Why People Write Books
("Red Star Rogue". http://tinyurl.com/q99n8
"One of the great secrets of the Cold War, hidden for decades, is revealed at last. Early in 1968 a nuclear-armed Soviet submarine sank in the waters off Hawaii, hundreds of miles closer to American shores than it should have been. Compelling evidence, assembled here for the first time, strongly "suggests" that the sub, K-129, sank while attempting to fire a nuclear missile, most likely at the naval base at Pearl Harbor.")
Why do people write books? For three reasons; to make money, to influence the opinions of others, and self adulation. Some truly creative people write as a catharsis.
Kenneth R. Sewell is a co author of Red Star Rogue. Sewell is a nuclear engineer and a U.S. Navy veteran who spent five years aboard the USS Parche, a fast attack submarine that was the Navy’s most decorated ship.
I have not read "Red Star Rogue", only reviews. No where do the authors give conclusive evidence, only innuendoes, that the rogue sub was trying to launch a nuclear missile at the United States.
The authors probably wrote Red Star Rogue for money. I can surmise they also are trying to influence public opinion, for a strike against Iran. The authors are trying to scare the public and convince them a nuclear strike has been tried before, so it is only a matter of time before it happens again, so we must kill them first! Mr. Sewell is one of those who has contacts in the war industry and he makes his living from wars and fears of wars. Look for him to appear on the "Scare Factor".
Bilbo Baggins.
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