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SKY MASTERS
BY DALE BROWN

Flight of the Old Dog (1987)
Silver
Tower
(1988)
Day of the Cheetah (1989)
Hammerheads (1990)
DONALD I. FINE, INC.
G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS New York G. P. Putnam’s Sons Publishers Since 1838
200 Madison Avenue
New York
,
NY
10016
Copyright Qc 1991 by Dale Brown, Inc.
All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced
in any form without permission.
Published simultaneously in Canada Endpaper maps and maps on pages 267
and 370 by Lisa Amoroso.
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Brown, Dale, date Sky
masters / Dale Brown.
p. cm.
ISBN 0-399-13705-X
(Putnam) I. Title. PS3552.R68543S58 1991 90-56053 CIP 813′.54~c20
Printed in the
United States of America
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
sky Masters is dedicated to General Curtis E. LeMay, the “Iron Eagle”
and the “Father of Strategic Air Power,” a man who envisioned much of
what Sky Masters is all about.
Sky Masters is also dedicated to the men and women who served as part of
Operation DESERT SHIELD and DESERT STORM.
I wish to especially dedicate this story to my brother, Second
Lieutenant James D. Brown, 3-35 ARMOR, First Armored Division, United
States Army, and his wife, Leah, and all of our military forces serving
ashore, afloat, and aloft for all the sacrifices they made in their
personal and professional lives.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
To my friend Lieutenant Colonel George Peck (who was instrumental in the
research for Day of the Cheetah and who, like Loki’s eternal fate in
Norse mythology, seems destined to be forever bothered by my insistent
questions and requests); TSgt Alan Dockery, Captain Harry G. Edwards,
and the other helpful and professional persons in the Office of Public
Affairs, Headquarters, Strategic Air Command (SAC), Offutt AFB,
Nebraska, for their assistance in gathering information on SAC
conventional and maritime operations and the
Strategic
Warfare
Center
,
and for their help in reviewing the manuscript; To all the men and women
of the Strategic Air Command and Pacific Air Forces whom I met during
GIANT WARRIOR ’90, a multinational, multiservice combat strike and
deployment exercise conducted by SAC’s Fifteenth Air Force in August of
1990 at Andersen Air Force Base on
Guam
. I wish to especially thank
Lieutenant General Robert D. Beckel, Fifteenth Air Force commander, for
allowing me the privilege of observing his super exercise; Brigadier
General DavidJ. Pederson, Third Air Division commander, and Colonel Alan
Cirino, Third Air Division deputy commander, and their staff for their
hospitality and helpfulness in explaining the intricacies of Pacific
theater combat operations; and to Colonel Arne Weinman, Ninety-second
Bomb Wing commander and joint air forces commander of GIANT WARRIOR ’90;
Special thanks to Captain Cynthia Colin, Fifteenth Air Force Public
Affairs, and the other professionals at Fifteenth Air Force Public
Affairs, March AFB, California; MSgt Ron Pack, Ninety-second Bomb Wing
public affairs; MSgt Al Dostal, Ninety-sixth Bomb Wing Public Affairs;
Second Lieutenant Darian “Slick” Benson, Fifty-seventh Air Division
Public Affairs; the feared terrorist-group-turned-media-pool known
throughout the Pacific as the Dream Team; and everyone who helped make
my visit to Guam and GIANT WARRIOR ’90a pleasure and a success; To
Brigadier General Larry Dilda, DCS I Communications and Computer
Operations, HQ SAC, for conducting a very special tour of SAC
Headquarters, where I learned much about the “new” Strategic Air Command
and its people and its new arsenal of weapons; and to Ron Silverstein,
B-2 Project Senior Engineer and Chief Spokesman, and the others at
Northrop Corporation, Air Force Plant 42, Palmdale, California, for an
amazing tour of the B-2 bomber assembly facilities; To Colonel Thomas A.
Hornung, Chief of Public Affairs, Air Force Public Affairs-Western
Region in Los Angeles, for his invaluable assistance throughout the
making of Sky Masters and for arranging a spectacular tour of SAC
headquarters; and to Major Ron Fuchs, former Deputy and Chief of Media
Relations in Los Angeles, for his time in reviewing the manuscript and
offering some valuable comments; To CDR Bruce R. Linder, commanding
officer of the guided missile frigate FFG-55 USS Elrod, who was
extremely helpful in providing details pertaining to naval operations in
the South China Sea, Palawan Passage, and the Philippines; To Richard
Herman, famous author of Warbirds and Force of Eagles, for his technical
knowledge on aerial combat in the F-4E and other facets of fighter
combat; To Rockwell International for information on the B- 1 bomber;
also to Orbital Sciences Corporation for information on the Pegasus
air-launched space booster; To my executive assistant, Dennis Hall, for
his hard work and support.
ACTUAL NEWS EXCERPTS Date: 5/21/90 PENTAGON DECLARES PHILIPPINES
“IMMINENT DANGER” AREA WASHINGTON (MAY 18) UPI-The Defense Department
designated the Philippines Friday as an area of imminent danger for
special pay purposes, which means US military and civilian employees
will be getting slightly larger paychecks. The Pentagon said it took the
action because of the “current unstable conditions” in the Philippines,
where three American servicemen have been killed in politically
motivated attacks this month alone. Imminent danger pay is an additional
15 percent of basic salary for American citizens who are department
employees and $110 per month for all US military personnel. Date:
5/22/90 “Well, first in my mind, the communist dream in the Philippines
will always be there. The communist dream of taking over and dominating
the country will always be there because you can’t kill an ideology.”
General Renato S. de Villa, Chief of Staff, Armed Forces of the
Philippines, from Asia-Pacific Defense Forum, U.S. Pacific Command,
Winter 1989-1990 Date: 11/2/90 … Turmoil in China… combined with
speculation about U.S. forces departures from the Philippines, have
merged to cause a new appreciation for U.S. regional security presence.
. . . I believe there is a growing realization in the Pacific that
U.S. presence cannot be taken for granted. If the U.S. presence is
substantially reduced, many Pacific nations perceive the danger of other
nations moving into the vacuum created by our departure, with a
potential result of conflict and instability.” 22 ACTUAL NEWS EXCERPTS
Admiral Huntington Hardisty, U.S. Navy, Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific
Command, from Asia-Paczfic Defense Forum, U.S. Pacific Command, winter
1989-1990 Date: 11/6/90 MELEE MARS INAUGURATION OF AUTONOMY IN SOUTHERN
PHILIPPINES COTABATO (Nov 6) REUTER-Police punched and clubbed 17 Moslem
students before dragging them off by their hair on Tuesday after they
disrupted President Corazon Aquino’s inauguration of an autonomous
government in the southern Philippines, witnesses said. The students,
members of an organization supporting Moslem rebels demanding a separate
state on Mindanao island, chanted slogans against the autonomous
government about 20 meters from where Aquino was speaking. Manila has
set up the autonomous government, dominated by Moslems, as a way to end
separatist violence on Mindanao, the second-largest island in the
Philippines. The government, headed by former Moslem rebel commander
Zacaria Candao, can pass its own laws, collect taxes and license fees,
and set up a regional police force in the four predominantly Moslem
provinces on Mindanao island it controls. Manila would retain control of
defense and foreign policy. -from U.S. Naval Institute Military
Database Defense News. Date: 14 January 1991 AIR FORCE TO CREATE TWO NEW
COMPOSITE AIR WINGS BY 1993 WASHINGTON-The U.S. Air Force will develop
by 1993 two composite tactical air wings that combine different types of
aircraft in the same unit. The new wings will serve as prototypes for
the possible reorganization of the service’s tactical force structure
along more mission-oriented lines. . . . [The composite air wings]
would include aircraft that could perform attack, defensive, standoff
jamming, and precision-strike missions. -from Aviation Week and Space
Technology magazine, p.26 AUTHOR NOTE Although the BIB bomber is now
officially called “Lancer,” the author will still use “Excalibur.” Every
effort has been made to present realistic situations, but all of the
persons and situations presented here are products of my imagination and
should not be considered reflections of actual persons, products,
policy, or practice. Any similarity of any organization, device,
weapons system, policy, person, or place to any real-world counterpart
is strictly coincidental. The author makes no attempt to present the
actual military or civil policies of any organization or government. The
author hopes readers will note the chronological setting of this novel
in regards to some of his previous books, most notably Day of the
Cheetah. While certain characters and backdrops in that book appear
here, the events described in this book come a full two years earlier
than those in Day of the Cheetah. Moreover, this book, like that one,
stands completely on its own-neither a prequel nor sequel. MONDAY, 6
JUNE 1994, 0812 HOURS LOCAL SOMEWHERE OVER SOUTHERN NEVADA < minus two
minutes and counting. . . mark.” Lieutenant Colonel Patrick McLanahan
glanced up at his mission data display just as the time-to-go clock
clicked over to 00:01:59. Dead on time. He clicked open the command
radio channel with the switch near his left foot. “Vapor TwoOne
copies,” he reported. “CROWBAR, Vapor Two-One requesting final range
clearance.”
“Stand by, Two-One.” Stand by, he thought to himself-not likely.
McLanahan and his partner, Major Henry Cobb, were flying in an FB-111B
“Super Aardvark” bomber, skimming two hundred feet above the hot deserts
of southern Nevada at the speed of soundevery five seconds they waited
put them a mile closer to the target. The FBI 1 lB was the “stretched”
version of the venerable F-1 11 Supersonic swing-wing bomber, an
experimental model that was the proposed interim supersonic bomber when
the B-1 Excalibur bomber program was canceled back in the late 1970s.
Only a few remained, and the High Technology Aerospace Weapons Center
(HAWC)-the Defense Department s secret test complex for weapons and
aircraft, hidden in the restricted desert ranges north of Las Vegas-had
them. Most F1-11 aircraft were Seeing their last few years of Service,
and more and more were popping up in Reserve unitS or sitting in museums
or base airparks-but HAWC always made use of their airframes until they
fell apart or crashed. But the “Super Vark” Was not the subject of
today’s sortie. Although an FB-111B could carry a
twenty-five-thousandpound payload, McLanahan and Cobb were carrying only
one twenty-six-hundred-pound bomb that morning-but what a bomb it was.
Officially the bomb was called the BLU-96, but its nickname was
HADES-and for its size it was the most powerful nonnuclear weapon in
existence. HADES was filled with two hundred gallons of a thin,
gasoline-like liquid that was dispersed over a target, then ignited by
remote control. Because the weapon does not need to carry its own
oxidizer but uses oxygen in the atmosphere to ignite the fuel, the
resulting explosion had all the characteristics of a nuclear
explosion-it created a mushroom cloud several hundred feet high, a
fireball nearly a mile in diameter, and a shock wave that could knock
down buildings and trees within two miles. Oddly enough, the BLU-96 had
not been used since the Vietnam War, soHAWC was conducting experiments
on the feasibility of using the awesome weapon again for some future
conflict. HADES had been designed as a weapon to quickly clear very
large minefields, but against troops it would be utterly devastating.
That fact, of course, would go into HAWC’s report to the Department of
Defense. “Vapor, this is CROWBAR, you are cleared to enter R-4808N and
R-4806W routes and altitudes, remain this frequency. Acknowledge.”
McLanahan checked his watch. “Vapor acknowledges, cleared to enter
Romeo 4808 north and Romeo 4806 west routes and altitudes at zero-six,
1514 Zulu, remain with CROWBAR. Out.” He turned to Cobb, checking
engine instruments and the fuel totalizer as his eyes swept across the
center instrument panel. “We’re cleared in, Henry.” Cobb clicked the
mike twice in response. Cobb never said much during missions-his job
was to fly the plane, which he always did in stony silence. Romeo
4808N-that was its official name, although its unclassified nickname was
Dreamland”-was a piece of airspace in south-central Nevada designated by
the Federal Aviation Administration and the Department of Defense as a
“restricted” area, which meant all aircraft-civilian, commercial, other
military flights, even diplomatic-were prohibited to fly over it at any
altitude without permission from HAWC. Even FAA Air Traffic Control
could not clear aircraft to enter that airspace unless in extreme
emergency, and even then the violating aircraft could expect to get
intercepted by Air Force fighters and the air-traffic controller
responsible could expect a long and serious scrutiny of his actions.
R-4808N was surrounded by four other restricted areas that were meant to
act as a buffer zone to give pilots ample warning time to change course
if they were-accidentally or purposely-straying toward R-4808N. If one
entered R-4808N without permission, military aircrew members would at
best lose their wings, and commercial and civilian pilots would lose
their licenses-and both would be in for an intense multiday “debriefing”
conducted by teams of military and CIA interrogators, who would discard
most articles of the Bill of Rights to find out why someone was stupid
enough to stray into Dreamland. At worst, one would come face-to-face
with McLanahan and Cobb’s FB-1 1 lB racing across the desert floor at
the speed of heat-or nose-to-nose with a BLU-96 fuel-air explosive bomb
or some other strange and certainly far deadlier weapon. Several
thousand workers, military and civilian, were shuttled from Las Vegas,
Nellis Air Force Base, Beatty, Mercury, Pahrump, and Tonopah every day
to the various research centers there. Most civilian workers reported
to the Department of Energy facilities near Yucca Flats, where nuclear
weapon research was conducted; most military members traveled forty
miles farther northeast to the uncharted aircraft and weapons facilities
northeast of Yucca Flats called Groom Lake. A series of electronic and
human observation posts was set up just south of Groom Lake in Emigrant
Valley, where they could observe the BLU-96 HADES bomb’s destructive
power. At the northern tip of Pintwater Ridge, the navigation com puter
commanded a full 60-degree turn toward the west. McLanahan clicked on
the command channel: “CROWBAR, Vapor Two-One, 1P inbound, unlocking now
at T minus sixty seconds. Out.” It took only seconds to configure the
switches for weapon release, and finding the target on radar was a
snap-it was a six-story concrete tower, resembling a fire-department
training tower, surrounded by trucks, a few surplus tanks and armored
personnel carriers, and surrounded by about a hundred mannequins dressed
in various combat outfits, from lightweight fatigues to bulky chemical
suits. Obviously, HAWC was not concerned about evaluating the effects
of a HADES bomb on minefields-they had “softer” targets in mind for the
BLU-96. Surrounding ground zero were several thirty-foot-high wooden
blast fences erected every one thousand feet, which would be used to
gauge the effect of the HADES bomb’s shock wave. McLanahan could shack
this bomb with one eye-it was hardly a test of either his or Cobb’s
skill. This was going to be a “toss” release, where the bombing
computer displayed a CCIP, or continuously computed impact point,
steering cue on Cobb’s heads-up display; the steering cue was a line
that ran from the target at the bottom of the heads-up display to a
release cue cross at the top, with the release pipper in the middle.
Cobb would offset the bomber to one side of the release cue line; then,
at the right moment, would turn and climb so as to “walk” the pipper up
the release cue line and eventually place the release cue cross directly
in the center of the aiming pipper. When the cross split the pipper,
the bomb would release-the hard turn would add “whip-crack” momentum to
the bomb, allowing it to fly farther than a conventional level release.
It was all a very computer-controlled and rather basic bombing
procedure-hardly a difficult task for a fifteen-year Air Force veteran
bombardier. But sortie rates were down and flying hours were being cut,
and McLanahan and his fellow flight test crew dogs were sniveling every
flight they could. Except for a few high-value projects-Dreamstar,
ANTARES, the Megafortress Plus, the A-I 2 bomber, the X-35 and X-37
superfighters, and a few other aircraft that were too weird for words
and probably would never see daylight for another decade-research
activity at Dreamland had almost ground to a halt. Peace was breaking
out all over the world-despite the efforts of nut-cases like Saddam
Hussein, Moammar Quaddafi, and a few renegade Russian generals to
disrupt things-and the military would be the first to pay for the “peace
dividend” that most Americans had been waiting for at least the past
five years. “T minus thirty seconds, final release configuration check,”
McLanahan announced. He quickly ran through the final seven steps of
the “Weapon Release-Conventional” checklist, then had Cobb read aloud
his heads-up display’s configuration readouts. Everything was normal.
McLanahan checked the crosshair placement on target, made a slight
adjustment, then told Cobb, “Final aiming… ready. My dark visor’s
down.” McLanahan told Cobb his dark visor was down because Cobb seemed
never to check around the cockpit, although McLanahan knew he did. “Tone
on.” McLanahan activated the bomb scoring tone so the ground trackers
would know exactly when the release pulse from the bombing computers was
generated. “Copy,” Cobb said. “Mine too. Autopilot off, TF’s off.
Coming up on break… ready… ready… now.” He said it as calmly,
as serenely as if he were describing a china teacup being filled with
afternoon tea-but his actions were certainly not dainty. Cobb slammed
the FB- 111 in a tight 60-degree bank turn to the left and hauled back
on the control stick. McLanahan felt a few roll flutters as Cobb made
minute corrections to the break, but otherwise the break was clean and
straight-the more constant the G-forces Cobb could keep on the BLU-96,
the more accurate the toss delivery would be. Through the steady four
Gs straining on every square inch of their bodies, Cobb grunted, “Coming
up on release . . ready . . . ready . . . now. Release button .
. . ready . . now. McLanahan saw the flash of the release pulse on
his weapon control panel, but he jabbed the manual release “pickle”
button just in case the bomb did not separate cleanly. “This is CROWBAR,
good toss, good toss,” McLanahan heard on the command channel. “All
stations, stand by… Cobb had just completed a 180-degree turn and had
managed to click on the autopilot again when both crew members could see
an impossibly bright flash of light illuminate the cockpit, drowning out
every shadow before them. Both men instinctively tightened their grips
on handholds or flight controls just as a tremendous smack thundered
against the FB111B’s canopy. The bomber’s tail was thrust violently to
the left in a wide-sweeping skid, but Cobb was waiting for it and
carefully brought the tail back in line without causing a roll couple.
“Henry-you okay?” McLanahan shouted. He could see a few stars in his
eyes from the flash, but he felt no pain. He had to raise his dark
visor to be able to see the instrument panels. Cobb raised his own
visor as well. “Yeah, Patrick, I’m fine.” After returning his left
hand to his throttle quadrant, he made one quick scan of his controls
and instruments, then resumed his usual position-eyes continually
scanning, head caged straight ahead, hands on stick and throttles.
“CROWBAR, this is Vapor Two-One, condition green, McLanahan reported to
the ground controllers. “Request clearance for a flyby of ground zero.
“Stand by, Vapor.” The wait was not as long this time. “Vapor Two-One,
request approved, remain at six thousand MSL over the target.” Cobb
executed another hard 90-degree left bank-turn and moved the FBI 1 lB’s
wings forward to the 54-degree setting to help slow the bomber down from
superSonic speed. They could see the results as soon as they completed
their turn back to the target. There was a ragged splotch of black
around what was left of the concrete target tower, resembling a
smoldering campfire thousands of feet in diameter. The tanks and
armored personnel carriers had been blackened and tossed several hundred
feet away from ground zero, and the regular trucks were burned and
melted down to unrecognizable hunks. Wooden blast targets up to two
miles away had been singed or knocked down, and of course all the
mannequins, regardless of what they had been outfitted with, were gone.
“My God.. .” McLanahan muttered. He had never seen an atomic ground
zero before except in old photos of Hiroshima or Nagasaki, but guessed
he was looking at a tiny bit of what such devastation would be like.
“Cool,” was all Cobb said-and for him, that was akin to a long string of
epithets and exclamations. McLanahan turned his attention away from the
ugly burn mark and the holocaust below: “CROWBAR, this is Two-One,
flyover complete, request approach clearance. “Vapor, this is CROWBAR,
climb and maintain eight thousand, turn left heading three-zero-zero,
clear to exit R-4806W and re-enter R-4808N to PALACE intersection for
approach and landing. Thanks for your help.”
“Eight thousand, three-zero-zero, PALACE intersection, Vapor copies all.
Good day. Out.” McLanahan set up the navigation radios to help Cobb find
the initial approach fix, but couldn’t shake the pow~ul impression HADES
had left on him. It was a devastating weapon and would represent a
serious threat and escalation to any conflict. No, it wasn’t a nuclear
device, but the fact that one aircraft could drop one bomb and kill all
forms of life within a one-to-two-mile radius was pretty sobering. Just
one B-52 bomber loaded with thirty to forty such weapons could destroy a
small city. Thankfully, though, there wasn’t a threat on the horizon
that could possibly justify using HADES. Things were pretty quiet in
the world. A lot of the countries that had regularly resorted to
aggression before were now opting for peaceful, negotiated settlements.
Flare-ups and regional disputes were still present, but no nation wanted
war with another, because the possibility for massive destruction with
fewer military forces was a demonstrated reality. And for McLanahan that
was just as well. Better to put weapons like HADES back in storage or
destroy them than to use them. What Patrick McLanahan did not know,
however, was that half a world away, a conflict was brewing that could
once again force him and his fellow flyers to use such awesome weapons.
NEAR THE SPRATLY ISLANDS, SOUTH CHINA SEA WEDNESDAY, 8 JUNE 1994, 2247
HOURS LOCAL nst as fifty-seven-year-old Fleet Admiral Yin Po L’un,
comander of the Spratly Island flotilla, South China Sea Fleet, People’s
Liberation Army Navy of China, reached for his mug of tea from the young
steward, his ship heeled sharply to port and the tray with his tea went
flying across the bridge of his flotilla’s flagship. Well, evening tea
would be delayed another fifteen minutes. Sometimes, he thought, his
lot in life was as if the gods had sent a fire-breathing dragon to
destroy a single lam-and the dragon finishes drowning in the sea along
the way. The skipper of Yin’s flagship, Captain Lubu Vin Li, chewed the
young steward up one side and down the other for his clumsiness. Yin
looked at the poor messboy, a thin, beady-eyed kid obviously with some
Tibetan stock in him. “Captain, just let him bring the damned tea,
please, ” Yin said. Lubu bowed in acknowledgment and dismissed the
steward with a slap on the chest and a stern growl. “I apologize for
that accident, sir, ” Lubu said as he returned to stand beside Yin’s
seat on the bridge of the Hong Lung, Admiral Yin’s flagship. “As you
know, we have been in typhoon-warning-condition three for several days;
I expect all the crew to be able to stand on their own two feet by now.”
“Your time would be better spent speaking with Engineering and
determining the reason for that last roll, Captain, ” Yin said without
looking at his young destroyer skipper. “The Hong Lung has the world’s
best stabilizer system, and we are not in a full gale yet-the
stabilizers should have been able to dampen the ship’s motion. See to
it.” Lubu’s face went blank, then pained as he realized his mistake,
then resolute as he bowed and turned to the ship’s intercom to order the
chief engineer to the bridge. The most sophisticated vessel in the
People’s Liberation Navy should not be wallowing around in only
force-three winds, Yin thought-it only made the rest of his unit so
unsightly. Admiral Yin turned to glance at the large, thick plastic
panel on which the location and condition of the other vessels in his
flotilla were plotted with a grease pencil. Radar and sonar data from
his ships were constantly fed to the crewman in charge of the bridge
plot, who kept it updated by alternately wiping and redrawing the
symbols as fast as he could. His ships were roughly arranged in a wide
protective diamond around the flagship. The formation was now headed
southwest, pointing into the winds which were tossing around even his
big flagship. Admiral Yin Po L’un’s tiny Spratly Island flotilla
currently consisted of fourteen small combatants, averaging around
fifteen years of age, with young, inexperienced crews on them. Four to
six of those ships were detached into a second task force, which cruised
within the Chinese zone when the other ships were near the neutral zone.
On the outer perimeter of the flotilla, Admiral Yin Po L’un deployed
three Huangfen-class fast-attack missile boats, capable against heavy
surface targets, and four Hegu-class fastattack missile boats with
antisubmarine and antiaircraft weapons. He had an old Lienyun-class
minesweeper on the point, a precautionary tactic born of the conflict
with the Vietnamese Navy only six years earlier. He also had two big
Hainan-class fast patrol boats with antiair, antiship, and antisubmarine
weapons operating as “roamers, ” moving between the inner and outer
perimeters. All were direct copies of old World War II Soviet designs,
and these boats had no business being out in the open ocean, even as
forgiving and generally tame as the South China Sea was. The ships in
Yin’s flotilla rotated out every few weeks with other ships in the
six-hundred-ship South China Sea Fleet, based at Zhanjiang Naval Base on
the Leizhou Peninsula near the Gulf of Tonkin. Yin’s flagship, the Hong
Lung, or Red Dragon, was a beauty, a true oceangoing craft for the
world’s largest navy. It was a Type EF5 guided-missile destroyer that
had a Combination Diesel or Gas Turbine propulsion system that propelled
the 132-meter, five-thousand-ton vessel to a top speed of over
thirty-five nautical miles per hour. The Hong Lung had a helicopter
hangar and launch platform, and it carried a modern, French-built
Dauphin II patrol, rescue, antimine, and antisubmarine warfare
helicopter. Yin’s destroyer also carried six supersonic Fei Lung-7
antiship missiles, the superior Chinese version of the French Exocet
antiship missile; two Fei Lung-9 long-range supersonic antiship
missiles, experimental copies of the French-built ANS antiship missile;
two Hong Qian-9 1 single antiair missile launchers, fore and aft, with
thirty-missile manually loaded magazines each; a Creusoit-Loire
dual-purpose 100-millimeter gun; and four single-barreled and two
double-barreled 37-millimeter antiaircraft guns. It also had a single
Phalanx CIWS, or Close-In Weapon System gun. Developed in the United
States of America, Phalanx was a radarguided Vulcan multibarrel
20-millimeter gun that could destroy incoming sea-skimming antiship
missiles; from its mount on the forecastle perch behind and below the
con, it could cover both sides and the stern out to a range of two
kilometers. The Hong Lung also carried sonar (but no torpedoes or depth
charges) and sophisticated targeting radars for her entire arsenal. The
Hong Lung was specifically designed to patrol the offshore islands
belonging to China, such as the Spratly and the Paracel Islands, and to
engage the navies of the various countries that claimed these islands-so
the Hong Lung carried no antisubmarine-warfare weaponry like the older
Type EF4 Luda-class destroyers of the North Fleet. The Hong Lung could
defeat any surface combatant in the South China Sea and could protect
itself against almost any air threat. The Hong Lung’s escort ships-the
minesweepers and ASW vesselscould take on any threat that the destroyer
wasn’t specifically equipped to deal with. “Position, navigator, “
Admiral Yin called out. The navigator behind and to the Admiral’s right
called out in reply, “Sir!”, bent to work at his plastic-covered chart
table as a series of coordinates were read to him from the LORAN
navigation computers, then replied, “Sir, position is ten nautical miles
northwest of West Reef, twenty-three miles north of Spratly Island air
base.”
“Depth under the keel?” “Showing twenty meters under the keel, sir, “
Captain Lubu Vin Li replied. “No danger of running aground if we stay
on this course, sir.” Yin grunted his acknowledgment. That was exactly
what he was worried about. While his escorts could traverse the shallow
waters of the Spratly Island chain easily, the Hong Lung was an
oceangoing vessel with a four-meter draft. At low tide, the big
destroyer could find itself run aground at any time while within the
Spratly Islands. Although the Spratlys were in neutral territory, China
controlled the valuable islands informally by sheer presence of force if
not by agreement or treaty. Yin’s normal patrol route took the flotilla
through the southern edge of the “neutral zone” area of the island
chain, scanning for Philippine vessels and generally staying on watch.
Although the Philippine Navy patrolled the Spratlys and had a lot of
firepower there, Admiral Yin’s smaller, faster escort ships could mount
a credible force against them. And since the Philippine ships had no
medium or long-range antiship missiles or antiair missiles in the area,
the Hong Lung easily outgunned every warship within two thousand miles.
They were currently on an eastward heading, cruising well north of the
ninth parallel-and as far as Yin was concerned, the “neutral zone” meant
that he might consider issuing a warning to trespassers before opening
fire on them. The shoal water was also south of their position, near
Pearson Reef, and he wanted to stay clear of those dangerous waters.
“CIC to bridge, ” the interphone crackled. “Wenshan re ports surface
contact, bearing three-four-zero, range eighteen miles. Stationary
target.” Captain Lubu keyed his microphone and grunted a curt,
“Understood, ” then checked the radar plot. The Wenshan was one of the
Hainan-class patrol boats roaming north and east of the Hong Lung; it
had a much better surface-search radar than the small
Huangfen-classboat, the Xingyi, in the vicinity; although the Xingyi was
equippe~Fei Lung-7 surface attack missiles, often other ships had to
seek out targets for it. Lubu turned to Admiral Yin. “Sir, the surface
contact is near Phu Qui Island, in the neutral zone about twenty miles
north of Pearson Reef. No recent reports of any vessels or structures
in the area. We have Wenshan and Xingyi in position to investigate the
contact.” Yin nodded that he understood. Phu Qui Island, he knew, was a
former Chinese oil-drilling site in the Spratly Islands; the well had
been capped and abandoned years ago. Although Phu Qui Island
disappeared underwater at high tide, it was a very large rock and coral
formation and could easily be expanded and fortified-it would be an even
larger island than Spratly Island itself. If Yin was tasked to pick an
island to occupy and fortify, he would pick Phu Qui. So might someone
else. . “Send Wenshan and Xingyi to investigate the contact, ” Yin
ordered. “Rotate Manning north to take Wenshan ‘5 position.” Manning
was the other Hainan-class patrol boat acting as “rover” in Yin’s patrol
group. Captain Lubu acknowledged the order and relayed the instructions
to his officer of the deck for transmission to the Wenshan. Yin, who had
been in the People’s Liberation Army Navy practically all of his life,
was proud of the instincts he’d honed during his loyal career. He
trusted them. And now, somewhere deep down in his gut, those instincts
told him this was going to be trouble. Granted, Phu Qui Island, and
even the Spratlys themselves, seemed the most unlikely place to expect
trouble. The Spratlys-called Nansha Dao, the Lonely Islands, in
Chinese-were a collection of reefs, atolls, and semisubmerged islands in
the middle of the South China Sea, halfway between Vietnam and the
Philippines and several hundred kilometers south of China. The
fifty-five major surface formations of the Spratlys were dotted with
shipwrecks, attesting to the high degree of danger involved when
navigating in the area. Normally, such a deathtrap as the Spratlys
would be given a wide berth. Centuries ago Chinese explorers had
discovered that the Nansha Dao was a treasure trove of minerals-gold,
iron, copper, plus traces or indications of dozens of other metals-as
well as gems and other rarities. Since the islands were right on the sea
lanes between the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean, the “round-eyes”
eventually found them, and the English named them the Spratlys after the
commander of a British warship who “discovered” them in the eighteenth
century. It was the British who discovered oil in the Spratlys and
began tapping it. Unfortunately, the British had not yet developed the
technology to successfully and economically drill for oil in the
weatherbeaten islands, so the islands were abandoned for safer and more
lucrative drilling sites in Indonesia and Malaysia. As time progressed,
several nations-Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines-all tried to
develop the islands as a major stopover port for sea traffic. But it
was following World War II that the Chinese considered the Spratlys as
well as everything else in the South China Sea as their territory. As
oil-drilling platforms, fishing grounds, and mining operations began to
proliferate, the Chinese, aided by the North Vietnamese, who acted as a
surrogate army for their Red friends, began vigorously patrolling the
area. During the Vietnam War radar sites and radio listening posts on
Spratly Island allowed the Vietcong and China to detect and monitor
every vessel and aircraft heading from the Philippines to Saigon,
including American B-52 bombers on strike missions into North Vietnam.
But the most powerful navy in the postwar world, the United States Navy,
exerted the greatest tangible influence over the Spratly Islands.
Through its sponsorship, the government of the Philippines began
patrolling the islands, eradicating the Vietnamese espionage units and
using the islands as a base of operations for controlling access to the
western half of the South China Sea. The Chinese had been effectively
chased away from the Spratlys, ending five hundred years of dominance
there. That became a very sore point for the Chinese. After the Vietnam
War, the American presence weakened substantially, which allowed first
the Vietnamese Navy, and then the Chinese Navy, to return to the Spratly
Islands. But the Philippines still maintained their substantial
American-funded military presence there, although they had ceded most of
the southern islands to China and Vietnam. The lines had been drawn. The
Philippines claimed the thirty atolls north of the nine degrees, thirty
minutes north latitude, and the territory in between was a sort of
neutral zone. Things were relatively quiet for about ten years
following the Vietnam War. But in the late 1 980s conflict erupted
again. During the war, Vietnam had accepted substantial assistance from
the Soviet Union in exchange for Russian use of the massive Cam Rahn
naval base and airbase, which caused a break in relations between China
and Vietnam. Vietnam, now trained and heavily armed by the Soviet
Union, was excluding Chinese vessels from the oil and mineral mining
operations in the Spratlys. Several low-scale battles broke out. It
was discovered that the Soviet Union was not interested in starting a
war with China to help Vietnam hold the Spratlys, so China moved in and
regained the control they had lost forty years earlier. Faced with
utter destruction, the Vietnamese Navy withdrew, content to send an
occasional reconnaissance flight over the region. That was when Admiral
Yin Po L’un had been assigned his Spratly Island flotilla. To his way
of thinking, these were not the Spratlys, or the Quan-Dao Mueng Bang as
the Vietnamese called them-these were the Nansha Dao, property of the
PeopIes Republic of China. China had built a hard-surfaced runway on
Spratly Island and had reinforced some stronger reefs and atolls around
it enough to create naval support facilities. Their claim was stronger
than any other nation. Several other nations had protested the
militarization of Spratly Island, but no one had done anything more than
talk. To Admiral Yin, it was only a matter of time before all of the
Nansha Dao returned to Chinese control. But the Filipino Navy, such as
it was, still held very tight control over their unofficially designated
territory. Yin’s job was to patrol the region, map out all sea traffic,
and report on any new construction or attempts to move oil-drilling
platforms, fish-processing vessels, or mining operations in the neutral
zone or in the Philippine sector. He was also to report on any
movements of the Philippine Navy’s major vessels in the area and to
constantly position his forces to confront and defeat the Filipino
pretenders should hostilities erupt. Not that the Filipino Navy was a
substantial threat to the Chinese Navy-far from it. The strongest of
the Filipino ships patrolling the Spratly Islands were forty-year-old
frigates, corvettes, radar picket ships, and subchasers, held together
by coats of paint and prayers. Still, a threat to Yin’s territory-no
matter whom it was from-was a threat, in his mind, to all of China.
Thirty minutes later, Yin’s task force had closed to within nine miles
of the contact while Wenshan and Xingyi had closed to within one mile;
Yin positioned his ships so that he could maintain direct, scrambled
communications with his two patrol boats but stay out of sight of the
contact. “Dragon, this is Seven, ” the skipper aboard Wenshan, Captain
Han, radioed back to Admiral Yin. “I have visual contact. The target
is an oil derrick. It appears to be mounted or anchored atop Phu Qui
Island. It is surrounded by several supply barges with pipes on board,
and two tugboats are nearby. There may be armed crewmen on deck. They
are flying no national flags, but there does appear to be a company flag
flying. We are moving closer to investigate. Request permission to
raise the derrick on radio.” So his instincts had been right An oil
derrick in the neutral zone? How dare they place an oil derrick on
Chinese property.” Yin turned to Lubu. “I want the transmissions
relayed to us. Permission granted to hail the derrick. Tell Captain
Han to warn the crew that they will be attacked if they do not remove
that derrick from the neutral zone immediately.” A few moments later,
Yin heard Han’s warning: “Attention, attention the oil derrick on Phu
Qui Island. This is the People’s Republic of China frigate Wenshan on
international hailing channel nine. Respond immediately. Over.”
Captain Han on Wenshan was speaking in excellent English, the universal
sailors language even in this part of the world, and Yin had to struggle
to keep up with the conversation. He made a mental note to congratulate
Han on his resourcefulness-the Wenshan was not a frigate, but if the
crew of the oil derrick believed that it was, they might be less
inclined to resist and more inclined to follow orders. “Frigate Wenshan,
this is the National Oil Company Barge Nineteen on channel nine. We
read you loud and clear. Over.” Admiral Yin seethed. The National Oil
Company. That was a Philippine company run by a relative of the new
Philippine president, Arturo Mikaso, and headquartered in Manila. Worse,
it was financed by and operated mostly by rich Texas oil drillers.
American capitalists who obviously thought they could, in their
typically imperialistic way, just set up an oil derrick anywhere they
pleased. The audacity. To even attempt to build a derrick in a neutral
zone. And Yin knew it wasn’t really neutral at all. It was Chinese
territory. And the Americans and the Filipinos were trying to rape it.
“National Oil Barge Nineteen, ” Han continued, “you are violating
international agreements that prohibit any private or commercial mineral
exploration or facilities in this area. You are ordered to remove all
equipment immediately and vacate the area. You will receive no further
warnings. Comply immediately. Over.”
“Vessel Wenshan, we are involved in search and salvage operations at
this time, ” a new voice on the radio, young and at ease, replied.
“Salvage operations are permitted in international waters. We are not
aware of any international agreements involving these waters. You may
contact the Philippine or American governments for clarification.”
“National Oil Barge Nineteen, commercial operations in these waters are
a direct threat to the national security and business interests of the
People’s Republic of China, ” Captain Han replied. He knew that Admiral
Yin would not approve of his debating like this over the radio-he was a
soldier, Yin would tell him, not a scum-sucking politician-but he wasn’t
going to move a meter closer to the Philippine oil derrick unless
everyone on board understood why. “You are ordered to discontinue all
operations immediately or I will take action.” There was no further
reply from the barge crew. “HF radio traffic from the barge, sir, “
Lubu said, relaying a report from his Radio section. “They may be
contacting headquarters.” Contacting headquarters? There was no reason
for the people on the drilling platform to do anything other than
dismantle. And to do it immediately. Yin shook his head in disbelief.
And anger. China had been forced to cede an island chain that was
rightly theirs, forced to set up a neutral zone and allow free
navigation in the area, only to have it thrown back in their faces. The
arrogance! “This is unacceptable!” Yin spat. “Any idiot knows this is
Chinese territory, whether this is called neutral territory or not. How
dare they “We can relay a message to Headquarters and report the
violation, sir. Yin bristled. “This is not a mere violation, Lubu. This
is an act of aggression! They know full well that the neutral zone is
off-limits to all commercial activity, and that includes salvage
operations-if indeed that is what they are really doing. This task
force will not sit idly by while these bastards ignore international law
and challenge my authority.” Lubu had not seen his Admiral this angry in
a very long time. “Sir, if we are seriously considering an armed
response, perhaps Headquarters… Admiral Yin cut him off. “These
people aren’t worth the aggravation of an explanation. Have you
forgotten that I’m in charge of this area? It is my responsibility to
protect our territory.” Yin shook his head angrily. “The brazenness of
this is what’s so astounding to me. Don’t they remember history? Hasn’t
there been enough of their blood shed over these islands? Have they
gone senile? Well, let’s remind them of the full power of this force.”
Yin turned to Lubu. “Captain, relay to Captain Han on Wenshan: ‘You are
ordered to move within one thousand meters of the platform so as to
provide sufficient lighting and covering fire from your deck guns, then
dispatch a boarding crew to take the captain, officers, and other
personnel on board the derrick into custody. After the crew is removed
from the barge, you will destroy the entire facility with heavy gunfire.
‘To Xingyi: have them move closer and be ready to assist. To the rest
of this task group: ‘go to general quarters.” Relay the messages and
execute.”
“Number-one launch is manned and ready, sir, ” the officer 0f( the deck
reported. “The chief reports davits for launch number three are fouled;
he recommends switching to launch four.”
“So ordered. I want that launch freed up as soon as possible. Have
other launches checked and report status to me immediately.” Han wasn’t
going to say why-he was afraid they might need the damned launches for
themselves. A few minutes later, with the ~nshan barely maintaining a
close and comfortable position away from Phu Qui Island, the motor
launches were lowered overboard. Each wooden launch, forty feet long
and eight feet wide, carried a crew of three and eight sailors armed
with AK-47 look-alike Type 56 rifles and sidearms. The launches were
only a few dozen meters away from the Wenshan when the world seemed to
explode for Admiral Yin, Captain Han, Captain Lubu, and the rest of the
task force. The engines on the Wenshan had been racing back and forth in
response to the helmsman’s attempts to hold the ship’s position steady.
Han had been watching the number-four motor launch moving away from the
ship and did not hear his crewman’s warning: “Shoal water! Depth three
meters . . depth two meters… depth under the keel decreasing.” From
the barges on Phu Qui Island, bullets began pelting the starboard side
of the Wenshan as the crewman aboard the oil-derrick barges fired on the
approaching launches and at the Wenshan itself. Captain Han had not
heard the shoal-water warning. He ran back into the bridge. “Radio to
Hong Lung, we are under fire from the oil barges. “Captain, depth under
the keel…!” Suddenly the Wenshan was pushed laterally toward the
island and struck a coral outcropping surrounding Phu Qui Island. The
patrol boat heeled sharply to starboard, the sudden, crunching stop
flinging every crewman on the bridge off his feet. The gusting winds
only served to push the Wenshan harder against the coral, and although
the brittle calcium formations gave way immediately under the
four-hundred-ton ship, the sound of straining steel combined with the
howling winds and the cries of the surprised crewmen made it seem like
the end of the world was at hand. The officer of the deck had raised his
headset microphone to his lips and shouted, “Comm, bridge, relay to Hong
Lung, we are under fire, we are under fire.. .” Then amid the tearing
and crunching sounds: “We have hit the reef, we have hit the reef.” But
the message transmitted to the rest of the task force group by the
startled and terrified radioman was, Wenshan to Hong Lung, we are under
fire. . . we have been hit.” ABOARD THE FLAGSHIP HONG LUNG When the
warning from the Wenshan pierced the air in the bridge of the Hong Lung,
Admiral Yin spun on his heels to Captain Lubu and shouted, “Order
Wenshan and Xingyi to open fire, full missile and gun salvo.” Lubu
wasn’t going to question this order-he had been fearing just such an
occurrence. He quickly relayed the command to his officer of the deck.
Seconds later the stormy night sky erupted with flashes of light and
streaks of fire off in the distance. Using their sophisticated Round
Ball fire-control radar, the fast attack craft Kingyi had maintained a
continuous attack solution on the barges with their Fei Lung-7
surface-to-surface missiles. As soon as the warning cry had been issued
by Captain Han on Wenshan, Captain Miliyan on Xingyi had ordered all
missiles and guns made ready for action. When he received the message
from Admiral Yin, the Fei Lung guided missiles were in the air. The
Flying Dragon missiles received initial course guidance from the Round
Ball targeting radar, and a small booster engine ignited that punched
the twenty.two-hundred-pound missile out of its storage canister. After
flying a hundred yards away from the ship, the big second-stage
sustainer motor kicked on, accelerating the missile to Mach one. A
radar altimeter kept the missile precisely at one hundred feet above the
choppy waters until it hit the easternmost barge and exploded six
seconds after launch. The pointed titanium armor-piercing warhead
section thruster cap of the Fei Lung missile allowed the missile to
drive through the thin steel hull of the outermost barge before
detonating the warhead. The four-hundred-pound high-explosive warhead
created a massive firestorm all across the Philippine oil platform,
spraying red-hot chunks of metal and propellant for hundreds of yards in
every direction. A wall of fire caused by a wave of burning petroleum
washed across Phu Qui Island, swirling into an inverted tornado that
defied the late summer rains and stabbed skyward. Captain Han watched
the spectacular firestorm that was once a Philippine oil derrick for
several moments until he realized that the Wenshan had returned to an
even keel and that the forward 76-millimeter gun had opened fire on the
platform, pounding the mountain of flames with twenty kilogram
radar-guided shells. “Cease fire!” Han shouted at his officer of the
deck, who was staring in rapt fascination out the forward windshield at
the maelstrom. “Cease fire!” he repeated before the forward 76 was
silent. “Helm! Move us out to two kilometers from the island. Signal
the motor launches and the Hong Lung that we are maneuvering out of
shoal water.” As Wenshan eased away from the huge fires still raging on
the Philippine oil barges, Xingyi launched two more missiles at the
barge until Admiral Yin on the Hong Lung ordered him to stop. One Fei
Lung missile was quite enough to suppress any hostile fire from the
small oil facility, and two missiles would have completely destroyed
it-four missiles, half the Xingyi ‘s load, could devastate an aircraft
carrier. Admiral Yin’s intent was clear-he wanted no one alive on that
platform. “Seven, this is the Dragon, ” the radio message began.
“Recover your boarding parties and rejoin the group. Over.” Captain Han
picked up the radio microphone himself. “I copy, Dragon, ” Han replied.
“I recommend that one of my motor launches search for survivors. Over.”
“Request denied, Seven, ” came the reply. “Dragon Leader orders all
Dragon units to withdraw.” One hour later, all traces of the Philippine
oil derrick and barges were swept away in the rising tide of the
windswept South China Sea currents. Except for a few pieces of pipe and
half-burned bodies, the oil platform had ceased to exist. MALACANANG
PALACE, MANILA, THE PHILIPPINES THURSDAY, 9 JUNE 1994, 0602 HOURS LOCAL
Since the Marcos years, the official residence of the Philippine
President, Malacanang Palace, had undergone a major transformation.
Concerned for his security, Marcos had transformed the graceful
eighteenth-century Spanish colonial mansion into an ugly fortress-he had
blocked most of the windows and replaced stained glass and crystal with
steel or reinforced bulletproof glass. Wishing to distance her
government from the dictatorial excesses of the Marcos regime, Corazon
Aquino had chosen to live in the less pretentious Guest House and had
turned the palace into a museum of shame, where citizens and tourists
could gape in wonder at Marcos’ underground bunker-some called it his
“torture chambers”-and Imelda’s cavernous bedroom, stratospheric canopy
bed; her infamous shoe closets and her bulletproof brassiere. The new
President of the Philippines, seventy-year-old Arturo Mikaso, changed
the Malacanang Palace back into a historical landmark that his people
could be proud of, as well as a livable residence for himself and a
workable office complex 46ions of Malacanang Palace were now open for
tours when they were not in use by the President. In time the palace
again became a symbol for the city of Manila itself. But now, in the
growing summer dawn, the palace was the scene of a hastily arranged
meeting of the President’s Cabinet. In Mikaso’s residential office,
where the President could see the Pasig River that wound through
northern Manila, President Mikaso sipped a cup of tea. Mikaso was the
elder statesman, a white-haired man who was taller and more
powerful-looking than most Filipinos, a wealthy landowner and ex-senator
who was immensely popular with most of his people. Mikaso had been
elected as President of the nation when Corazon Aquino’s second
four-year term came to an end. He won the election only after forming
an alliance with the National Democratic Front, the main political organ
of the Communist Party of the Philippines; and the Moro National
Liberation Front, a pro-Islamic political group that represented the
thousands of citizens of the Islamic faith in the south Philippines.
“How many were killed, General?” Mikaso asked. “Thirty men, all
civilians, ” the Chief of Staff of the New Philippine Army, General
Roberto La Loma Santos, replied somberly. “Their barge came under full
attack by a Red Chinese patrol. No orders to surrender, no quarter
given, no attempts to offer assistance or rescue the attack. The
bastards attacked, then slinked away like cowardly dogs.” A tall,
dark-haired man, standing alone near the great stone fireplace, turned
toward General Santos. “You have still not explained to us, General, “
Second Vice President J~~e Trujillo Samar said in a deep voice, “what
that barge was doing in the neutral zone, anchored to Pagasa Island. .
“And what are you implying, Samar?” First Vice President Daniel
Teguina, who was seated near the President’s desk, challenged. Teguina
was politically an ally of Samar but ideologically a complete opposite.
Part of the coalition formed during the 1994 elections was the
appointment of forty-one year-old Daniel Teguina. Much younger than
Mikaso, Teguina was not only a vice president, but also the leader of
the Philippine House of Representatives, an ex-military officer,
newspaper publisher, and leader of the National Democratic Front, a
leftist political organization. With General J~~e Trujillo Samarwho
besides being the second vice president was also governor of the newly
formed Commonwealth of Mindanao, which had won the right to form its own
autonomous commonwealth in 1990-these three men formed a fiery coalition
that, although successful in continuing the important post-Marcos
rebuilding process in the Philippines, was stormy and divisive. “Those
were innocent Filipino workers on the barge.. .” said Teguina. Samar
nodded and said, “Who were illegally drilling for oil in the neutral
zone. Did they think the Chinese were going to just sit back and watch
them work?”
“They were not drilling for oil, just taking soundings, ” said Teguina.
“Well, they had no business there, ” Samar insisted. “The Chinese
Navy’s actions were outrageous, but those workers were in clear
violation of the law.”
“You’re a cold bastard, ” Teguina cut in. “Blaming the dead for an act
of aggression “Enough, enough, ” the elderly Mikaso said wearily,
gesturing for the men to stop. “I did not call you here to argue.
Teguina glared at both men. “Well, we can’t just sit back and do
nothing. The Chinese just launched a major act of aggression. We must
do something. We must-“
“Enough, ” Mikaso interrupted. “We must begin an investigation and find
out exactly why that barge was operating in those waters, then. “Sir, I
recommend that we also step up patrols in the Spratly Island area, “
General Santos said. “This may be a prelude to a full-scale invasion of
the Spratlys by the Chinese.”
“Risky, ” Samar concluded. “A naval response would be seen as
provocative, and we have no way of winning any conflict with the
People’s Liberation Navy. We would gain nothing… “Always the general,
eh, Samar?” Teguina asked derisively. He turned away from him to the
President. “I agree with General Santos. We have a navy, however
small-I say to send them to protect our interests in the Spratlys. We
have an obligation to our people to do nothing short of that.” Arturo
Mikaso looked at each of his advisers in turn and nodded in agreement.
Little did he realize the extraordinary chain of events he was about to
set into motion with that slight nod of his head. OVER NEW MEXICO, 100
MILES SOUTH OF ALBUQUERQUE 9 JUNE 1994, 0745 HOURS LOCAL with his boyish
face, long, gangly arms and legs, his baseball cap, and his
thirty-two-ounce squeeze bottle of Pepsi-Cola-he drank five such bottles
a day yet was still as skinny as a rail-Jonathan Colin Masters resembled
a kid at a Saturday afternoon ball game. He had bright-green eyes and
short brown hair-luckily, the baseball cap hid Masters’ hair, or else
his stubborn cowlicks would have made him appear even younger, almost
adolescent, to the range officers and technicians standing nearby.
Masters, his assistants and technicians, and a handful of Air Force and
Defense Advanced Research and Projects Agency (DARPA) officials were on
board a converted DC-10 airliner, forty-five thousand feet over the
White Sands Missile Test Range in south-central New Mexico. Unlike the
military and Pentagon officials, who were poring over checklists, notes,
and schematics, Masters had his feet up on a raised track in the cargo
section of the massive airliner, sipping his cola and smiling like a kid
who was at the circus for the first time. “The winds are kicking up
again, Doctor Masters, ” U.S. Air Force Colonel Ralph Foch said to
Masters, his voice one of concern. Masters wordlessly tipped his soda
bottle at the Air Force range safety officer and reached to his control
console, punched in instructions to the computer, and studied the
screen. “Carrier aircraft has compensated for the winds, and ALARM has
acknowledged the change, ” Masters reported. “We got it covered,
Ralph.” Colonel Ralph Foch wasn’t mollified, and being called “Ralph” by
a man-no, a kid-twenty years his junior didn’t help. “The
one-hundred-millibar wind patterns are approaching the second-stage ‘Q’
limits, Doctor, ” Foch said irritably. “That’s the third increase over
the forecast we’ve seen in the past two hours. We should consider
aborting the flight.” Masters glanced over his shoulder at Foch and
smiled a dimpled, toothy smile. “ALARM compensated OK, Ralph, ” Masters
repeated. “No need to abort.”
“But we’re on the edge of the envelope as it is, ” Colonel Foch reminded
him. “The edge of your envelope, Ralph, ” Masters said. He got to his
feet, walked a few steps aft, and patted the nose of a huge,
torpedo-shaped object sitting on its launch rail. “You established your
flight parameters based on data I provided, and you naturally made your
parameters more restrictive. ALARM here knows its limits and it still
says go. So we go. “Doctor Masters, as the range safety officer I’m
here to insure a safe launch for both the ground and the air crews. My
parameters are established to-“
“Colonel Foch, if you want to abort the mission, say the word, ” Masters
said calmly, barely suppressing a casual burp. “The Navy doesn’t get
their relay hookup satellites on the air until tomorrow, you can spend
the night at the Blytheville, Arkansas, Holiday Inn again, and I can
bill DARPA another one hundred thousand dollars for gas. It’s your
decision.”
“I’m merely expressing my concern about the winds at altitude, Doctor
Masters . . “And I replied to your concerns, ” Masters said with a
smile. “My little baby here says it’s a go. Unless we fly somewhere
else to launch, away from the jet stream . . “DARPA is very specific
about the launch area, Doctor. These satellites are important to the
Navy. They want to moni tor the booster’s progress throughout the
flight. The launch must be over the White Sands range. “Fine. Then we
continue to monitor the winds and let the computers do their jobs. If
they can’t properly compensate without going outside the range, we turn
around on the racetrack and try again. If we go outside the launch
window, we abort. Fair enough?” Foch could do nothing but nod in
agreement. This launch was important to both the Navy and Air Force,
and he wasn’t prepared to issue a launch abort unilaterally. The object
called ALARM that Masters so lovingly regarded was the Air Launched
Alert Response Missile; there were two of the huge missiles on board the
DC-10 that morning. ALARM was a four-stage space booster designed to
place up to three-quarter-ton payloads in low-to-medium Earth orbit by
launching the booster from the cargo hold of an aircraft-in effect, the
DC-10 was the ALARM booster’s first stage, with the other three stages
provided by powerful solid-fuel rockets on the missile itself. The ALARM
missile had a long, slender, one-piece wing that swiveled out from its
stowed position along the missile’s fuselage after launch. The wing
would supply lift and increase the effectiveness of the solid rocket
motors while the booster was in the atmosphere, which greatly increased
the power and payload capability of the booster. An ALARM booster could
carry as much as fifteen hundred pounds in its ten-foot-long,
forty-inch-diameter payload bay. On today’s mission, each of Masters’
ALARM boosters carried four small two-hundred-pound communications
satellites, which Jon Masters, in his own inimitable way, called
NIRTSats-“Need It Right This Second” satellites. Unlike more
conventional satellites, which weighed hundreds or even thousands of
pounds, were placed in high geosynchronous orbits almost twenty-three
thousand miles above the Equator, and could carry dozens of
communications channels, NIRTSats were small, lightweight satellites
which carried only a few communications channels and were placed in low,
one-hundred-to-one-thousand-mile orbits. Unlike geosynchronous
satellites, which orbited the Earth once per day and therefore appeared
to be stationary over the Equator, NIRTSats orbited the Earth once every
ninety to three hundred minutes, which meant that usually more than one
satellite had to be launched to cover a particular area. But a NIRTSat
cost less than one-fiftieth the price of a fullsized satellite, and it
cost less to insure and launch as well. Even with a constellation of
four NIRTSats, a customer with a need for satellite communications could
get it for less than one-third the price of buying “air time” on an
existing satellite. A single ALARM booster launch, which cost only ten
million dollars from start to finish, could give a customer instant
global communications capability from anywhere in the world-and it took
only a few days to get the system in place, instead of the months or
even years it took for conventional launches. NIRTSats could be
repositioned anywhere in orbit if requirements changed, and Masters had
even devised a way to recover a NIRTSat intact and reuse it, which saved
the customer even more money. Masters’ customer this day was, as it
usually was, the Department of Defense, which was why all the military
observers were on hand. Masters was to place four NIRTSats in a
four-hundred-mile-high polar orbit over the western Pacific to provide
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