ManhuntThe incredible pursuit of a CIA agent turned terrorist by New York Times best-selling author Peter Maas. Edwin P. Wilson was the Great Gatsby of the spook world, the rogue CIA agent who had already begun to amass a fortune while still in U.S intelligence. His lavish estate outside Washington, D.C. was a favoured gathering place for senators and congressmen, admirals and generals, for key intelligence officers. In addition, Wilson was also raking in millions in the service of the godfather of world-wide terrorism - Libya's Colonel Muamar el-Qaddafi. Wilson seemed above the law. Then, US attorney Larry Barcella discovered Wilson's sinister machinations, and in a chase that would go on for nearly four years and over three continents, Barcella began a manhunt that would not end until Wilson was brought to justice. In MANHUNT, Peter Maas went behind the headlines, gaining access to the secret documentation of Wilson's intelligence career, classified federal investigative reports and sealed court records. And in the course of his exhaustive research into the murky bypaths of espionage and deception, he turned over rocks that official Washington would have much preferred remained in place |
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He hoped Kevin wouldn ' t be offended , but one of them was arms sales . Mostly
legal , and always in the best interests of the United States . Still , he ' d try to
keep Kevin out of that part of things as much as possible . It amused Mulcahy that
...
He hoped Kevin wouldn ' t be offended , but one of them was arms sales . Mostly
legal , and always in the best interests of the United States . Still , he ' d try to
keep Kevin out of that part of things as much as possible . It amused Mulcahy that
...
Sida 142
Peter Goulding had gotten a price quote of $ 300 per M - 16 from an arms
merchant in Belgium that Wilson often used , so he decided to charge the
Libyans $ 350 , for an easy profit of a quarter of million dollars , and there would
be additional ...
Peter Goulding had gotten a price quote of $ 300 per M - 16 from an arms
merchant in Belgium that Wilson often used , so he decided to charge the
Libyans $ 350 , for an easy profit of a quarter of million dollars , and there would
be additional ...
Sida 300
... 80 – 81 , 86 , 98 , 100 von Bülow , Claus , 271 von Marbod , Erich Fritz : as
associate of Wilson , 54 , 234 – 35 , 247 - 48 , 249 , 278 , 279 , 285 background of
, 35 - 37 as consultant , 288 in Egyptian arms deal , 137 – 38 , 139 - 40
personality ...
... 80 – 81 , 86 , 98 , 100 von Bülow , Claus , 271 von Marbod , Erich Fritz : as
associate of Wilson , 54 , 234 – 35 , 247 - 48 , 249 , 278 , 279 , 285 background of
, 35 - 37 as consultant , 288 in Egyptian arms deal , 137 – 38 , 139 - 40
personality ...
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Manhunt
Användarrecension - Not Available - Book VerdictIf the story of Edwin Wilson, the ex-CIA agent who came to serve Muammar el-Qaddafi as a freewheeling dealer in explosives and the technologies and tactics of terror, were laid before a reader as ... Läs hela recensionen
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