Jack Ryan 11 - Bear And The Dragon (98 page)

BOOK: Jack Ryan 11 - Bear And The Dragon
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“Yes, what is it?”

“An urgent communication for you, Comrade General,” the voice answered.

“Very well, wait a minute.” Gennady Iosifovich rose and donned a cloth robe, punching on a light as he went to open the door. He grumbled as any man would at the loss of sleep, but generals had to expect this sort of thing. He opened the door without a snarl at the NCO who handed over the telex.

“Urgent, from Moscow,” the sergeant emphasized.

“Da, spasiba,” the general replied, taking it and walking back toward his bed. He sat in the comfortable chair that he usually dumped his tunic on and picked up the reading glasses that he didn't actually need, but which made reading easier in the semidarkness. It was something urgent -- well, urgent enough to wake him up in the middle of the fucking --

“My God,” CINC-FAR EAST breathed to himself, halfway down the cover sheet. Then he flipped it over to read the substance of the report.

In America it would be called a Special National Intelligence Estimate. Bondarenko had seen them before, even helped draft some, but never one like this.

It is believed that there is an imminent danger of war between Russia and the People's Republic of China. The Chinese objective in offensive operations will be to seize the newly-discovered gold and oil deposits in eastern Siberia by rapid mechanized assault north from their border west of Khabarovsk. The leading elements will include the 34th Shock Army, a Type A Group Army...

This intelligence estimate is based upon national intelligence assets with access to the political leaders of the PRC, and the quality of the intelligence is graded “1A,” the report went on, meaning that the SVR regarded it as Holy Writ. Bondarenko hadn't seen that happen very much.

Far East Command is directed to make all preparations to meet and repel such an attack...

“With what?” the general asked the papers in his hand. “With what, comrades?” With that he lifted the bedside phone. “I want my staff together in forty minutes,” he told the sergeant who answered. He would not take the theatrical step of calling a full alert just yet. That would follow his staff meeting. Already his mind was examining the problem. It would continue to do so as he urinated, then shaved, his mind running in small circles, a fact which he recognized but couldn't change, and the fact that he couldn't change it didn't slow the process one small bit. The problem he faced as he scraped the whiskers from his face was not an easy one, perhaps an impossible one, but his four-star rank made it his problem, and he didn't want to be remembered by future Russian military students as the general who'd not been up to the task of defending his country against a foreign invasion. He was here, Bondarenko told himself, because he was the best operational thinker his country had. He'd faced battle before, and comported himself well enough not only to live but to wear his nation's highest decorations for bravery. He'd studied military history his whole life. He'd even spent time with the Americans at their battle laboratory in California, something he lusted to copy and re-create in Russia as the best possible way to prepare soldiers for battle, but which his country couldn't begin to afford for years. He had the knowledge. He had the nerve. What he lacked were the assets. But history was not made by soldiers who had what they needed, but by those who did not. When the soldiers had enough, the political leaders went into the books. Gennady Iosifovich was a soldier, and a Russian soldier. His country was always taken by surprise, because for whatever reason her political leaders didn't ever see war coming, and because of that soldiers had to pay the price. A distant voice told him that at least he wouldn't be shot for failure. Stalin was long dead, and with him the ethos of punishing those whom he had failed to warn or prepare. But Bondarenko didn't listen to that voice. Failure was too bitter an alternative for him to consider while he lived.

 

The Special National Intelligence Estimate made its way to American forces in Europe and the Pacific even more quickly than to Chabarsovil. For Admiral Bartolomeo Vito Mancuso, it came before a scheduled dinner with the governor of Hawaii. His Public Affairs Officer had to knock that one back a few hours while CINCPAC called his staff together.

“Talk to me, Mike,” Mancuso commanded his J-2, BG Michael Lahr.

“Well, it hasn't come totally out of left field, sir,” the theater intelligence coordinator replied. “I don't know anything about the source of the intelligence, but it looks like high-level human intelligence, probably with a political point of origin. CIA says it's highly reliable, and Director Foley is pretty good. So, we have to take this one very seriously.” Lahr paused for a sip of water.

“Okay, what we know is that the PRC is looking with envious eyes at the Russian mineral discoveries in the central and northern parts of eastern Siberia. That plays into the economic problems they got faced with after the killings in Beijing caused the break in trade talks, and it also appears that their other trading partners are backing away from them as well. So, the Chinese now find themselves in a really tight economic corner, and that's been a casus belli as far back as we have written history.”

“What can we do to scare them off?” asked the general commanding Pacific Fleet Marine Force.

“What we're doing tomorrow is to make the Russian federation part of NATO. Russian President Grushavoy will be flying to Warsaw in a few hours to sign the North Atlantic Treaty. That makes Russia an ally of the United States of America, and of all the NATO members. So, the thinking is that if China moves, they're not just taking on Russia, but all the rest of the North Atlantic Council as well, and that ought to give them pause.”

“And if it doesn't?” Mancuso asked. As a theater commander-in-chief, he was paid to consider diplomatic failure rather than success.

“Then, sir, if the Chinese strike north, we have a shooting war on the Asian mainland between the People's Republic of China and an American ally. That means we're going to war.”

“Do we have any guidance from Washington along those lines?” CINCPAC asked.

Lahr shook his head. “Not yet, Admiral. It's developing a little fast for that, and Secretary Bretano is looking to us for ideas.”

Mancuso nodded. “Okay. What can we do? What kind of shape are we in?”

The four-star commanding Seventh Fleet leaned forward: “I'm in pretty decent shape. My carriers are all available or nearly so, but my aviators could use some more training time. Surface assets -- well, Ed?”

Vice Admiral Goldsmith looked over to his boss. “We're good, Bart.”

COMSUBPAC nodded. “It'll take a little time to surge more of my boats west, but they're trained up, and we can give their navy a major bellyache if we have to.”

Then eyes turned to the Marine. “I hope you're not going to tell me to invade the Chinese mainland with one division,” he observed. Besides, all of Pacific Fleet didn't have enough amphibious-warfare ships to land more than a brigade landing force, and they knew that. Good as the Marines were, they couldn't take on the entire People's Liberation Army.

“What sort of shape are the Russians in?” Seventh Fleet asked General Lahr.

“Not good, sir. Their new Commander Far East is well regarded, but he's hurting for assets. The PLA has him outnumbered a good eight to one, probably more. So, the Russians don't have much in the way of deep-strike capabilities, and just defending themselves against air attack is going to be a stretch.”

“That's a fact,” agreed the general commanding the Air Force assets in the Pacific Theater. “Ivan's pissed away a lot of his available assets dealing with the Chechens. Most of their aircraft are grounded with maintenance problems. That means his drivers aren't getting the stick time they need to be proficient airmen. The Chinese, on the other hand, have been training pretty well for several years. I'd say their air force component is in pretty good shape.”

“What can we move west with?”

“A lot,” the USAF four-star answered. “But will it be enough? Depends on a lot of variables. It'll be nice to have your carriers around to back us up.” Which was unusually gracious of the United States Air Force.

“Okay,” Mancuso said next. “I want to see some options. Mike, let's firm up our intelligence estimates on what the Chinese are capable of, first of all, and second, what they're thinking.”

“The Agency is altering the tasking of its satellites. We ought to be getting a lot of overheads soon, plus our friends on Taiwan -- they keep a pretty good eye on things for us.”

“Are they in on this SNIE?” Seventh Fleet asked.

Lahr shook his head. “No, not yet. This stuff is being held pretty close.”

“Might want to tell Washington that they have a better feel for Beijing's internal politics than we do,” the senior Marine observed. “They ought to. They speak the same language. Same thought processes and stuff. Taiwan ought to be a prime asset to us.”

“Maybe, maybe not,” Lahr countered. “If a shooting war starts, they won't jump in for the fun of it. Sure, they're our friends, but they don't really have a dog in this fight yet, and the smart play for them is to play it cautious. They'll go to a high alert status, but they will not commence offensive operations on their own hook.”

“Will we really back the Russians if it comes to that? More to the point, will the Chinese regard that as a credible option on our part?” COMAIRPAC asked. He administratively “owned” the carriers and naval air wings. Getting them trained was his job.

“Reading their minds is CIA's job, not ours,” Lahr answered. “As far as I know, DIA has no high-quality sources in Beijing, except what we get from intercepts out of Fort Meade. If you're asking me for a personal opinion, well, we have to remember that their political assessments are made by Maoist politicians who tend to see things their own way rather than with what we would term an objective outlook. Short version, I don't know, and I don't know anyone who does, but the asset that got us this information tells us that they're serious about this possible move. Serious enough to bring Russia into NATO. You could call that rather a desperate move towards deterring the PRC, Admiral.”

“So, we regard war as a highly possible eventuality?” Mancuso summarized.

“Yes, sir,” Lahr agreed.

“Okay, gentlemen. Then we treat it that way. I want plans and options for giving our Chinese brethren a bellyache. Rough outlines after lunch tomorrow, and firm options in forty-eight hours. Questions?” There were none. “Okay, let's get to work on this.”

 

Al Gregory was working late. A computer-software expert, he was accustomed to working odd hours, and this was no exception. At the moment he was aboard USS Gettysburg, an Aegis-class cruiser. The ship was not in the water, but rather in dry dock, sitting on a collection of wooden blocks while undergoing propeller replacement. Gettysburg had tangled with a buoy that had parted its mooring chain and drifted into the fairway, rather to the detriment of the cruiser's port screw. The yard was taking its time to do the replacement because the ship's engines were about due for programmed maintenance anyway. This was good for the crew. Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, part of the Norfolk Naval Base complex, wasn't exactly a garden spot, but it was where most of the crew's families lived, and that made it attractive enough.

Gregory was in the ship's CIC, or Combat Information Center, the compartment from which the captain “fought” the ship. All the weapons systems were controlled from this large space. The SPY radar display was found on three side-by-side displays about the size of a good big-screen TV. The problem was the computers that drove the systems.

“You know,” Gregory observed to the senior chief who maintained the systems, “an old iMac has a ton more power than this.”

“Doc, this system is the flower of 1975 technology,” the senior chief protested. “And it ain't all that hard to track a missile, is it?”

“Besides, Dr. Gregory,” another chief put it, “that radar of mine is still the best fucking system ever put to sea.”

“That's a fact,” Gregory had to agree. The solid-state components could combine to blast six megawatts of RF power down a one-degree line of bearing, enough to make a helicopter pilot, for example, produce what cruel physicians called FLKs: funny-looking kids. And more than enough to track a ballistic reentry vehicle at a thousand miles or more. The limitation there also was computer software, which was the new gold standard in just about every weapons system in the world.

“So, when you want to track an RV, what do you do?”

“We call it 'inserting the chip,'” the senior chief answered.

“What? It's hardware?” Al asked. He had trouble believing that. This wasn't a computer that you slid a board into.

“No, sir, it's software. We upload a different control program.”

“Why do you need a second program for that? Can't your regular one track airplanes and missiles?” the TRW vice president demanded.

“Sir, I just maintain and operate the bitch. I don't design the things. RCA and IBM do that.”

“Shit,” Gregory observed.

“You could talk to Lieutenant Olson,” the other chief thought aloud. “He's a Dartmouth boy. Pretty smart for a j.g.”

“Yeah,” the first chief agreed. “He writes software as sort of a hobby.”

“Dennis the Menace. Weps and the XO get annoyed with him sometimes.”

“Why?” Gregory asked.

“Because he talks like you, sir,” Senior Chief Leek answered. “But he ain't in your pay grade.”

“He's a good kid, though,” Senior Chief Matson observed. “Takes good care of his troops, and he knows his stuff, doesn't he, Tim?”

“Yeah, George, good kid, going places if he stays in.”

“He won't. Computer companies are already trying to recruit him. Shit, Compaq offered him three hundred big ones last week.”

“That's a living wage,” Chief Leek commented. “What did Dennis say?”

“He said no. I told him to hold out for half a mil.” Matson laughed as he reached for some coffee.

“What d'ya think, Dr. Gregory? The kid worth that kinda money in the 'puter business?”

“If he can do really good code, maybe,” Al replied, making a mental note to check out this Lieutenant Olson himself. TRW always had room for talent. Dartmouth was known for its computer science department. Add field experience to that, and you had a real candidate for the ongoing SAM project. “Okay, if you insert the chip, what happens?”

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