Jack’s blue eyes glanced back at Mac as he took a deep breath, gathering his thoughts before responding to Mac’s question.
“No, Mac, not gonna lie to you and say everything’s good. It’s not. I’m telling you, telling all of you, things feel weird. This whole Libya bullshit, how it all went down, I don’t like it.”
While Jack Thompson had become increasingly paranoid about the American government in recent years, Mac considered him intelligent enough to still differentiate between a real threat and nonsense. If he was sincerely worried about going into Libya, Mac wanted to know why. He moved seats to allow him to look directly back at Jack.
“Ok then, tell me what you think is going on, Jack. I want to hear it.”
Jack folded his well muscled arms across his chest, looking at Mac in silence for nearly a minute before proceeding.
“How much do you know about how Gaddafi was taken out, Mac? Did you bother looking into it before accepting this assignment?”
Mac’s pride was hurt a bit by Jack’s accusation. Of course he informed himself of some of the particulars. He wasn’t an idiot.
“Yeah, Tilley broke it down for me, for the most part.”
Jack shook his head as his eyes returned to looking out the window.
“Shouldn’t depend so much on Tilley’s version of things, Mac. Do your own homework – connect the dots.”
“You saying Tilley can’t be trusted?”
Jack shook his head again.
“No, I’m not saying that. He gets his information through his Congressional contacts. The Senate…whatever. I don’t trust those bastards any more than I trust Mardian, and I know you don’t trust him.”
“Ok, Jack, then you give me your version of Libya. Why are you so worried about this assignment? It’s not the first shithole we’ve gone into. What makes this one any different than the others?”
Jack’s arms remained crossed over his chest as he tilted his head back against the top of his seat.
“Do you know how the take down was started? Gaddafi’s fall? What was the event that got that rolling?”
Mac shook his head.
“He was a dictator and people had enough. I know we had operatives there pushing for the protests, helping get things rolling. That’s nothing new. We’ve been doing that kind of thing for decades.”
Jack appeared to ignore Mac’s response.
“It was the alleged arrest of a man named Fergi Tahbell. A human rights activist in Libya with strong ties to organizations in the United Nations, throughout Europe, and the United States. Within hours of his arrest, there were people marching in Benghazi. That is where this thing originated – that is where our operatives were focused. The protests were bullshit, staged. Their purpose was to incite protest throughout Libya, but what was going on in Benghazi, was highly controlled Mac. Every minute of it was orchestrated. Within a week of the Benghazi protests, the United Nations is locking down Gaddafi, moving for a war crime tribunal, the whole nine yards. It goes down fast, Mac. You get that? How fast it all happened? How smoothly? What does that tell you?”
Mac pondered Jack’s question for a brief moment. Certainly the United Nations wasn’t thought of as a smooth, quick responding organization. Not normally, anyways.
“That would tell me it was operational, like you said, and not some random protest event, but something that had been planned.”
Jack nodded back at Mac.
“Of course, we know it when we see it, right? We’ve been part of those things, right? Egypt, Iraq, it’s what we do. Libya was different though. We weren’t the lead in that. We were taking orders from somewhere else. The United States was deferring to the United Nations. The administration took a back seat. Since when does that happen, and why?”
Mac wasn’t sure, though he couldn’t disagree with anything Jack had said to this point.
Jack continued his version of what really happened during the fall of Gaddafi.
“Ok, so you have this human rights activist arrest story. He wasn’t arrested, Mac. He was placed into custody by U.N. operatives working in Benghazi. They had control of that prison complex. He was kept there willingly. He was never in any danger. The whole thing was a ruse, and Benghazi was the focal point. I’ll bet you my full share, Mac, that’s where we’re headed. We won’t be camping out in Tripoli for this assignment, it’ll be Benghazi. And that’s a big reason why I’m not feeling right on this thing. That place…for people like us, that place is hell.”
Mac was about to speak but Jack held up a hand to cut him off.
“Let me keep going with this, Mac. There’s more – a lot more.
“Almost all of our initial media coverage of what was going down in Benghazi and soon after, the rest of Libya, came from a guy named Abdallas Dahnat. He’s based in the United States, another human rights organization, funded by a lot of the same progressive groups that got certain presidents elected. In fact, he was meeting with high ranking White House officials just two weeks before the Benghazi riots. He was the one who was spinning the arrest story at the very start. In fact, this guy was calling out Gaddafi big time months before the protests in Benghazi began. He was paving the road, getting everything ready to go operational. He’s plugged into the far left media in America, all the progressive community organizing type groups. And I’m pretty sure he’s CIA Mac. At least a lot of what he does, in some capacity, he’s CIA by way of the U.N. He’s one of ours, and more importantly, he’s one of theirs.
“So follow me here…we have the Benghazi protests heating up, the United Nations moving quick to go after Gaddafi, the European Union is doing the same thing, but the American government seems to staying pretty quiet about all of it. Why is that? Simple, we have to give the protests the appearance of being genuine and not manufactured by us, right? At the same time though, we’re already arming the protesters, who are actually tribal militants. We are arming them and working directly with United Nations operatives to make that happen. Not working with the United Nations though Mac, but taking our orders from them. Get it? The United States is taking direction from people affiliated with the United Nations to topple a government. We’ve taken out governments before – but since when do we do it on the orders of the United Nations?”
Mac sat silent, not certain of how much of what Jack believed to be true, actually was. Mac didn’t doubt Jack’s sincerity in what he was saying, but the fact he just spent a night making love to a woman who described to him the need for a “New United Nations”, an organization that was to have the power to enforce its demands upon the world, certainly left Mac with an increasingly uneasy feeling. Maybe Jack was right. Maybe this assignment they were now involved in was part of something much bigger, and much more influential than any of them could fully comprehend.
Jack wasn’t quite done, as he now leaned forward in his seat, his blue eyes narrowing as he focused on convincing Mac what he was telling him about Libya was true.
“We were sending drones by the dozens every day over to Libya, Mac, bombing the hell out any group with even the slightest inclination to defend Gaddafi. So while our president was saying publicly there were no troops in Libya, the fact is, we sent all those drones over there and took over the skies, which allowed the militants who we had armed, to win the ground. It was a test run for drone power, Mac, and the United Nations was very interested in how it worked out.
“That’s just the surface though. The real deal here is why all of this went down. Who was to gain from Gaddafi being taken out? Why did this plan happen at all? The media reports didn’t say anything about Gaddafi’s ties to world leaders. Not much anyways. He was tight with Britain, France, Russia, and more recently, the United States. And he was getting rich off of it, billions of dollars in oil sales. Enough to shift the market if he wanted. And some of those billions went to the same governments I just listed off. And more governments than just those – a lot more. The United Nations could give a shit about human rights. That’s just a term used
to allow programs to be put in place to shift money, and control people. It’s all a scam, Mac, a huge global scam.
“So if all these other governments were ok with Gaddafi, and could care less about what was happening to the Libyan people, why all of a sudden a rush to take him out? Who has that kind of pull? Who has that kind of power and influence that the leaders of Britain and France would jump so quickly onto the anti-Gaddafi bandwagon? So you know who Gaddafi was in almost constant communication with right before he was killed Mac? Have you had that information told to you? Did Tilley bother to mention it?”
Mac shook his head.
“Gaddafi was talking directly with Assad. They pulled the satellite links, Mac. Let that sink in. Assad. Syria. What do we have going on there right now? It’s the same damn thing as Libya, at least that’s what’s being attempted. But Gaddafi gave him the heads up, warned him how the operation worked, and Assad has been able to hold it off. That public image of Gaddafi’s, it was a put on. The man was no fool. You don’t survive for forty years in a place like Libya by being a fool. So Assad, he learned from Gaddafi’s mistakes. Plus, Syria isn’t as important oil-wise as Libya. Close, but not quite.”
Finally Mac interrupted, his mind reeling from Jack’s onslaught of information.
“Wait, you haven’t said who was really behind Gaddafi’s removal.”
Jack nodded, his eyes looking over to both Minnick and Benny, who were both listening intently as well.
“Who is the biggest oil producer in the world Mac?”
Mac answered without hesitation.
“Saudi Arabia.”
Jack shook his head.
“Wrong, not anymore. It’s Russia. Saudi Arabia is number two. Studies are showing though that the United States, with all of the new shale explorations, the oil found in the Dakotas, that the United States will be jumping to number one. Now pay attention here Mac, I need you to really let this part sink in.
“The Saudis are losing their choke hold on oil production in the world, and that could mean losses of trillions of dollars over the next decade alone. If they can’t manipulate the markets like they’ve been used to doing, they lose money and they lose influence, and most importantly for them, they lose power. Now who was Libya selling its oil to? Russia. That had the Saudis pissed – real pissed. Who is Syria selling its oil to? Russia. And like I said, same thing happening there as went down in Libya. Take it back further. Who was Iraq selling its oil to? Russia. Saudis didn’t like it, Saddam told them too damn bad, and he’s taken out, just like Gaddafi. Egypt, same thing. Algeria, same thing too. They were all pissing off the Saudis and the United Arab Emirates, places like Dubai, who are basically the Saudis’ little cousins. The two are connected at the hip, the royal families all intermarry with one another.”
As Jack continued with his explanation, Mac inhaled sharply at his mentioning of Dubai, the very city Dasha had indicated she preferred to spend most of her time when not in New York or London.
“That’s why there’s this war on energy production in America right now, Mac. This administration has been put in place to do just that, bought and paid for by oil money outside of the United States. That rig that blew up in the gulf was no accident. The slow response to clean it up, this administration wanted that bad press. They wanted it to create more momentum for the anti-oil movement in this country. It’s an all out war on coal, and oil and natural gas, these people are selling out any hope we have for energy independence because that’s what the Saudis need to happen if they are to regain control over the international oil markets. They need control over the Libyan oil, and the Algerian oil, and the Egyptian oil, and any other governments they can topple and replace with people willing to do their bidding. That oil that is now back up and running and going to Great Britain and France and other European nations? Those profits are being directed back to the Saudis, Mac, I guarantee it. When Gaddafi was taken out, it was the Saudis telling the Russians to back the hell off, and the United States, our government, was right there to help make it happen because it was the Saudis who personally put this administration into power.
That’s why I’m so uneasy about why we are going into Libya now. I’m afraid, Mac. I’m afraid our job will be to make sure it keeps happening. I’m afraid we aint’ working for America on this one. Do you get what I’m saying? Minnick said to us yesterday that it didn’t matter where the money we were being paid came from, as long as we were working for the good guys. Well, what if we aren’t working for the good guys on this? What if…what if we’re actually the bad guys?”
The drone of the jet’s engines gently vibrated the cabin interior as Mac sat silent, looking from Jack, to Minnick, and then to Benny. The others were as quiet regarding Jack’s information as Mac.
Mac found himself wondering if some or even most of what Jack believed could actually be true. If so, how much danger were he and his men actually in while they hunkered down in Libya for the next twenty-one days? Jack must have sensed Mac’s thoughts, as he leaned forward in his seat again, his face grim.
“This assignment ain’t right, Mac. I’m telling you, we are being used for something far beyond anything we’ve been involved with before. I don’t know exactly what it is, but I can feel it in my gut, man. This is my last assignment. I can’t look the other way anymore. I don’t trust the people giving us this work. We get out of this one alive…that’s it for me. I’m out. I’m done.”
Mac looked out his own window, his mind repeating the words Dasha had spoken to him the day before.
My position with the United Nations involves a new approach, Mr. Walker. For too long that institution has been viewed as something of a joke among the world’s political class. There are those who feel it must…evolve. We must move beyond countless meetings and agendas, and idiotic statements that have no basis in reality, and are ultimately, non-binding. We have been pleased to see this view received rather warmly by the current American administration. Call it a more…pro-active approach. We wish to give the United Nations real teeth, so that the world will come to realize if provoked, it can and more importantly will, bite back.
Think of it as a new beginning for the organization. A…New United Nations, if you will.
VII.
The descent onto the San Vito runway was without incident, Captain Bob expertly handling the Gulfstream’s approach and bringing the aircraft to a stop near a long, light red metallic building where a large, silver SUV was parked. Mac was surprised to see the Gulfstream was only one of several aircraft that were coming into and out of the former American military air station, even during the nighttime hours. Several light blue United Nations vans were also busily moving about at the facility.
Captain Bob emerged from the cockpit and opened the exit door for Mac’s team. The captain shook each of their hands again, wishing the men luck. He told Mac as soon as the jet was re-fueled, he was returning to D.C. for several weeks of needed downtime.
“Too old for this shit anymore, Mac. Got a few more runs left in me and then I’ll be hanging it up.”
Mac gripped the captain’s hand firmly.
“Hope to see you be the one to fly us back out of here in a few weeks Captain.”
Mac quickly moved down the Gulfstream’s exit steps, spotting who he assumed was the San Vito contact making his way toward them where he had been waiting in the parked SUV which Mac noted had the same United Nations identification markings as the light blue vans did.
“Hello gentleman! My name is Angelo Moretti. I am your facilitator contact here at San Vito. I have been in communication with your Mr. Tilley and understand you are to be given direct transport to Benghazi, Libya immediately.”
As soon as he heard Moretti mention Benghazi, Mac found himself glancing over at Jack, who in turn stood silently as he watched the comings and goings of the many United Nations vans as they drove back and forth across the airport.
Angelo was several inches shy of six foot, with a friendly, rounded face and n
eatly trimmed black mustache. What remained of his hair was carefully combed over his scalp in a failed attempt to hide his balding. As he spoke in a heavy Italian accent, his eyes would flare open while his hands would help to enunciate each of his words.
“Please gentlemen, if you would follow me this way.”
As he followed Angelo to the SUV, Mac’s hand went instinctively to his sidearm that was holstered on his right hip. Jack, Minnick, and Benny also carried their own weapons.
The temperature inside the SUV was considerably cooler, its AC blasting cold air from the dash vents. Mac sat in the passenger seat opposite Angelo, while the other three sat behind them.
“Ok, just a short drive to the other end of the runway. You will be taking a humanitarian transport flight into Benina International Airport, which is just ten minutes drive from downtown Benghazi. This aircraft has already made multiple flights into and out of Benina, so it should not illicit any undo notice from the local authorities. The flight crew has been told you are part of a food provisions mission and your identifications, which you will find in the glove box there, fully supports that scenario. Your location on the plane will be at the very back, so you should not even be required to speak to the flight crew at all if you so choose. Once we arrive in Benina, I shall drive you personally to Benghazi and your safe house, where further instructions and materials will be made available to you.”
Military Fiction: THE MAC WALKER COLLECTION: A special ops military fiction collection... Page 30