Friday, August 15, 2014

The Rubicon Trilogy: An Interview With the Author of the Soon to be Published Techno-Thriller, Stephen M. Walker


(We sat down with Stephen Walker to discuss his soon to be published historical techno-thriller trilogy, Rubicon, and to get his thoughts on the book, his experiences as a first-time novelist, his influences and the challenges he faced undertaking such a complex project. Stephen has contributed blog articles and white papers on a wide range of subject to this blog in the past.)





 So we have with us today the new author of the soon to be released techno-thriller Rubicon, Stephen Walker. Stephen, set the stage for us and give potential readers a broad overview of what they can expect in Rubicon.



 The finishing chapter and scenes have not been finished, but the bulk of the writing is complete. The word you used, techno-thriller, is probably a fair one, but it also encompasses a lot more than your standard gee-whiz descriptions of gadgetry and technology. The book is actually three books, a trilogy.
 I’ve always been fascinated by the pace of technological change and the good and bad that comes with it. Most people have heard of the Nobel Prizes awarded in Sweden for various positive academic achievements and research and also the Nobel Peace Prize. Most people don’t realize that Alfred Nobel was a chemist and engineer who ran one of the largest and most successful armaments manufacturing companies in the world, Bofors. He was responsible for inventing the blasting cap, dynamite and the substance that is the forerunner of what we today call cordite.
 He was keenly aware that his inventions would be used to make war. Although he saw positive uses for his explosive inventions such as blasting railroad tunnels, taking down dangerous rock overhangs and stabilizing avalanche zones, he understood that his work would mostly be used to make war. As a way to counter-balance these things, he used his sizable estate to fund the Nobel Prizes.
 The book leans on this for part of its premise. Technology in and of itself is benign. It is neither good nor bad. The uses that imperfect men and ambitious nations put the technology to make the application either bad or good.



So would you then also say that Rubicon as a novel, is a statement about the dangers of runaway technology?


STEPHEN

 It is. We hear a great deal these days about the singularity from a purely technological perspective. Raymond Kurzweil wrote a brilliant book about ten years ago called The Singularity is Near. Although he never claims to have come up with the base idea that the pace of technological change is outstripping society’s ability to comprehend it, he was the first to try and formulate what an unrestrained future might look like.
 I’ve used a term in the book called the sW, the Singularity of Warfare. Although the term is a creation of my imagination, the evidence that it is indeed occurring is all around us. Military forces all around the world are having difficulty getting design and testing for the fighter planes and battle tanks of the next generation because technology is changing so quickly that they aren’t certain that a project that gets green-lighted in 2014 will still be a relevant weapon system by the times its fielded in perhaps 2019.
Rubicon speaks directly to the very real possibility that a very small country or even a very small company or group could become a force to be reckoned with on the world stage because of the wild pace of technological change. They could wield the power that in the past was reserved only for industrialized nations; the ability to project power overseas and carry out one nations will against another on that nations soil with relative impunity. When you can bring that kind of power to bear, you’re a superpower.


THE ERUDITE AARDVARK

 Without being a spoiler, can you tell our readers a little more about Rubicon and what they can expect in terms of its’ playout scenario?



 Certainly. In a rare moment of candor, the President of the United States and his advisory team comes to the realization that America is too hamstrung politically to win the so-called War on Terror. His belief is that no matter which political party is  in power in Washington, the party in the  minority will do anything, no matter the cost, to regain power. That includes seeing the country cede territory that was seized in battle, leave areas where US troops were previously engaged and release those captured during fighting. Although many in his own party, and many in the opposition party believe that America can’t collapse no matter how badly the war is mis-managed, he sees a different picture. He sees that for every fire he puts out, five to ten new ones take its place. He comes to understand that he will be the man sitting in the Oval Office when America’s reign as the sole world superpower comes crashing down.
 This President is a pragmatist. He knows that he has a House and Senate that is aligned against him that will counter any move that he takes. He begins to meet secretly with Senator Myron Canfield, a longtime opponent and powerful member of the Senate Armed Forces Committee and Senate Intelligence Committee. Canfield is a dinosaur from the days of the Cold War and has many friends in both the House and the Senate. He’s owed many favors by the intelligence community and is in the twilight of his career.
 Although Canfield and the President are polar opposites, they do agree on this point; America will soon lose the War on Terror. Together, they jointly cobble together a very small team of like-minded people from both parties. They make the decision that the only way to win is to completely bypass the giant US intelligence machine and outsource the dirtiest and most controversial aspects of the war to a group that has no trace to the United States.



 So this is a group that operates in the shadows of The Shadow War?



(Laughing) I suppose that’s a good way to think of it. I hadn’t thought of that.



THE ERUDITE AARDVARK

You call these men “francs-tireur”, correct? Basically meaning that they are high-tech pirates?




 Many countries have employed francs-tireur over the years. In the broadest of terms, yes they are pirates. The distinction with francs-tireur is that they have been sanctioned to perform certain duties on behalf of a government. At times they were paid a commission and at other times they were simply allowed to plunder whatever they came across and keep it with the promise of no reprisals against them. If this sounds a lot like Blackbeard and Black Bart stuff, that’s because that’s what it usually was.
 So although a country may secretly hire francs-tireur to complete a mission, they don’t direct them on how to accomplish that mission. It was this plausible deniability that made dealing with these people so appealing.



The parts of the book you provided to us had a great deal of historical content and accuracy. The story actually goes back into the 1940’s and spends a good deal of time there. Why did you feel it was so important to include that in order to tell the story?




STEPHEN


 Like millions of others, I’m a fan of espionage thrillers, techno-thrillers and Black Operations stories. I know for myself, I always find myself asking questions, like, “how did they manage to get those safe houses set up?” or “how did the bad guys come into possession of this technology in the first place” or “how do they get the money to operate and where do their weapons come from?” Some authors explain it, but most just leave it to your imagination to get the answers to those questions.
 The story behind the Tesla technology, the mysterious death of Tesla, the seizure and then disappearance of his research and writings, that is all true. The fact that he approached the War Department with an idea for a peace ray is real. The fact that his friend was a registered agent for Nazi Germany is also real.
 The truth is that there were dozens of projects being undertaken in 1942-1944 that now sound outlandish; pigeon-guided missiles, bombs that were steered by cats, small packages of explosives affixed to millions of bats so that they would be released over Tokyo and fly into dark corners of wood and paper homes before exploding and catching the entire city on fire. Some regarded Tesla as a crackpot but many others thought that he might have the solution to the end of the war. In either case, he was watched by the FBI until his unexplained death in his hotel room.
 The United States knew that they were working on the atomic bomb and at some point, saw that it was going to be the answer for the super-weapon they were looking for. However, they were afraid that the Germans, as well as the Soviets, were making overtures to Nikola Tesla. He had made it very clear that he felt that every country should be given his technology because it would mean that no country could successfully wage war against another. It was the original Mutual Assured Destruction. He’d offered it first to the US because he was a naturalized American. The War Department didn’t want it, but they didn’t want anyone else to have it either. Tesla was a close associate and friend of George S. Viereck. He often gave Tesla money and befriended him, often hosting him at their home in New York. Viereck was jailed on charges of being an agent of Germany. He was released temporarily under odd circumstances and the re-incarcerated. Although charged with a federal crime, he was held in the Washington, DC city jail.
 Tesla’s family were ethnic Serbs, but he was born in Croatia. The United States feared that Tesla’s allegiances, ethnicity or love for the country of his birth could also move him to provide his peace ray to the Soviet Union, who were funding and assisting the Chetniks in fighting the Nazi’s at various points in the war.





So you’ve woven the fictional story piece into the fabric of the historical account? The manuscript you provided to us does that with several different story lines throughout the book, correct?





 Yes. It’s a favorite technique of mine. I always enjoy looking at actual events that transpired and then trying to weave in what I think the back story might be. Call it the conspiracy theorist within.





So, again, not to give away the entire story, but this technology continues to be pursued throughout the Cold War and into the present day?


STEPHEN

 Yes. The Tesla technology becomes something of a black market “White Whale”. I trace the parties that were pursuing it from the end of World War Two up through the present day. There are three proxy parties that are involved, just as there were three parties involved in the war years. As we know, the United States lost interest in particle beam weaponry. But a group picked up that torch.  Tesla’s research was obtained through a partial sampling of his stolen papers by the Nazi’s and that line is also traceable to a group trying to obtain these weapons. A third group managed to obtain old research done just after the war by the Soviets and replicate a measure of success by trying to update the work.
 The three lines can all directly be traced back to Nikola Tesla’s original works and the failure of the War Department at that time to see the use case for particle beam weapons. The myopia was caused by the pressure to bring the war to a close and defeat the Germans and Japanese. The focus was on super-weapons, what we now refer to as weapons of mass destruction. The thinking then was that an invasion of the Japanese home islands would cost one million American lives. The Allies knew that Germany was close to perfecting more accurate V2 rockets, jet propulsion aircraft, helicopters and even a nuclear bomb of their own. The story goes that were it not for the actions of a handful of Norweigian resistance fighters, the Nazi’s would have taken enough deuterium away from Norway to create an atomic bomb before the Americans did.
 As a result of these things, no one saw the need to develop a weapon who’s power dissipated over very short distances. Only in the decades around the 1980’s and 1990’s did governments begin to see the benefit that pinpoint strikes from these short-range weapons could have. With the development of UAV technology, miniaturized versions of these weapons could be flown anywhere in the world and used for covert assassinations, hostage rescues and support for special forces operating in hostile areas.
 The UAV and particle beam technologies become chicken and egg complements to one another. As both become smaller, quieter and more powerful, their desirability starts to come alive again. But most nation-states have ignored them for so long that they’re hopelessly behind these small but well funded groups that have been working through trial and error with these technologies for decades.






 And, as one might expect, the technology must be used by one group to destroy the ability of the other groups to employ it?



Yes, its not giving too much of the storyline away to say that the powers that have developed or are trying to develop the Tesla technology are pitted against one another. The risk here being not that World War Three will break out as a result, but that a thousand small, black, covert wars will break out if those who are seeking to employ this technology succeed and that the world will implode into a tangled mess of plausibly deniable assassinations and covert attacks.




This is your first full length novel. You’ve written other short stories and smaller fare prior to this. Why take on a complex, 1300 page monster like this on your first attempt?




I agree that it’s a huge challenge. But I think I’m up to the task. In truth, it probably would’ve been easier to start with a less complex story line and fewer characters to develop. But this is the story I’ve wanted to write for some time. I didn’t see trying to break it down into three separate books. It just doesn’t play or flow naturally to that direction. In a general sense, the novel flows chronologically, but in order to allow the reader to stay abreast of the background and to fully grasp why things happened as they did or mist happen as they eventually will, I have to flashback throughout the book.
 Although it’s my first novel, I’ve done writing for others and written short stories and essays, so it’s not my first attempt at writing.


THE ERUDITE AARDVARK

You’ve said that you’re a huge fan of the novels of the late great Tom Clancy and Vince Flynn as well as the Scott Harvath series that Brad Thor authors. Two questions come up here from reading your manuscript; first, who else besides those three do you feel has been an influence on the way you write? And second, what accounts for the lack of coarse language in the book and what seems to be eschewing graphic descriptions of violence?


STEPHEN

 As for other influences on what makes me want to write, those three are big. I have a tremendous amount of respect for Brad Thor. He must do tons of research for his books. His back story designs are just wonderful. Not only do I think he’s an excellent writer technically, he’s great at weaving in a fictional story to a historical account. And he does it without trying to come off as trying to alter someone’s perspective or engage in revisionist history. It’s a fine balance and I don’t think he gets enough credit for how good he is at it. As for other writers, I’m like every other guy I guess. I like George Orwell, I like adventure stories like Treasure Island and Robinson Crusoe. I like Jack London, James Michener and Sherwood Anderson. That’s quite a crew, huh?

 To answer your question about the coarse language and the violence, yes, it was done intentionally. I’ve served in the military, I’ve been around these types of operators and operations, and I’ve heard every four letter word you can imagine used in some very creative and often humorous ways. But when you grow up and get a few years on you and have kids, you begin to realize that vulgar language and cursing in general really just contribute to the coarsening of society. I’ve never alleged that any of the characters in my book are choir boys or even that that they should be emulated and admired. In some cases, they engage in some very shocking behavior that most people would consider barbaric. I’m not saying that these tough black operators don’t curse or ever use foul language. That’s up to the reader to decide. Just because you didn’t see him or her say anything vulgar in the scene you looked in on doesn’t mean that it didn’t happen in some other place when they’re out of view of the readers eye.
 I didn’t want to use the language in my writing because I don’t use that language around my friends or family or think its an appropriate way to express myself. It’s probably not realistic to expect that a group or men like this wouldn’t use profanity. That’s fine. They just didn’t happen to say it when we were looking in on them.

 I don’t think I need to painfully describe graphic scenes of violence. If someone feels that they are reading something purely for the long, drawn out descriptions of someone in the throes of dying, you probably just need to not read my book and go rent Saw VI or something to satisfy that need.
 It’s the nature of espionage, war and games of state that people lose their lives in the pursuit of their nation’s or group’s interests. It wouldn’t re realistic to write about otherwise. When you do that you get Adam West in Batman where people get beat up and fall off of buildings but are back the following week to terrorize the people of Gotham City.
 People die in this book. Many of them die violent deaths, as would be the case in real life. I feel like I tell the story enough to give you a feel for what’s happened without being over the top about it. I have no desire to morbid or grotesque. My aim is to deliver to the reader the essence of what happens when a team of door kickers takes down a warehouse with criminals inside. That doesn’t, in my humble opinion, require descriptions of bullets ripping through tissue and body parts flying everywhere.
 You can show someone a pig and then point them to a slaughterhouse and then show them a sausage patty and they get the idea. They understand what went on in that slaughterhouse without having to be walked into it and forced to turn the handle of the sausage grinder themselves. I just don’t see that it’s necessary to do as a literary device. Others may disagree.






Thank you for your time today. We appreciate you talking with us about your observations and about the book.





You’re more than welcome. I should be thanking you. Hopefully people will read the interview and make a point to look for the book. If they like Clancy, Thor and Flynn novels and enjoy a little conspiracy theory and history lesson on the side, hopefully they’ll like this book and buy it and recommend it to their friends.



 The Erudite Aardvark writes blog articles on a wide range of topics.  We can be reached at info@eruditeaardvark.com.
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