Clear and Present Danger


Title:                  Clear and Present Danger

Author:                 Tom Clancy

Clancy, Tom (1989). Clear and Present Danger. New York: Putnam

LCCN:       89010287

PS3553.L245 C5 1989

Subjects

Date Updated:  October 29, 2015

Tom Clancy is one of my favorite writers, and I read all of his major works. A recent book with a collaborator is Clancyesque but not to be compared with books such as Clear and Present Danger.

At the end of the prologue to Clear and Present Danger, Clancy writes, “And so began something that had not quite begun and would not soon end, with many people in many places moving off in directions and on missions which they all mistakenly thought they understood. That was just as well. The future was too fearful for contemplation, and beyond the expected, illusory finish lines were things fated by the decisions made this morning–and, once decided, best unseen.” In Clear and Present Danger nothing is as clear as it may seem.

The president, unsatisfied with the success of his “war on drugs,” decides he wants some immediate success. But after John Clark’s covert strike team is deployed to Colombia for Operation Showboat, the drug lords strike back taking several civilian casualties. The chief executive’s polls plummet. He orders Ritter (Deputy Director of Operations in the CIA) to terminate their unofficial plan and leave no traces. Jack Ryan, who has just been named CIA Deputy Director of Intelligence is enraged when he discovers that has been left out of the loop of Colombian operations. Several of America’s most highly trained soldiers are stranded in an unfinished mission that, according to all records, never existed. Ryan decides to get the men out.

Ultimately, Clear and Present Danger is about good conscience, law, and politics, with Jack Ryan and CIA agent John Clark as its dual heroes. Ryan relentlessly pursues what he knows is right and legal, even if it means confronting the president of the United States. Clark is the perfect soldier, but a man who finally holds his men higher than the orders of any careless commander.

Along with the usual, stunning array of military hardware and the latest techno-gadgets, Clear and Present Danger further develops the relationships and characters that Clancy fans have grown to love. Admiral James Greer passes the CIA torch to his pupil, Ryan. Mr. Clark and Chavez meet for the first time. Other recurring characters like Robert Ritter and “the President” add continuity to Clancy’s believable, alternate reality. This is Clancy at his best.