āFor six days, it was the Iranian Embassy on Princes Gate in London that riveted the world. . . . Macintyreās superb reconstruction restores it to vivid, complex life.āāThe Washington Post
A thrilling tick-tock recounting of one of the most harrowing hostage situations and daring rescue attempts of our timeāfrom the true-life espionage master and New York Times bestselling author of Operation Mincemeat and The Spy and the Traitor.
ā[Ben Macintyre is] John le CarreĢās nonfiction counterpart.āāThe New York Times
A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: The Washington Post, Minnesota Star Tribune, Parade
As the American hostage crisis in Iran boiled into its seventh month in the spring of 1980, six heavily armed gunman barged into the Iranian embassy in London, taking twenty-six hostages. What followed over the next six days was an increasingly tense standoff, one that threatened at any moment to spill into a bloodbath.
Policeman Trevor Lock was supposed to have gone to the theater that night. Instead, he found himself overpowered and whisked into the embassy. The terrorists never noticed the gun hidden in his jacket. The drama that ensued would force him to find reserves of courage he didnāt know he had. The gunmen themselves were hardly one-dimensionalāall Arabs, some highly educated, who hoped to force Britain to take their side in their independence battle against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini. Behind the scenes lurked the brutal Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, who had bankrolled the whole affair as a salvo against Iran.
A story of ordinary men and women under immense pressure, The Siege takes readers minute-by-thrilling-minute through an event that would echo across the next two decades and provide a direct historical link to the tragedy on 9/11. Drawing on exclusive interviews and a wealth of never-before-seen files, Macintyre brilliantly reconstructs a week in which every day minted a new hero and every second spelled the potential for doom.
The Siege: A Six-Day Hostage Crisis and the Daring Special-Forces Operation That Shocked the World (Unabridged) - Ben Macintyre
āFor six days, it was the Iranian Embassy on Princes Gate in London that riveted the world. . . . Macintyreās superb reconstruction restores it to vivid, complex life.āāThe Washington Post
A thrilling tick-tock recounting of one of the most harrowing hostage situations and daring rescue attempts of our timeāfrom the true-life espionage master and New York Times bestselling author of Operation Mincemeat and The Spy and the Traitor.
ā[Ben Macintyre is] John le CarreĢās nonfiction counterpart.āāThe New York Times
A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: The Washington Post, Minnesota Star Tribune, Parade
As the American hostage crisis in Iran boiled into its seventh month in the spring of 1980, six heavily armed gunman barged into the Iranian embassy in London, taking twenty-six hostages. What followed over the next six days was an increasingly tense standoff, one that threatened at any moment to spill into a bloodbath.
Policeman Trevor Lock was supposed to have gone to the theater that night. Instead, he found himself overpowered and whisked into the embassy. The terrorists never noticed the gun hidden in his jacket. The drama that ensued would force him to find reserves of courage he didnāt know he had. The gunmen themselves were hardly one-dimensionalāall Arabs, some highly educated, who hoped to force Britain to take their side in their independence battle against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini. Behind the scenes lurked the brutal Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, who had bankrolled the whole affair as a salvo against Iran.
A story of ordinary men and women under immense pressure, The Siege takes readers minute-by-thrilling-minute through an event that would echo across the next two decades and provide a direct historical link to the tragedy on 9/11. Drawing on exclusive interviews and a wealth of never-before-seen files, Macintyre brilliantly reconstructs a week in which every day minted a new hero and every second spelled the potential for doom.