What Lies Across the Water

The Real Story of the Cuban Five

Nonfiction, History, Americas, Latin America, Social & Cultural Studies, True Crime, Espionage, Social Science, Crimes & Criminals
Cover of the book What Lies Across the Water by Stephen Kimber, Stephen Kimber
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Stephen Kimber ISBN: 1230000187092
Publisher: Stephen Kimber Publication: September 27, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Stephen Kimber
ISBN: 1230000187092
Publisher: Stephen Kimber
Publication: September 27, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

Is the man who blows up an airplane and kills dozens of civilians a murderous terrorist... or a valiant freedom fighter? Is the man who tries to stop the bomber a threat to national security... or a hero of the people?
It depends.
What Lies Across the Water is a narrative nonfiction thriller. About terrorists who blow up airplanes and try to overthrow governments. About intelligence agents who try to stop them.
The twist is that these terrorists are not Muslim. They’re Cuban exiles. And the men trying to stop them? Cuban intelligence agents.
What Lies Across the Water examines the post-9/11 Bush doctrine—“Any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime”—by focusing on what happened in Miami and Havana in the 1990s when the American government—and Miami’s Cuban violent exile community—ratcheted up their attacks against Cuba.
Cuba responded by sending intelligence agents to South Florida to penetrate the plotters.
What Lies Across the Water uses an in-the-moment narrative to tell the parallel, converging, diverging stories of the exile militants, Cuban intelligence officers and FBI agents as they clash in Havana, Miami and the Straits of Florida. The story moves from the streets of Little Havana to real Havana’s Tropicana nightclub, from the hotel bar at the Copacabana Hotel to the inner sanctum of the White House—and back.
What Lies Across the Water climaxes when Cuba’s intelligence agents—the Cuban Five—are arrested and sentenced to long prison terms while the exile terrorists go free.
Who’s really a terrorist and who’s really a freedom fighter?

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Is the man who blows up an airplane and kills dozens of civilians a murderous terrorist... or a valiant freedom fighter? Is the man who tries to stop the bomber a threat to national security... or a hero of the people?
It depends.
What Lies Across the Water is a narrative nonfiction thriller. About terrorists who blow up airplanes and try to overthrow governments. About intelligence agents who try to stop them.
The twist is that these terrorists are not Muslim. They’re Cuban exiles. And the men trying to stop them? Cuban intelligence agents.
What Lies Across the Water examines the post-9/11 Bush doctrine—“Any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime”—by focusing on what happened in Miami and Havana in the 1990s when the American government—and Miami’s Cuban violent exile community—ratcheted up their attacks against Cuba.
Cuba responded by sending intelligence agents to South Florida to penetrate the plotters.
What Lies Across the Water uses an in-the-moment narrative to tell the parallel, converging, diverging stories of the exile militants, Cuban intelligence officers and FBI agents as they clash in Havana, Miami and the Straits of Florida. The story moves from the streets of Little Havana to real Havana’s Tropicana nightclub, from the hotel bar at the Copacabana Hotel to the inner sanctum of the White House—and back.
What Lies Across the Water climaxes when Cuba’s intelligence agents—the Cuban Five—are arrested and sentenced to long prison terms while the exile terrorists go free.
Who’s really a terrorist and who’s really a freedom fighter?

More books from Crimes & Criminals

Cover of the book Serial Killers and the Media by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book 旧約聖書 文語訳 by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Financial Crime and Knowledge Workers by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Policing Non-Citizens by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Barack Obush by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book That's 雑学フルパック(シリーズ第1~10弾の雑学収録) by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Searching for Sandra by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Crime, Violence and Security in the Caribbean by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book A Shimmering Light by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Social Ecology of Crime: Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Governing Paradoxes of Restorative Justice by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Police in Canada by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Crime Control Policy: Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Victimization Patterns and Trends: Oxford Bibliographies Online Research Guide by Stephen Kimber
Cover of the book Police Culture by Stephen Kimber
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy