no easy way to summarise this book: it’s dense, packed with names, acronyms and unexpected twists and turns. Some of its finding are frankly mind-boggling and after reading the last page, I was left in a state of dazed stupor, wondering if someone had sneaked up behind me and put a tin-foil hat on my head. What had I just read? That question reminded me of an old Woody Allen joke: “I took a speed-reading course and read War and Peace in twenty minutes. It involves Russia.”
Sadly, the subject matter of this book is anything but funny: it’s clear from Patrick’s findings and the mountain of evidence he produces that Putin’s Russia is behind Trump’s election and the Brexit vote. Not only that: Patrick argues that we are effectively in the middle of a war: a hybrid war, fought through disinformation, propaganda, data mining, psychometric manipulation and a hefty dose of the old adage ‘divide and conquer’.
It is absolutely staggering to think that this hybrid war is being waged right in front of us, in this day and age, and that a foreign government succeeded in influencing the vote in not one, but two countries (mercifully, an attempt to influence the recent French elections was ultimately defeated). Why aren’t the media talking about the links between all these prominent characters and shady organisations? Unfortunately it is only now, some three months after the publication of “Alternative War”, that mainstream media is beginning to discuss the connections between Cambridge Analytica, Robert Mercer Steve Bannon, Nigel Farage, Julian Assange and many other names of the people and companies this book investigates. The problem is that this is a very, very complex web: how do you condense these findings into a catchy headline for public consumption? As Patrick himself points out:
“The background information in all of this is of such a complex nature, I now find it easy to understand how difficult it has been for the world’s media agencies to reduce the available evidence to the short, sharp punches needed for headline-led reporting.”
Don’t ask me to summarise this book, but let me tell you this: “Alternative War” is a compelling and often terrifying read - the kind of book that will make you question everything you know about the EU referendum, the US elections and the near-dystopian outcome of both. You will never read the news in the same way. It might have gone under the radar of the mainstream media but without a doubt, “Alternative War” is the most important non-fiction book of 2017.