Diplomatic Immunity - Softcover

Sutherland, Grant

 
9780553583304: Diplomatic Immunity

Inhaltsangabe

In the secretive community of the United Nations, Sam Windrush searches for a killer as he comes up against roadblocks created by everyone from his supervisor to his lover, and he attempts to protect his daughter--the only suspect he cannot eliminate. Reprint.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Grant Sutherland was born in Sydney and grew up in rural western Australia. After studying at the United World College of Southeast Asia in Singapore and then at the London School of Economics, he returned to Australia and worked in the financial markets before embarking on a writing career. The author of two internationally published novels, Due Diligence and East of the City, he now lives with his wife and two children in Oxfordshire, England.


From the Hardcover edition.

Aus dem Klappentext

atic immunity, n: freedom from arrest...and submission to police regulations usually accorded by international law to diplomatic agents.* From the most exciting writer of international thrillers since Robert Ludlum comes a riveting tale of intrigue that propels us into the heart of the United Nations. Here conscience and loyalty will collide in one man s desperate race against time.

Diplomatic Immunity

Shock waves ripple through the UN at the stunning news: a special envoy has been murdered in the basement. In the midst of a high-stakes General Assembly vote, the last thing officials want is more controversy. But Sam Windrush, a deputy in Legal Affairs, is determined to pursue his friend s killer--despite roadblocks created by everyone from his supervisor and foreign ambassadors to his lover. Even worse, each of his suspects is protected by diplomatic immunity. Each can escape justice.

In less than a week UN officials will wrest

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

"We're going to be late," Patrick O'Conner remarks unhappily.

We have just emerged from a twenty-minute session in the local Starbucks, Patrick, over two light grandes, telling me his woes. Now he considers the thickening crowd on the sidewalk before veering right, wiping the last muffin crumbs from his mouth with a handkerchief as I fall into step beside him.

"You know," he says, continuing his complaint as we walk, "it's unbelievable. This thing's been on the cards how long? Years. And here we are, the whole jamboree set to start -- for chrissake, they'll be voting on it in two days -- and still no one knows the numbers. Tell me, Sam. Really. What kind of cockass thing is that?"

This question, in variations, is one I have been listening to every day now for at least a month. So I incline my head but offer no comment, and as we push our way through the sightseers, Patrick goes on delivering his latest thoughts on the subject, the main matter of debate at Turtle Bay, in fact, for over a year: the elevation of the Japanese to a place at the top table of international diplomacy, a permanent UN Security Council seat. What Patrick refers to in private moments, in his inimitable Australian way, as the Nip Question.

"Every tinpot bozo lining up for his say, and the Japs still walking around like a buncha zombies, like it's in the bag, as if it'll all go through on a nod from Uncle Sam." He shakes his head, disconsolate. He swears.

And then, mercifully, he lapses into a thoughtful silence. He is not a tall man, and is in his late fifties, but as he barrels forward, the crowd parts around him like water around a stone.

Patrick O'Conner, the UN's Undersecretary-General for Legal Affairs, has been my boss for almost three years. I have become accustomed to his moods, but today, this morning, his disgruntlement has gone into overdrive, reached an altogether higher order of magnitude. He sweeps a hand across his forehead. He sets his bulldog jaw tight. He does not look happy.

Patrick, as everyone in the Secretariat knows, has fallen out of favor lately with the thirty-eighth floor. Breaking with his usual practice, the Secretary-General no longer calls Patrick to his side at the onset of any crisis. He has ceased to find Patrick's speechwriting talents indispensable. He does not invite Patrick back to his grand Upper East Side residence, as he once did so often, to shoot the breeze and drink whiskey till all hours of the night. And everyone knows, too, that the reason for Patrick's fall is the vote, just two days away now, on Japan. Following Patrick's advice, the SG has forced the pace on the vote, driving it to the top of this year's General Assembly agenda. Patrick, in a rare miscalculation, was certain the Japanese had the numbers. In fact, they still may. But the whole thing is so delicately balanced now that no one can call it, and if the worst should happen, if Japan loses the vote, then the SG, after all his efforts, will look like a fool.

Which is why for the past several weeks Patrick has been kept at arm's length from the thirty-eighth floor. Should the need for a scapegoat arise, Patrick is shaping up as ideal material.

Now Patrick shoulders his way impatiently through the sightseers and tourists who have gathered near First Avenue. It is not just me. Patrick O'Conner is unhappy with the world.

"Speak to Hatanaka," he tells me as we bump together in the throng.

Right, I think. Okay, now I get it. Why Patrick has asked me to Starbucks for a quiet word, why I have just spent twenty minutes listening to his beef. He has been softening me up, priming me to comply with this request. Speak to Hatanaka.

When I pretend not to have heard, Patrick touches my arm.

"I want you to speak to Hatanaka. Get him to ease off this crap he's talking, trashing his own bloody country. Who's he think he is anyway, running a private campaign? Is that what he's paid for?"

I concede, reluctantly, that Toshio Hatanaka has probably overstepped the mark.

"Overstepped? Christ, the way Hatanaka's playing it, there is no bloody mark." Patrick shakes his head in disgust. "You hear the latest? He's sent out a letter to all the senior delegations telling them how a Security Council seat's incompatible with the Japanese Constitution. Can you believe it?"

"It won't change the vote."

"Says you."

Unfortunately, he has a point. Toshio Hatanaka, committed pacifist and twenty-five-year UN veteran, has become more involved than he has any right to be in this. Now I ask Patrick exactly what it is he wants me to tell Toshio.

"Tell him he's out of line. Pull his bloody head in."

"You can't?"

"You think I haven't tried?" We turn face-to-face, edging our way through the crush toward the steps down to First Avenue. Part of the crowd down there is chanting, placards held high. "Of course I've damn well tried, he's just not listening. But you two seem to get along, yeah? You've wasted enough time on that Third Committee bullshit with him. Anyway, try to speak to him, will you? See if you can talk some sense into the man's thick head, make him see this isn't just some pissy point of procedure he's screwing around with here. This is the big game."

"And you want Toshio to butt out."

Patrick shoots me a look. "Sam, I'm asking you to speak to the man, that's all. If you don't want to, don't. But I don't wanna be hearing any more about your principles. You know he's in the wrong. Speak to the man."

We emerge from the crowd at the head of the steps and pause; even Patrick is momentarily silenced by the sight. Turtle Bay, UN headquarters, in all its General Assembly opening day glory. Sightseers line First Avenue both ways; a motorcade of black limousines slowly snakes its way into the forecourt of the Secretariat building, the thirty-nine-story office tower where Patrick and I both work. Delegates are strolling across to the garlanded entrance, the rainbow colors of the African national costumes shimmering in the long line of gray suits. Everyone shaking hands. Smiling. One hundred and eighty-five flags flapping in line. There is, undeniably, a real sense of occasion.

Just below us on this side of the street, the maroon-robed Tibetan monks -- a shaven-headed cluster, they have been camped here on a hunger strike for two weeks -- cease their chanting as the Chinese delegation disappears into the UN buildings. The monks lower their FREE TIBET placards and peer curiously through the line of New York cops to see what might happen next. Or maybe in this age of celebrity they're hoping for the same as the ranks of sightseers crowding behind them: a glimpse of somebody famous, a face they recognize from the style magazines or TV.

Well, I think, here we are. My fourteenth time and the thrill, though muted by the passing years, still rises. The flags fly. The limos disgorge the mighty. It is the third Tuesday in September, and here we are once again at the gathering of all the nations of the earth.

Patrick turns to me. "Speak to Hatanaka." Then he looks at his watch as he begins shouldering his way down the steps. "We're going to be late," he says.

We are not late, of course. The delegates and the presidents, the prime ministers and the foreign secretaries, various senior UN staff, all of us are gathered in the Delegates' Lounge, everyone busy seeing and being seen, the only two things you can do at a gala occasion like this. The moment he spots James Bruckner, the U.S. ambassador, Patrick moves in swiftly to press the flesh, leaving me alone by the wall. Most days this place has the feel of some airport lounge built and...

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9780553801866: Diplomatic Immunity

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ISBN 10:  0553801864 ISBN 13:  9780553801866
Verlag: Bantam Dell Pub Group, 2001
Hardcover