This book may have passed for a decent, somewhat badly written yet still entertaining, espionage thriller. However, any chance the book had was ruined by the fact that it functioned better as a piece of right wing propaganda than as a piece of entertainment.
I don't really care what Brad Thor's political views are, I don't particularly care that he and I differ, and I don't even mind if he infuses those views into the novel. However, when there is more focus on said views than an actual story, then I get a little annoyed. Just about every character is an arrogant, judgemental, testosterone driven prick. Those that aren't exact clones of the others were either terrorists or made out to be idiots. The author spends most of his time whacking us over the head with his political views, rather than focussing on the story. He is condescending and insulting to the characters that hold different viewpoints, and by extension towards those readers that hold different viewpoints (myself being one of them).
Mr. Thor takes the idea of patriotism to another level. I'm all for loving and fighting for one's country, but the message given by this book is that anyone who isn't out on the front lines, who isn't willing to torture prisoners, who shows even an ounce of pacifism (or even basic humanity towards one's enemies) is just as bad as the terrorists. The one major political opponent to the fictional president's policies, the one I frankly agree with, is laughed out of the room, by both Mr. Thor and his characters, and forced to resign. For showing a difference of opinion? Said fictional president later pretty much declares war on Islam as a whole, extremist or not, and we are still supposed to root for this guy? Wait, what?
To top off my disdain for Brad Thor's overbearing political propaganda, there was also his lack of basic writing ability. The integration of Mr. Thor's messages was made all the more clunky by his apparent need to beat us over the head with words such as "America", "Patriot", and "Terrorist". He tells us over and over again how angry each and every character is, battering us with paragraphs and paragraphs about how pissed off they are at the terrorists and their attacks. There is no variation to this anger between characters. The wording is practically identical from chapter to chapter, character to character. Why? Because every character is a robot whose only purpose is to further convince us of why Brad Thor's view on the world is absolute, and anybody who disagrees is no better than the terrorists.
It was interesting to here Mr. Thor's view on Canada. Paranoia is apparently so rampant in the U.S. intelligence services that they are convinced that even their allies are invading them, and that the American people need to "wake up".
In conclusion, if you hold similar views to Brad Thor, or at least aren't bothered by his beating the reader around the head with them, then you will likely enjoy this. I can see a case being made for it being a decent espionage thriller. For me though, what little enjoyment I might have gotten from the book was lost in a sea of overbearing political ideologies.
To me, this book represents everything wrong with the western world's views on Islam and the War on Terror. Individuals reacting out of anger, fear, and hatred simply perpetuate the problem and reinforce ingrained biases. Issuing sweeping, blanket condemnation on an entire religion for the actions of a few extremists is ignorance of the highest order, and plain racism.