"Look, Marcus," Ryan said, trying to keep the exasperation out of his voice, "what we have with this guy is some really hot information, something which, if true, could affect the way we deal with the Soviets. But it is not confirmed. It just comes from one person, okay? What if he's wrong? What if he misunderstands something? What if he's lying, even?"
"Do we have any reason to believe that?"
"None at all, Director, but on something this important--is it prudent or reasonable to affect our government's policy on the basis of a short letter from a single person?" That was always the best way to get to Marcus Cabot, prudence and reason.
"I hear what you're saying, Jack. Okay. My car is waiting. I'll be back in a couple of hours."
Cabot grabbed his coat and walked out to the executive elevator. His Agency car was waiting. As Director of Central Intelligence he got a pair of bodyguards, one driving and the other in the front-passenger seat. Otherwise he had to deal with traffic the same as everyone else. Ryan, he thought on the drive down the George Washington Parkway, was becoming a pain in the ass. Okay, so he himself was new here. Okay, so he was inexperienced. Okay, so he liked to leave day-to-day stuff to his subordinates. He was the Director, after all, and didn't need to deal with every little damned thing. He was getting tired of having the rules of conduct explained to him once or twice a week, tired of having Ryan go over his head, tired of having analysis explained to him every time something really juicy came in. By the time he entered the White House, Cabot was quite annoyed.
"Morning, Marcus," Liz Elliot said in her office.
"Good morning. We have another SPINNAKER report. President needs to go over it."
"So, what's Kadishev up to?"
"Who told you his name?" the DCI growled.
"Ryan--didn't you know?"
"Goddamn it!" Cabot swore. "He didn't tell me that."
"Sit down, Marcus. We have a few minutes. How happy are you with Ryan?"
"Sometimes he forgets who's the Director and who's the Deputy."
"He is a little on the arrogant side, isn't he?"
"Slightly," Cabot agreed frostily.
"He's good at what he does--within limitations--but personally I'm getting a little tired of his attitude."
"I know what you mean. He likes telling me what I have to do--with this, for example."
"Oh, he doesn't trust your judgment?" the National Security Advisor asked, selecting her needle with care.
Cabot looked up. "Yeah, that's the attitude he conveys."
"Well, we weren't able to change everything from the previous administration. Of course, he is a pro at this...." Her voice trailed off.
"And I'm not?" Cabot demanded.
"Of course you are, Marcus, you know I never meant it that way!"
"Sorry, Liz. You're right. Sometimes he rubs me the wrong way. That's all."
"Let's go see the Boss."
"How solid is this?" President Fowler asked five minutes later.
"As you've already heard, this agent has been working for us over five years, and his information has invariably been accurate."
"Have you confirmed it?"
"Not completely," Cabot replied. "It's unlikely that we can, but our Russian department believes it, and so do I."
"Ryan had his doubts."
Cabot was getting a little tired of hearing about Ryan. "I do not, Mr. President. I think Ryan is trying to impress us with his new views on the Soviet government, trying to show us that he's not a cold-warrior anymore." Again Cabot had dwelt on irrelevancies, Elliot thought to herself.
Fowler's eyes shifted. "Elizabeth?"
"It's certainly plausible that the Soviet security apparatus is trying to stake out an improved position," her voice purred at its most reasonable timbre. "They're unhappy with the liberalization, they're unhappy with their loss of power, and they're unhappy with what they think is a failure of leadership on Narmonov's part. This information, therefore, is consistent with a lot of other facts we have. I think we should believe it."
"If this is true, then we have to ease off on our support for Narmonov. We cannot be party to a reversion to more centralized rule, particularly if it results from elements who so clearly dislike us."
"Agreed," Liz said. "Better to lose Narmonov. If he can't break their military to his will, then someone else will have to. Of course, we have to give him a fair chance ... how we do that is rather tricky. We don't want to dump the country into the hands of their military, do we?"
"Are you kidding?" Fowler observed.
They stood on a catwalk inside the massive boat-shed where the Trident submarines were prepared for sea, watching the crew of USS Georgia load up for their next cruise.
"Talked his way out of it, Bart?" Jones asked.
"His explanation made a lot of sense, Ron."
"When's the last time you caught me wrong?"
"For all things there is a first time."
"Not this one, skipper," Dr. Jones said quietly. "I got a feeling."
"Okay, I want you to spend some more time on the simulator with his sonar troops."
"Fair enough." Jones was quiet for a few seconds. "You know, it might be fun to go out, just one more time...."
Mancuso turned. "You volunteering?"
"No. Kim might not understand my being away for three months. Two weeks is long enough. Too long, as a matter of fact. I'm getting very domesticated, Bart, getting old and respectable. Not young and bright-eyed like those kids."
"What do you think of them?"
"The sonar guys? They're good. So's the tracking party. The guy Ricks replaced was Jim Rosselli, right?"
"That's right."
"He trained them well. Can we go off the record?"
"Sure."
"Ricks is not a good skipper. He's too tough on the troops, demands too much, too hard to satisfy. Not like you were at all, Bart."
Mancuso dodged the compliment. "We all have different styles."
"I know that, but I wouldn't want to sail with him. One of his chiefs asked for a transfer off. So did half a dozen petty officers."
"They all had family problems." Mancuso had approved all the transfers, including the young chief torpedoman.
"No, they didn't," Jones said. "They needed excuses, and they used them."
"Ron, look, I'm the squadron commander, okay? I can only evaluate my COs on the basis of performance. Ricks didn't get here by being a loser."
"You look from the top down. I look from the bottom up. From my perspective, this man is not a good skipper. I wouldn't say that to anybody else, but we were shipmates. Okay, I was a peon, just a lowly E-6, but you never treated me that way. You were a good boss. Ricks isn't. The crew doesn't like him, does not have confidence in him."
"Damn it, Ron, I can't allow stuff like that to affect my judgment."
"Yeah, I know. Annapolis, old school tie--ring, whatever matters to you Canoe U. grads. You have to approach it a different way. Like I said, I wouldn't talk this way with anybody else. If I was on that boat, I'd try to transfer off."
"I sailed with some skippers I didn't like. It's mainly a matter of style."
"You say so, Commodore." Jones paused. "Just remember one thing, okay? There's lots of ways to impress a senior officer, but there's only one way to impress a crew."
Fromm insisted that they take their time. The mold had long since cooled and was now broken open in the inert atmosphere of the first machine tool. The roughly formed metal mass was set in place. Fromm personally checked the computer codes that told the machine what it had to do and punched the first button. The robotic system activated. The moving arm selected the proper toolhead, secured it on the rotating spindle, and maneuvered itself into place. The enclosed area was flooded with argon gas, and Freon began spraying on the plutonium to keep everything to the proper isothermal heat environment. Fromm touched the computer screen, selecting the initial program. The spindle started turning, reaching over a thousand RPM, and approached the plutonium ma
ss with a motion that was neither human nor mechanistic, but something else entirely, like a caricature of a man's action. As they watched from behind the Lexan shield, the first shavings of the silvery metal thread peeled off the main mass.
"How much are we losing?" Ghosn asked.
"Oh, the total will be less than twenty grams," Fromm estimated. "It's nothing to worry about." Fromm looked at another gauge, the one that measured relative pressures. The machine tool was totally isolated from the rest of the room, with the pressure inside its enclosure marginally less than outside. The fact that argon gas was heavier than air would keep oxygen away from the plutonium. That prevented possible combustion. Combustion would generate plutonium dust, which was every bit as lethal as Fromm had told them. A toxic heavy metal, the additional hazard of radioactivity--mainly low-energy alphas--merely made death more rapid and marginally less pleasant. The machinists moved in to take over supervision of the process. They had worked out extremely well, Fromm thought. The skills they'd brought with them had grown with remarkable speed under his tutelage. They were nearly as good as the men he'd trained in Germany, despite their lack of formal education. There was much to be said for practical instead of theoretical work.
"How long?" Qati asked.
"How many times do I have to tell you? We are precisely on schedule. This phase of the project is the most time-consuming. The product we are now producing must be perfect. Absolutely perfect. If this part of the device fails to function, nothing else will."
"That's true of everything we've done!" Ghosn pointed out.
"Correct, my young friend, but this is the easiest thing to get wrong. The metal is hard to work, and the metallic phase transformations make it all the more delicate. Now, let's see those explosive blocks."
Ghosn was right. Everything had to work. The explosives had been almost entirely his problem after Fromm had set the design specifications. They'd taken normal TNT and added a stiffener, a plastic that made the material quite rigid, but without affecting its chemical properties. Normally explosives are plastic and easily malleable by their nature. That property had to be eliminated, since the shape of the blocks was crucial to the way in which their explosive energy was delivered. Ghosn had shaped six hundred such blocks, each a segment of a full ellipsoid. Seventy of them would nest together exactly, forming an explosive ring with an outside diameter of 35 centimeters. Each block had a squib fired from kryton switches. The wires leading from the power supply to the switches all had to be of exactly the same length. Fromm lifted one of the blocks.
"You say that these are all identical?" Fromm asked.
"Completely. I followed your directions exactly."
"Pick seventy at random. I'll take one of the stainless-steel blanks, and we will test your work."
The spot was already prepared, of course. It was, in fact, the eroded crater from an American-made Mark 84 bomb dropped by an Israeli F-4 Phantom some years before. Qati's men had erected a prefabricated structure of timber posts and beams whose roof was three layers of sandbags. Camouflage netting had been added to reduce the chance of notice. Test assembly took three hours, and an electronic strain-gauge was inserted in the steel blank and a wire run to the next crater down--two hundred meters away--where Fromm waited with an oscilloscope. They were finished just before dusk.
"Ready," Ghosn said.
"Proceed," Fromm replied, concentrating on his scope.
Ibrahim pressed the button. The structure disintegrated before their eyes. A few sandbags survived, flying through the air, but mainly there was a shower of dirt. On the 0-scope, the peak pressure was frozen in place well before the crump of the blast wave passed over their heads. Bock and Qati were somewhat disappointed in the physical effects of the explosion, most of which had been attenuated by the sandbags. Was such a small detonation enough to ignite a nuclear device?
"Well?" Ghosn asked as a man ran off to the newly deepened crater.
"Ten percent off," Fromm said, looking up. Then he smiled. "Ten percent too much."
"What does that mean?" Qati demanded, suddenly worried that they'd done something wrong.
"It means that my young student has learned his lessons well." Fifteen minutes later, they were sure. It took two men to find it, and half an hour to remove the tungsten casing from the core. What had been a nearly solid steel mass as big around as a man's fist was now a distorted cylinder no wider than a cigar. Had it been plutonium, a nuclear reaction would have taken place. Of that the German was sure. Fromm hefted it in his hand and presented it to Ibrahim.
"Herr Ghosn," he said formally. "You have a gift with explosives. You are a fine engineer. In the DDR it took us three attempts to get it right. You have done it in one."
"How many more?"
Fromm nodded. "Very good. We shall do another tomorrow. We will test all the stainless-steel blanks, of course."
"That is why we made them," Ghosn agreed.
On the way back, Bock ran over his own calculations. According to Fromm, the force of the final explosion would be more than four hundred fifty thousand tons of TNT. He therefore based his estimates on a mere four hundred thousand. Bock was always conservative on casualty estimates. The stadium and all in it would be vaporized. No, he corrected himself. That wasn't really true. There was nothing magical about this weapon. It was merely a large explosive device. The stadium and all in it would be totally destroyed, but there would be a great deal of rubble flung ballistically hundreds, perhaps thousands of meters. The ground nearest the device would be pulverized down to pieces of molecular size. Dust particles would then be sucked up into the fireball. Bits of the bomb-assembly residue would affix themselves to the rising, boiling dust. That's what fallout was, he'd learned, dirt with bomb residue attached. The nature of the blast--being set off at ground level--would maximize the fallout, which would be borne downwind. The majority would fall within thirty kilometers of the blast site. The remainder would be a plaything of the winds, to fall over Chicago or St. Louis or maybe even Washington. How many would die from that?
Good question. He estimated roughly two hundred thousand from the blast itself, certainly no more than that. Another fifty to one hundred thousand from secondary effects, that number including long-term deaths from cancers which would take years to manifest themselves. As Qati had noted earlier, the actual death count was somewhat disappointing. It was so easy to think of nuclear bombs as magical engines of destruction, but they were not. They were merely highly powerful bombs with some interesting secondary effects. It also made for the finest terrorist weapon yet conceived.
Terrorist? Bock asked himself. Is that what I am?
It was, of course, in the eye of the beholder. Bock had long since decided his measure of respect for the judgment of others. This event would be the best expression of it.
"John, I need an idea," Ryan said.
"What's that?" Clark asked.
"I've drawn a blank. The Japanese Prime Minister is going to be in Mexico in February, then he's flying up here to see the President. We want to know what he's going to be saying on his airplane."
"I don't have the legs to dress up as a stew, doc. Besides, I've never learned to do the tea ceremony, either." The field officer turned SPO paused and turned serious. "Bug an airplane ... ? That sounds like a real technical challenge."
"What do you know about this?"
John examined his coffee. "I've placed intelligence-gathering devices before, but always on the ground. With an aircraft you have lots of ambient noise to worry about. You also have to sweat where your subject intends to sit. Finally, with a presidential aircraft you need to worry about security. The technical side is probably the hardest," he decided. "The greatest personal threat to the guy is probably at home--unless he's going to stopover at Detroit, right? Mexico City. Okay, people speak Spanish there, and my Spanish is pretty good. I'd take Ding down with me, of course.... What sort of aircraft will he be using?"
"I checked. He'll be flying a JAL 747. The upp
er deck behind the cockpit is laid out as his conference room. They put in beds, too. That's where he'll be. Their PM likes to kibbitz with the drivers. He's pretty smart about traveling, sleeps as much as he can to handle the jet lag."
Clark nodded. "People have to wipe the windows. Not like he's got an air force base to handle all the ground-service requirements like we do it. If JAL flies into there regularly, they'll have Mexican ground crews. I'll check out data on the 747.... Like I said, that's the easy part. I can probably talk my way there. Might even get Ding to head down with a good set of papers and get a job. That would make it easier. I presume this has executive approval?"
"The President said 'find a way.' He'll have to approve the final op-plan."
"I need to talk to the S&T guys." Clark referred to the CIA's Directorate of Science and Technology. "The real problem is noise.... How fast, doc?"
"Fast, John."
"Okay." Clark rose. "Gee, I get to be a field-spook again. I'll be over in the new building. It may take me a few days to figure if it's possible or not. This mean I can't go on the U.K. trip?"
"Bother you?" Jack asked.
"Nope. Just as soon stay home."
"Fair enough. I get to do some Christmas shopping at Hamleys."
"You know how lucky you are to have 'em little? All my girls want now is clothes, and I can't pick girl clothes worth a damn." Clark lived in horror of buying women's clothing.
"Sally has her doubts now, but little Jack still believes."
Clark shook his head. "After you stop believing in Santa Claus, the whole world just goes downhill."
"Ain't it the truth?"
23
OPINIONS
"Jack, you look bloody awful," Sir Basil Charleston observed.
"If one more person tells me that, I'm going to waste him."
"Bad flight?"
"Bumpy as hell all the way across. Didn't sleep much." As the even-darker-than-usual circles under his eyes proclaimed.
"Well, we'll see if lunch helps."
the Sum Of All Fears (1991) Page 56