Bookbot

Josefina Guerrero

    By way of deception
    The Passion
    • To escape marriage to a despised man twice her age, Lady Aurora Demming makes a scandalous arrangement with Nicholas Sabine, a dangerously handsome American facing execution for murder and piracy. She agrees to become his wife for one day . . . and one glorious, intoxicating night. Widowed, Aurora returns to London society with Nicholas's orphaned sister at her side to face a lifetime without love--until her "dead" husband returns, insisting that she honor their vows and haunting her dreams with promises of forbidden desire. . . .

      The Passion2007
      4,1
    • By way of deception

      • 396pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      The first time the Mossad approached Victor Ostrovsky, it was for their assassination unit, the kidon, which he declined. On the second invitation, he entered a rigorous three-year training program to become a katsa, or intelligence case officer, for the renowned Israeli spy agency. This account reveals his experiences within the Mossad and two decades of its often ruthless covert operations globally. Ostrovsky provides an insider's perspective on Mossad tactics, detailing how they withheld critical information about a planned suicide mission in Beirut, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of U.S. Marines and French troops. He recounts how they tracked Yasser Arafat by enlisting his driver and bodyguard, and how they concealed information on American hostages, contributing to the Iran-Contra scandal. The narrative also covers the Mossad's role in secret UN negotiations that led to ambassador Andrew Young's resignation. Furthermore, it exposes the organization's influence, including how Jewish communities in various regions are secretly armed and trained in self-defense units, and how agents facilitate drug trafficking to fund their operations. Ostrovsky highlights a network that has spiraled out of control, with internal conflicts causing terrorist escapes and policies misaligned with Israel's interests. This work stands as one of the most significant and controversial of its kind since Spycatcher.

      By way of deception1991
      3,9