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Review: Chasing Shadows

Sinister lingering of war in 'peacetime'

July 15, 2011 10:41
Josef Alon with daughters Rachel, Yael and Dalia in Washington in 1973

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

1 min read

By Fred Burton and John Bruning
Palgrave Macmillan, £16.99

An unsolved murder leads quickly to spies and secret agents, assassination, terrorism, obstructive officials and a doggedly persistent investigator. But Chasing Shadows, through thrilling, is not a thriller. Written by an expert in terrorism and a military historian, it is a factual account of actual events.

On June 30 1973, Josef Alon, an Israeli Air Force pilot working at the Israeli embassy in Washington, came home from a party. Following his wife into the house, he was shot five times. He was dead on arrival in hospital.

No foreign diplomat had been killed in DC before and the murderer was never found. Sixteen-year-old Fred Burton, who lived nearby, chose a career in law enforcement as a result of this close encounter with violent death. He became a police officer, then a special agent and was eventually appointed deputy director of counter terrorism at the Diplomatic Security Service.

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