Air Battle Force pm-11

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Air Battle Force pm-11 Page 36

by Dale Brown


  Rebecca closed her eyes, then turned away from him and spoke: “Duty Officer, have Security Forces report to the BATMAN immediately and escort Colonel Long to his office, situation code yellow.”

  “ ‘Yellow’? What do you think I am, damn it, a terrorist?”

  “You’ve disobeyed orders and shown absolute disregard for rank or authority,” Rebecca said. “In my opinion you are not in full control of your emotions or senses, and I determine you are a risk to wing assets. Duty Officer, Colonel Long is to remain confined to his office incommunicado until further notice. Rescind my order making Colonel Long the Fifty-first’s commander — show his specialty code as Eight-X. Notify Lieutenant Colonel Ricardo that he is now the Fifty-first Squadron’s commander.”

  “Yes, General Furness.”

  “God damn you, Rebecca — you’re fucking out of your mind!” Long shouted.

  “Duty Officer, correction, show Colonel Long’s specialty code now as Nine-X,” Rebecca ordered. The Eight-series codes were reserved for special-duty officers — usually officers stuck in an office somewhere insignificant until they could be reassigned or ousted, or for medical patients in hospitals. It was bad enough going from a Zero-series code — a commander — to an Eight-series. But the Nine-series specialty codes were reserved for officers doing time in prison, under investigation for criminal activities, or undergoing psychiatric treatment — untrainable, unpromotable, and unassignable. Long had just been sent to the Air Force’s version of purgatory.

  Moments later two Security Forces officers stepped quickly into the room. Both were pulling on leather gloves. After putting on his gloves, one of the officers pulled a stun gun out of its sheath, keeping it in view just long enough for Long to know he had it in his hand. The other officer took Long by the upper arm to lead him away; when Long tried to shrug off the officer’s hand, the first officer immediately pinned Long’s other arm behind him, and together the two officers handcuffed Long’s arms behind his back and led him away.

  At first McLanahan and Luger made absolutely no mention of the entire event once Rebecca had sat back down at her console and logged in. But after a few minutes Patrick half turned to her and asked, “Isn’t that going to leave the Fifty-first short of aircraft commanders, Rebecca?”

  “Who cares?” she replied. “We don’t need aircrew members to fly my planes anymore, remember?” She looked at McLanahan and said, “I’m taking the first Air Battle team to Turkmenistan.”

  “I need you here.”

  “I’m going with the general, sir,” Daren Mace said.

  “I need you both here.”

  “Sir, I know what you’re going to say, but you know it’s not the right thing to do,” Rebecca said. “The virtual-cockpit control stuff is just too unpredictable and new to rely on with this mission. I’ll fly with your unmanned toys, sir, but I’ll insist on personally commanding the rest of the force. If you don’t like it, too bad — sir.”

  Patrick looked at both Furness and Mace, then nodded. “I wish I were going with you, that’s all.”

  “Say that more than once, sir, and I’ll put you on a crew,” Rebecca said. She smiled, then added, “You’ve had your fun, Major General McLanahan. I’ve got a bunch of youngsters on this base who want a piece of the action now. You built this place as your command center — you should use it.”

  TWO HUNDRED KILOMETERS NORTHEAST OF MARY, REPUBLIC OF TURKMENISTAN

  Later that day

  A string of six Russian Mi-6 transport helicopters swept in at high speed toward Mary. They flew less than a rotor’s diameter above the desert floor, high enough to minimize the dust cloud kicked up by their huge blades but low enough to avoid detection by ground-based radars.

  The Mi-6 transport helicopter, first rolled out almost fifty years earlier, was one of the world’s largest, a perfect example of the old Soviet drive to build bigger and bigger war machines. Fitted with external wings to help provide lift and plenty of hardpoints for extended-range fuel tanks, the immense Mi-6 transports were the Russian army’s most important heavy-lift helicopter. Each one carried forty fully armed combat troops and two BMD airborne-combat vehicles. The assault group had deployed from its base in Volgograd, refueled in Astrakhan on the Caspian Sea, and had launched again with other helicopters carrying enormous fuel bladders. They landed in the wastelands of central Uzbekistan completely undetected by anyone, refueled from the bladders, and then began their assault into southwestern Turkmenistan.

  For the Russian helicopter pilots manning the big transport and attack choppers on this mission, flying in this region of the world was a whole new experience. They truly believed that life for most of the people living in these wastelands couldn’t have changed much in the past thousand years. Case in point: the camel caravans they encountered in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan.

  As they raced across the desert, they saw dozens of groups of nomads scattered across the landscape. The gunners in the Mi-24 Hind attack helicopters locked up every one of them in their infrared targeting systems, ready to blast them to pieces — and at first, in Uzbekistan, a few groups did get blasted. But when they zoomed in on them with their telescopic sights, it turned out they really were just camel caravans traveling across the burning desert sands. Here it was, the twenty-first century, and there were still nomads riding their camels, the animals piled high with crates, blankets, and other odds and ends to trade or sell. No use in wasting precious ammunition on them.

  Fifty kilometers outside Mary, the formation moved into trail position and descended lower to the desert floor in an attempt to hide themselves from patrols. All radio frequencies were silent. Once in a while the gunship crews would spot an explosion far on the horizon or receive a brief squeak on the threat-warning receiver, but there was no sign whatsoever of the presence of Taliban forces. The pilots had to be careful now — there were more oil wells in this area, and they were definitely flying low enough now to run into them — and the clouds of dust kicked up by their rotors were starting to limit visibility for the trailing helicopters.

  “Approaching infiltration point,” the company commander announced. “Prepare for dismount.”

  “Target, target, two o’clock!” one of the Mi-6 pilots shouted.

  The lead gunship pilot swung his telescopic sensor in that direction — but it turned out to be a camel. The sight was so funny that the pilot couldn’t help laughing. The big animal was truly comical, madly dashing away from the approaching helicopters, a few rugs and blankets that had broken loose from its back streaming behind it. As the pilot watched, the poor animal ran headlong into a fence surrounding a cluster of oil wells and collapsed in a tangle of legs and neck on the barbed wire. “No target,” the pilot said. “Another damned camel.”

  “What should we do about those camel caravans we find out here?” the gunship pilot asked. “If the noise spooks those animals so bad, they could attract attention or set off an alarm in those oil well compounds.”

  “Next time you see them, take them out,” the commander ordered.

  Sure enough a few moments later the gunship pilot spotted several more groups of camel nomads huddled around some abandoned oil wells. “How in the hell can those people live out here like that?” he asked his gunner as he zoomed in the infrared image and centered his thirty-millimeter cannon’s crosshairs on the first group. “They’re fifty kilometers from the nearest shelter. No water, no food, no—”

  The nomads started to move. A camel clambered to its feet and trundled off — and right behind where the camel had lain, the gunship commander clearly saw a man raise something to his shoulder. Seconds later a flash of light obscured the scene — but he knew what it was. “Missile attack!” he shouted. “We’re under—”

  The SA-14 antiaircraft missile hit the engine compartment of the hovering lead gunship, tearing the engines to pieces in a millisecond and sending the big helicopter spinning out of control sideways across the desert. In rapid succession a dozen more shoulder-fired antiairc
raft missiles shot out across the night sky, and almost all of them found their targets. In seconds all the Russian helicopters were on the ground. Only two of the half dozen Mi-6 transports and one Mi-24 gunship landed upright, and three of the fully loaded Mi-6s were on fire. A few troops ran out of the other downed helicopters, some carrying wounded.

  “Open fire, fire at will,” Jalaluddin Turabi ordered on his command radio. The six antiaircraft squads deployed around the area threw aside their SA-14 launchers and uncovered their thirty-seven-millimeter machine guns from their hiding places in the sand, mounted them, and began firing at the survivors. A few Russian commandos returned fire, but in a matter of minutes the battle was over.

  Turabi and his security forces carefully approached the hulks of the downed helicopters. The echoes of gunshots and the crackle and groaning of burning metal and burning Russian soldiers disturbed the desert stillness. Their grim job took nearly an hour — examining and, if necessary, dispatching almost three hundred Russian commandos strewn across the desert floor. “Three officers and twenty-one enlisted recovered alive, four armored personnel carriers still operational,” reported one of Turabi’s senior platoon chiefs. “One helicopter gunship may be flyable. Want to try to fly it out of here, sir?”

  “Burn it,” Turabi said. “Get the prisoners to Mary, and get replacement missiles and ammo sent out here on the double. This might be only the first wave of Russian troops moving into this area — we need to be ready in case the second assault is inbound.” Turabi had fought the Russians before, as a youngster recruited into the Afghan resistance in the 1980s, and he knew that they rarely moved in small numbers. When they moved into an area, they usually did it with large, overwhelming force, giving themselves at least a ten-to-one numerical advantage.

  “Yes, sir,” the platoon chief said. “Outstanding job, sir. It was a perfectly executed ambush. Brilliant idea using the camels to disguise our positions. The Russians must’ve actually thought we were a bunch of desert rats. They flew right up to us as if they didn’t even know we were here.”

  Turabi surveyed the area. The massive burned hulks of the Mi-6 helicopters looked like the carcasses of some sort of prehistoric dinosaurs littering the desert. The smell of burning flesh and jet fuel was almost overpowering, but Turabi had seen too much death on this campaign to be sickened by it now. He scowled at his senior chief. “Two months ago, Anwar, we were nothing but a bunch of desert rats,” Turabi said. “But at least we had a purpose and a mission. What are we now? Nothing but a bunch of invaders and murderers.”

  “We are soldiers.”

  “Soldiers fight to defend their homes and repel aggressors,” Turabi said. “We do neither. We attack and pillage and kill, for no apparent reason. That makes us marauders, not heroes.”

  “Tomorrow we might be as dead and crispy as those Russians,” the chief said. “Tonight we are victorious. That is good enough for me right now.” He bowed his head briefly in respect and left to carry out Turabi’s orders, obviously uncomfortable with the direction this discussion was taking.

  Jalaluddin Turabi had to remind himself—again—to be careful about verbalizing his doubts and inner conflicts with his men. It was a very successful operation, well planned and executed. Their losses had been minimal; the Russians’ overconfidence cost them dearly. It was necessary for the men to know he was proud of their courage and discipline. Instead he had moaned to the senior chief about how all of this was a waste. How were the men supposed to react after hearing something like that?

  This war was far from over, Turabi reminded himself, and he was farther than ever from home. He had to rely on these men, and they had to rely on him, if they had any chance whatsoever of making it home again.

  MINISTRY OF DEFENSE, FRUNZE EMBANKMENT, MOSCOW, RUSSIAN FEDERATION

  A short time later

  “Oh… my… God,” faltered General Anatoliy Gryzlov, chief of staff of the Russian military forces. He immediately slammed the phone down, jumped from his seat, and dashed to his private elevator, which took him down to the underground Central Military Command Center at Frunze Embankment. “What in hell happened out there in Turkmenistan?” he thundered as soon as he entered the chamber.

  “An ambush. They were waiting for us, sir,” the senior controller replied. “We’re repositioning satellites to get a better look at the northeast quadrant of Mary, but we feel it was a freak occurrence — our forces were just in the wrong place at the wrong time. The opposing force could not have been more than company size, well hidden, and armed with shoulder-fired antiaircraft missiles.”

  “Ni pizdf!” Gryzlov swore, banging a fist on the desk. He thought for a moment, but he had already made up his mind long before he reached the command center. “Get the entire staff in here immediately. I was briefed on an air-invasion plan as a contingency operation — I want that plan set in motion immediately. I want all the airspace around Turkmenistan closed off and ten tactical-attack air regiments on the ground in Mary and Ashkhabad within forty-eight hours.” He picked up the direct line to the president’s office in the Kremlin. “I want to speak with him immediately—I don’t care who he’s meeting with.”

  “What in hell is so important, General?” Sen’kov said a few minutes later when he came on the line. “I’m in a very important meeting with—”

  “Mr. President, I lost three hundred soldiers last night in Turkmenistan.”

  “Sraka,” Sen’kov muttered. The line was silent for a moment, and then Gryzlov could hear Sen’kov ordering the room cleared. “All right, damn it, get over here as fast as you can.”

  “I will tell you what happened and what I will do about it now, Mr. President. I’m not going to waste more time taking crap from you!”

  “Watch your tongue, General!”

  “Yimu adin huy kto ty yest!” Gryzlov said. “I don’t care who the hell you are now, sir. All I care about is teaching those Taliban bastards the dangers of raising a weapon at a Russian soldier!”

  “Relax, General. Get over here and—”

  “Sir, I’m sending in an air strike against the known Taliban positions in Mary,” Gryzlov interrupted. “First I’m going to order a complete air blockade of Turkmenistan. No one enters or leaves the country without my express permission.”

  “The American secretary of state’s delegation is due to arrive in twenty-four hours.”

  “The Turkmen foreign ministry should warn that delegation not to attempt to enter the country, especially around Mary,” Gryzlov said. “I will not allow even one beat-up old crop duster to interfere with my operation. It will be in the Americans’ best interest to stay well away from Turkmenistan. President Thorn is famous for staying away from trouble — make him understand that it would be wise to stay out of this conflict.”

  “What are you planning on doing next?”

  “I’m going to commence round-the-clock heavy aerial bombardment until satellite imagery detects no movement of Taliban armored or mechanized forces,” Gryzlov replied. “Then I’m going to drop an entire battalion of paratroopers with artillery on that city, retake the airfield, and set up a secure forward command center in Mary. I’m going to insert a brigade of mechanized infantry into Mary and retake the city. I’m going to repeat the entire process with Chärjew, then Kizyl-arvat, and finally Gaurdak.”

  “What in God’s name is your objective here, Gryzlov? Do you want to destroy all those cities? Do you intend to take the entire country?”

  “My objective will be to eliminate all Taliban and any other subversive elements in Turkmenistan and retake the oil fields and pipelines,” Gryzlov said. “Russia will be criticized for attacking Turkmenistan with such overwhelming force — but I don’t care. I will retake control of the country quickly and effectively.” Gryzlov paused, waiting to see if Sen’kov was going to object. When he did not, Gryzlov continued, “Sir, the warning order will be transmitted to the district headquarters immediately, and the execution order will be on your desk in fifteen minute
s. I expect you to sign the order. I plan on launching the first air strike in less than eight hours from now.”

  There was a very long pause, almost a full minute. Gryzlov was growing angrier by the second, until: “Very well, General. Issue the warning order, then get the execution order on my desk immediately. I am prepared to sign it. But, General?”

  “Sir?”

  “You will be very careful in the future to consult with the Defense Ministry and myself before making any more such plans,” Sen’kov warned. “I don’t like your tone, and I don’t like being told what to do.”

  “Sir, at this moment I don’t much care what you like,” Gryzlov said. “You told me you were so afraid of Turkmenistan’s turning into another Kosovo or Chechnya, and then you tied my hands behind my back—”

  “Watch your tone of voice, General!”

  “I will not, sir!” Gryzlov shot back. “I am putting you on notice from now on, sir, that the Russian military will not tolerate any more political equivocating or half commitments where vital Russian interests or Russian military forces are involved! If my men are attacked again, I will act — and if I do not receive one hundred percent backing from the Kremlin, I will see to it that there are leaders in place who will back the military!”

  “You are out of line, Gryzlov!” Sen’kov cried. “One more word out of you and you’ll find yourself in a Siberian prison beside Zhurbenko!”

  “Don’t threaten me, Mr. President,” Gryzlov said. “As long as my men and women guard your offices, support influential members of the Duma, and monitor your phones and computers, you will not threaten me! My soldiers know I will die before I fail to support them, and I know they will die to support me. That is all you need to remember. I’ll have that execution order on your desk in ten minutes. It had better be back on my desk in twenty minutes, or the next target for my bombers will be the Kremlin!”

  Valentin Sen’kov replaced the phone on its cradle. His foreign minister, Ivan Filippov, stared at him in complete amazement. “Was that General Gryzlov shouting on the phone?” he asked. “I could hear it all the way from here!”

 

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