A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP
“Ah! my poor dear child, the truth is, that in London it is always a sickly season. Nobody is healthy in London, nobody can be.” - Jane Austen
“My job is to stop Britain going red.” - Margaret Thatcher
As we come into a new decade, one thing is difficult to argue with. The West is now fighting a second Cold War. From London assassinations to messy proxy battles in the Eastern Syrian borderlands, the Free World is slowly waking up to the fact that the end of history has not come, and its old enemy has risen once more to try destroying it in new and creative ways. One of the fronts of the new Cold War is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. By far the most hostile country to Moscow’s geopolitical ambitions in Europe, the UK has seen a massive spike in Russian black operations, most prominently with the assassination of Russian dissidents through radioactive and chemical weapons. Such actions which have not been precise or discriminate have been met with hardly any retaliation by London or the West. It’s this covert war which is the backdrop for Mark Greaney’s eight Gray Man book. Focusing on the life and times of Courtland Gentry, contract killer and deniable asset of the CIA, the series has come a long way from its humble beginnings all the way back in 2009.
The real world has gotten more complex, more dangerous, more violent and more exciting and so has Courtland Gentry. Still with a legion of enemies who would be happy to shoot him if the opportunity presents itself and future enemies who are happy to make use of him for now, Mission Critical, Gentry’s eight outing is a story about, among other things, how Gentry and the people around him, try to reconcile their complexities and relationships in the violent profession they work in. When writing this book, the author said that he avoided doing a ripped from the headlines story and instead, poached like a magpie, elements of actual real-world espionage and geopolitical events happening now. The result is one of the most interesting contemporary spy novels and one of the perfect ones to close out the 2010s. Now to the review, can children forgive the sins of their fathers?
We start our story in Switzerland several hours after the previous book, Agent In Place concluded. Courtland Gentry boards a Gulfstream IV Jet in Zurich, briefly worrying the Flight attendant and pilots due to changing the pre – arranged approach. He’s informed that they’ll have to make a stop in Luxemburg and a stop at the RAF’s Ternhill Airbase as part of an extraordinary rendition operation. At the Luxemburg stop, a team of CIA officers get into a macho pissing match over Gentry’s presence on the plane. At the Ternhill stop, calamity strikes. A team of gunmen storm the RAF Ternhill runway, slaughtering the entire CIA rendition team and several SIS officers who had come to pick of the rendition prisoner. As this attack is going on, one of the Virginia Safe Houses belonging to the CIA is also hit by hired Mexican mercenaries.
They too manage to slaughter nearly everyone in the vicinity but miss Zoya Zakharova, a defector and highly trained Russian SVR officer who attempts to flee to Britain for reasons unknown. In the immediate aftermath of these assassinations, the CIA realize that there is a mole who provided the intel used in the attacks and initiate a violent hunt spearheaded by an ex Paramilitary officer. And hidden in the British underworld, a mysterious Evil Genius begins finalizing a plan that if successful would permanently blind the Free World for an entire generation. As Gentry and Zakharova fight across the length of the United Kingdom dodging death, bullets, sniper fire, grenades and even some very large fists, only one question remains. When on a mission to save the world, is success or the survival of those alongside you the most critical?
In terms of plot? This is one of the most fun and imaginative the author has penned in his entire career to date. Rather than being centred around one big issue and exploring its facets, Greaney instead takes several different security threats and blends them into a multifaceted, original tale that examines the state of contemporary espionage in the Post 9/11 world. From traitors and leaky information that somehow ends up in the hands of the opposition, a growing emphasis on the paramilitary side of the business in the once trigger shy west, and a use of proxies of all kinds, from terrorists, mercenaries and even criminal groups to act as the third option in place of global thermonuclear conflict or appeasement, Mission Critical and its author examines just how complex and violate the Second Cold War has gotten.
And it’s not just the hard, impersonal complexities that are examined, but the human factor that is at the heart of espionage ever since the Israelites went to spy out the land. Whether it be an unwillingness to lead due to power hungriness, a sinful father refusing to admit his responsibilities to the only family he has left, or whether it’s even possible for a man of action to find true romance when he’s still married to the job and lives for the dangerous thrill of the job, the author explores some interesting avenues about what the human condition goes through when playing the spying game.
Action and setting? Now, I have a sneaking suspicion that Mark decided to have a little fun by giving Gentry more guns than he has ever used in the previous books and then letting him loose in a country which in real life has strict gun control laws. If that’s true, then he succeeded. From the opening airfield gun battle, we get taken on a violent, wild ride with enough explosions to rival Michael Bay and enough bullets to put Michael Mann in the shade. From a wild, visceral car chase through the English Home Counties, to sniper attacks in Earls Court, a spectacular commando assault on a Scottish Presbyterian Church in the Highlands and a race to stop a highly unconventional assassination of 400 people simultaneously, Mission Critical actually manages to recapture some of the raw ferocity present in the earlier books of the series like Dead Eye and Back Blast. The backdrop on which this action takes place is also rather good. While not reaching the exotic heights of Gunmetal Gray where setting was used to good effect, Mission Critical does capture the gritty drabness of contemporary Britain to a degree with a variety of locales across the UK. Whether it be a fancy Belgravia Mansion owned by a powerful Russian Oligarch, a hidden biological warfare lab in the alleys of Edinburgh, or the underground dungeon of an old Scottish Castle, the Gray Man continues to find himself in very interesting places.
Research? Rather good. Due to increased firepower, Gentry gets some very Gucci kit to use in this story. Micro – Compact Glock 43s, Heckler and Koch 416 assault rifles chambered for .300 Blackout rifle rounds, the sexy new SIG MPX submachine gun that’s finally providing competition to the old MP5 and even the HK VP9 tactical automatic, there’s, enough hardware in Mission Critical to satisfy the gear – heads and tacticool nerds. But there’s also some other neat non – firearm equipment used during the story, chief among which are the Direct-Action Penetrator helicopters, tricked out Blackhawk prototypes that allow Gentry and his allies to pull off incredibly violent Paramilitary assaults within Britain without the public being any the wiser. But aside from the guns and kit, there are also other highlights in the book. A major highlight is the succinct and efficiently explained primer on the mechanics of biological warfare. Unlike other books which bore the reader to death in needless minutiae, Greaney manages to illustrate the severity of the pathogen he’s selected, how it works and what sort of strategies go into optimal deployment.
Rather than being just another mere afterthought, the WMD in the novel will make you think and impress you with how well thought out the narrative is, especially when you consider the targets, the nature of which is a genius move on the author’s part. Aside from that we also have the usual combat and tradecraft tactics. The author spent time with a stunt driver who teaches America’s special forces soldiers on the actual tricks used in the book’s car chase and even the little details like the dead – check insurance gunshot and disabling the air bags when running over hostiles inject the authenticity which balances out the wilder escapism of the Gray Man saga.
Characters, phenomenal. Not since DEADEYE have the characters shined this much in a Gray Man book. Many standouts in this story and I’ll focus on a few. Gentry, Zoya, Brewer, Hightower and DM. First Gentry. Courtland Gentry in this book is on fine form. For the first time in the series he’s not hobbled by a firepower disadvantage, he has a little more time to plan and best of all, he has some friends with guns on his side. The man is a badass who can fight a covert war with nothing but a heavy steel monkey wrench single handed but despite his best efforts, he’s not as antiheroic as he tries to act for his work. For someone called The Gray Man, his morality is stark, good vs evil, something which even he has identified as his Achilles heel. A good man who finds himself in a business full of backstabbing arseholes and the odd crazed sociopath, the true joy of the Gray Man saga has been seeing Gentry, the hero who suffers so much because he wants to do the morally righteous thing, bring down the smug monster’s he’s sent to slay. In this entry of the series however, he’s put on the spot with the monster he’s hunting as he now has a choice. To let the monster die by the hands of someone else, or do the deed and forever destroy the first true love he’s ever found during his years in the spying game. It’s this dilemma which takes the Gray Man into one of the more interesting psychological places he’s been in since the series began.
Second, Zoya. Zoya Zakharova is the deutertagonist of Mission Critical. In some respects, Mission Critical is more of her story, than it is Gentry’s. Zakharova is a now fired Russian SVR Officer who Gentry swept up in Gunmetal Gray. Having defected to the USA after the destruction of her career in the wake of the business in Phuket, when we find at the start of this story, her she has accepted employment as a deniable asset for the CIA. Just before she can go off on her new employment however, she’s forced to go on the run after a dramatic assassination attempt on her life. Zoya is one of the most compelling characters in the series, and Greaney does an excellent job in this book fleshing out her characterization. As the daughter of the most gifted spymaster ever to grace the Russian Intelligence Community, Zakharova was imbued with a great regard for duty, diligence, excellence and never settling for mediocrity. Her desire to live up to these qualities, resulted in a talented, operative who like Gentry, was suited for lone wolf covert operations, but made her wholly unsuited to working in a team environment, especially a team environment that was part of a conforming authoritarian government. Her arc in this story, is reconciling with the lies of her past and the sins of her parents whom she discovers might be too grave to ever be forgivable.
Third, Brewer. Suzanne Brewer is the handler of the Gray Man. First introduced in Back Blast and Gunmetal Gray, she established herself as a competent enough asset runner but a very greedy office politicker who has grandiose dreams of finally reaching the 7th floor and becoming the first female DCI in the Company’s history. However, Suzanne’s opportunism has proven to be her main weakness. As we meet with her in this story, she’s already found being handler to the Gray Man become wearisome and a dead-end job preventing her from moving up in Langley. As such she starts to get ideas beyond her station, ideas which turn to a shocking, murderous act of rebellion as her resentment and hatred of the assets she’s running boils over. Brewer however is not a careerist of the Vince Flynn mould and even at her worst can pull her weight whether it be providing technical support or supplies that Gentry needs.
Fourthly, Hightower. Zack Hightower is a now ex Special Activities Division assassin turned government contractor and is one of the most fun characters in the series. A heroic high functioning sociopath, Hightower is gleefully callous, ruthless and driven as only a former Navy SEAL from Texas can be. His worldview is about following orders and whether he’s told by his masters at the Company to take pot shots at Courtland Gentry or team up with him to stop a terrorist attack, Hightower is more than happy to do both when asked. With fewer hang - ups about the morality of his profession which grip the Gray Man, while morally depraved, Hightower possesses some more common sense and clarity that Gentry lacks about life, being able to whack Courtland in the face with said clarity at the right moment during the story. Hightower is also a riot, with his machine gun stream of jokes, wisecracks, taunts and sarcasm providing a lot of the black comedy of the narrative.
Constructive criticism? Well, let me say that it did not detract from the overall story at all, but I did find it rather jarring that Mr Greaney was rather slapdash with the GRU, SVR and FSB. With a GRU officer becoming an FSB agent and an FSB file becoming an SVR file. It was moderately disconcerting and felt a bit shabby to be honest. Secondly, while it’s explained away early on, there’s almost no difficulty or complications with the British intelligence, military or law enforcement communities. While it’s not noticeable due to the excellent story, upon reflection, it’s a tad unrealistic.
As we start the 2020s, it is clear that we have not reached the end of history. The new Cold War is just getting started and its eternal conflict over which ideals will rule the world and the Shadow Warriors who violently battle for supremacy will continue to influence the future Global Order. Mission Critical captures this battle, one which the Free World does not have a guaranteed, God Given certainty of winning. With its well balanced, imaginative narrative, cinematic action that never lets up, devastating use of research which manages to take a stock assassination into a class above its peers and a cast of characters who undergo some surprising story arcs, Mark Greaney closes the old decade and enters the new one on top form. 2020, the Gray Man will return, and in a
way you’ll have never seen or heard him before.
RECOMMENDED.