Authors: James W. Huston
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Terrorists, #Political, #General, #Middle East, #Thrillers, #Fighter pilots, #Fiction, #Espionage
“But Syria is a different question altogether. The implication by the Syrian Ambassador is that we have no business responding to terrorism with a declaration of war. The second implication is that they can harbor and protect the terrorists that they feel like protecting with impunity. Even one who has declared war against the United States. They are very wrong about that. They may try to protect him, but they will be unsuccessful. We will come to wherever Sheikh al-Jabar is hiding, with whatever force is necessary to get him. It doesn’t matter to me whether the result is capturing him, or killing him. What does matter is that we seek justice for the people of this country that he has attacked. If Syria stands between us and him that is not our problem. It is not a condition of our making.
“The Ambassador pretended not to know that Sheikh al-Jabar has been operating out of Syria. Such a position is disingenuous in the extreme. The Sheikh is the current head of the Isma’ili sect of the Muslim religion that has been operating in eastern Syria for hundreds of years. The Assassins, as they are known, have been known to reside in Syria for hundreds of years. To now claim that this particular group of Assassins is unknown to Syria is ridiculous.
“He also knows that the Syrian government has done nothing to limit or stop Sheikh al-Jabar from operating from Syrian territory.
“For Syria to assert these positions on the argument that a U.S. Naval officer was meeting with an Israeli intelligence agent to concoct a scheme for joint operations is outrageous. Navy Lieutenant Tony Vialli had simply fallen for a pretty woman, and had gone to visit her in Israel. That is well known. He was in the wrong place at the wrong time. If she was an Israeli intelligence agent, that is news to me, and I’m sure would have been news to him as well.
“He was told, and other officers aboard the ship from which he operated were told, that she was a schoolteacher. It is my understanding that she was going to Tel Aviv to interview with El Al airlines. That has been confirmed to us by the airline itself.
“Syria still claims that United States Navy fighters off the USS
George Washington
accompanied the Israeli Air Force on a strike into Lebanon. That is false. It is wrong, malicious, and false. The missile they showed to the world as proof was in fact sold to Israel years ago. They know that.”
President Garrett paused and looked at the camera with an intense stare. “What matters now is that terrorists operating from Syria continue to murder Americans. In fact, he seems to have raised the ante with his most recent bloody attacks on innocent civilians. We will raise the ante too. If it means sending American ground troops into Syria or Lebanon, or wherever he is to be found, we will do that. If countries are concerned about American troops landing in their territory, then they should get Sheikh al-Jabar out of their country. It’s as simple as that.”
The President looked at his audience, and said coldly, “If that makes Syria unhappy, that’s fine. This war is not about happiness, it’s about justice and retribution. We will not be stopped.”
Woods didn’t have much time to do what he wanted to do. He also wasn’t sure how to do it. He first had to convince his Squadron Commander, then the Air Wing Commander, then the Admiral, then the Chief of Naval Operations in the Joint Chiefs, that an F-14 off the
Washington
should be the one to drive a knife through the Sheikh’s heart. All in due time. First he had to figure out if it could be done. The Gunner was working on getting the bomb. Woods didn’t think he’d pull that off, but on the off chance that he did, they had to hit the target. Dead on. No near misses. This was one shot only.
The thing that worried him, other than going into Iran itself and the distance involved, was how to laser designate the hit point. He knew Wink would be fine and that they would hit whatever they had their laser designator on. But to penetrate into the Sheikh’s quarters they would have to hit the sweet spot. And they didn’t know where that was. Woods had reread the message about locating the Sheikh. The message had hidden implications. There was only one way they could know for a fact that the Sheikh was there. Someone was there. On the ground. Woods turned back and headed directly toward CVIC. He had to find out.
He looked around for Pritch. He saw her in the corner studying the charts. “How do we
know
he’s there?”
Pritch looked up from her work and smiled at him. “Nice to see you too, Lieutenant. I’m fine, thanks.”
“How do we
know
?” Woods repeated.
Pritch wanted to help. She had begun to identify with Woods. She wanted to tell him everything she knew, but she couldn’t. “I can’t tell you.”
“Why not?”
“It’s classified.”
“I’m cleared.”
“No, you’re not.”
“I’ve had a Secret clearance since I joined the Navy.”
“You and every other officer in the Navy, sir.”
“I had Top Secret at Topgun.”
“
Top
Secret doesn’t do anything, Trey. This is
code
word. SCI.”
Special Compartmentalized Information. A clearance wasn’t good enough. You had to have a need to know, and only then were you “read-in” to the project and given the code word of the program. He pressed on, calculating other directions through which to get the same information. He lowered his voice. “Do we have somebody on the ground? Some snake-eater?”
Pritch resisted. “Even if we did, if it’s compartmentalized, I couldn’t tell you about it.”
Woods’s frustration got the better of him. “How the hell am I supposed to fly a mission into Iran if you won’t tell me the source of our information? How do I know whether to trust the information or not?”
“You’re supposed to trust me.”
Woods paused. He realized he actually did trust her. It was the rest of the world of intelligence he didn’t trust. “You have any idea how many people have been killed by relying on intelligence reports? You realize what a total failure intelligence usually represents?”
Pritch winced. “No. Maybe you shouldn’t worry about it.”
“I’m not going to be one more sad memory who relied on intelligence and was killed for it.”
Pritch remembered his notebook. “How do you see yourself being killed because I won’t tell you the source of the information?”
“Because I’m going after the Sheikh, either by myself or with a small strike force. If I don’t know whether your information on his location is any good, I may be doing something too dangerous to be worth the risk. Maybe I’ll let somebody else be the hero.” He was torn. “He may not be there at all.”
“He’s there.”
“How do we
know
?”
“We just do.” She could see his frustration.
“So why don’t I get to know how we know that?”
“Because you might get shot down.”
Woods hesitated. That was why he and every other Naval aviator had gone to SERE school — Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape. There they’d taught you how to be a prisoner of war, how to resist giving away any information, but always knowing that if in fact you encountered dedicated torturers, they
would
get the information from you at some point. He lowered his voice and looked directly into her eyes. “I still have to know. It’s critical to the mission.”
She was startled. “Why?” she asked as an aircraft flew down the catapult over CVIC, causing the ship to shudder. Neither of them noticed.
“The best way to penetrate this target . . . would be to have someone on the ground designating the exact impact point with a handheld laser designator. Otherwise, we are more likely to miss the impact point then hit it, because it won’t be obvious from IR. Just another point in the dirt.” He studied her face for any sign of the answer. “So do we?”
“I can’t say.”
“This is ridiculous!”
“I just can’t.”
Her answer caused him more concern. “What do you mean, can’t?”
“That’s all I’m going to say.” She considered. “You want someone on the ground to lase the target.”
“Yeah. Exactly.”
“I’ll ask.”
“Ask who?”
“The people that I have to ask.”
“This is nuts! Speak English! Can it be done?”
“I don’t know. I’ll ask.”
“How are you going to do that?”
“By sending a back channel message.”
“One of those Top Secret messages. The ones I don’t get to see.”
“You make it sound sinister.”
“No, it’s just stupid.” He was growing tired of the resistance he met at every turn. What was supposed to be a team too often felt like a series of bureaucracies. “I need a yes or no.”
“I’ll find out, Trey. Trust me, for a change.”
Kinkaid stood by his STU-III telephone waiting for Efraim to return his call. The rest of the task force continued to work furiously. The latest bold murders had increased the already frenetic focus of the members of the task fore. Outrage permeated every move and thought. Their progress, though, was still halting and uncertain. The Snapshot Teams had seen no other activity near American embassies since the one in Morocco. That didn’t surprise Kinkaid. He knew that the odds of an embassy being attacked directly were low. Even the people they had seen were probably only casing the embassy to observe its personnel.
The STU-III rang at exactly the appointed minute. Kinkaid glanced at the other members of the task force who listened on the special speaker he had rigged to the phone. He wanted them all in on this momentous phone call. “Good morning, Efraim,” Kinkaid said. “How are things?”
“We are enjoying watching the United States attack our common enemy. It is the joy that you have been experiencing for years. When Israel attacked your enemies.”
Sami’s face showed his general disagreement.
Kinkaid spoke while looking at Sami. “Sometimes, but often they are not our direct enemies.”
“Oh, yes, they are. You misunderstand how closely tied our interests are.”
“I have something else in mind to talk you about today. Do you have time to discuss it?”
“I always have time for you, my friend.”
“Your man on the ground.”
“I do not know what you mean.”
“At Alamut.”
Efraim hesitated. “That is a very sensitive matter. I regret having told you about it.”
“I don’t think you do. I think you wanted me to know about him.”
“What is your question?”
“I told you we would act. You didn’t believe me.”
“You are going to strike?” Efraim asked, surprised.
“Yes.”
“What is the plan?”
“I’ve been asked to present a question to you.”
“This discussion should perhaps be between others, at a higher level.”
“The higher levels have asked me to ask
you
directly.”
“What is the question?”
“Does the person on the ground have the ability to do laser illumination on the target?”
“You ask too much. If I say yes, you will ask if he would laser designate for your strike.”
“Of course.”
“Then we would be working for you. In your war.”
“Exactly. You told me not to ask about our pilots doing your bidding before. Maybe it is time to return the favor.”
“If in fact such a thing happened . . . perhaps
letting
them go
was
the favor. We don’t need the help of the United States, or of a Navy Lieutenant who is avenging the death of his friend who was only chasing a woman. Do not insult us.”
Kinkaid hadn’t anticipated Efraim’s response. He had no leverage to bring to bear. He waited. The line hummed quietly. The entire room of Americans stared at the speaker on the table, waiting.
Efraim finally spoke. “Perhaps it could be done.”
“Will you?”
“Ah. We get to the ultimate issue. I’m afraid it is beyond my ability to offer. I would need to ask others. It could only happen once, if at all.”
“I assumed he was well hidden.”
“No one is undiscoverable.”
“Efraim, I need to hear back from you immediately. Our aircraft can do it by themselves, but the precision required in this mission would benefit greatly from someone on the ground. If you can’t do it, let me know. We may drop in one of our own people to do it.”
“I would recommend in the strongest possible terms that you not do that. It could compromise your mission and ours.”
“The Navy has its own people who could be there in less than twenty-four hours—”
“Yes. Your DEVGROUP, I suppose. Do not do this.”
Kinkaid smiled at the others in the task force. “Then make it so I don’t have to.”
“We will see.”
“I need to hear back from you in less than an hour. If you’re not willing to help, we’ll be launching our own people immediately, but even that will not be ideal. They don’t know what’s inside the hill. Now, if you’re willing to share a diagram with—”
“I will let you know as soon as I know.”
“Thank you, Efraim.”
“I haven’t said that I am willing to help. You are beginning to make me regret I said anything to you.”
“You will not regret it in the long run.”
“I will call. And, Joseph, please make sure your Turk knows none of this. It cannot get into the wrong hands.”
Kinkaid glanced at Sami, who sat with his hand over his chin, listening to every word. “I will await your call.”
The line went dead and Kinkaid put the receiver back on its cradle. He looked at the room full of CIA officers.
Cunningham spoke. “They owe us. Ricketts.”
Kinkaid nodded. “Efraim will remember him later.”
“We’re still just doing their dirty work,” Sami said.
“How?” Kinkaid asked, exasperated.
“Maybe they want us to go after him in Iran because they couldn’t. They’ve
known
about him. Who knows, maybe for years. They failed to take him out, which they wouldn’t hesitate to do, if they
could
have. They tried in Lebanon, and missed again. Maybe rather than attack the Sheikh in his fortified positions, they just lateraled the whole thing to us.” Sami played with the blank notepad in front of him. “This whole reluctance to let us use an agent on the ground to laser the target? I don’t buy it. They’ll do it. Guaranteed. It was the plan all along. If we called, they’d be there for the final stroke. I think their guy is on the ground for this very purpose. Always has been. You’ll see,” Sami said, standing. He leaned against the wall and put his hands in his pockets defensively. They were all listening. “They got to where we are now, except they thought it through first. Instead of just bombing the fortresses to dust, they realized they’d never get it done. They knew they couldn’t penetrate this guy’s cave. They don’t have the GBU-28. They don’t have the weapon. But we do.”