There are people who will enjoy this. I just wasn't for me .
I am halfway through THE BETRAYAL and am just not motivated to finish. I don't think it is right to do a full review on a book I haven't read in its entirety, because some books manage to redeem themselves in the concluding chapters. Since I don't plan to finish this one, i can only give my impressions to the halfway mark.
THE BETRAYAL is a first person account of a long term undercover operation ran by the DEA, as part of the overall "War on Drugs" program. The operation targeted the Columbian cartels and drug lords by inserting the DEA into the role of money launderers. In other words the DEA was accepting huge cash deposits in the United States directly from the Cartels, and returning it to them as legitimate earnings from trade and exports -less a fee, of course. We are talking obscene amounts of money here. (2 million dollars per month from one source alone.) Sounds Interesting, right?
THE BETRAYAL is interesting. But it is a difficult book to get swept up in. It is jam packed with so many intricate details that it is more like a detailed report or accounting than it is a story. It is chock full of phone calls and meetings with attendees, dates, times, places and every imaginable detail spelled out. It feels repetitive and never-ending. There is an index of the players at the beginning, to help you keep track of who's who. You'll need to reference it often, to keep track. Even then, all the connections made by the author, during this years long operation, swim together. Every meeting is basically the same as the last.
There isn't much in the way of emotion from the author, especially for a guy involved in such a dangerous operation. People do get kidnapped and tortured but it is all very matter of fact. Just the facts. It feels almost like a direct report to a supervisor or a justification to provide to a Senate Hearing or Over Site Committee about the DEA's sketchy, quasi-legal, elaborate undercover operation. It is dull as a box of rocks and just as heavy.
If the subject matter is something you find particuarily interesting, I would still give it a try. There are quite a few interesting tid bits that had me reading out loud to my husband. It also makes clear that US Law enforcement agencies profited mightily off of drug money. The agencies were stepping all over each other to seize cash. I have no doubt the forfeiture laws that enriched the various law enforcement agencies, got many people killed and were particularly dangerous for those working undercover. I don't think they cared at all who got caught in the crossfire or who became collateral damage I think that much cash corrupted many law enforcement agencies and served as a disincentive to stop the actual drugs generating the profits, the traffiking or the cartels. I think allowing agencies to enrich themselves (still happening) through seizure and forfeiture laws has a corrupting effect on law enforcement and the juristictions they represent. It isn't condusive to fair, measured, thoughtful and considered policing.
THE BETRAYAL may be for you, but it wasn't for me.