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Night In Tehran

by Philip Kaplan

Tehran, 1978. With a collapsing economy and street demonstrations growing in size, number, and violence, the ailing Shah of Iran responds with increasing brutality. CIA operative David Weiseman, posing as a representative of the US State Department, is sent into the heart of the tumult to convince the Shah to step down, and find a strong, democratically minded replacement - before far-right religious extremists win the day. Weiseman finds himself drawn deeper and deeper into a shadowy world of unscrupulous operatives from other governments, covert back alley meetings with scheming ayatollahs, military officers, politicians, and even officers from the Shah's vicious secret police.

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Author Biography

Ambassador Philip Kaplan had a 27-year career as a diplomat in the U.S. Foreign Service, including being U.S. minister, deputy chief of mission and Charge d'Affaires, to the U.S. Embassy in Manila, Philippines during the tumultuous overthrow of Ferdinand Marcos. Now retired from the State Department, Kaplan is currently a partner in Berliner, Corcoran & Rowe LLP's Washington, D.C law office, where his practice is focused on public and private international law. He lives in Washington, DC.

Review

"This taut and fast-paced novel has a particularly compelling feature: Philip Kaplan, after a career in the State Department, brings to his book a sharp political and international sophistication--rare in thrillers, abundant in "Night in Tehran."  — Alan Furst
 
"Throw away the CIA analysis of Iran and instead pick up Ambassador Phil Kaplan's brilliant novel, which illuminates the intricacies of diplomacy, espionage, and high-stakes politics in the most dangerous country in the world with clarity and drive.  This book should be required reading for senior Pentagon and State Department leaders trying to understand the complexities of our relations in the turbulent Middle East."  — Admiral James Stavridis, 16th Supreme Allied Commander at NATO

"Kaplan dramatically shows how competing interests, foreign manipulation, and domestic brutality led to the violent overthrow of the last Persian monarch and one of the longest hostage crises on record. Not just a snapshot in time, this insightful novel is a powerful reminder of how Cold War strategies continue to reverberate through the modern global landscape." — Publishers Weekly

Review Quote

"This taut and fast-paced novel has a particularly compelling feature: Philip Kaplan, after a career in the State Department, brings to his book a sharp political and international sophistication--rare in thrillers, abundant in "Night in Tehran." -- Alan Furst "Throw away the CIA analysis of Iran and instead pick up Ambassador Phil Kaplan's brilliant novel, which illuminates the intricacies of diplomacy, espionage, and high-stakes politics in the most dangerous country in the world with clarity and drive. This book should be required reading for senior Pentagon and State Department leaders trying to understand the complexities of our relations in the turbulent Middle East." -- Admiral James Stavridis , 16th Supreme Allied Commander at NATO "Kaplan dramatically shows how competing interests, foreign manipulation, and domestic brutality led to the violent overthrow of the last Persian monarch and one of the longest hostage crises on record. Not just a snapshot in time, this insightful novel is a powerful reminder of how Cold War strategies continue to reverberate through the modern global landscape." -- Publishers Weekly

Excerpt from Book

CHAPTER ONE PARIS A foggy morning in the Place de la Concorde. Poking above the rooftops of the left-bank of the Seine, a blinking red light was all that could be seen of the Eiffel Tower. David Weiseman shook the drizzle from his overcoat, and then dodged through the cars streaming into the great square. He hustled past the Hotel de Crillon and across to Avenue Gabriel. Get on with it, he told himself. He strode past the US embassy, casting only a quick glance at the tough-looking French flics twirling police batons, staring down nosy American tourists. A clap of thunder hastened his step. Ten minutes later he crossed the ornate Pont Alexander III, homage to the Russian Tsar who concluded the Franco-Russian alliance that endured for some twenty years, until the guns of the First World War shattered a century of post-Napoleonic peace in Europe. Diplomacy rarely if ever succeeded like that. Across the Seine, he took in the Quai d''Orsay, said to be the home of the French mandarins who considered themselves masters of the stylized international ballet known as diplomacy. This fine art meant staying on one''s toes, sustaining the process, never letting it break down. But it did break down, Weiseman knew, remembering Berlin ... the Gruenewald ... every twenty years or so in Europe, leading to the two world wars of the twentieth century. And so he saw things differently, reminding himself diplomacy wasn''t just about process, or compromise. It was about persuading the other country that it was in their interest to do what you wanted them to do. Trevor said Gramont, the man Weiseman was on his way to meet, could be trusted. Well, he didn''t quite say that. Trevor--Weisman''s boss, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency--didn''t trust anyone. He said Laurent Gramont was important, the door into the French elites. At the Foreign Ministry, a young woman in outsized amber glasses led him to the secretary general''s office. Gramont was with an aide, giving instructions. He held himself tall and straight in a perfectly tailored, double-breasted gray suit with a subtle dark stripe, a silver tie with a pearl tie tack, matching cufflinks on his white shirt. His hair was a richly toned silver gray. He was a French Trevor, knowing and discreet, no doubt ready to be ruthless. "Monsieur Weiseman, quel plaisir." Gramont''s inner office was a gorgeous Empire spectacle, separated from the outer world by mauve, silk drapes. The gilt inlaid desk was devoid of any papers. A revolving globe stood to the right. Europe on top, France in the middle. Weiseman gestured toward it. "Still the center of civilization, I see." Gramont allowed the kind of half smile that also reminded Weiseman of Trevor. "It''s our mission," he said. "But please, have a seat." He lifted the phone, whispered, "Deux caf

Details

ISBN1612199445
Author Philip Kaplan
Pages 320
Publisher Melville House Publishing
Language English
Year 2021
ISBN-10 1612199445
ISBN-13 9781612199443
Format Paperback
DEWEY 813.6
Imprint Melville House Publishing
Place of Publication Brooklyn
Country of Publication United States
AU Release Date 2021-10-26
NZ Release Date 2021-10-26
US Release Date 2021-10-26
Publication Date 2021-10-26
UK Release Date 2021-10-26
Audience General

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