“Gripping…Ackerman and Stavridis stage a harrowing global conflict that pits military might against an appetite for justice… equal parts haunting and entertaining.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review
A gripping drama and chilling prophecy about the possible path to war for a planet devastated by climate change
In their novel 2034, decorated military officers and award-winning authors Elliot Ackerman and Admiral James Stavridis imagined a war between the US and China. In their follow-up novel, 2054, they envisioned a breakdown in American politics fueled by a radical advance in AI. Now they make their boldest, most astonishing, and arguably most necessary leap—imagining the consequences of a climate war.
By the year 2084, the world is divided into the equatorial countries that bear the brunt of the climate crisis—led by Nigeria, Brazil, and Indonesia—and wealthier countries like China and the US, beset by their own problems after a series of civil wars. Tensions between the two sets of countries have reached a breaking point, until finally the so-called Reparationist nations of the equator decide that only military force can bring them justice.
A fascinating and disturbingly plausible extrapolation from current realities, 2084, like other classics of the genre such as Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Ministry for the Future and Neal Stephenson’s Termination Shock, deploys a global cast of characters, all protecting their interests as the fate of human civilization hangs in the balance. Individuals often seem small in the face of the forces that drive global change, but in the end human agency proves surprisingly decisive. Big doors can swing on small hinges. We have it within ourselves to write a different destiny, if only we can imagine it.
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Elliot Ackerman is the author of the novels Sheepdogs, Halcyon, 2034 (coauthor), Red Dress in Black and White, Waiting for Eden, Dark at the Crossing, and Green on Blue, as well as the memoirs The Fifth Act: America’s End in Afghanistan and Places and Names: On War, Revolution, and Returning. His books have been nominated for the National Book Award, the Andrew Carnegie Medal in both fiction and nonfiction, and the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. He is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and a Marine veteran who served five tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan, where he received the Silver Star, the Bronze Star for Valor, and the Purple Heart. He divides his time between New York City and Washington, DC.
Admiral James Stavridis, USN (Ret.), spent more than thirty years in the US Navy, rising to the rank of four-star admiral. He was Supreme Allied Commander at NATO and previously commanded US Southern Command, overseeing military operations through Latin America. At sea, he commanded a Navy destroyer, a destroyer squadron, and an aircraft carrier battle group in combat. He holds a PhD from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, where he recently served five years as dean. He received fifty medals in the course of his military career, including twenty-eight from foreign nations. He has published fifteen other books and is the senior military analyst for CNN and a Bloomberg Opinion weekly columnist. He is currently partner and vice chair, global affairs, of the Carlyle Group and the chair of the board of the Rockefeller Foundation.
1
The Armada
23:47 Nov 09, 2084 (-5 GMT)
New Orlando
The skiff passed over a black sheet of water. The moon was down. Stars appeared as tiny pinpricks overhead. Julia Hunt listened for the shore . . . a stray voice, animal sounds, a car's engine. Nothing yet. She sat in the bow, a cracked chem stick casting a pale glow on the paper map spread across her lap, one of a handful of old documents she'd requested from her office at UN headquarters. She compared it with the up-to-date hologram produced by the implanted visi-chip in her left wrist. They didn't match at all.
Old Florida appeared on the paper map like a welcoming arm reaching out into the Gulf. A terrible season of storms two decades ago had eradicated the coast, turning that arm into a stump after years of rising sea levels. Julia had marked the line of amputation with red pencil. The new coast extended in a diagonal from Daytona Beach in the east, bisecting Old Orlando, and then on to St. Petersburg in the west. She had spent little time in Florida, but she understood the anger and heartbreak of native Floridians as so much of their beloved peninsula vanished beneath the waves.
Julia had set out from Greenland less than twenty-four hours earlier. She'd left her office in a rush, with hardly time to pack a bag. An unmarked Brazilian transport had picked her up at an FBO outside of Nuuk, flown her south across Greenland's coast, and delivered her onto the carrier deck of a multinational flotilla gathered just outside the Gulf of Mexico. The flotilla's commodore, an Indonesian captain named Joko, had gone over the message Julia was tasked to deliver as envoy. Not long after dark she had departed his flagship on the skiff with a pilot and four-man security detail of Indonesian Marines. Now, many hours later, she wondered if they'd ever find the coast and their rendezvous.
Without warning, the pilot threw the rudder violently starboard. Julia toppled to the deck. The twin outboard motors reversed, churning up the water. Julia caught a heavy whiff of diesel as she stood. As a citizen of a Consortium member nation, she hadn't smelled those fumes in years.
The pilot pointed overhead, gesturing for her to duck.
The skiff passed slowly beneath a steel scaffold arching out of the water. The pilot issued another sharp order. A marine scuttled up to the bow, nudging Julia to the side. He held a high-powered flashlight. Its beam washed over a tangle of these scaffolds. It was an old roller coaster. Julia glanced once more at her map. She now realized exactly where they were. She placed a red X on what had once been Disney World. She recalled a childhood trip with her adoptive mother after the war as their skiff made wakeless progress through the wreckage.
The Marine shut off his light and climbed back to the stern as the amusement park passed behind them. The pilot throttled the engines and they hurried toward the coast, a darker band of darkness growing on the horizon.
The pilot idled their engine at a hundred meters out. The current drew them silently onto the beach. Julia could hear the waves lap against the sand as their flat-bottomed hull scraped onto the shore. She leaped over the gunwale, landing thigh deep in the water. The four Marines followed, their rifles tilted at the ready. The rendezvous was less than a mile away, at an abandoned airstrip.
Standing in the Indonesian commodore's stateroom earlier that evening, Julia had asked for more details on the rendezvous, the name of who she'd meet, their description, anything really. But the commodore only repeated the little he knew. Ever since Independence, the Floridians had proven notoriously difficult to work with, uncooperative at best and hostile at worst. Her instructions were to head to a nearby airstrip and wait. An envoy would arrive sometime before first light.
Sand coated Julia's boots as she crossed the beach. Her salt-water-wet trousers clung to her legs as she hurried onto the dirt track that led to the airstrip. The summer before, she'd turned sixty and had already served three years at the UN as the Special Representative for the Future of the Planet. She thought of herself as an environmental scientist first and a diplomat second. She had only this year placed a down payment on a farmstead east of Sarqaq, in Greenland's wine country, only ninety minutes by gravi-train from her condo in Nuuk. Before this assignment, the chapter of her life when she'd been Major Julia Hunt, US Marine Corps, had felt long behind her. But here she was, sandy and soaking wet, marching down a dirt road. She glanced at her watch: a little before midnight, November 9. Tomorrow, November 10, would be the US Marine Corps's 309th birthday.
The dirt road opened onto a clearing dominated by a rough-hewn airstrip. Gutted planes rotted against the black tree line. Julia's four-man escort fanned out across the runway. Using their low-light sensors, they swept the abandoned control tower and waved for Julia to join them. The wait wasn't long. A jet engine whined overhead, rattling the windowpanes in the tower. An old Chinese J-19 flew a single low pass, then it flared up, its engines autorotating as it began its vertical descent. Its landing gear touched down on the airstrip as gingerly as a teacup clinking against a saucer.
When the canopy hinged open, the pilot grunted, shifting his weight around with some effort. He hoisted himself up from his cockpit. Once he'd come to standing, he tottered back and forth, arching his back, as if trying to relieve some unrelievable ache. He removed his oxygen mask to reveal a mustache, ample as a dragoon's and white as a bank of fresh snow. He took off his helmet and his thick, silver hair fell to his collar. He shouted toward the control tower, "You in there, Dr. Hunt?"
Julia could make out the markings of the Floridian Confederation on the jet's gray fuselage. The pilot wore a flag patch on his shoulder with the St. Andrew's cross, its red diagonal bars embroidered on a white background. As Julia approached, he introduced himself: Colonel Mark Dundee, Floridian Air Corps. He didn't bother to climb down from the cockpit.
"I'm here to see . . ."
"I know who you're here to see," he said. "And I'm here to take you to see him." Colonel Dundee gestured to the back seat of his plane. "Hop in."
02:17 Nov 10, 2084 (-5 GMT)
Gulf of Mexico, West Florida Shelf
Commodore Joko sat on the bridge of his flagship, the Banda Aceh, waiting for news. When the Marines reported that Julia Hunt had made contact with the Floridians, Joko asked about the composition of their delegation. They didn't know. A single plane had landed on the airstrip-a J-19. The pilot had taken Dr. Hunt with him. It had all happened very fast.
Joko exploded. "What do you mean, taken her with him?"
The Floridian pilot had flown her to a different meeting site, and the Marines didn't know where. They had protested . . . they had advised Dr. Hunt against leaving . . . but she hadn't listened. The pilot, a colonel, had assured them that he was taking her to a second location for security purposes. He would return her to this airfield, and then they could return to their flotilla.
Joko took one long, deep breath followed by two short ones, a technique Gemi had taught him. His anger, like a clenched fist in his chest, eased its grip. They had a mission. Yelling at the Marines would do no good.
Joko thought about the nineteen enormous nuclear-powered ships under his command, three six-ship strike groups. Each one had dozens of strike vessels, almost all unmanned, which constituted the flotilla's combat power. He liked to think of his flotilla as an armada, an ancient word, a grand word, one that conjured invasion fleets from prior centuries. Each of the three strike groups fell under the...
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Hardcover. Zustand: new. Hardcover. GrippingAckerman and Stavridis stage a harrowing global conflict that pits military might against an appetite for justice equal parts haunting and entertaining. Publishers Weekly, starred reviewA gripping drama and chilling prophecy about the possible path to war for a planet devastated by climate changeIn their novel 2034, decorated military officers and award-winning authors Elliot Ackerman and Admiral James Stavridis imagined a war between the US and China. In their follow-up novel, 2054, they envisioned a breakdown in American politics fueled by a radical advance in AI. Now they make their boldest, most astonishing, and arguably most necessary leapimagining the consequences of a climate war.By the year 2084, the world is divided into the equatorial countries that bear the brunt of the climate crisisled by Nigeria, Brazil, and Indonesiaand wealthier countries like China and the US, beset by their own problems after a series of civil wars. Tensions between the two sets of countries have reached a breaking point, until finally the so-called Reparationist nations of the equator decide that only military force can bring them justice.A fascinating and disturbingly plausible extrapolation from current realities, 2084, like other classics of the genre such as Kim Stanley Robinsons The Ministry for the Future and Neal Stephensons Termination Shock, deploys a global cast of characters, all protecting their interests as the fate of human civilization hangs in the balance. Individuals often seem small in the face of the forces that drive global change, but in the end human agency proves surprisingly decisive. Big doors can swing on small hinges. We have it within ourselves to write a different destiny, if only we can imagine it. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 9780593489895
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