Asian Front wi-6
Page 23
* * *
There were no ChiCom fighters attacking the remaining two B-52 bombers on their return flight, that is, until they reached Shache at the edge of the vast Taklimakan Shamo, or desert, of southwestern Sinkiang, the great dunes east of Shache looking like some vast, undulating brown sea glimpsed beneath flitting cloud.
“Bogeys! Four — six o’clock!” the EWO called. “Mach one point three. On your tail, Murphy.” It meant that the four MiGs had gone back to base, refueled, and come back to kill the two remaining B-52s. Three Harriers led by Squadron Leader Jean Williams entered the fray, and now Murphy saw something few men or women outside of war games pilots and test pilots would see, and it happened so quickly that Murphy and the EWO watching the dogfight on the scope barely had time to notice. On paper there should have been no contest, the supersonic MiG-29, 2.5 Mach against a pedestrian Harrier whose top speed was.9 Mach, a cheetah running a dog to death, the lead MiG piloted by Sergei Marchenko getting on the tail of Williams, her wing-man yelling, “On your tail… on your tail!”
She went into a right turn. Marchenko turned with her, got into her cone, and fired a 120-pound Aphid heat-seeker. She had already released flares, and with the Harrier’s vectored thrust, “viffed”—suddenly dropping like a stone three hundred feet, the MiG flashing by overhead and turning left. She rose and saw the Fulcrum going into its world-renowned “flip-up,” when the plane, in a virtual tail-slide, is raised up, and Marchenko was ready to fire straight into Williams’s gut, with his thrust-to-weight ratio so good he actually increased speed in the straight-up-the-wall vertical climb.
But this time the Harrier moved abruptly to left, dropped again, as if punched by some unseen force, and turned slowly compared to the Fulcrum but with the turn much tighter. Shirer’s Harrier had caught up and was behind Marchenko. He heard his Sidewinder missile “growl,” showing he could lock on and shoot, but then Marchenko went to afterburner for a split second, rising high above and off to the right. Shirer and his Harrier worked their magic, the Harrier viffing, its vectored thrust slamming it to the right for a split second in the Fulcrum’s cone, and he fired his two 30mm Aden underfuselage cannon. The MiG gave off a lick of flame from the exhaust which rapidly spread, briefly showing the “Yankee Killer” motif painted in black forward of the port box-intake.
Shirer saw two things simultaneously: Marchenko ejecting and another MiG taking fire from Williams’s Harrier, exploding into Marchenko, swallowing him up in its own flame, due in no small measure to Williams’s having been in the right place at the right time.
“Splash one!” Shirer yelled triumphantly.
“Splash two!” Williams’s voice came.
The other two MiGs, flying “welded wing,” almost touching and so flown by inexperienced ChiCom pilots, immediately broke off.
“Nice shooting, Major!” Williams’s sweet voice came.
“Your assist on mine,” Shirer answered. “Thanks.”
“Don’t mention it.”
* * *
“Man!” Murphy said excitedly. “Did you see that—”
“SAM — gainful — five thousand,” the EWO cut in. It meant that there was a twenty-foot four-inch-long, 1,230-pound surface-to-air type-6 missile with a warhead of 176 pounds streaking toward them, and no matter how high they tried to go, the SAM’s thirty-seven-mile range could outreach their envelope.
With no foil, or chaff, left to scramble the missile’s radar guidance, the air commander in Ebony One and the pilot of the other B-52 had to take whatever evasive action they could, but now the second EWO announced there were more “telephone poles” coming at them, and suddenly there was an explosion a hundred meters to the right of Ebony One and a sound like hail as the shrapnel from the SAM now struck Ebony One. The plane was shuddering violently. Whether he’d only been clipped by missile debris or by AA fire he wasn’t sure and didn’t care — he only knew that everything was vibrating so badly he could hear the ping of rivets coming out and could no longer talk to his copilot on the intercom, warning lights dancing madly in front of him. Thompson fought the yoke with all he could, barely managing to keep the plane aloft, losing hydraulic fluid and knowing one of the wing tanks had been hit. He did a magnificent job of keeping her aloft as long as he did, but he knew he was losing the battle, his altimeter needle telling him the end was near.
It was just beyond Tabriz in the far northwestern corner where Iran meets Iraq that Thompson knew he could no longer control Ebony One, its yoke now fighting him like a thing possessed. Thompson thought of his wife and two youngsters, ages two and four, back in Toledo, Ohio.
“Everyone out!” he yelled, indicating the top hatch to the copilot. The copilot unstrapped and, stepping below, holding the radar’s console for support, yelled with all his strength at the navigator, radar nav, EWO, and Murphy to get out.
Both Thompson and the copilot ejected down out of the nose hatch. After them came Murphy, the EWO, radar nav, and navigator.
The copilot hit the fuselage of the remaining B-52 behind and to the right of them, traveling at 560 miles per hour. They knew this because his head had penetrated the aluminum sheeting on the port side of one of the eight Pratt and Whitney engines’ intakes, the fan decapitating him.
Thompson tried to work his chute, but wind drift took him into the long tongue of fire now licking the starboard side, his chute becoming a roman candle within seconds as he disappeared into the swirling gray abyss beneath. The navigator, radar navigator, and EWO also drifted into the inferno, their chutes torched long before their bodies, like blackened matchsticks, disappeared from view.
As Murphy the gunner descended, his chute intact, he felt frantically for his survival pack and his .45 service revolver, and all he could think of was the pictures he’d seen as a child of the American hostages and hearing parts of the tape the Iranians had sent to the CIA, with the screams of an American on it whom the Iranians had slowly, methodically, tortured to death.
He had absolutely no doubt they’d see him coming down under the burning inferno of the aircraft, its flames casting enormous shadows off low clouds as he passed through them, drifting downwind in the overcast dawn.
* * *
Over a thousand miles east the sun had already risen and the Inner Mongolian sky was as blue as lapis lazuli but turning mustard as a moving wall of dust twenty miles wide proceeded south like the great invasions of the Khans centuries ago. With no enemy in sight and his Bradleys still “coattailing” back and forth to create the impression of a bigger force than he had, Freeman, his columns no longer falling victim to Turpan’s rocket offensive, felt the tension ease and was giving a running commentary to his tank crew, whether they liked it or not, on the tactics of the great Khans.
* * *
As his body fell through the cold darkness of heavy cloud and his feet hit the dry dirt of the Kurdistan foothills, Murphy heard another explosion to the north behind him and wondered if it was the last B-52 caught by AA fire or downed by one of the SAM batteries. Quickly he punched for the release clip, the chute dragging him along over the dusty, stony terrain, but he missed and succeeded only in winding himself. He smacked at it again and felt himself slow as he scrambled out of the harness and began to walk back toward the billowing canopy of silk, rolling it up as he went, falling over stones the size of baseballs, skinning himself.
He began cursing, but not too loudly lest anyone hear him, though he seemed to have landed in a remote area, there being no sign of village lights of the kind he’d seen sprinkled below the bomber. As best he could figure it, he guessed the B-52 had been struck well south of what the navigator had earlier told him was Kvoy, one of the ancient cities in Kurdistan region whose unofficial borders had moved back and forth in the towering mountains of eastern Turkey and Iraq to the west and in Iran’s northwestern frontier.
The towering bulk of the mountains, great bastions shrouded in fog, frightened Murphy — the wildness and vastness of them unimaginable twenty-four hours b
efore, before he’d ever heard of Mount Ararat, let alone about these mountains that seemed to cover the world for as far as he could see.
Bundling up the parachute, he began to scrape a shallow trench with his knife to bury the chute, but the ground was unbelievably hard, like baked clay on the Utah salt flats, and he was worried about making too much noise. He stopped and listened, heard nothing, aware only of the sound of dry, cold wind sweeping down from the mountains. Moments later he heard running water and, as his eyes grew more accustomed to the gray dawn, he could make out a small ditch, possibly an irrigation channel, only ten feet or so away from him.
Thinking that it might mean a village nearby, Murphy drew his .45, the handle frigid, and made his way cautiously toward the stream. When he reached it he stopped, listened again, and stared into the fog to see whether there were any buildings nearby. He could see nothing, hear nothing but the water. He scooped up a handful — it had a surprisingly metallic taste, and he guessed it was artesian water rather than runoff from the snowcaps—
“Befarmaid! — Please!”
Murphy swung about, but the pistol was knocked from his hands. The Iranian, an officer of the Third Corps, was a short, thick man, like the four other soldiers now surrounding Murphy, their rifles pressed hard against his chest.
When the officer shone the flashlight directly into his eyes, Murphy instinctively put up his hands and saw his right hand was bleeding from where they’d kicked the pistol out of it. The officer gave an order and one of the men, a faded picture of what looked like an ayatollah on the butt of his Kalashnikov, bent down and retrieved the .45. The officer laughed. “You are idiot,” he told Murphy. “Safety strap is not released.” He meant the safety catch, but Murphy was in no mood to correct him.
“Where did you come from?” the officer asked, his tone sharp, bullying.
“The sky,” Murphy said ingenuously, but the officer took it as sarcasm, whipping the revolver across Murphy’s face. There was a crunch of bone, and Murphy tasted blood, like warm aluminum, running over his lips.
There was a shot — the officer pitching forward, knocking Murphy over. Another shot — a flare. There were several more — sharper rifle shots. Two of the soldiers near him dropped, the other two taking off. A submachine gun chattered, followed by a scream.
Out of the grayness beyond the fringe of flare light, one of the two soldiers who had run off was returning, or rather was being led back, hunched over, begging for mercy, the still-falling flare revealing the fiercest looking man Murphy had ever seen, dragging the soldier by the ear. He was a giant of a man in a white turban, not the kind Murphy had seen worn by East Indians but a turban like those he’d seen among Afghans. The man was wearing a rough, dark green lamb’s-wool vest over a loose-fitting khaki smock, his khaki trousers wrapped about the ankles with puttees, chest crisscrossed with bandoleers, his eyes ebony black, his beard and mustache as white as his turban.
As he pointed his Kalashnikov to the sky, his other hand, holding the prisoner’s ear, flexed, forcing the Iranian soldier to the ground. “Plane?” he asked Murphy, his gun still pointing at the sky. “American?”
Murphy knew he was supposed to give only his name, rank, and serial number, but right now he was willing to give the tall man his Instabank access number and anything else he wanted. “Yes,” Murphy said, “Americ—” His voice gave out, the effort to speak creating a searing cramp from his lower jaw up to his nose where the revolver had struck him. When he tried to “peg” his nose with his ringers to staunch the flow of blood, he felt a mulch of skin and smashed bone, the strange thing being that it was the rest of his face rather than his nose that ached indescribably. What remained of the nose felt numb.
The man in the turban flung the cowering Iranian soldier to the ground next to the dead Iranian officer and offered Murphy his Kalashnikov while spitting on the soldier. Murphy waved the rifle off, not sure he could stay on his feet if the pain didn’t ease up. The Kurd drew his dagger, the Iranian now scrambling backward like an upturned crab but unable to turn over quickly enough to get up and run. The Kurd, muttering an oath, barked out an order, and the man stood up. With one slash, the Kurd disemboweled him, then kneeling and with a few more quick strokes, the dagger flashing in the dying flare light, castrated the still-screaming Iranian, the next moment stuffing the genitals in the now-dead man’s mouth and returning Murphy’s .45 to him.
Murphy had heard now and then of Kurdish rebels, the bane of the Iraqis and Iranians alike, who, like the Afghans far to the east, had never given an inch in their fierce determination to keep the mountains as their own.
“Americans,” the Kurd said, “friends. Stingers.”
Murphy thought he must mean Stinger air-to-air missiles, which the United States had given the Afghans years ago after the Russian invasion.
“Friends!” the Kurd declared again with the same kind of ferocity with which he’d killed the Iranian. “Friends!”
“Yeah,” Murphy said, still holding his nose, his voice nasal. “Very glad—” He tried desperately to think of something else to say but couldn’t. Instead he sat, or rather collapsed to the ground, dimly aware of other figures, Kurds moving in toward him, as he fumbled in his emergency kit with the insane idea that he must get out his phrase book. Instead, his head weaving like that of a drunkard, he began holding the Hershey bar out to them and offered his .45 to the fierce one, who smiled, holding the .45 aloft as treasure. He said something, but to Murphy, though he knew the man was very close, the Kurd’s voice seemed far off, lost in a swirling vortex of explosions and the air commander telling him, screaming at him to bail out. Murphy thought he saw the tall warrior once more — holding up the strip of three condoms from the kit — then blacked out.
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
Freeman had kept his word. With Cheng having violated the cease-fire the American general had unflinchingly struck back. Now it was Kuang’s moment. Turpan had been destroyed, and late the next day the Taiwanese admiral gave the order.
At 0100 hours, the moonless night wreathed in mist, Admiral Kuang’s ROC — Republic of China — task force, on radio silence, set out from Kuang’s home port of Kaohsiung on the far southwest coast of Taiwan. Steering a course on a northern tack into the Formosa Strait, as if the battle group of one helicopter carrier, two cruisers, two destroyers, and four frigates were following routine maneuvers up the 240-mile-long west coast of Taiwan, the task force proceeded under the electronic umbrella of two Grumman E-2Cs early-warning patrol planes.
The battle group steamed twenty-two miles north-northwest before Kuang, after being joined by one hundred invasion craft that were waiting under camouflage nets off the mouth of the River Hsilo midway up the Taiwanese coast, would steam due west past the Pescadores twenty-nine miles off the coast.
If all went well, this course would take the task force toward the mainland where the landings would take place on the peninsula north of Xiamen Dao (or Amoy Island). The invasion would be supported by other ROC regiments already dug in on Quemoy Island, which had long been part of the Republic of China, and which lay less than ten miles from the Chinese mainland and which Chiang Kai-shek had festooned with high-explosive cannon. The ROC cannon on Quemoy would lay down heavy artillery barrages on mainland China’s near shore islands less than two miles to the west of Quemoy.
For so long, Kuang mused, so many people in the world had seen Taiwan as the permanent home of the Kuomintang, after they had been pushed out by the forces of Mao Zedong in ‘49. But through the mist of the hundred-mile-wide Formosa Strait, Chiang Kai-shek had fled the mainland to Taiwan to carry on the fight. It was here that the next Asian “miracle” occurred when Taiwan joined Japan and South Korea as the three most prosperous countries in all of Asia. Admiral Lin Kuang, a one-time captain of a guided-missile frigate, did not remember this time of the economic miracle so much as the stories told by his great-grandfather — stories of how Taiwan was not to be viewed as home — never could be — but was
an island garrison that, through the blessings of Matsu, the sea goddess, had been given to the Kuomintang on the condition that one day they would return, leaving the indigenous Taiwanese, who resented them so much, behind and reclaim their beloved homeland.
It was not enough, Kuang’s father, grandfather, and greatgrandfather told him, to be content with the luxuries the Kuomintang had wrought from their industry and the labor of the indigenous Taiwanese, and the wealth the millions of Chinese émigrés had produced. Nor was it sufficient to dwell on the fabulous wealth of the treasures they had brought with them—”plundered,” the Red Chinese said — from Beijing’s Forbidden City. Such treasures must one day return to China, or else how could the spirits of their ancestors who had borne such travail ever rest in peace?
Lin Kuang remembered how his great-grandfather recalled the humiliation of having been driven into the sea by Mao’s forces and of everyone in the world sounding the death knell of the Kuomintang as the beleaguered refugees clambered ashore on Taiwan. Even the Americans who had given them so much aid finally did not believe they would ever see the Kuomintang on mainland China again.
But then when the North Koreans had invaded the South, the American response to the invasion resulted in Beijing suddenly having to shift its military away from Taiwan in order to meet the threat of the Americans in Korea, and quite suddenly made the old Kuomintang dream realizable. Not only were the descendants of the Kuomintang keen to act, but all those who suddenly saw the vast prize of China before them. And to carry out the promise, the superbly equipped Republic of China forces were ever ready, and now poised to attack the Communists’ eastern flank across the straits. With Freeman in the west and the ROC in the east, Cheng would find himself in a two-front war — a three-front war if you counted the stalemate along the Amur to the north.
The Communist Chinese navy was primarily a coastal defense force and did not have big ordnance or the superior training of the American-tutored Taiwanese navy. Nor could the Communists’ Shenyang F-6s — updated versions of the old MiG-19s — pose any real threat.