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Iron Wolf

Page 1

by Dale Brown




  DEDICATION

  This novel is dedicated to all who rise up against tyranny, intimidation, and aggression, not just in Eastern Europe but around the world.

  The violence we are seeing in 2015 rivals anything we have seen since the end of the Cold War, and the world needs leaders who have the strength, courage, and vision to lead others to engage and defeat the aggressors.

  Whether it is by massive armies or navies, by small teams of special operations forces, or by an entirely new class of high-tech weapons and tactics, free nations and those praying for freedom need a leader to devise a plan, lead warriors into battle, and get the job done.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Thank you to author and visionary Patrick Larkin for his hard work.

  EPIGRAPH

  You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face.

  —Eleanor Roosevelt, First Lady

  CONTENTS

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Epigraph

  Weapons and Aircraft

  Real-World News Excerpts

  Cast of Characters

  Prologue

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Also by Dale Brown

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  WEAPONS AND AIRCRAFT

  ADM-160—Medium-Range Air-Launched Decoy (MALD), a heavy aircraft defensive cruise missile

  AGM-154A—Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW), GPS-inertial navigation guided glide weapon

  AGM-158—Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile, advanced long-range precision strike weapon

  AGM-88 HARM—High-Speed Anti-Radiation Missile, air-launched antiradar missile

  ALQ-293 SPEAR—Self-Protection Electronically Agile Reaction, an integrated aircraft defense suite

  AN/APG-81—advanced air-to-air and air-to-ground aircraft radar

  AWACS—Airborne Warning and Control System, an airborne radar that can detect aircraft from hundreds of miles and vector interceptor aircraft

  Beriev-100—Russian AWACS aircraft

  BLU-97B—Combined Effects Munition antipersonnel mine

  BTR-80—Russian armored personnel carrier

  CID—Cybernetic Infantry Device, an advanced manned combat robot

  CLAM SHELL—Russian antiaircraft radar

  DTF—Digital Terrain Following, using a global terrain and obstacle database for extreme low-level flying

  F-22 Raptor—U.S. Air Force air superiority fighter aircraft

  F-35 Lightning II—U.S. medium bomber and attack aircraft HEMI, 520

  HUD—Heads-Up Display, an electronic device that presents important flight data in front of a pilot

  IRSTS—Infrared Search and Track System, a sensor that detects heat and can feed targeting data to a computer

  KAB-500L—Russian laser-guided bomb

  M320—forty-millimeter grenade launcher

  MH-47—American heavy-lift helicopter

  MiG-29—third-generation Russian air superiority fighter, used by a number of former Soviet countries

  MQ-55 Coyote—advanced unmanned air weapon launch platform

  MSBS Radom—Polish assault rifle

  OSCE—Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, an intergovernmental organization promoting peace, security, and human rights

  RDX—Research Department Explosive, a widely used military explosive

  ROCC—Remote Operations Control Center, a location with many unmanned aircraft control stations

  RPG-22—shoulder-fired antitank weapon

  RQ-20 Vedette—small, stealthy unmanned airborne threat-warning aircraft

  SNR-125—Russian air defense radar system

  SPY-1 Aegis—American air defense radar system

  Su-34—Russian modernized second-generation fighter-bomber

  Su-50—Russian fifth-generation multirole stealthy fighter

  Sukhoi-30—Russian fourth-generation multirole fighter

  Sukhoi-35—Russian advanced air superiority fighter

  T-72—Soviet second-generation main battle tank, widely exported around the world

  T-80—third-generation Soviet main battle tank, widely exported

  XV-40—unmanned tilt-rotor aircraft used for covert, rapid supply and insertion

  REAL-WORLD NEWS EXCERPTS

  EMERGING ALLIANCE IN EUROPE—George Friedman, Stratfor.com, June 12, 2014— . . . The term “Intermarium” itself comes from a Polish general and founder of modern Poland, General Pilsudski. He was dealing with the same geopolitical problem that exists now. He had a Russia, a Soviet Union that was in the 1920s, increasingly assertive and pressing on his frontiers and the frontiers of the rest of what we now call Central Europe. Behind him he had a Germany that at that time was unclear with its intentions. Poland had emerged from World War I with these two empires clearing the way, so his question was how to preserve Polish independence.

  He had really two strategies since he wasn’t strong enough to defeat them. One had somebody from the outside guarantee their security and that was France for him, but he didn’t really trust that this would be sufficient, so he imagined an alliance that ran from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea, including countries at the time like Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and possibly Turkey. This group would serve to contain Russia and would have, instead of an east-west orientation, a north-south orientation . . .

  But what I started thinking about was the fact that today Russia was reasserting itself, was going to be reclaiming its priority within the former Soviet Union, repressing on them, and the fact that Germany is once again uncertain. I thought this might be something that would emerge and in a kind of very early protostage, that seems to be what is happening right now . . .

  NATO: TOP COMMANDER WARNS AGAINST CRIMEA METHODS IN ALLIED COUNTRIES—© Stratfor.com, August 18, 2014—If Russia does in a NATO state what it did in Crimea, it would be considered an act of war against the alliance, Philip Breedlove, NATO’s top military commander, said Aug. 17, EU Observer reported Aug. 18, citing Die Welt.

  Breedlove said NATO nations are prepared for the intervention of armed military without insignia who seek to create unrest, as well as separatists who give military advice and help destabilize a country. If NATO sees such an approach in an allied country and deems it an aggression, it will entail a military response, he said.

  NATO: SEVEN MEMBER STATES CREATING NEW RESPONSE FORCE FOR UKRAINE CRISIS—© Stratfor.com, August 30, 2014—Seven NATO member states will create a new response force of 10,000 troops to improve the group’s capabilities as the crisis in Ukraine continues, RIA Novosti reported Aug. 30. Britain will join Denmark, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Norway, and the Netherlands in contributing air, land, and sea units, while Canada may join in . . .

  RUSSIA: POLAND WILL ONLY RECEIVE MINIMAL AMOUNTS OF NATURAL GAS FROM GAZPROM—© Stratfor.com, Tuesday, September 16, 2014—Gazprom, Russia’s state-controlled energy company, is only capable of supplying Poland with the minimal contracted amount of natural gas and not the quantity requested, a Gazprom spokesperson said, The Warsaw Voice reported Sept. 16.

  The spokesperson did not say why the company was reducing natural gas levels to the country. Last week, Poland claimed it was receiving 45 percent less natural gas than expected, but current levels represent an estimated 20 percent drop. Austria and Slovakia have also reportedly experienced a drop in Rus
sian energy imports.

  RUSSIA’S AIR POWER CONSOLIDATES CONTROL IN UKRAINE—December 3, 2014 | 1913 GMT—Russia has deployed a significant number of air defense systems to eastern Ukraine, reports from local sources and the Ukrainian security services say. Medium ranged Buk M1M2 air defense systems cover most of the separatist held areas, and shorter ranged systems such as the Pantsir S1, Osa, and Tor cluster around the strategic supply lines running from the Russian border into the main cities of Luhansk and Donetsk. The systems combine to create a layered air defense infrastructure that prevents the Ukrainian air force from using its assets over separatist held areas.

  Even though a Sept. 5 cease-fire agreement explicitly rules out Ukrainian air operations over separatist held areas, and the Ukrainian military has not attempted any such operations since then, the Russian move to establish this air defense presence indicates strong commitment to defending the separatist held territory.

  The deployment of these air defense systems, as well as measures by artillery units to prevent the Ukrainian military from massing forces for an attack on separatist held areas, seem to serve a mostly defensive objective. However, separatist units continue to fight to expand their territorial hold over smaller areas along certain positions on the front line. They have continued to encircle and then take over Ukrainian checkpoints in areas near Luhansk, while bitter fighting between both sides continues at the Donetsk airport. The Ukrainian military’s positions at Debaltseve, a strategic town that controls the main highway directly connecting Donetsk and Luhansk, have also been contested. As the separatist and Russian forces seek to consolidate their positions there, they may still make significant attempts to seize this location.

  Even though the cease-fire has not been completely implemented and skirmishes continue to break out along the front line, the shape and posture of Russian reinforcements do not necessarily indicate a further escalation of the conflict between Ukrainian forces and separatists. Instead, Russia seems to be consolidating the gains made prior to the cease-fire declaration, securing the separatists’ hold on the territory they currently control . . .

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  AMERICANS

  STACY ANNE BARBEAU, president of the United States of America

  TIMOTHY SPELLING, general, U.S. Air Force, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  THOMAS TORREY, CIA director

  EDWARD RAUCH, president’s national security adviser

  KAREN GRAYSON, secretary of state

  LUKE COHEN, White House chief of staff

  KEVIN CALDWELL, admiral, U.S. Navy, director of the National Security Agency

  ROWLAND HALL, brigadier general, U.S. Marine Corps, top aide to General Spelling

  HUNTER “BOOMER” NOBLE, Ph.D., chief of aerospace engineering, Sky Masters Aerospace Inc.

  DEKE CARSON, Sky Masters student pilot, U.S. Air Force (ret.)

  FRANK TALBOT, officer, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol

  COMMANDER RUSS GERHARDT, U.S. Navy, air operations officer, CVN-77 USS GEORGE H. W. BUSH

  FIRST SERGEANT MIKE IKEDA, U.S. Army, 75th Ranger Regiment

  CAPTAIN DANIEL ROJAS, U.S. Army, 75th Ranger Regiment

  FIRST LIEUTENANT WILLIAM WEBER, U.S. Air Force, Special Operations Command

  IRON WOLF SQUADRON AND SCION

  KEVIN MARTINDALE, president of Scion, former president of the United States of America

  BRAD MCLANAHAN, commander of the Iron Wolf Squadron’s XF-111 SuperVark bomber unit

  PATRICK MCLANAHAN, Cybernetic Infantry Device (CID) pilot, Iron Wolf Squadron ground operations unit, former lieutenant general, U.S. Air Force (ret.)

  WAYNE “WHACK” MACOMBER, commander, Iron Wolf Squadron CID operations, former major, U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command (ret.)

  MARK DARROW, XF-111 pilot, Iron Wolf Squadron, former Tornado fighter-bomber pilot, Royal Air Force (ret.)

  JACK HOLLENBECK, XF-111 weapons officer, Iron Wolf Squadron

  BILL SIEVERT, XF-111 pilot, former F-15E Strike Eagle pilot, U.S. Air Force (ret.)

  GEORGE “SMOOTH” HERRES, XF-111 weapons officer, former B-1B offensive systems operator, U.S. Air Force (ret.)

  KAREN TANABE, XF-111 pilot, former B-52 pilot, U.S. Air Force (ret.)

  IAN SCHOFIELD, commander, Iron Wolf deep-penetration unit, former captain in Canada’s Special Operations Regiment

  SAMANTHA KERR, operative, Scion’s security and countersurveillance division

  MARCUS CARTWRIGHT, operative, Scion’s logistics division

  RUSSIANS

  GENNADIY ANATOLIYVICH GRYZLOV, president of the Russian Federation

  SERGEI TARZAROV, president’s chief of staff

  GREGOR SOKOLOV, minister of defense

  VIKTOR KAZYANOV, minister of state security

  DARIA TITENEVA, foreign minister

  IVAN ULANOV, president’s private secretary

  GENERAL MIKHAIL KHRISTENKO, chief of the General Staff of the Russian armed forces

  LIEUTENANT GENERAL MIKHAIL VORONOV, commander of Russia’s 20th Guards Army

  COLONEL GENERAL VALENTIN MAKSIMOV, commander of the Russian Air Force

  IGOR TRUZNYEV, former president of the Russian Federation and former head for the Federal Security Service (FSB)

  MAJOR GENERAL KONSTANTIN ZARUBIN, commander, 9th Motor-Rifle Brigade

  LIEUTENANT GENERAL MIKHAIL POLIVANOV, new commander of Russia’s 20th Guards Army

  MAJOR VIKTOR ZELIN, Su-34 fighter-bomber pilot

  CAPTAIN NIKOLAI STARIKOV, Su-34 fighter-bomber navigation and weapons officer

  CAPTAIN KIRILL ARISTOV, commander, 2nd Spetsnaz Brigade Quick Reaction Force

  SENIOR SERGEANT IVAN CHAPAYEV, scout, 2nd Spetsnaz Brigade

  CAPTAIN LEONID DAVYDOV, Su-24M2 fighter-bomber pilot

  CAPTAIN STEPAN NIKOLAYEV, Su-24M2 fighter-bomber pilot

  LIEUTENANT YURI BELINSKY, Su-24M2 fighter-bomber weapons officer

  CAPTAIN TIMUR PELEVIN, 2nd Spetsnaz Brigade

  REAR ADMIRAL ANATOLY VARENNIKOV, task force commander, Russian aircraft carrier ADMIRAL KUZNETSOV

  CAPTAIN LEONID YAKUNIN, chief intelligence officer, Russian aircraft carrier ADMIRAL KUZNETSOV

  MAJOR VLADIMIR CHERKASHIN, Su-35 fighter pilot

  CAPTAIN OLEG BESSONOV, Su-35 fighter pilot

  COLONEL VITALYI SAMSONOV, senior air controller, Beriev-100 AWACS plane

  COLONEL ALEXEI FILIPPOV, Su-35 fighter pilot and fighter strike force commander

  MAJOR YEVGENY KUROCHKIN, MiG-29M fighter pilot

  CAPTAIN IVAN TEPLOV, T-72 tank company commander

  COLONEL KONRAD SARATOV, commander, 72nd Tactical Missile Brigade

  LIEUTENANT KARARINA KIROV, deputy action officer, 72nd Tactical Missile Brigade

  MAJOR GENERAL ALEXANDER KORNUKOV, commander, Western Military District

  CAPTAIN PAVEL IGNATYEV, Su-30 pilot

  SENIOR LIEUTENANT VIKTORIA GREF, Su-30 weapons officer

  UKRAINIANS

  MAJOR FEDIR KRAVCHENKO, second-in-command of Kaniv Volunteer Battalion, later partisan leader

  COLONEL ROMANIUK, commander of Kaniv Volunteer Battalion

  SERGEANT PAVLO LYTVYN, senior noncom, Kaniv Volunteer Battalion, later second-in-command of Fedir Kravchenko’s partisan unit

  HENNADIY VOVK, partisan fighter

  DMYTRO MARCHUK, former colonel in Ukraine’s special police, the Berkut

  POLES

  PIOTR WILK, president of Poland, former general in the Polish Air Force and commander of the First Air Defense Wing

  KLAUDIA RYBAK, Polish prime minister

  JANUSZ GIEREK, minister of national defense and deputy prime minister

  ANDRZEJ WANIEK, foreign minister

  IRENA MALINOWSKI, minister of the interior

  CAPTAIN NADIA ROZEK, military aide to President Piotr Wilk, pilot in Polish Special Forces, 7th Special Operations Squadron

  MAJOR GENERAL TADEUSZ STASIAK, Polish Land Forces

  MAJOR GENERAL MIL
OSZ DOMANSKI, Polish Land Forces

  COLONEL PAWEŁ KASPEREK, F-16 pilot and commander of the Polish Air Force’s 3rd Tactical Squadron

  MAJOR DARIUSZ STEPNIAK, head of presidential security detail, Bureau of Government Protection (BOR)

  SERGEANT KONRAD MALEK, Polish Border Guard

  CAPTAIN MAREK KACZOR, MiG-29 fighter pilot

  LIEUTENANT MILOSZ CZARNY, MiG-29 fighter pilot

  STAFF SERGEANT TEODOR GóRSKI, support division, Polish armed forces

  CAPTAIN KAZIMIERZ JANIK, liaison officer, Iron Wolf Squadron, Polish Special Forces, Jednostka Wojskowa Grom counterterrorism unit

  BALTIC STATES

  LUKAS TENYS, prime minister of Lithuania

  SVEN KALDA, prime minister of Estonia

  KUNNAR DUKURS, prime minister of Latvia

  ORGANIZATION FOR SECURITY AND COOPERATION IN EUROPE (OSCE)

  CAPTAIN STEFAN COVACI, Romanian Military Police, co-commander of OSCE Starovoitove Arms Control Station

  CAPTAIN VITALYI YUREVICH, Belarussian Border Guards, co-commander of OSCE Starovoitove Arms Control Station

  CHINESE

  QIN HENG, regional managing director for the Kiev branch, Shenzen Merchants Bank, and senior intelligence agent for the ministry of state security

  PROLOGUE

  Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice; it is not a thing to be waited for, it is a thing to be achieved.

  —WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, AMERICAN POLITICIAN

  SOUTHWEST OF DONETSK, UKRAINE

  LATE SUMMER 2014

  The Russian shelling had stopped. An eerie silence descended on the shattered and burning village.

  Smoke drifted through the bomb-cratered streets, curling past wrecked homes and shops. A battered convoy made up of commandeered civilian trucks and cars and a few wheeled BTR-80 armored personnel carriers lined the main road. White truce flags fluttered from their radio antennas.

  Wearily, Major Fedir Kravchenko pulled himself up onto the rear deck of one of the APCs. Even in his midthirties, the Ukrainian officer had kept himself fit and trim. But now, after months of brutal combat against separatist rebels and Russian “volunteers,” he felt more dead than alive.

 

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