- Mitch Rapp
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Mitch Rapp First appearance Transfer of Power
Film:Last appearance American Assassin Created by Vince Flynn Information Nickname(s) Iron Man Aliases Mitch Kruse Gender Male Occupation Counter Terrorism Operative Title Special Assistant to the Director of the CIA on Counterterrorism Family Steven Rapp (Brother) Spouse(s) Anna Reilly (From Executive Power to Consent to Kill) Mitch Rapp is a fictional character in a series of novels by Vince Flynn and in the planned film adaptation of what was to be Consent to Kill, but now changed to American Assassin.[1]http://www.movierewind.com/2011/new-mitch-rapp-movie/ The character first appeared in ISBN 0-671-02319-5 Transfer of Power and in the 11 subsequent novels by Vince Flynn.
Contents
Character introduction
Mitch Rapp is a counter-terrorism operative[2] employed, first unofficially then officially, by the CIA. The primary focus of the character is thwarting Middle Eastern terrorist attacks on the United States and he is presented as an aggressive operative who is willing to take measures that are more extreme than might be considered commonly acceptable.
Character sketch
Motivations
Rapp's high school sweetheart Maureen (Mary in American Assassin) "the Dream" Eliot, who was attending Syracuse University with Rapp, was killed in the December 21, 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. She had been one of thirty-five Syracuse students returning from a semester overseas. One year later he was recruited into the Central Intelligence Agency by Irene Kennedy.
Conflict(s)
Over the course of the series Rapp assassinates several terrorists both on foreign and domestic soil. His main conflicts center on Islamic terrorists.
Minor irritations
Politics, red tape, and politicians who do not understand the need for extreme measures.
Biographical summary
Prior story
Rapp attended Syracuse University, where he majored in international business and minored in French. He attended the college on a lacrosse scholarship[3] and was an All-American. Rapp was also offered a scholarship by the University of North Carolina, but turned that one down because his high school sweetheart Maureen (Mary in American Assassin) "the Dream" Eliot was attending Syracuse with the hope of getting into broadcasting. Maureen, whom Rapp had known since he was fifteen years old, was killed in the December 21, 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. She had been one of thirty-five Syracuse students returning from a semester overseas.
Nearly a year after Maureen's death, Rapp was recruited into the CIA by Irene Kennedy. He began training the week after graduating from Syracuse. Only twenty-three years old at the time, Rapp did not go through the standard CIA training program at "The Farm," outside Williamsburg, Virginia. Instead, for a year straight he was shuttled from one location to the next, sometimes spending a week, sometimes a month. The bulk of the training was handled by Stan Hurley, a former CIA operative, who taught him "how to shoot, stab, blow things up, and even kill with his bare hands." In other words, he was schooled in firearms and marksmanship, hand to hand combat, and explosives. Endurance was stressed. There were long swims and even longer runs. Between all the heavy lifting, they worked on his foreign language skills. Since he had minored in French at Syracuse, within a month at the CIA he was fluent in the language. He was then taught Arabic and Persian and can passably speak Urdu and Pashto. He also speaks Spanish and Italian. He is ambidextrous, but naturally left-handed.
Rapp then became an operative of the Orion Team, a highly secretive organization supported by the CIA but outside the Agency. It is funded by money that has been diverted out of congressionally funded programs. The job of the Orion Team in a nutshell is to take the war to the terrorists. It was formed in response to the Lockerbie disaster by the then CIA director of operations Thomas Stansfield. The unit operates in secret, independent of the U.S. national security apparatus and circumvents the leviathan of politics and gets around small impediments like the executive order banning assassinations. The team is headed by Rapp's recruiter, Irene Kennedy, whose official role is as director of the CIA's Counterterrorism Center.
Rapp has been the Orion Team's star operative almost from the day he started and has been honed into the most effective counterterrorism operative in America's arsenal. He's spent significant amounts of time in Europe, the Middle East, and Southwest Asia collecting intelligence and when the situation called for it, dealing with threats in a more final manner.
Officially, Rapp has nothing to do with the U.S. government; rather, he is referred to in the business as a private contractor. Rapp lives a life completely separate from the Agency. His cover is that of a successful entrepreneur. With the help of the CIA, he runs a small computer consulting business on the side that just happens to do a fair amount of international business, which gives him the cover to travel frequently. To keep things legitimate, Rapp often does indeed conduct business while abroad.
One of Rapp's aliases is Mitch Kruse. In the special ops community he is often known only by his call sign, "Iron Man" after the annual Ironman Triathlon in which he has participated on several occasions and has twice won. His only remaining family is his brother, Steven Rapp, a millionaire financial genius. Mitch and Steven grew up in McLean, Virginia.
Throughout the books, Rapp works with several special operations units including Navy SEALs and DEVGRU, Delta Force, Air Force Special Operations Command, the FBI Hostage Rescue Team, and the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Airborne). He also has close ties with "SEAL Demolition and Salvage Corporation," a private military company specializing in underwater salvage such as getting rid of debris for ports and shipyards and training law enforcement divers, but whose employees also work from time to time as freelance operatives for the CIA. The company is owned and operated by Scott Coleman, former commanding officer of SEAL Team Six and friend of Rapp.
Relationship with other characters
- Thomas Stansfield
- Director of CIA (Transfer of Power and The Third Option)
- Irene Kennedy
- Director of the Counter-terrorism Center (Transfer of Power and The Third Option)
- Director of the CIA (Separation of Power through Pursuit of Honor)
Books Appeared In
Transfer of Power
(2000) -- Islamic terrorists have taken over the White House. The President is safely evacuated to a bunker inside the White House. Things are not always as they seem; it is soon learned that his safety is in jeopardy, and over 70 hostages are still inside. The clock is ticking in favor of the terrorist, and if nothing is done soon the President and the hostages will be lost. CIA operative Mitch Rapp is tasked to observe from the inside and act if necessary. However, he quickly finds that in Washington, nothing is as simple as it seems, for there are people who are willing to use the hostages as pawns in their power struggle, and pawns can be sacrificed.
The Third Option
(2001) -- Beyond diplomacy and military intervention, there is the third option. Sinister forces wish to discredit the existing CIA chief and deputy chief as a part of a power struggle. Their perfect plan: set up top CIA operative Mitch Rapp on a "third option" mission to fail, and let Rapp take the blame. Their only mistake: they picked the wrong man to betray... Rapp goes on a mission that he has no plan in failing.
Separation of Power
(2002) -- Dr. Irene Kennedy, now head of the CIA, has many enemies, and those enemies wish to destroy both her and the President in a daring plot. In the Middle East, Saddam Hussein is developing a nuke, and Israel vows to launch a preemptive strike if the nuke is ever completed. Can CIA Operative Mitch Rapp destroy Saddam's plans before the Middle East is plunged into war while unraveling the sinister plots developing at home... in only 2 weeks?
Executive Power
(2003) -- A disgruntled congressman has destroyed Mitch Rapp's CIA operative career by outing him on national TV, and marking him for death by almost every terrorist who owns a television. Now Mitch Rapp must adjust to a new life as a CIA analyst/adviser, while attempting to plug a leak in the State Department that led to an ambush of a US Navy SEAL team in the Philippines. But in the shadows looms a madman and his assassin, ready to ignite another world war, and Mitch Rapp is the only one in their way.
Memorial Day
(2004) -- Mitch Rapp leads a daring raid on an Al Qaeda stronghold on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, and reveals the unthinkable: Al Qaeda has obtained a nuke, and the target is Washington D.C., on Memorial Day. As the government debates on a course of action, Mitch Rapp is chasing leads and suspects across the globe. When the nuclear material is intercepted, everyone breaths a sigh of relief, but Mitch Rapp can't help but think... what if there is more than one?
Consent to Kill
(2005) -- A Saudi billionaire vows vengeance on Mitch Rapp after his son was killed by Rapp for the plot to nuke Washington D.C.. However, he's not the only one who wishes to see Mitch Rapp gone. For Rapp has made too many enemies in his effort to save the nation from Armageddon. This time, the international conspiracy may be bigger than even Rapp's ability to unravel...and the consequences could be devastating.
Act of Treason
(2006) -- Mitch Rapp makes another major appearance in this story about a conspiracy by very high officials to passively rig a presidential election by launching a false terrorist attack on one of the candidates, granting him a strong sympathy vote and propelling him to the Oval Office. Rapp, still mourning the terrible loss of his wife and unborn child he suffered in "Consent to Kill", must work to save the nation from corruption and evil once more.
Protect and Defend
(2007) -- After the Israelis take out the Iranian nuclear complex with a brilliant strike using a deep undercover agent, the Iranians blame the U.S. and launch proactive attacks on the U.S. Navy in the Persian Gulf, and threaten to unleash a worldwide terrorist attack. Mitch has a plan to thwart the Iranians and embarrass them by exposing their lies at the U.N. General Assembly. But, before he can complete his mission, he must deal with a Palestinian terrorist that is playing and being played by the highest levels of the Iranian government.
Extreme Measures
(2008) -- Now, with Rapp away on assignment in Afghanistan, CIA Director Irene Kennedy turns to her protégé Mike Nash. Nash has served his government honorably for sixteen years—first as an officer in the Marine Corps and then as an operative in an elite counter terrorism team run by none other than Mitch Rapp. He has met violence with extreme violence and has never wavered in his fight against the jihads and their culture of death. Rapp is boggled by "desk jockeys" while trying to save the world from a terrorism cell
Pursuit of Honor
(2009) -- The action begins six days after a series of explosions devastated Washington, D.C., targeting the National Counterterrorism Center and killing 185 people, including public officials and CIA employees.
It was a bizarre act of extreme violence that called for extreme measures on the part of elite counterterrorism operative Mitch Rapp and his trusted team member, Mike Nash. Now that the initial shock of the catastrophe is over, key Washington officials are up in arms over whether to make friends or foes of the agents who stepped between the enemy's bullets and countless American lives regardless of the legal consequences.
Not for the first time, Rapp finds himself in the frustrating position of having to illustrate the realities of national security to politicians whose view from the sidelines is inevitably obstructed.
Meanwhile, three of the al Qaeda terrorists are still at large, and Rapp has been unofficially ordered to find them by any means necessary.
No one knows the personal, physical, and emotional sacrifices required of the job better than Rapp. When he sees Nash cracking under the pressure of the mission and the memories of the horrors he witnessed during the terrorist attack, he makes a call he hopes will save his friend, assuage the naysayers on Capitol Hill, and get him one step closer to the enemy before it's too late.
American Assassin
(2010) -- Prior to becoming a CIA superagent, Rapp was attending Syracuse University along with his girl friend. When she is killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 the doors are open for his recruitment. This novel reveals Rapp's early years and follows the formation of a new group of clandestine operatives headed by Irene Kennedy as they seek to stem the rise of Islamic terrorism before it reaches American shores.
Film Universe
The New York Times bestseller, Consent to Kill[4], is the first Mitch Rapp film in a proposed series of films by CBS Films.[5] Consent to Kill will be produced by Lorenzo di Bonaventura and Nick Wechsler; the screen play was written by Jonathan Lemkin. The studio's last few films have performed poorly causing them to delay the production of this film. Antoine Fuqua has been listed as the director[6] with several names being rumored to play Mitch Rapp including Gerard Butler, Colin Farrell and Matthew Fox.[7] Note: this section needs to be updated, as CBS has now announced that the first movie will be adapted from Flynn's later released novel about the personal events which transformed Rapp into an assassin, and have signed Edward Zwick to direct. The leading man will be a younger version of Rapp than previously discussed actors.
See also
References
- ^ "CBS Films Building Mitch Rapp Franchise". ComingSoon.net. 2008-02-14. http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=42011. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
- ^ "Killing terrorists: Is there a real Mitch Rapp?". The Daily Caller. 2010-10-18. http://dailycaller.com/2010/10/18/killing-terrorists-is-there-a-real-mitch-rapp/. Retrieved 1 February 2011.
- ^ "Former Orange All-American Mitch Rapp coming to the big screen". 2009-10-07. http://justlacrosse.squarespace.com/talkback/2009/10/7/former-orange-all-american-mitch-rapp-coming-to-the-big-scre.html. Retrieved 1 February 2011.
- ^ "New York Times best seller list for September 10, 2006". New York Times. 2006-09-10. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F02E0DC1E3EF933A2575AC0A9609C8B63. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
- ^ "Mitch Rapp Movie Coming, Says Vince Flynn". Movie Rewind. 2010-09-05. http://www.movierewind.com/mitch-rapp. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
- ^ "Consent to Kill". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/453248/Consent-to-Kill/details.
- ^ http://www.movieinsider.com/m6849/consent-to-kill/
- Flynn, Vince (1999). Transfer of Power. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-02319-5.
- Flynn, Vince (2000). Third Option, The. Pocket Star. ISBN 0-671-04731-0.
- Flynn, Vince (2001). Separation of Power. Pocket Books. ISBN 0671047337.
- Flynn, Vince (2003). Executive Power. Atria. ISBN 0-7434-5395-6.
- Flynn, Vince (2004). Memorial Day. Atria. ISBN 0-7434-5397-2.
- Flynn, Vince (2005). Consent to Kill. Atria. ISBN 0-7432-7036-3.
- Flynn, Vince (2007). Act of Treason. Atria. ISBN 0-7432-7037-1.
- Flynn, Vince (2007). Protect and Defend. Atria. ISBN 978-0743270410.
- Flynn, Vince (2008). Extreme Measures. Atria. ISBN 978-1416599395.
- Flynn, Vince (2009). Pursuit of Honor. Atria. ISBN 978-1416595168.
- Flynn, Vince (2010). American Assassin. Atria. ISBN 978-1416595182.
Categories:- Fictional assassins
- Fictional CIA agents
- Literary characters
- Characters in American novels
- Fictional secret agents and spies
- Characters in American novels of the 20th century
- Thomas Stansfield
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