Authors: Nick Cook
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Persian Gulf Region - Fiction, #Technological, #Persian Gulf Region, #Middle East, #Adventure Stories, #Espionage
The colonel ran towards the group of Rangers across the airfield. He found a soldier, stump bleeding from an amputated leg, dragging himself across the concrete to cover. Above the boy's screaming, the detonations, and the pom-pom beat of the Spectre's 40mm gun, he heard his name repeated over and over again, as if someone was working a loudhailer...
âColonel Ulm, sir... Colonel.'
Ulm's eyes snapped open. They looked straight into the face of the pretty female co-pilot who had come back from the flight deck of the C-21. He saw, too, the shock on her face. The same look on the face of his wife whenever she woke him from the dream.
Ulm was drenched in sweat. His face was grey, drawn; and he was shaking.
The captain managed to control her voice. âColonel, we'll be touching down at National in ten minutes. You ought to prepare yourself for the landing.'
He grunted his thanks and watched her move past him to Shabanov.
Ulm looked out of the window and saw the Washington monument pierce the horizon. Los Torrijos had not been his fault and the Air Force knew it. Someone - a punk colonel in the air-tasking office at Southern Command Headquarters in Panama City, he had found out later - had fucked up. But people with influence in Washington had made it clear that it wasn't going to be anyone from Southern Command HQ or the Rangers that paid. The Air Force defended him, but afterwards considered it best he be removed from the limelight. And so it was that he and the 1725th Combat Control Detachment, his Pathfinders, were sent into exile at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico.
Were they giving him a second chance? Was his advice sought over recent developments in the Middle East? After the dream, his mind was too fuzzy around the edges to provide any answers.
The co-pilot slipped back to the flight deck, giving him a strange look as she passed his seat.
Whatever the truth of the matter, there were those who said the Pathfinders had had their chance and blown it.
Confirmation of his worth came on the day USSOCOM told him he had been selected to enter into a secret bilateral exchange programme with Spetsnaz. He was warned against showing the Russians too much. The Romeo Protocol, USSOCOM pointed out, was hatched by politicians who did not understand about the ways of the military.
As the Learjet swept into National airport, Ulm cast a glance back to Shabanov. The Russian's eyes darted eagerly over the sights of the capital. No longer in uniform, Shabanov passed for any other US serviceman heading into DC on legitimate business.
Two bumps through the airframe signalled they were down.
Ulm almost asked the driver if there had been some mistake. After dropping Shabanov at the Soviet Embassy, he had expected the car to swing south for the Pentagon. But instead, they had kept going deeper into the tree-lined suburbs of Washington's north-west district, eventually stopping outside a mundane office building a short distance from the National Zoo.
The driver walked round and opened Ulm's door. Ulm was led across the sidewalk to the building. The entrance hall was cool, its floors and walls lined with dark polished stone tiles. A middle-aged woman, sitting behind a desk against the far wall, looked up as soon as his footsteps rang out across the atrium. Ulm kept walking. It was only when he reached the desk that he realized his escort had gone. He turned to see the limousine pulling into the early morning traffic beyond the double plate glass doors.
Ulm had expected a military facility, but there was not a shred of evidence that a single cent of the DOD's budget had gone near this place. The woman looked at him expectantly. He gave his name.
She smiled again, then filled out a form and handed him a pass, which he clipped to his jacket. Then she lifted the telephone and announced his arrival as if he had been expected for a week. She pointed to the elevator and told him he would be met on the fourth floor. As he turned, Ulm glanced up at the board behind the desk listing the companies in the building. For the fourth floor, there was just one entry: Comco Software Inc.
The lift did not stop at any of the intervening levels. When the doors parted, Ulm was met by a sallow-faced, studious-looking man in his mid-forties.
âColonel Ulm? Welcome to TERCOM. I'm Jacobson.' He offered a delicate hand, which Ulm shook suspiciously. âYou probably have a thousand and one questions, but if you'll be patient a while longer, I promise that you will get your answers. If you'd like to follow me, Colonel.'
Ulm stepped into the corridor and was struck immediately by the absence of natural light. There was an unpleasant artificial odour, and a hum of air-conditioning about the place, too, which exacerbated his growing feeling of isolation.
Jacobson led him into a dim room with a large oak table in its midst. He was offered a seat and accepted a cup of coffee. There were two windows set in the wood-panelled walls, but the blinds were down allowing no early morning light to creep into the room.
Jacobson took a seat opposite Ulm, clasping his styrofoam coffee cup between both hands.
âIt will probably help you to think of me - and this place - as your direct link to every asset this country possesses for the neutralization of the terrorist threat,' Jacobson said. âBy comparison, your General McDonald at USSOCOM is limited in the resources at his disposal. Believe me, Colonel, that there is absolutely nothing I cannot call upon in the pursuit of that goal. You see, we - that is, my colleagues and I - have a mandate from the highest possible authority. General McDonald has therefore temporarily assigned you to us.'
âThat's very impressive, Mr Jacobson,' Ulm said drily. âBut maybe you could start by telling me what I'm doing here.'
âSimple, Colonel. We want you to go after the people who carried out Beirut. We want you to find Ambassador Franklin and bring him and his staff home - alive. And we want the people who perpetrated this deed punished. Is that a mission you feel you are prepared, or able, to undertake, Colonel?'
Ulm battled not to let his feelings show. âThe 1725th is ready for anything,' he said. âBut- ' Ulm looked at Jacobson again and was reminded of one of the Pentagon prosecuting attorneys at his trial. A jumped-up little bureaucrat with a big opinion of himself who was real good at talking and full of ideas about the way things should be done, but pig-ignorant of the realities. Ulm thought he'd like to see Jacobson handling a PDF sniper with a star-scope on a pitch-black night or trying to defuse an Iraqi chemical mine with the fur flying around him. Jacobsons used people as stepping stones through shit to further their ambition.
âYes, Colonel?'
âWhy us? Why not Delta or the SEALs? From what I've seen of this case, it's more their style.'
Jacobson chuckled. âBut there is no provision under the Romeo Protocol for Delta or the SEALs to work with the Soviet Union. You see, you'll be going in with Spetsnaz on this mission.'
Ulm felt his blood run cold. âYou're pulling my chain.'
âNo, I'm not, Colonel. This will be a joint US-Soviet operation.'
âBut everybody knows the Romeo Protocol is a sham,' Ulm said. âGod knows, I've been playing my part, but it was always intimated that we would not have to go into action with them. At least, that's the way SOCOM explained it.'
âWith respect, SOCOM has no idea how deep the shit is around us,' Jacobson said. His expression had changed. He looked like death.
âWhat do you mean?'
âIn simple terms, the Soviets have access to information that is denied to us at this time. They are willing to share it, but the price of admission is a joint operation.'
âIt won't work,' Ulm said adamantly.
âYou said you were ready for anything.'
âOn our own, yes. But the only contact between Spetsnaz and the Pathfinders has been at commander level. As it happens, Colonel Roman Shabanov is with us at the moment.'
âWe know,' Jacobson said, before pausing to take a sip of his coffee. âHave you been watching the news lately, Colonel?'
âOf course.'
âThen you will have seen the items about the disappearance of that boat.'
âSure, but that's public consumption shit, right?'
âWrong. That, I'm sorry to say, is how it is.'
It took a few moments for the impact of Jacobson's statement to sink in. âJesus, Jacobson, what kind of outfit are you running here?'
âI don't like it any better than you,' Jacobson said. His voice never wavered from a dull, impassive monotone. âBut for the past two decades my contemporaries at Langley relied heavily, far too heavily, on sophisticated surveillance methods in the Middle East. Sure, we have space-based radar, infra-red satellites, plus every conceivable ELINT and COMINT platform above the Eastern Med and the Gulf sucking intelligence out of the rawest data you can imagine. Between ourselves and the NSA, we can position a communications or signals intelligence ship off, say, the coast of Libya and listen to Gaddafi talking into a mobile phone from his toilet.'
Ulm sat back in his chair. He felt numb. He let Jacobson's words wash over him.
âI would not have known how to begin looking, however, for a bunch of two-bit terrorists roaming around the Southern Lebanon.'
âWhy not?'
âBecause we've lost the ability to do the one thing we used to do well - Humint. Human Intelligence, Colonel. Having a guy on the ground who does nothing but good old-fashioned cloak and dagger work.
âWhen peace broke out between East and West, the budget resources allocated to the CIA, DIA, and NSA were pared back to record lows. We were trying to re-establish a new network in the Middle East when the finances were pulled from under our feet. Then the Gulf crisis came along. The dollars started flowing back again, but it takes years to get people back in place and we're not there yet.'
Ulm recalled the collapse of their network in Iran, Lebanon, and Syria following the kidnapping of the CIA's Beirut station chief, William Buckley, in 1984. Within a few months, every single operative had been wiped out.
âAnd in the mean time,' Jacobson said, âthe Israelis had stopped helping us because we'd been leaning on Tel Aviv too hard over nuclear proliferation.'
âWhat about the Brits?'
âMI6? You know what the Brits are like. They're good at asking, but they sure as hell don't like sharing it. Basically, though you won't get anyone to admit it, we're blind from the Eastern Mediterranean to the Asian subcontinent.'
âWhich leaves the Soviets,' Ulm said.
The rattle of the air-conditioning system seemed to fill the room.
âPrecisely, Colonel. I should add that we are under some pressure here to make this thing with the Soviets work. Politically speaking, that is.'
Ulm got the hint. It was obvious from its elaborate front that TERCOM received its funding from the Administration's âblack' accounting jar, the source from which most classified programmes obtained their money. As a result, TERCOM was at its master's beck and call.
âAll right, suppose we can make it work,' Ulm said. âWhen would I be briefed about the target?'
âThat is being arranged, Colonel.' Jacobson looked at his watch. âWe have a preliminary briefing scheduled in an hour's time. Until then, why don't I show you around?'
The tour took something less than an hour in the end. Ulm saw everything from the front company that had been created to protect TERCOM from prying eyes - a fully-funded and functional computer software house - to the dark workings of the organization's communications room. Throughout the walk-round he was conscious of Jacobson's mounting agitation. The agent punctuated his talk with frequent references to his wristwatch.
The phone buzzed in the midst of a demonstration of TERCOM's VLF communications suite. Jacobson picked it up and listened intently for a few seconds. He left Ulm alone for less than five minutes, returning to announce that their briefer had arrived.
Ulm followed him along the corridor, conditioning his mind already to expect a whole lot of things he wasn't going to enjoy hearing about what lay ahead.
It was this discipline that undoubtedly saved him from an exclamation of surprise when he re-entered the conference room, for on the other side of the table it was Colonel Roman Shabanov who rose to greet him.
âYou two, of course, know each other,' Jacobson said, a smile thinning his lips. He closed the door behind him with a soft click.
As Shabanov rose from his chair, Ulm couldn't begin to think what the Russian - a mere colonel -was doing with information of the calibre required by TERCOM for a joint operation. Had he been in possession of the salient facts all along, or had he merely collected the information from the embassy as messenger boy for the Kremlin?
Either way, the Russian had been a sleeper, waiting for orders. It was a timely reminder that Spetsnaz was indivisible from the GRU, Soviet Military Intelligence. And however Westernized Shabanov seemed, Spetsnaz always drew its recruits from hard-core communist organizations like the Komsomol and DOSAAF before the fall of the Communists.
Jacobson gestured for Shabanov to take his chair again. With Ulm seated on his left, he took his seat opposite the Russian.
âThe floor's yours, Colonel,' he said. âMake history.'
Shabanov remained unmoved. He raised his eyes from the table and stared straight at Ulm. âI have known about the organization which carried out the hijacking for some time. Let me tell you it has not been easy, Elliot.'
Ulm held the Russian's stare. âWe all have our orders.' Privately, however, he could not shake off an irrational sense of betrayal.
âGeneral Aushev has empowered me to deliver the identity of the terrorists as proof that the Romeo Protocol can succeed. Our motives are not altruistic. The general wishes me to be honest with you. For us, co-operation in the counter-terror field has a very practical purpose. Terrorism inside my country is on the increase. In the past three months, thirteen internal flights have been hijacked. Yet, a few months previously, Russians did not know the meaning of the word. You and your allies have had time to formulate your counter-insurgency doctrine and practices. As I said to you yesterday, Elliot, Spetsnaz can do many things, but we are still learning. There is much you can teach us.'