- Mills, Kyle.
Enemy of the State.
New York: Atria Books, 2017.
ISBN 978-1-4767-8351-2.
-
This is the third novel in the Mitch Rapp saga written by Kyle
Mills, who took over the franchise after the death of Vince
Flynn, its creator. It is the sixteenth novel in the Mitch Rapp
series (Flynn's first novel,
Term Limits [November 2009],
is set in the same world and shares characters with the Mitch
Rapp series, but Rapp does not appear in it, so it isn't
considered a Rapp novel), Mills continues to develop the Rapp
story in new directions, while maintaining the action-packed and
detail-rich style which made the series so successful.
When a covert operation tracking the flow of funds to ISIS
discovers that a (minor) member of the Saudi royal family
is acting as a bagman, the secret deal between the U.S. and
Saudi Arabia struck in the days after the 2001 terrorist
attacks on the U.S.—the U.S. would hide the ample evidence
of Saudi involvement in the plot in return for the Saudis
dealing with terrorists and funders of terrorism within the
Kingdom—is called into question. The president of the
U.S., who might be described in modern jargon as “having
an anger management problem” decides the time has come
to get to the bottom of what the Saudis are up to: is it
a few rogue ne'er-do-wells, or is the leadership up to their
old tricks of funding and promoting radical Islamic
infiltration and terrorism in the West? And if they are,
he wants to make them hurt, so they don't even
think about trying it again.
When it comes to putting the hurt on miscreants, the
president's go-to-guy is Mitch Rapp, the CIA's barely controlled
loose cannon, who has a way of getting the job done even if
his superiors don't know, and don't want to know, the details.
When the president calls Rapp into his office and says,
“I think you need to have a talk … and at the end
of that talk I think he needs to be dead” there is
little doubt about what will happen after Rapp walks out
of the office.
But there is a problem. Saudi Arabia is, nominally at least, an
important U.S ally. It keeps the oil flowing and prices down,
not only benefitting the world economy, but putting a lid on the
revenue of troublemakers such as Russia and Iran. Saudi Arabia
is a major customer of U.S. foreign military sales. Saudi Arabia
is also a principal target of Islamic revolutionaries, and
however bad it is today, one doesn't want to contemplate a
post-Saudi regime raising the black flag of ISIS, crying havoc,
and letting slip the goats of war. Wet work involving the royal
family must not just be deniable but totally firewalled from any
involvement by the U.S. government. In accepting the mission
Rapp understands that if things blow up, he will not only be on
his own but in all likelihood have the U.S. government actively
hunting him down.
Rapp hands in his resignation to the CIA, ending a relationship
which has existed over all of the previous novels. He meets
with his regular mission team and informs them he
“need[s] to go somewhere you … can't follow”:
involving them would create too many visible ties back to the
CIA. If he's going to go rogue, he decides he must truly do
so, and sets off assembling a rogues' gallery,
composed mostly of former adversaries we've met in previous
books. When he recruits his friend Claudia, who previously
managed logistics for an assassin Rapp confronted in the
past, she says, “So, a criminal enterprise. And only
one of the people at this table knows how to be a
criminal.”
Assembling this band of dodgy, dangerous, and devious characters
at the headquarters of an arms dealer in that paradise which
is Juba, South Sudan, Rapp plots an operation to penetrate the
security surrounding the Saudi princeling and find out how
high the Saudi involvement in funding ISIS goes. What they
learn is disturbing in the extreme.
After an operation gone pear-shaped, and with the CIA, FBI,
Saudis, and Sudanese factions all chasing him, Rapp and his
misfit mob have to improvise and figure out how to break the
link between the Saudis and ISIS in way which will allow him to
deny everything and get back to whatever is left of his life.
This is a thriller which is full of action, suspense, and
characters fans of the series will have met before acting in
ways which may be surprising. After a shaky outing in
the previous installment, Order to
Kill (December 2017), Kyle Mills has
regained his stride and, while preserving the essentials
of Mitch Rapp, is breaking new ground. It will be
interesting to see if the next novel,
Red War,
expected in September 2018, continues to involve any of the new
team. While you can read this as a stand-alone thriller, you'll
enjoy it more if you've read the earlier books in which the
members of Rapp's team were principal characters.
June 2018