2034

Il romanzo della prossima guerra mondiale

eBook, 309 pages

Italiano language

Published Oct. 18, 2021 by SEM.

ASIN:
B09GW3X8T9
Goodreads:
60893722
(25 reviews)

Il 12 marzo 2034 il commodoro della Marina militare degli Stati Uniti – Sarah Hunt – si trova sul ponte della sua nave ammiraglia, nel Mar Cinese Meridionale, quando intercetta un peschereccio in avaria. Lo stesso giorno, il maggiore Chris “Wedge” Mitchell, aviatore della marina statunitense, sta testando una nuova tecnologia invisibile sorvolando con un F-35E Lightning lo stretto di Hormuz, sul confine dello spazio aereo iraniano. Entro la fine della giornata, Wedge sarà un prigioniero iraniano e la Marina militare cinese avrà affondato la nave di Sarah Hunt. Iran e Cina hanno chiaramente coordinato le loro mosse, utilizzando nuove potenti forme di attacchi cibernetici in grado di vanificare le difese navali e aeree statunitensi. In ventiquattro ore la fiducia degli Stati Uniti nella preminenza strategica delle sue forze armate è a brandelli. Una nuova, terrificante era è alle porte. Inizia così l’opera, plausibile in maniera inquietante, scritta a quattro …

6 editions

A plasuble future involving a future world war

The story starts relatively slow, giving insight to the characters and the theme of the story. Stick with it, because after the foundation is laid, the story explodes into a foreseeable outcome that draws inspiration from current global tensions experienced in 2022.

A worthy read if you want to explore a realistic outcome based on current day, real world situations.

Review of '2034' on 'Goodreads'

I enjoyed this book about a possible next world war between the USA and China.
It serves as a warning how things can go wrong, very wrong.

It's also an interesting thought exercise on how things could play out in such a war.
It's only a bit annoying that he had to "invent" some bizar tech to give the Chinese the upper hand. Although wars are won with new tech it feels still a bit fantastic.

I love these near-future stories as they open my mind to possibilities of a future. If you;re the same, go read it. If not, read someone else.

Review of '2034' on 'Goodreads'

The authors are a distinguished retired admiral and a distinguished veteran and accomplished writer. Their premise, and ax to grind, is that the computerized weaponry that makes the US military so powerful is actually their Achilles’ heel. They show this by imagining an undescribed black box invented by the Chinese that can completely inactivate all “cyber” systems without inactivating their own but does not affect traditional radio signals. The story is gripping, but ultimately unsatisfactory, especially when the plot further astounds us by requiring that the Indians have easy access to all of our White House communications and also have dramatic stealth capabilities of which we were completely unaware. Other disturbing peculiarities are present, the misunderstanding of what a tactical nuclear weapon is, and a Chinese character who launches the weapons that destroy Galveston and San Diego but who seems to be a closet American patriot. I suspect that the …

Review of '2034' on 'Goodreads'

Haunting

I really enjoyed reading this. One might quibble with specific details - the rise of India seems implausible given what we now know of the Modi administration, and the cyber attacks seem a bit Deus ex Machina - but the problem of nuclear escalations between an existing superpower and a rising challenger, and how vulnerable the decision making processes (on both sides) is to unaccountable actors, is starkly stated

Review of '2034' on 'Goodreads'

While the ending felt a bit rushed, the overall story was good. Of course, my own career may color my perceptions quite a bit here, and those who are less well-versed in things such as "where the heck is the Barents" might be less generous with the writing. At many times, the novel felt more like the narrative underpinning one of our simulations, and not a thoroughly fleshed-out personal tale.

Despite any failings, the overall arc was satisfying, and also very plausible. The dependence on technology and exceptionalism is a potential problem for all modern countries, and the final "disposition of forces" shown in 2034 could just as easily have gone a number of different directions.

Recommended for fans of current and near-future military tactics and international politics.

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