2034
About 2034
2034: A Novel of the Next World War by Elliot Ackerman and Admiral James Stavridis is a geopolitical thriller and speculative work of future war that imagines a catastrophic conflict between the United States, China, and Iran.
On March 12, 2034, US Navy Commodore Sarah Hunt is conducting a routine freedom of navigation patrol in the South China Sea when her destroyer encounters a distressed vessel. At the same time, Marine aviator Major Chris “Wedge” Mitchell is flying an advanced stealth fighter near Iranian airspace over the Strait of Hormuz. Before the day is over, Hunt’s ship lies at the bottom of the sea, Wedge is an Iranian prisoner, and America’s confidence in its military superiority has been shattered.
As China and Iran coordinate the use of devastating cyber weaponry capable of rendering American ships and aircraft defenseless, a series of strategic miscalculations pushes the world toward a rapidly escalating global conflict.
Combining military realism, geopolitical sophistication, and literary storytelling, 2034 follows a global cast of American, Chinese, Iranian, Russian, and Indian characters through a future shaped by technological warfare, great power competition, cyber conflict, and the fragile balance of international order.
Drawing on the authors’ experience at the highest levels of national security and military leadership, 2034 presents a disturbingly plausible vision of the future and a cautionary tale about war, escalation, and the consequences of strategic overconfidence.
2034
Praise & Reviews
“It is hard to write in great detail about what ensues in this novel without giving away the drama of its denouement. Suffice it to say that there is conflict and catastrophe on a large scale, and it unfolds, as major conflicts tend to, with surprising twists and turns . . . The strengths of the novel are anything but incidental to the background of one of its authors, Adm. Stavridis, a former destroyer and carrier strike group commander who retired from the Navy in 2013 as NATO Supreme Allied Commander in Europe. . . . Adm. Stavridis not only understands how naval fleets work; he has clearly given a great deal of thought to America’s biggest strategic risks, and at the top of the list is war with China, which, as this book seems designed to point out, could occur quite by accident and at almost any time . .. One of the messages of this book is that war is utterly unpredictable and that opportunist adversaries of the U.S. are likely to play important roles in any widening confrontation . . . 2034 is nonetheless full of warnings. Foremost is that war with China would be folly, with no foreseeable outcome and disaster for all. This is not a pessimistic book about America’s potential, but the picture of the world it paints before the central conflict will be a difficult one for many to accept, albeit one well supported by facts.” —Wall Street Journal
“An unnerving and fascinating tale of a future . . . The book serves as a cautionary tale to our leaders and national security officials, while also speaking to a modern truth about arrogance and our lack of strategic foresight . . . The novel is an enjoyable and swiftly paced but important read.” —The Hill
“This crisply written and well-paced book reads like an all-caps warning for a world shackled to the machines we carry in our pockets and place on our laps, while only vaguely understanding how the information stored in and shared by those devices can be exploited. . . . In 2034, it’s as if Ackerman and Stavridis want to grab us by our lapels, give us a slap or two, and scream: Pay attention! George Orwell’s dystopian masterpiece, Nineteen Eighty-four: A Novel was published 35 years before 1984. Ackerman’s and Stavridis’s book takes place in the not-so-distant future when today’s high school military recruits will just be turning 30.” —The Washington Post
“Stavridis and Ackerman have combined their talents—the former’s detailed operational knowledge of military strategy and tactics and the latter’s narrative skills—to come up with a realistic, detailed and highly readable account of how the next world war might begin . . . 2034 is thought-provoking reading for military and diplomatic professionals dealing with China, and for the generalist concerned with China’s rise. The scenario outlined by Stavridis and Ackerman lends credence to recent calls for the US to strengthen its military capabilities in the Indo-Pacific. It’s also a riveting read.” —The Strategist (Australia)
“If you’re looking for a compelling beach read this summer, I recommend the novel 2034.” —Thomas L. Friedman, The New York Times
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