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Jake Grafton races against time to extinguish a harrowing terrorist plot in Washington, D.C., and prevent all-out catastrophe from enveloping the nation. When the psychotic Colombian drug lord Chano Aldana is extradited to the United States for trial, he brings his army of vicious mercenaries with him. And as Aldana's hit men target the President of the United States, the capital is plunged into chaos that only veteran fighter pilot Jake Grafton can stop. With the help of an investigative show more journalist and an undercover agent, Grafton must find the deadly assassins before they can strike again. But time is running out, and the future of the country hangs in the balance. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Stephen Coonts, including rare photos from the author's personal collection. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
This is the first Stephen Coonts' book I have actually finished! The other ones I've tried I never liked. I have a friend that really like Stephen Coonts' so I wanted to keep trying to find a book by him I'd actually like and this is the 1st!
I found I really enjoyed it from the very beginning. It was a book/story I was sorry to put down. I enjoyed all the twists and turns and different plot points. It's essentially 3 or 4 different stories all in one and each one is well written : )
Adrianne
I found I really enjoyed it from the very beginning. It was a book/story I was sorry to put down. I enjoyed all the twists and turns and different plot points. It's essentially 3 or 4 different stories all in one and each one is well written : )
Adrianne
Some things Stephen Coonts do well, some things he does less well. As Jake Grafton, the red thread in the Jake Grafton novels (doh!), moves up the chain of command the books end up more in higher level, political, situations, and Coonts' political authoring is not up to the standards of his action, military or thriller writings.
This book is about Washington DC's drug problem and interaction with Colombian drug lords. It's possible that the book has aged badly, but it doesn't seem to be a good fit to reality.
This book moved away from Jake Grafton even more and focused on 3 other characters: A Washington Post writer, an undercover police and a rented assassin. Their character portraits are not terrible but you read a Jake Grafton book to show more follow Jake Grafton. Now he just becomes a fringe character which adds very little, or nothing, to the story.
At a few places in previous books, and in many places in this book, Coonts let characters do political rants. I don't know if they reflect the authors own views or anti-views but they become tiring, both the serious ones and the ones seemingly intended to make the readers think a character is ridiculous.
I don't know if I will keep reading the series after this one. Maybe give it one more shot? If the review score is higher on the next book - maybe... show less
This book is about Washington DC's drug problem and interaction with Colombian drug lords. It's possible that the book has aged badly, but it doesn't seem to be a good fit to reality.
This book moved away from Jake Grafton even more and focused on 3 other characters: A Washington Post writer, an undercover police and a rented assassin. Their character portraits are not terrible but you read a Jake Grafton book to show more follow Jake Grafton. Now he just becomes a fringe character which adds very little, or nothing, to the story.
At a few places in previous books, and in many places in this book, Coonts let characters do political rants. I don't know if they reflect the authors own views or anti-views but they become tiring, both the serious ones and the ones seemingly intended to make the readers think a character is ridiculous.
I don't know if I will keep reading the series after this one. Maybe give it one more shot? If the review score is higher on the next book - maybe... show less
What if narco terrorists with lots of money hired mahem and anarchy in the US? Applied the same strong arm tactics to the USA as to Columbia or Venezuela? That's the thesis of this book and Jake Grafton plays a small but crucial role. I was surprised that the US leadership did not apply interdiction in Columbia to the story; it would have improved some. Instead, the author stayed with tactical roles, even making the CJCS a tactical commander. I liked the book and am looking forward to the next in the Grafton series.
From the start Coonts gets your attention. The US Govt. brings a drug lord to America to stand trial. He uses Columbian tactics to be released. Everything from commando teams to an assassin to take out the President. The book starts to flow when the assassin wounds President Bush. The story is great. Well developed...until the end. I would have given this book 4 stars if the ending would have lived up to the rest of the interesting story line. With what we have learned in the book about the assassin, it is hard to believe he would act as he does after being so meticulous.
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Author Information

Stephen Coonts was born on July 19, 1946 and grew up in Buckhannon, West Virginia. He received an A.B. degree in political science from West Virginia University in 1968. He entered the U.S. Navy and received his Navy wings in August of 1969. He made two combat cruises aboard the USS Enterprise. After the Vietnam War, he served as a flight show more instructor aboard the USS Nimitz. He left active duty in 1977 and received a law degree from the University of Colorado School of Law in 1979. He went to West Virginia to practice and later, to Colorado to work as a staff attorney for an oil company. Coonts published his first novel, Flight of the Intruder, in 1986, which was adapted as into a film in 1991. Since then he has written more than 20 books including ones in the Jake Grafton Novel series, Saucer series, Deep Black series, and Tommy Carmellini series. He also published a work of nonfiction in 1992 called The Cannibal Queen and edited an anthology of true flying stories, War in the Air, in 1996. The U.S. Naval Institute honored him with its Author of the Year Award in 1986 for his novel, Flight of the Intruder. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Awards and Honors
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Belongs to Publisher Series
Pocket Books (10901995)
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Etat de siège
- Original title
- Under siege
- Original publication date
- 1990
- People/Characters
- Jake Grafton; Jack Yacke
- Important places
- Washington, D.C., USA
- Epigraph
- Government is not eloquence. It is not reason. It is a
force. Like fire, a dangerous servant and a fearful master.
~GEORGE WASHINGTON
Of all the tasks of government, the most basic is to protect
its citize... (show all)ns from violence.
~JOHN FOSTER DULLES - Dedication
- To My Parents, Gilbert and Violet Coonts
- Blurbers
- Clancy, Tom; Lehman, John
- Original language*
- Anglais (Etats-Unis) (Etats-Unis)
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Members
- 855
- Popularity
- 31,896
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.51)
- Languages
- 8 — Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 43
- ASINs
- 8





























































