Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose!
Richard Rohmer’s high tension geo-political techno-thriller might have been written almost forty years ago, but the degree to which it could also have been taken from the headlines of yesterday’s newspaper is uncanny, unnerving and quite terrifying – the re-heating of the Cold War tensions between USSR then, of course, and the USA; the Soviet incursion into Afghanistan; the American support of Pakistan in the face of Soviet sabre-rattling; submarines toting tactical nuclear weapons playing high stakes games of chicken and hide and seek; the world’s perennial reliance on fossil fuels and its delivery system of supertankers from the Middle East that are all too vulnerable to attack; the never-ending dispute between Muslims and Jews, Palestine and Israel over possession of the Gaza Strip and the existence of a Palestinian homeland; and, of course, the belief in MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) as the deterrent to the outbreak of a thermonuclear World War III.
In short, the events in PERISCOPE RED have been most wondrously reprised in today’s current events. On the other hand, I wonder if Richard Rohmer is stricken by a gag reflex when he dwells on the irony of his depiction of John Hansen, the fictional occupant of the Oval Office, being the complete antithesis of Donald Trump and his bumbling ham-handed efforts at international diplomacy. Hansen is portrayed as intelligent but aware of his shortcomings and the necessity to seek the advice and counsel in high level cabinet briefings; a man with integrity and principles; a courageous, strong leader respected by his fellow leaders in other countries; happily in love with his wife and respectful of her opinions and her part in their administration. Trump? Well, suffice it say, he isn’t. One particularly amusing and ironic description of the fictional president:
“He always believed there was no better way of staying aware of what was going on in the country than religiously reading the Times and the Washington Post … The president took a sip of coffee and turned to the second page of the New York Times, his eye quickly running over each of the columns of interest to him. He had developed an excellent speed reading technique years before when the volume of paper he had to cope with reached the saturation point.”
Oh my! Could that be much further away from one page briefings of bullet points in simple, short words of one or two syllables? (As I read, I wondered if a modern American reader of Rohmer’s characterization of a president might even write Rohmer's novel off as fantasy!?)
The scenario is realistic. The tension is electric and the shocking ending is guaranteed to take your breath away. Highly recommended.
Paul Weiss