Read The Tehran Initiative Online
Authors: Joel C. Rosenberg
Tags: #FICTION / Christian / Suspense, #FICTION / Suspense
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The Tehran Initiative
Copyright © 2011 by Joel C. Rosenberg. All rights reserved.
Cover photograph copyright © Tibor Bognar/Photononstop/Photolibrary. All rights reserved.
Author photograph copyright © 2005 by Joel Rosenberg. All rights reserved.
Designed by Dean H. Renninger
Some Scripture quotations and words of Jesus are taken or adapted from the New American Standard Bible,
®
copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission.
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
to come]
Rosenberg, Joel C., date.
The Tehran initiative / Joel C. Rosenberg.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-4143-1935-3 (hc)
1. Intelligence officers—United States—Fiction. 2. Nuclear warfare—Prevention—Fiction.
3. International relations—Fiction. 4. Prophecy—Islam—Fiction. 5. Iran—Fiction. 6. Middle East—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3618.O832T44 2011
813'.6—dc23 2011026051
ISBN 978-1-4143-6492-6 (International Trade Paper Edition)
To all our friends in Iran and the Middle East, yearning to be free.
Author’s Note
Tehran, Iran, is one and a half hours ahead of Jerusalem and eight and a half hours ahead of New York and Washington, DC.
Table of Contents
Cast of Characters
Americans
David Shirazi
(aka Reza Tabrizi)—field officer, Central Intelligence Agency
Marseille Harper
—childhood friend of David Shirazi; daughter of CIA operative Charlie Harper
Jack Zalinsky
—senior operative, Central Intelligence Agency
Eva Fischer
—field officer, Central Intelligence Agency
Roger Allen
—director, Central Intelligence Agency
Tom Murray
—deputy director for operations, Central Intelligence Agency
Dr. Mohammad Shirazi
—cardiologist, father of David Shirazi
Nasreen Shirazi
—mother of David Shirazi
William Jackson
—president of the United States
Mike Bruner
—Secret Service agent, assigned to President Jackson
Iranians
Dr. Alireza Birjandi
—preeminent scholar of Shia Islamic eschatology
Najjar Malik
—former physicist, Atomic Energy Organization of Iran
Javad Nouri
—senior governmental aide
Ayatollah Hamid Hosseini
—Supreme Leader
Ahmed Darazi
—president of Iran
Jalal Zandi
—nuclear physicist
Firouz Nouri
—leader of an Iranian terrorist cell
Rahim Yazidi
—member of Firouz Nouri’s cell
Navid Yazidi
—member of Firouz Nouri’s cell
Ali Faridzadeh
—minister of defense
Mohsen Jazini
—commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps
Dr. Mohammed Saddaji
—nuclear physicist (deceased)
Israelis
Asher Naphtali
—prime minister of Israel
Levi Shimon
—defense minister
Captain Avi Yaron
—commander, Israeli Air Force squadron
Captain Yossi Yaron
—commander, Israeli Air Force squadron
Others
Muhammad Ibn Hasan Ibn Ali
—the Twelfth Imam
Tariq Khan
—Pakistani nuclear physicist, working in Iran
Iskander Farooq
—president of Pakistan
Abdel Mohammad Ramzy
—president of Egypt
Preface
from
The Twelfth Imam
Tehran, Iran
Tuesday, March 1
David Shirazi wondered if they’d even make it to the safe house in Karaj.
As he inched forward in Tehran’s stop-and-go traffic toward Azadi Square, he saw the flashing lights of police cars ahead. Despite the roar of jumbo jets and cargo planes landing at Mehrabad International Airport, he could hear sirens approaching. Beside him sat Dr. Najjar Malik, the highest-ranking nuclear scientist in the Islamic Republic of Iran and the most valuable defector to the Central Intelligence Agency in a generation.
“They’re setting up a roadblock,” David said.
Najjar stiffened. “Then we need to get off this road.”
David agreed. The problem was that every side street from here to the square was clogged with hundreds of other drivers trying to find their way around the logjam as well.
“We’re going to have to get rid of this car.”
“Why? What for?”
“The moment a police officer runs these license plates, he’s going to come up with your name. We don’t want to be in the car when that happens.”
Without warning, David pulled the steering wheel hard to the right. He darted across two lanes of traffic, triggering a wave of angry honks.
Under no circumstances could he allow himself to get caught or implicated in the extraction of Najjar from the country. To do either would blow his cover and compromise all the work he’d done. The Twelfth Imam’s inner circle would never use the new satellite phones he’d just provided them. The MDS technical teams would be thrown out of the country. The CIA’s multimillion-dollar effort to penetrate the Iranian regime would be ruined. And given that Iran now had the Bomb, the CIA needed every advantage it could possibly get.
David heard a siren behind them. He cursed as he glanced in his rearview mirror and saw flashing lights about ten cars back. He guessed that a police cruiser had spotted his rapid and reckless exit from Azadi Road and gotten suspicious. Najjar, cooler than David would have expected under the circumstances, bowed his head and began to pray. David admired his courage. The worse things got, the calmer the man became.
The siren and flashing lights were getting closer. David turned the wheel, jumped the curb, pulled Najjar’s car off the congested street and onto the sidewalk, and hit the accelerator. Pedestrians started screaming and diving out of the way as David plowed through trash cans. The police cruiser was left in the dust, and David let himself smile.
The escape, however, was momentary. By the time they reached Qalani Street and took a hard left, another police cruiser was waiting. David wove in and out of traffic, but despite blowing through one light after another, he was steadily losing ground. Najjar was not praying anymore. He was craning his neck to see what was happening behind them and urging David to go faster. The road ahead was coming to an end. David suggested Najjar grab the door handle and brace for impact.
“Why?” Najjar asked at the last moment. “What are you going to do?”
David never answered. Instead, he slammed on the brakes and turned the steering wheel hard to the right, sending the car screeching and spinning across four lanes of traffic.
They were hit twice. The first was by the police cruiser itself. The second was by a southbound delivery truck that never saw them coming. The air bags inside Najjar’s car exploded upon impact, saving their lives but filling the vehicle with smoke and fumes. But theirs was not the only collision. In less than six seconds, David had triggered a seventeen-car pileup on Azizi Boulevard, shutting down traffic in all directions.
David quickly unfastened his seat belt. “You okay?” he asked.
“Are we still alive?”
“We are,” David said, checking his new friend for serious injuries. “We made it.”
“Are you insane?”
“We needed a diversion.”
David couldn’t get out his own door. It had been too badly mangled. So he climbed into the backseat, which was littered with shards of broken glass, and kicked out the back passenger-side door. He jumped out of the car and surveyed the scene. It was a terrible mess in both directions.
The police car was a smoldering pile of wreckage. Gasoline was leaking everywhere. David feared a single spark could blow the whole thing sky high. Inside, the solitary officer was unconscious.
Using all of his strength, David pried the driver’s-side door open and checked the man’s pulse. Fortunately, he was still alive, but he had an ugly gash on his forehead, and his face was covered in blood. David pocketed the officer’s .38-caliber service revolver and portable radio. Then he pulled the officer far from the wreckage and laid him down on the sidewalk.
David hobbled back to Najjar’s car, realizing his right knee had gotten banged up worse than he’d first realized. He looked down and noticed his pants were ripped and that blood was oozing from his leg.