TO DESTROY JERUSALEM, Kaplan’s fifth gripping Middle East thriller, is his longest and most ambitious to date. A historical novel set in 1990, the action races around the globe from Jerusalem, to Rio de Janeiro, to London, and then to war torn Beirut as the antagonists attempt to separately smuggle plutonium into Israel and have the operational physicist breach Israel’s fortified northern border. How they manage both should keep Israeli security services up at night. They want to use this live nuclear weapon as a threat..
At the heart of the novel is the first intifada (the PLO uprising) which stretched from December 1987 to the Madrid Conference in 1991.
Kaplan takes us into the strike committees, their internal organizing, and the hearts and minds of the PLO terrorists It is a hallmark of his writing to give us human characters on both sides of the war. While Kaplan’s spies usually work as loners , this time the Israeli team this time assembled to thwart the plot, is an unusually rich group of Sabras, South Africa, British and American olim with their facility in English, among them two fascinating women who have joined the Mossad for vastly disparate reasons.
Romance strikes and not unintentionally as Kaplan’s spymaster, Shai Shaham, has women constantly on his mind in his spare time. BTW: Kaplan’s spies are married folk with children struggling with these relationships as they are gone so often from home.
Interestingly, the novel too brings back a relationship Kaplan has in two previous novels: BULLETS OF PALESTINE and THE SPY’S GAMBLE.
All three feature Shai’s relationship with Ramzy Awwad, the Palestinian Liberation Organization intelligence officer and famous short story writer. Kaplan lets us know in the afterword, that Awwad is based on Ghassan Kanafani, the actual spokesperson for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) later killed by a Mossad hit team in a car bomb explosion in Beirut in retaliation for his part in the lethal Lod Airport massacre, when the PFLP “subcontracted” Japanese terrorists to murder passengers at baggage claim, killing 37 people and wounding more than 8o .
Kaplan moderates Kanafani’s views into a more conciliatory Ramzy Awwad as a man famous among his people for his writings even more so than his terror.
All three books , each of which this writer has reviewed, are ‘stand alones’ which mean that these separate stories can be read independently and in any order, though this one, time-wise, is slipped in between the other two.
THE SPY’S GAMBLE’s fictional characters move through real events in Israel in 2016-2017 and reads often as the ink has barely dried from the page.
Kaplan’s t novel, THE DAMASCUS COVER has been adapted into Sir John Hurt’s recent film starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Olivia Thirlby and the Israeli actors Aki Avni, Tsahi Halevy, Neta Riskin and Igal Naor. It is currently playing worldwide and in Israel on Netflix, and will be available in the U Ss for streaming exclusively on Hulu on November 23, 2018.
In this impressive body of work TO DESTROY JERUSALEM rises to the top in its complexity, originality and the true cleverness of the plot.
Like his spies, Kaplan is at the top of his game.