Thursday, July 12, 2007

The Gambit

Terrorism for profit.

In The Gambit,terrorist events are "engineered" to spike global oil markets for personal profit and political and strategic goals.
The audacious manipulation of events soon spirals oil prices out of control, undermining economies and the reelection prospects of a U.S. president, co-opted by the actions of the conspiracy underway. A conspiracy led by a wealthy Saudi prince who has the goods on the occupant of the White House; a conspiracy operating under the cover of shadowy militant groups, seducing a Houston oilman to subjecting his own company to terrorist assault.
Tipped off by a mysterious Lebanese banker, the U.S. mounts a furious effort to thwart the operation. But, it becomes eerily apparent that the President's first priority is to terminate the banker at all costs. Hastings, the top American intelligence official, acting against orders, desperately attempts to keep the banker alive long enough to understand the full dimensions of the treachery underway, culminating in the truth about the Prince and President dumped upon an unsuspecting electorate in the closing days of the election.
The Gambit's wild ride through scheming oil traders, unstable markets, political blackmail, desperation and greed produces an uncomfortable premise: to what extent has the conspiracy already occurred?


Book Themes
  • American Presidential Election Campaign
  • Corruption in the White House
  • Director, National Intelligence and the CIA
  • Enron Debacle/Syriana
  • Hezbollah
  • Houston and Oil
  • Iran and Oil
  • Lebanon
  • Media Manipulations
  • Middle Eastern Terrorism
  • Oil Markets and Terrorism
  • Oil Price Conspiracy and Manipulation
  • Oil Trading
  • Saudi Arabia and Oil
  • Saudi Royal Family
  • U.S. Energy Policy
About Gary Nunnally
Gary Nunnally spent nearly thirty years in the global petroleum business, including many years as an oil trader. Experiences and encounters in the oil trading wars inspired The Gambit. He and his family presently live in Houston.

To visit the website, click on the link above to be redirected.
Gary's website was made by the designers at the Mill City Press. To find out more about how to get your own author website, view our publishing package at http://www.millcitypress.net/Book-Publishing-Services.cfm.



Add to Technorati Favorites



Digg!

No comments: