Pakistan: America's Armageddon
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Ayeza entered a forced marriage when she was twelve and left Pakistan for her husband's village in Afghanistan. Driven from her home by the senior wives when her husband was away, her husband's brother caught her talking to a boy on the street. He and the men he was with killed the boy and gang raped Ayeza. The village imam condemned her in accordance with Islamic law for enticing the rape. An American patrol rescued her as her husband and his family was stoning her in the street. The CIA later recruited her. A theft of nuclear material meant new rules of engagement. Eric Ludlow sent Ayeza back to her village to get the proof.
With proof in hand, Ayeza joined with Logan, the CIA's top Middle East operative, in a search for the weapons. When the government of Pakistan denied the theft, the American administration waffled. Unconvinced, America's CIA and its military leaders placed their careers on the line to find the warheads before they reached their targets in the States. After a two year failed search spanning three continents, a successful nuclear attack on an American city by Islam's crusaders appeared imminent.
When the Americans executed Osama Bin Laden Al-Qaeda focused on a target, and, a leader for a leader became radical Islam's rallying call. Convinced by Eric and Admiral Michaels that a weapon had arrived, President Gregory Paxton must choose. Would he seek safety for his family and himself and leave the captiol while risking a major city and its entire population, or would he cave in and trade America's freedom by accepting Al-Qaeda's perverted terms for peace, or, would he hold the enemy responsible?
Patrick J. Roelle Sr.
Patrick graduated from the University of Portland, in Portland, Oregon in 1965. His interest in writing grew from a diary he kept while on assignment to manage a construction project in Cairo Egypt. One year turned into seven as he traveled and worked throughout the Middle and Near East, and later to South Africa, Botswana, and Zimbabwe. Patrick’s international career ended at a remote border crossing in Botswana, Africa in 1991. He returned to the Pacific Northwest where he lived until he retired from his construction business to devote his time to writing. Patrick has written six books; three fiction, and three non-fiction. He spent two years working on Egyptian military installations, on the back streets of Cairo, in the remote villages along the Nile, and in the Sinai Desert. Project Egypt, a Politically Incorrect View reflects his first attempt at assimilating into a world that, at the time, was beyond his understanding. A tour on the Island of Cyprus resulted in his first fiction novel. The Terrorist legacy was a product of the people he met and the places he visited. A terrorist attack on the Island of Cyprus, which was divided down the middle by Muslim and Christian philosophy drew Patrick into the world of Islam. Fear God and the Shadow of the Muslim Sword, and Islam's Mandate, a Tribute to Jihad analyze the relationship between the world of Islam and the People of the Book, Jews, Christians, and Pagans. 9-11 brought Islam's radical side to the forefront. Patrick revisited his tour in Pakistan and Afghanistan to write The Apostate Theory and his most recent work, Pakistan, America's Armageddon. Patrick lives in a coastal community of Florida. He has four children, seven grandchildren, one great grandchild, and his constant companions, Brandy and Duchess, Yellow Labradors who share the space beneath his desk.
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