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<text id=89TT0548>
<title>
Feb. 27, 1989: Merger Mystery
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Feb. 27, 1989 The Ayatullah Orders A Hit
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 54
Merger Mystery
Is the media mogul a mole?
</hdr><body>
<p> Arriving like an invasion force, foreign media magnates have
taken over billions of dollars' worth of U.S. properties ranging
from RCA Records to Scientific American magazine. So far, their
intentions have appeared to be strictly business. But what if
a foreign communications kingpin were secretly working for the
KGB as part of a diabolical scheme to influence American public
opinion? And what if this media mole were to get his claws on
the most powerful U.S. communications company? That is the
provocative premise of Agent of Influence (Putnam; 416 pages),
an intriguing merger mystery by David Aaron, author of the
best-selling 1987 spy thriller State Scarlet.
</p>
<p> Aaron's tale reflects a real-life strategic shift in which
military competition is giving way to financial struggle. "The
new focus of Soviet intelligence operations under Mikhail
Gorbachev," warns one of his characters, "is in the field of
economics." Aaron has populated his tale with a new breed of
intelligentsia whose members whisper in the same breath about
both espionage and arbitrage.
</p>
<p> The book's protagonist, Jayson Lyman, is an investment
banker who grips his peach-colored Financial Times "like a
swagger stick." Advised by his boss that French magnate Marcel
Bresson is out to buy News/Worldweek, Lyman is ready to leap to
the American company's defense. "You mean foreigners, the
French of all people, think they can take over the biggest
media company in America? They'll get their butts kicked!" But
Lyman's boss informs him that their firm has been retained by
the other side.
</p>
<p> Plagued by misgivings during the ensuing takeover battle,
Lyman joins the search for Bresson's real identity. The French
magnate owns no real estate and has no fixed address, except
for the 325-ft. yacht docked at Monte Carlo. A reporter looking
into Bresson's origins turns up dead. And the magnate's dentist
tells Lyman that Bresson's "cement" filling could have been
done only in the Soviet Union.
</p>
<p> Aaron's tale bristles with arcana picked up during the
author's career in Washington, where he served as deputy to
Zbigniew Brzezinski on President Carter's National Security
Council, and on Wall Street, where he is a board member of the
Oppenheimer investment firm. At times, Aaron can get carried
away with brand names, as when he notes that a character was
able to fall asleep on a plane "despite a monster roar from the
four Rolls-Royce SNECMA Olympus 593 jet engines." But he
manages to keep his plot shifting as fast as the ticks in the
price of a takeover stock.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>