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randyrippley

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Yes it was the Iraqi supergun(s)
But who was the designer ? (he was Canadian, and also behind the American Project HARP)
 

randyrippley

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Looks like no-one is going to get this
He was Gerald Bull, assassinated (probably by the Israelis) in Belgium

Project Babylon was the Iraqi supergun, Gloster was the first to ID this so I hand the target over to him
 

Gloster

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Up the creek
That his first name was Gerald or Gerard wandered into my brain sometime in the night, but not his surname..

Regrettably, although I do not like doing so, I will have to declare ’open floor’ as important matters have come up in the last day.
 

Calthrop

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I'll offer one, if I may. One of Frederick Forsyth's most-acclaimed thrillers, The Fist Of God, is about the 1990/91 Gulf War, including the matter of Project Babylon. A rather lesser-known such work by this author, involves a tense stand-off between the USSR and the Western powers (with -- perhaps "prophetically half a century-odd, from publication date", Russia-versus-Ukraine doings), plus "environmental terrorism". Please give the name of this novel.
 
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Xenophon PCDGS

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I'll offer one, if I may. One of Frederick Forsyth's most-acclaimed thrillers, The Fist Of God, is about the 1990/91 Gulf War, including the matter of Project Babylon. A rather lesser-known such work by this author, involves a tense stand-off between the USSR and the Western powers (with -- perhaps "prophetically half a century-odd, from population date", Russia-versus-Ukraine doings), plus "environmental terrorism". Please give the name of this novel.
I remember reading one of his novels called "Icon" that tells of a Russian political party organisation with strong views that would threaten the West, but I am sure that I am off-track to the clues in the raised question.
 

Calthrop

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Although the book prominently features things Russian / Soviet; I'm afraid it's it's neither Icon nor The Odessa File.
 

Xenophon PCDGS

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The only other Forsyth novel that I recall was made into a film of the same name called "The Fourth Protocol" in which Anton Rogers played the part of a naive patriot who was handing secret documentation information to a South African when the Apartheid regime was in power in the belief that South Africa were sworn enemies of the USSR, whereas the truth was the South African was a Russian agent.
 

Calthrop

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The only other Forsyth novel that I recall was made into a film of the same name called "The Fourth Protocol" in which Anton Rogers played the part of a naive patriot who was handing secret documentation information to a South African when the Apartheid regime was in power in the belief that South Africa were sworn enemies of the USSR, whereas the truth was the South African was a Russian agent.
Not that one, I fear.
 

Peter Mugridge

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Thank you. :)

Remaining with the subject of Frederick Forsyth's novels - one in particular has long been rumoured to have been based closely on the real actions of a powerful businessman trying ( and failing ) to do something very audacious in order to boost his business.

We don't need a discussion on who the businessman may or may not have been, but we do need the title of the novel concerned...
 

MotCO

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Thank you. :)

Remaining with the subject of Frederick Forsyth's novels - one in particular has long been rumoured to have been based closely on the real actions of a powerful businessman trying ( and failing ) to do something very audacious in order to boost his business.

We don't need a discussion on who the businessman may or may not have been, but we do need the title of the novel concerned...

Is it on the shelf behind you? :D
 

Calthrop

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Thank you. :)

Remaining with the subject of Frederick Forsyth's novels - one in particular has long been rumoured to have been based closely on the real actions of a powerful businessman trying ( and failing ) to do something very audacious in order to boost his business.

We don't need a discussion on who the businessman may or may not have been, but we do need the title of the novel concerned...
The Dogs Of War -- enterprising gent concerned, wishes to take over for his benefit, a hapless African country; but those whom he hires to implement his plan, turn out to have other ideas...
 

Peter Mugridge

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The Dogs Of War -- enterprising gent concerned, wishes to take over for his benefit, a hapless African country; but those whom he hires to implement his plan, turn out to have other ideas...
That's the one... you'd better pen us a new question. :)

@MotCO - it is actually... :lol:
 

Xenophon PCDGS

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When I was researching artifacts from the Micronesian Islands in the South Pacific region many years ago, I came across a rather strange form of stone currency in the Yap (?) Islands which was a circular block of stone almost two metres in height when stood on end, with a small hole in the middle, reminiscent of a giant Polo Mint. It was said this stone currency was not from the islands in question, but were ferried on large rafts.
 

Calthrop

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@Xenophon PCDGS -- as often, you prove to know more about the matter concerned; than I the setter, do ! "Short version" -- the Yap island region in the Pacific (a US territory, I believe) is indeed where the relevant unwieldy currency obtains, or did.

I'd better not break into pidgin-English -- that would probably be reckoned non-PC nowadays -- will just say: it's your go.
 

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