... has a stunning new novel on Amazon.com, “The Darts of Deceit”, a close-to-the-bone thriller which glues the reader to the pages right through to the back cover. A group of diehard communists plan to  reverse the collapse of Soviet power by triggering catastrophes in volatile parts of the world, including Africa. One man finds himself in their path.

 

This is what reviewers have to say:

Two Russian SS-X-25 nuclear missiles are missing. MI6, the CIA and Southern African intelligence services believe them to be in Madagascar, positioned by hard-core Soviets bent on creating political mayhem.
Billionaire and political intriguer, Hugh X Alcock’s son Peter is missing.
Victor Kennedy, ex-soldier skilled in guerrilla warfare, is hired by Alcock to find Peter after his plane disappears on a flight to Mauritius. When Kennedy and a Mozambican colleague find Peter they learn the appalling truth of the missing armaments.
They also uncover a CIA dirty tricks campaign which, if successful, will result in the deaths of hundreds of thousands, maybe millions, of people in Zimbabwe, Zambia and Mozambique. A killing field for which South Africa will be blamed. In Darts of Deceit Wilf Nussey poses an unthinkable, but all too possible, scenario. An eclectic group, veterans from guerrilla wars in Africa, find themselves confronted by nuclear terrorism on the Dark Continent. The lives of hundreds of thousands and the survival of nations depend on the success or failure of their desperate mission. There are no slow spots in the book. It zooms from beginning to end. The book is fiction but I asked myself if it could have happened. Chillingly, it definitely could.”
Keith Macmillan – author of Shadow Tracker

Wilf Nussey

Wilf Nussey was a newspaperman for forty years, all but four of them based in Africa. He was a foremost foreign correspondent for the Argus group of newspapers for twenty years spanning most of Africa’s transition to independence and its continuing upheavals. Before that he was a freelance correspondent in Kenya for various British and North American media and lived and worked in Britain and Canada. Assignments have taken him to the Middle East, Far East, Europe and New Zealand. Five years after being appointed editor of a small newspaper, he quit to write books and freelance and has produced four successful documentaries and a collection of stories in South Africa. Now he and his wife live within yards of the sea at Simon’s Town in South Africa’s Cape Peninsula.

“THE DARTS OF DECEIT” – a drama of intrigue

A young, go-getting, all-women publishing house in South Africa, Rebel ePublishers, has launched a dynamic first novel on the e-market in late November, early December.

Titled “The Darts of Deceit” it is a powerful drama of international political intrigue and high adventure in turbulent Africa. The author, Wilf Nussey, a journalist for forty years, spent most of them in Africa, covering the march of independence up to the death of apartheid. As a foreign correspondent for South Africa’s leading newspaper chain he came to know the southern and central African states intimately. He watched Portugal’s three African colonies implode into civil war after the Lisbon dictatorship collapsed in 1974, Rhodesia’s whites surrender power to blacks in the new Zimbabwe (who promptly suppressed internal black opposition by massacreing twenty to thirty thousand of them, always an effective ploy), and South Africa’s white regime desperately reinforce the apartheid walls as the black nationalist tide beat against them.

The turmoil  coincided with the disintegration of the Soviet Union under Gorbachev in the 1980s. From this emerged the seed for “The Darts of Deceit”.

The story is set mainly in Mozambique and nearby Madagascar, the  huge island state in the Indian Ocean plunged into Mao-style communism by its dictator, Didier Ratsiraka, when he seized power in 1975. It takes in London, Washington, Lusaka in Zambia, Addis Ababa in Ethiopia, and places in South Africa. It features a broad array of well-defined characters from the leading players, Victor Kennedy and Mario Octavio de Sousa, to the US President and his National Security Advisor, the CIA deputy chief, British MI6 agents, the Mozambique president and his security head, A Soviet diplomat-cum-KGB officer, South African spies and military chiefs, NASA satellite trackers, Malagasy soldiers and a Russian ICBM crew.

Dismayed by the crumbling Soviet system around them, a group of hard-core Russian politicos and officers decide to restore their fast-vanishing power and prestige by causing international crises.

For this they need major weapons – not a problem because with the crumbling of the Soviet Union sophisticated weaponry was disappearing wholesale from arsenals in its former vassal states.

With stolen nuclear missiles they set out to create major disasters in several parts of the world to discredit Moscow’s new liberalism, create openings for Russian military intervention and restore the credibility of communism.

The first place they pick is Southern Africa, where they can exploit the turbulence to make South Africa look the culprit, triggering open war. Russian forces under the Red banner will rush to black Africa’s aid.

British and American intelligence get wind of this but are unwilling to take direct action. Britain’s MI6 opts to use the services of a billionaire and political intriguer with worldwide business interests whose son, a charter pilot in Kenya and covert MI6 agent, has disappeared on a flight to Mauritius. He hires Kennedy to find him.

Kennedy is an out-of-work Briton who fought for Rhodesia in the guerilla war there. The search leads him via murky exile groups in South Africa to Mozambique, where he enlists the help of the rebel underground and the sinister security police discover his presence.

The CIA learn of the Russian plot from their own sources. They inform the National Security Advisor and he decides to turn the tables by seizing guidance control of the hijacked nuclear missiles and blaming the apartheid government in South Africa.

Kennedy finds the missing son and discovers the full ramifications of the plot but is captured. Meanwhile South Africa’s intelligence chiefs have been tipped off and discover their objective is ironically the same that of Mozambique’s Frelimo rulers, who have also learned of the plot: to destroy it. They go to Kennedy’s assistance.

The story moves between the political machinations in London, Washington and Southern Africa as the different groups move to abort the rebel Russians’ scheme or take it over for their own objectives.

It rises to taut and violent action as Kennedy and De Sousa move to counter the missiles, and reaches spectacular climax in the depths of Madagascar.

From the Big Thrill, ITW emagazine.

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