[1] It is 1999, and the Middle Eastern kingdoms of Greater and Lesser Lolome are at war with each other over oil.
When Sidi bin Sidi bin Sidi, the despotic ruler of Greater Lolome newly armed with nuclear weapons, demands control over Lesser Lolome, the United States is compelled to intervene.
The President hopes to use the situation to his political advantage, while the Secretary of State, his deputy, the United Nations and other factions debate their next move under pressure from the American public, which Sidi knows had tied their hands.
Publishers Weekly called the novel's plot "a believable worst-case scenario about the consequences of our failure to bring the Gulf War to a satisfactory end", and noted that "despite an overly expository beginning and prose that occasionally resembles a jungle thicket, the narrative quickly gathers pace and sweeps readers along toward a chilling conclusion.
"[2] Kirkus Reviews wrote: The plot resonates with recent events in the Middle East and with America's loss of will and increased vulnerability to atomic blackmail, a valid topic for a political novel, but Drury's cardboard characters and continuous bombast make for hard going.