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The Hunter Elite

Inside America's Secret Force Against Terror

Published by Knox Press
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
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About The Book

After the panic of 9/11, intelligence agencies, including state and local police and their nascent anti-terror divisions, realized they had failed the country and had to share all their precious info with the total intel community—something all their years of training had taught them never to do.

The great War on Terror was not intentionally begun by the United States or its NATO allies. It came looking for us. America is a country that is an open society, where men like the 9/11 perpetrators could visit on a student visa and conduct the diabolical, fevered schemes of Osama bin Laden and other monsters from hell.

Islamic extremists were angry that Western women are treated equally to men, can drive cars, and even show their faces in public. The existence of such a nation/state sneers at the barbarous conditions in the many Islamic states that torture and publicly behead citizens for giving voice to the societal rules that America and the West consider the norm.

The main sources of the book are code-named “Ranger” and “Laredo,” to save them from the antifas—or death warrants—the terrorists have attached to them.

Ranger joined the elite Army Rangers. Laredo steered her career in the direction she felt would make the most difference: she was an expert in chemical, biological, and radiologic warfare. Her army general father and other advisors told her they had plenty of warriors; they needed people who could identify and neutralize future weaponry—the kind of weapons third-world terrorists could afford with no concern regarding the hellish outcome.

Both jobs call for unique soldiers with special skills and fearless souls. The Hunter Elite is about the clash of civilizations on a global scale.

About The Author

Leon Wagener was born in Washington, D.C. His father Leon Sr., a veteran of World War II, was in finance. His mother Shirley worked in the Richard Nixon White House and was one of the first female press secretaries. She was proudly an “unindicted co-conspirator.”

Wagener first started as a copy boy at the Wall Street Journal in Washington, D.C.; he then worked as a news assistant at the New York Times Washington bureau. From 1968 to 1974, Wagener served in the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve. After leaving the Coast Guard, he studied journalism at the University of Maryland. He joined the National Enquirer in the early seventies and worked as the chief for the Washington and Miami bureaus.

Wagener is the author of bestselling biographies of Neil Armstrong and Jodie Foster and wrote and contributed to eight political books about the Clintons and Obamas, including The Amateur, The Truth About Hillary, and Blood Feud, which were New York Times bestsellers.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Knox Press (June 27, 2023)
  • Length: 256 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781637588970

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