Nice action read, but not much else. Then again, it's cliche, sophomoric,and predictable.
This is your standard action adventure of rescue the damsel in distress. In this case, the damsel is Julia Gallo (an aid doctor) and she has been kidnapped in Afghanistan. The complexity of the idea behind the kidnapping could have been better carried out, because the focus is all on the action. At the end, you hardly even remember why she was kidnapped or that it was just part of a more elaborate plan. The second plot line of discovering the secret a new president is hiding can be completely left out...it is a weak plot line that seems irrelevant.
The plot was thin. Everything is built around the superhuman, all-knowing Scot Harvath complaining about the government and kicking the shit out of America's enemies. He always complains about how little the government supports his noble, valiant efforts, but then, hey, guess what, it turns out that Superman, er, I mean, Scot Harvath actually CAN get things done by himself. Imagine that. Then why is he whining so much...?
" Harvath just couldn't understand the liberal mindset. He was convinced that they believed deeply in what they said and did; his only problem was that it so often flew in the face of reality. They continually focussed their rage on their protectors rather than their enemy. They denigrated their country believing it was the source of all evil in the world."
Blah, blah, whine, whine...