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Authors: Thomas A. Mays

BOOK: A Sword Into Darkness
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But that did not stop Senior Chief David Edwards from adding his own sidebar to the jumbled mess.  “‘DDM’, Weps.  What the hell does that mean?”

“I have no idea, Senior.”  Nathan keyed his mike.  “Strike, TAO.  Lines 29 through 32 complete.”  He flipped the page of his StealthHawk launch checklist.

Across the space, and in his ear, Nathan heard the young Strike Officer respond, “Strike, aye.  Five minutes until primary package launch.”  The CIC was one of the largest non-engineering spaces within
Rivero
.  Fitted out with the standard light blue and gray bulkheads, a multitude of pipes and cableways leapfrogging one another through the overhead, and dark gray false decking, the space’s most striking features were the tightly packed ranks of bulky, militarized computer consoles through which the combat watchstanders interacted with the destroyer’s weapon systems and the world outside the ship.  The dim lighting left only the monitors and large screen displays to provide their ghostly illumination upon the grim faces of the sailors, who were all dressed in either coveralls or Navy digital-patterned camouflage utilities.  Each person was identically bundled in a thick blue jacket as proof against the cold, conditioned air, the temperature at which the combat computer system worked most efficiently.

Senior Chief Edwards, Nathan’s Combat Systems Coordinator, punched a few keys on his console, updated his own checklist and then turned back toward his TAO.  “It’s gotta mean something if they’re going to go to all the trouble of re-designating every one of the
Zumwalt
s.  DDM … Dreadnought Destroyer Miniature?”

Nathan shook his head.  Edwards was too damn cheerful to get mad at, and he knew the Senior Chief’s off-topic question was a ploy to keep Nathan from considering any of the ethical ambiguities associated with launching strikes into North Korea.  “We’re 600 feet long, Senior.  That’s not so miniature.  I think it stands for multi-mission destroyer, since we do so much more than just shoot guided missiles.  Apparently DDG no longer suffices.”

“I think some admiral just wanted himself another star, so he makes a Navy-wide change that doesn’t actually change anything.  It’s just another example of our grand traditions, sir.  Dreaded Destructive Marsupial?”

Nathan grinned at that.  “How about Devilish Dancehall Morons?”

Edwards’ own smile broadened and he nodded.  “Daffy Duckish Militants?”

Nathan’s sudden, barking laugh caused everyone in CIC to look around.  He and the Senior Chief instantly became engrossed in their checklists and displays, each turning a different shade of red.  All eyes soon turned back to their own consoles in the darkened space, and the two top surface warriors in CIC devolved into a fit of restrained giggles.

Their reverie was broken by the Captain’s sobering voice on the net.  “TAO, Captain.  Batteries release.”

“TAO, aye.  Combat, TAO.  We have batteries release.  Shifting forward and aft VLS to launch.  Break, Strike.”  Nathan reached up and turned the rarely-seen launcher keys from Standby to Launch.  A fresh wave of butterflies hit his stomach.  Some were no doubt due to the concern he had over what their missiles would do when they reached their targets in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Would their missiles be effective?  How many innocent lives, “collateral”, would be lost?  How would China respond?  Would the strikes give the newly aggressive North Korea pause and make them pull back out from the DMZ, or would they drive them to use any nukes that escaped destruction?

Aside from the larger, national concerns, most of his worry was about more mundane things.  He worried about his men and women.  Would all their training and preparation pay off?  Would they become the tip of the sword they yearned to be?  Would they be able to hold their heads high when they remembered the destruction they had wrought?

Ensign Blake sounded even younger than his short 23 years.  “Strike, aye.  Launchers show ready.  StealthHawks one through thirty are green for primary package launch.  StealthHawks thirty-one through forty-five are green for backup launch.  Primary package launch in thirty seconds.”

“TAO, aye.”  All was quiet throughout the ship, sailors from the Commanding Officer to the junior engineering security rover holding their breath without realizing it.  Fifteen seconds later, the VLS sirens sounded, their high-pitched wail at a volume that would drive any foolhardy sailor either back inside the ship or over the side.  Ten seconds after that, the first pair of Vertical Launch System hatches opened up, the forward-most cells on the port and starboard sides of the ship.

Five seconds later, at precisely 1900 local, twin blooms of fire boiled upward out of the VLS exhaust, casting the young night back into day.  The sharp roar of the rocket motors could be heard throughout the ship, and Nathan could feel the white noise through the soles of his boots.  Instants after, a pair of dark shapes slid up as one from the open hatches, leaping into the sky on columns of liquid flame.  The missiles screamed higher and higher, twin stars whose radiance was quickly lost on the waters below.  Their fiery trajectories tipped over, arcing toward the distant, unseen land.  Seconds after going horizontal, the rockets burned out and broke apart, their thick cylindrical tails falling away while smaller, sleeker shapes jetted forward on much more modest tongues of fire.

Then the departing StealthHawks were lost from view as another pair of VLS hatches sprang open, disgorging another pair of missiles in nearly identical fashion.  The gray on black contrail of this twosome angled slightly off from the first pair, seeking fresh air through which to climb, and new gaps in the armor that was the North Korean air defense net.  In the distance, flares of light could be seen from other ships:  destroyers, cruisers, and submerged submarines, the world’s last blue water navy projecting the power that had always proved so decisive in the past.

Aboard
USS
Rivero
, the process was repeated thirteen more times in the next six and a half minutes, until there was nothing left but the final hush of closing VLS hatches, the lap of the waves, and the muted whine of her gas turbines.  The dull haze gray sides of the ship were now blackened in spots from the toxic, acidic fires of the StealthHawks’ solid rocket boosters, but even that was lost in the smoky gloom of night on the open sea.  The sudden fury had gone and peace settled over the water once again.

“TAO, Strike.  All missiles have transitioned to cruise, datalink sat, crypto sat.  StealthHawks one through thirty handed off to Strike East.  No backup missions for ownship.  Request permission to spin down StealthHawks thirty-one through forty-five and secure from Condition Two Strike.”

“Strike, TAO.  Roger.  Forward and aft VLS placed in Standby.  Spin down all remaining birds and conduct post-fire checks.  Secure from Condition Two Strike with exception of key watchstanders.”  Nathan blew a slow whistle in relief and pulled his headphones down to the back of his neck.  He turned in his seat and spoke loud enough for all in CIC to hear.  “Good work, people.  The world asks and you deliver.  Now let’s clean up and turn this bitch over.  The near-beer is on me, cigars you can scrounge up your own damn self.”

There were a couple of chuckles, and several grins, but no applause and never a cheer.  You might cheer the defeat of an enemy in combat, but this was strike, not battle.  The targets here were nameless, faceless, and too often innocent of any other crime than being strategically necessary.  They felt pride in a job done well, professionally, but any man who found joy in this work was a man few would care to associate with.

Nathan put his headphones back on and began updating the interminable situation reports in chat.  Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Edwards’ hand sticking out.  Nathan allowed himself a small smile and took the offered hand in a slow, strong shake.  Edwards squinted slightly at him.  “How you doin’, Weps?”

“I’m good, Senior Chief.  It’s the first time I’ve done it for real is all.”

Edwards nodded.  “I’ve shot missiles into Iraq, I’ve shot ‘em into Syria, and I’ve shot ‘em in Iran.  Now I’ve done it in North Korea.  I’m hoping to get a matched set of ‘Axis of Evil’ commemorative plates for the ‘I Love Me’ wall at home, but that would probably be in poor taste.”

Nathan just shook his head.  The older enlisted man knew exactly which buttons to push on his department head in order to interrupt his spiraling chain of thoughts.  Nathan punched a few buttons of his own and took a look at the air picture on his console.  Where before there had been only a few commercial airliners moving down their precise air corridors, there were now literally hundreds of individual beaconed tracks blossoming, radiating out from the Surface Strike Group and the Carrier Strike Group.

At first one by one, and then by the dozens, the low-flying contacts disappeared, as they shut off their ID beacons and passed below the SPY-3 radar’s horizon.  Within twenty minutes they would all be gone, and all the ships would have to show for their end of the offensive against North Korea would be a bunch of empty STLAM canisters.  The strikes would continue for days, but with Coalition Air Force bombers and naval aviation in the lead, winding up with what was hoped would be a very limited ground push to secure South Korea’s border and take out the North’s ability to threaten them further.  Either way, from this point on the wet Navy was largely relegated to a supporting role, there being no real opposing navy to engage.

“TAO, Bridge.  The Skipper’s on his way down to Combat.  Good shooting, Weps.”

Nathan half stood in front of his console and stretched.  “Roger that, Bridge.  You might want to have your Quartermaster update PIM.  We’ll be leaving the launch baskets pretty soon and rejoining formation to screen the ESG.  Work with the CIC Watch Supe and give me your best bet so I can info the Old Man.”

“Bridge, aye.  Already on it, sir.”

Nathan settled back down to his seat and began reading his own post-fire checklist when a shrill voice on his tactical net almost popped his eardrum.  “All stations, Sonar!  I have two passive broadband contacts with matching narrowband tonals off the bow and starboard bow, bearing 263 and 340.  No corresponding surface tracks on those lines of bearing.  Evaluate both as possible sub, confidence high!  Request permission to go active.”

Two acoustic lines of bearing speared out from the circle on the display that represented the
Rivero
, one to the west and one toward the north.  Nathan’s mind spun and everyone returned to their consoles, punching keys and bringing up displays.  He shook his head in dismay.  They had sanitized this area for three days prior to beginning the strike package, for the sole purpose of ensuring that something like this would not happen.  And it had.  “Sonar, TAO.  Go active and stand by on countermeasure activation.  Break, Surface, TAO.  Inform Victor Zulu and request ASW pouncer from
Chafee
.  Break, Bridge, TAO.  Set flight quarters for Firescout launch and come up to full power.  Set Condition Two AS Gold.”

The acknowledgements came, and announcements issued from the speaker over his head and all around the ship.  CIC, which had just begun to wind down, became a flurry of activity as the strike technicians going off watch jockeyed for seating with those anti-submarine warfare watchstanders taking over.  Back aft, the hangar doors folded upward and sailors in blue/white/gray digi-cammies and brightly colored flight deck jerseys rolled out and prepared a small helicopter UAV for launch.  The Firescout-II itself was nearly dwarfed by the pair of sonobouy launchers and the single mini torpedo it mounted.  Amidships, the muted whine of the destroyer’s gas turbines changed in pitch as another pair of Rolls Royce engines came online, ready to propel the
Rivero
’s electric drive to her full 35+ knots.

Back in CIC, Nathan was forced to wait in the dark as status reports rolled in, praying the whole time that it was a false alarm.  Submariners liked to kid surface warriors that there were two kinds of ships in the world:  submarines and targets.  On any normal day, Nathan would dispute that.  The Navy had let their ASW know-how atrophy for decades, but the last 12 years had seen a resurgence of anti-submarine pride.  He would have bet that the
Rivero
and her destroyer squadron could hunt subs almost as well as another submarine or a P-8 Maritime Patrol Aircraft squadron, given enough warning.  But having a pair of hostile subs show up in your back yard without the usual aviation screen, tracking data, or defense in depth was a recipe for disaster.  Destroyer sailors knew that anytime you seriously contemplated using the short-range, ship mounted torpedo tubes, you had already failed the ASW problem.

“TAO, ASWE.  I’m online, conferring with Sonar and going active.  Port and starboard mounts are trained to forty-five degrees offset, torpedo firing checks in progress.  Firescout launch in about seven minutes.”  That was LTJG Calhoun, the ship’s ASW Officer.  There was no telling where he had been, but he was alert and on the job now.

“TAO, aye.”  A figure appeared off to one side of Nathan’s elbow without a sound, causing him to look behind him.  Commander Anthony Jones,
Rivero
’s Commanding Officer, stood behind him, looking over the tactical picture on Nathan’s console and nodding his head.  He caught Nathan’s eye and gestured for him to turn back around.  Nathan did so immediately and continued changing the system data displayed on his status boards.

Captain Jones was a quiet, reserved man who usually liked to let his people do as they trained.  He was not afraid to correct someone and step in when they required it, and the blistering heat of those corrections were not soon forgotten, but he believed in his crew fighting the ship, not himself.  If they all relied upon his decisions before making their own, they would be doomed if he became unavailable.  In Nathan’s case, he was more than happy to leave the Weapons Officer in charge.  For the moment, anyway.

Numerous, disparate flows of information streamed around Nathan, but he stayed atop the flood.  He turned slightly to Senior Chief Edwards at his console.  “How the hell could a pair of subs sneak by us?  We spent three days combing this whole area.”

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