Direct Action - 03 (32 page)

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Authors: Jack Murphy

BOOK: Direct Action - 03
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Russ talked about his family, his wife and their three kids. One was already in college, the other two in High School. They relived a few war stories from the Task Force days in Iraq back when McCoy was the JSOC commander and the Admiral worked under him. Finally, they caught up on the careers and gossip of various other Officers they knew.

When Russ asked for the bill, Jim told him he already took care of it.

They stood up to leave and made their way to the door.

“There is one other thing,” Russ said. He closed the distance and spoke in Jim's ear. “The targets that I have getting killed. Their bodies are usually mutilated. In the same manner. Scalpings, top of the heads shot off, shit like that.”

“Oh yeah?”

“You know anything about that?”

While not widely known, Corbett had been a Dev Group commander back when the unit was first formed. He had been kicked out of the unit after receiving a vote of no confidence from his men. The reason for the no confidence vote was because he had refused to engage in mutually compromising behavior.

“Do I want to know anything about that?” McCoy restated the question as they walked out the door and onto the sidewalk. “Listen, Russ. Sometimes you need bad people to go after other bad people. You know that.”

“This is a little excessive.”

“The only way to get things done in this political climate. The type of people who do this type of work are not like you and me. That is just the reality of sending people on what they know is a suicide mission. But just like the Arabs, they will continue to fight each other and all die in the process. The hell with it.”

Jim patted his old friend on the back.

“It is what it is, Russ. Let me worry about these things, huh?”

“If you say so Jim.”

“I do,” the retired General said as he walked off. “And by the way, watch your ass around those journalists okay? They will be the death of you.”

24

“Deckard!” Nadi shouted. “Deckard, wake up!”

As she shook him, Deckard bolted upright into a sitting position as he was startled awake. He was struggling to catch his breath as if he had just sprinted for a mile.

“Deckard, you're hurting me,” Nadi said as she grabbed his forearm.

It was only then that Deckard realized that he had her wrist in a death grip. He had gripped her so strongly in his sleep that he had left bruises on her.

“You were having a nightmare,” she whispered.

Deckard laid back down and tried to catch his breath.

“What were you dreaming about?”

“I don't know,” Deckard said.

“It's okay, go back to sleep.”

Nadi ran her hand down his chest.

They had several days to themselves now. Bill was talking about putting the entire team on leave for a couple weeks. Then, earlier that night they got an urgent request. A repeat customer, the Kingdom of Bahrain.

Tomorrow it was back to work.

Deckard held Nadi as she drifted off in his arms. He stared at the ceiling until the sun came up.

Liquid Sky hit the ground at Isa Air Base in Bahrain at 9:52PM local time. Two liaison officers from Nerve met them to drive the team to the company's headquarters. Nerve's CEO was the former commander of America's 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment at Ft. Campbell, Kentucky, however the company itself was owned by the UAE. Emiratizing certain functions of private military companies was looked upon favorably by those who gave those companies mandates involving U.S. national security.

The tarmac on Isa Air base was covered with dozens of American F-16 fighter jets, backlit by the golden runway lights. The fighter jets were standing by, just in case something popped off.

The team was driven in two black SUVs heading north on King Hamad highway. Through the night they traveled up the length of the island to Manamah. The island of Bahrain had a population of only 1.2 million but only half of them were actual natives of Bahrain. In addition to hosting U.S. forces in the Isa Air Base, Bahrain was also home to the U.S. 5th Fleet. The strategic importance of the island Kingdom to the United States could not be over emphasized. Then there was the Saudi issue.

As the saying went in Saudi Arabia, “Allah does not see across the bridge.” Taking the causeway across fourteen miles of ocean, Saudis would stop at the liquor stores located on the Bahrain side of the bridge before heading to the discotheques and club life on the island. In Saudi Arabia it wasn't easy for young men to find ways to spend their leisure money, but in Bahrain there was plenty of alcohol, and Russian prostitutes, to be found if you knew where to look.

The Arab Spring had taken Bahrain by storm starting in 2011 and this was a major concern to Saudi Arabia. Like Bahrain, Saudi Arabia was a kingdom, not a democracy. Like Bahrain, Saudi Arabia had a troublesome problem. The Royal family in Saudi Arabia was Sunni and had a Shia minority population on their eastern coast, one that had revolted in the past during the late 1970s and 80s. Bahrain had a Sunni Royal family that ruled over a Shia majority that made up as much as 70% of their country.

When protestors first began taking to the streets and occupying the Pearl roundabout in Manama, the Royal family of Bahrain responded with a crackdown, arresting and even shooting protestors who were demanding liberalization and increased representation in government. Unknown to much of the West, many Shia Muslims in the Middle East suffered under inequities not unlike black Americans had in the United States in the 1950's.

The killing of protestors created even larger protest movements as Shias rallied around the funerals of their dead. The demonstrations grew stronger and stronger. Various camps within the Shia movement demanded not just political reforms, but a revolution that included the removal of Bahrain's Royal family.

Saudi Arabia, perhaps the most medieval and repressive country in the Middle East, knew they had similar issues on the home front with their Shia minority, a minority that lived in squalor and poverty despite the immense oil wealth that the country produced. The Sunni fears in Saudi Arabia were that if the Kingdom of Bahrain fell to the Arab Spring, that the Saudi Royal family would be next on the chopping block.

Sure enough, the protests movement soon spread from Bahrain to the eastern villages of Saudi Arabia. The Saudi Royal family moved to secure their flank by deploying the Saudi National Guard to Bahrain. Armored personnel carriers and armed troops rolled across the causeway linking the two kingdoms to help Bahrain repress the protestors as the movement continued to gain steam.

With a strict media blackout imposed on Bahrain, and Western media intentionally not reporting on the crack downs because of American oil and defense interests in the region, things seemed to quiet down some. Then, when riot police in Bahrain shot and killed several teenage demonstrators, the entire Shia uprising kicked into high gear once again. In a country of only 600,000 it was estimated that nearly 100,000 were protesting in the streets each night.

The Royal family of Bahrain was teetering on the brink.

Shia protestors might have wanted their freedom, but Saudi Arabia was determined to control their own Shia problem and by extension that of Bahrain. The United States and Britain had geo-strategic interests which overrode the call for democracy. This pointed out the absurdity of the West supporting so-called democracy movements in Libya, Syria, and Egypt, all while suppressing them elsewhere.

This was when Liquid Sky was called in to help deal with the problem.

Their vehicles pulled into a walled compound within the city and parked. The two liaison officers from Nerve then walked them into the office. Liquid Sky knew this was another low visibility operation and wore civilian clothes, but civilian employees scooted to the edge of the hall to let them pass. The six-man and one-woman team made an impression.

The team was brought to a conference room and introduced to a lanky, tall American who wore a dress shirt with the sleeves rolled up and a blue-striped tie.

“Lance Klein, director of special activities,” he said as he took turns shaking each of their hands. Bill took a seat without waiting to be told to.

“What are we looking at Lance?”

“Well, we've got quite a mess on our hands here,” Lance said as he opened his laptop and brought up a map of Bahrain which was projected onto the screen behind him. “We've got belligerents flooding the streets and threatening the Royal family. Our firm has been hired to monitor and do the statistical analysis, which is easy since the belligerents are using Twitter and Facebook to organize. We also have access to private cell phone traffic with the Kingdom's consent but things are getting out of control. The Royal family is scared, which makes the Saudis scared, which makes the United States scared.”

“What does that got to do with us?” Bill said, hurrying to get to the point.

“Listen,” Lance said holding a hand up in front of him to stop Bill for a moment. “Don't tell me anything I don't want to know. The Royal family instructed Nerve to brief a team they have flying in on specifics about individual groups of belligerents in their country. What you do with that information is none of our business.”

Deckard noted the repeated use of the word belligerent rather than protestor, much less pro-democracy protestor.

“Go on.”

“There are three main camps within the belligerents who are staging this public disturbance,” Lance began. Deckard rolled his eyes. “We have the leftist nationalist group Wa'ad, the Islamist group al-Wafiq, and a banned Islamist political party called Wafa. All three have now transitioned from calling for
islah
, or reform, to demanding
isqat
, the fall of the current regime.”

Lance briefly walked them through the key personalities of each of the three groups and where they were located based on Nerve's targeting data, most of it based on cellular intercepts. His analysis was that all three groups were now acting as agents of, or at least under the heavy influence of, the Iranian supported terrorist organization known as Hezbollah. Deckard had no idea if this was true, or if Lance was merely telling his employer what they wanted to hear. The Royal family would no doubt like to paint the protestors as being malevolent agents working at the behest of some foreign power rather than address the real grassroots anger on display against their regime.

“The British maintain some home field advantage here,” Lance continued, “since Bahrain is a former colony. They've been very good about keeping Al-Jeezera where they want them. After helping to oust Mubarak, they've been kept quiet about what is happening here in Bahrain. Much of the police force that is out every night enforcing curfew has come from another former British colony, Pakistan. The British also maintain a strong presence in Bahrain's National Security Agency and we've found that our interests align well with the Brits.

“With things looking bleak out on the streets, the Saudis are sending more of their National Guard to help control the protests, which are turning into riots. The UAE also has a battalion-sized strike team on call if the Royal family decides they need them.

“At the end of the day, we are playing a zero-sum game here. The police go out to crack down on the riots and kill some of the belligerents. This incites them even further, they rally around the funerals in outrage and then return back to the streets with renewed strength. Every one of them that the security forces kill has the effect of recruiting ten more. This cycle has to be broken, and frankly, Bahrain's security and intelligence services are not up to the challenge. They have relied on the United States and other countries for their defense for too long, and in this situation it is politically embarrassing for America to have their ally cracking down on demonstrators who claim to be pro-democracy.

“Providing direct support to Bahrain to help quell this movement is a political impossibility,” Lance finished.

“I guess that is where we come in,” Zach said as he cracked his knuckles.

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