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The Sum of All Fears jr-7

Page 104

by Tom Clancy


  “Ten minutes at least, sir, let me, uh, check with my operations people.” CINC-SAC flipped off his microphone switch. “Christ.”

  “Pete,” the Deputy Chief of Staff (Operations) said, “the man is right. That fucker almost killed us all — us and the Russians! For profit, for political profit!”

  “I don't like it.”

  “You have to re-target the bird. I suggest a Minuteman-III out of Minot. The three RVs'll flatten the place. I'll need ten minutes.”

  Fremont nodded.

  * * *

  “Mr. President, you can wait.”

  “No, I'm not going to wait. Ryan, you know what they did, you know why they did it. It was an act of war—”

  “An act of terrorism, sir.”

  “State-sponsored terrorism is war — your own position paper from six years ago said that!”

  Jack had not known that Fowler'd read it, and being hoist on his own petard came as a surprise. “Well, yes, sir, I did say that, but—”

  “That holy man tried to kill — did kill thousands of Americans, and tried to trick us and the Russians into killing two hundred million more! He almost succeeded.”

  “Yes, sir, that is also true, but—” Fowler cut him off with a raised hand and continued to speak in the placid voice of a man whose decision had been made.

  “It was an act of war. I will reply in kind. That's decided. I'm the President. I'm the Commander-in-Chief. I am the one who evaluates and acts upon the safety and security of the United States. I decide what the military of this country does. This man slaughtered thousands of our citizens, and used a nuclear weapon to do it. I have decided that I will reply in kind. Under the Constitution, that is my right, and my duty.”

  “Mr. President,” van Damm spoke. “The American people—”

  Fowler's anger appeared, but only briefly. “The American people will demand that I act! But that's not the only reason. I must act. I must reply to this — just to make sure it never happens again!”

  “Please think it through, sir.”

  “ Arnold, I have.”

  Ryan looked over at Pete Connors and Helen D'Agustino. Both concealed their feelings with marvelous skill. The rest of the room approved of Fowler's purpose, and Jack already knew that he was not the one to reason with the man. He looked at the clock and wondered what would come next.

  “Mr. President, this is General Fremont.”

  “I'm here, General.”

  “Sir, we have re-targeted a Minuteman-III missile in North Dakota for the target specified. I — sir, have you thought this through?”

  “General, I am your commander-in-chief. Is the missile readied for launch?”

  “Sir, the launch sequence will take about a minute from the time you give the order.”

  “The order is given.”

  “Sir, it's not that simple. I need an ID check. You've been briefed on the procedure, sir.”

  Fowler reached for his wallet and removed a plastic card, much like a credit card. On it were ten different eight-number groups. Only Fowler knew which one he was supposed to read.

  “Three-Three-Six-Zero-Four-Two-Zero-Nine.”

  “Sir, I confirm your identification code. Next, Mr. President, the order must be confirmed.”

  “What?”

  “Sir, the two-man rule applies. In the event of an overt attack, I can be the second man, but since that is not the case, someone on my list must confirm the order.”

  “I have my Chief of Staff right here.”

  “Sir, negative on that, the rule is that to be on the list you must be an elected official or one approved by Congress — the Senate, that is — like a cabinet secretary.”

  “I'm on the list,” Jack said.

  “Is that Dr. Ryan, DDCI?”

  “Correct, General.”

  “Deputy Director Ryan, this is CINC-SAC,” Fremont said in a voice that oddly mimicked the robotic one used to issue SAC orders. “Sir, I have received a nuclear-launch order. I need you to confirm that order, but first I also need to verify your identity, sir. Could you please read your identification code?”

  Jack reached for his own ID card and read off his code group. Ryan could hear Fremont or one of his people flipping through the pages of a book.

  “Sir, I confirm your identification as Dr. John Patrick Ryan, Deputy Director of Central Intelligence.”

  Jack looked at Fowler. If he didn't do it, the President would just get someone else. It really was that simple, wasn't it? And was Fowler wrong — was he really wrong?

  “It's my responsibility, Jack,” Fowler said, standing at Ryan's side, resting his hand on Jack's shoulder. “You're just confirming it.”

  “Dr. Ryan, CINC-SAC here, I repeat, sir, I have a nuclear-launch order from the President, and I require confirmation, sir.”

  Ryan looked at his President, then leaned down to the microphone. He struggled for the breath to speak. “CINC-SAC, this is John Patrick Ryan. I am DDCI.” Jack paused, then went on quickly:

  “Sir, I do not confirm this order. I repeat, General, this is not a valid launch order. Acknowledge at once!”

  “Sir, I copy negative approval of the order.”

  That is correct,“ Jack said, his voice growing stronger. ”General, it is my duty to inform you that in my opinion the President is not, I repeat not in command of his faculties. I urge you to consider that if another launch order is attempted." Jack rested his hands on the desk, took a deep breath, and snapped back erect.

  Fowler was slow to react, but when he did, he pressed his face against Jack's. “Ryan, I order you—”

  Jack's emotions exploded one last time: “To do what? To kill a hundred thousand people — and why?”

  “What they tried to do—”

  “What you damned near let them do!” Ryan jabbed a finger into the President's chest. “You're the one who fucked up! You're the one who took us to the edge — and now the real reason you're willing to slaughter a whole city is because you're mad, because your pride is hurt, and you want to get even. You want to show them that nobody can push you around! That's the reason, isn't it? ISN'T IT?” Fowler went white. Ryan lowered his voice. “You need a better reason than that to kill people. I know. I've had to do that. I have killed people. You want this man killed, we can do it, but I'm not going to help you kill a hundred thousand others just to take out the one man you want.”

  Ryan stepped back. He dropped his ID card on the desk and walked from the room.

  * * *

  “Jesus!” Chuck Timmons observed. They'd heard the entire exchange over the hot mike. Everyone in SAC headquarters had.

  “Yeah,” Fremont said. Thank Him. But first deactivate that missile!" The Commander-in-Chief Strategic Air Command had to think for a moment. He couldn't remember if Congress was in session or not, but that was beside the point. He ordered his communications officer to place a call to the chairmen and ranking minority members of the Senate and House armed-services committees. When all four were on line, they'd stage a conference call with the Vice President, who was still aboard Kneecap.

  * * *

  “Jack?” Ryan turned.

  “Yeah, Arnie?”

  “Why?”

  “That's why they have a two-man rule. There are a hundred thousand people in that city — probably more. I can't recall how big it is.” Jack looked into the cold clear sky. “Not on my conscience. If we needed Daryaei dead, there are other ways.” Ryan blew smoke into the wind. “And that fucker'll be just as dead.”

  “I think you were right. I want you to know that.”

  Jack turned. “Thank you, sir.” A long pause. “Where's Liz, by the way?”

  “Back in the cabin, under sedation. She didn't cut the mustard, did she?”

  “Arnie, today nobody did. Mainly we were lucky. You can tell the President that I'm resigning effective — oh, Friday, I guess. Good a day as any. Someone else'll have to decide on the replacement.”

  The President's Chief of Staff wa
s quiet for a moment, then brought things back to the main issue. “You know what you've just started here, don't you?”

  “Constitutional crisis, Arnie?” Jack flipped the butt into the snow. “Not my first, Arnie, not my first. I need to ride that chopper back to Andrews.”

  “I'll take care of it.”

  * * *

  They'd just crossed into U.S. territory when a thought struck John Clark. Qati's bags had those medications. One was Prednizone, and another was Comazine. Prednizone was a steroid… often used to mitigate the adverse effects of — he got up from his seat and looked at Qati. Though still blindfolded, the man was different from the most recent photos he'd seen of the man, thinner, his hair was — the man had cancer, Clark thought. What did that mean? He got on the radio and called that information ahead.

  * * *

  The Gulf stream was a few minutes later getting in. Ryan was awakened on the couch in the VIP lounge on the south side of the Andrews complex. Murray was next to him, still awake. Three FBI vehicles were there. Clark, Chavez, Qati and Ghosn were loaded into them, and the convoy of four-wheel-drives headed into D.C.

  “What are we going to do with them?” Murray asked.

  “I have an idea, but we need to do something first.”

  “What, exactly?”

  “You have an interrogation room at the Hoover Building?”

  “No, Buzzard's Point, the Washington Field Office,” Murray said. “Did your guy Mirandize them?”

  “Yeah, I told him he had to do that, right before he started cutting their balls off.” Ryan turned as he heard a loud noise. Kneecap was landing on the same Runway Zero-One it had left ten or so hours before. They must have shut down the strategic systems quicker than expected, Jack thought.

  * * *

  The Admiral Lunin surfaced amid the flares and smoke floats dropped by the P-3. It was much too far for a rescue aircraft to come out, at least in this weather. The seas hadn't moderated, and the light was bad, but Dubinin's was the only ship in the area, and he did the best he could to start rescue operations.

  * * *

  The interrogation room was ten by ten, with a cheap table and five equally cheap chairs. There was no two-way mirror. That trick had been around far too long. Instead, two fiber-optic cables ran out of the room and into cameras, one from a light switch, and the other from what looked like a nail hole in the door frame.

  Both terrorists were set in place, looking somewhat the worse for wear. The broken fingers both sported offended the professional ethic of the FBI, but Murray decided to pass on that. Clark and Chavez went off for coffee.

  “As you see,” Ryan told them, “you failed. Washington is still here.”

  “And Denver?” Ghosn asked. “I know about Denver.”

  “Yes, you did manage to do something there, but the guilty parties have already paid.”

  “What do you mean?” Qati asked.

  “I mean that Qum isn't there anymore. Your friend Daryaei is now explaining his misdeeds to Allah.”

  They were just too tired, Ryan thought. Fatigue was the worst enemy of men, even worse than the dull pain in his hand. Qati didn't show horror at all. His next error was worse.

  “You have made an enemy of all Islam. All that you have done to make peace in the region will be as nothing! because of this.”

  “Was that your objective?” Ryan asked in considerable surprise, drawing on the two hours of sleep he'd had. “Was that what you wanted to do? Oh, my God!”

  “Your god?” Qati spat.

  “What of Marvin Russell?” Murray asked.

  “We killed him. He was merely an infidel,” Qati said.

  Murray looked at Ghosn. “This is true? Wasn't he a guest in your camp?”

  “He was with us for some months, yes. The fool's help was indispensable.”

  “And you murdered him.”

  “Yes, along with two hundred thousand others.”

  “Tell me,” Jack said. “Isn't there a line in the Koran that goes something like, 'If a man shall enter your tent and eat your salt, even though he be an infidel, you will protect him'?”

  “You quote poorly — and what do you care of the Koran?”

  “You might be surprised.”

  44

  THE BREEZE OF EVENING

  Ryan's next call was to Arnie van Damm. He explained what he had learned.

  “My God! They were willing to—”

  “Yeah, and it almost worked,” Ryan said huskily. “Clever, weren't they?”

  “I'll tell him.”

  “I have to report this, Arnie. I have to tell the Vice President.”

  “I understand.”

  “One more thing.”

  “What's that?”

  The request he made was approved, largely because no one had a better idea. After the two terrorists had had their hands treated, they were bedded down separately in FBI holding cells.

  “What do you think, Dan?”

  “It's — Christ, Jack, where are the words for something like this?”

  “The man's got cancer,” Clark said. “He figures that if he has to die — why not a bunch of others? Dedicated son-of-a-bitch, isn't he?”

  “What are you going to do?” Murray asked.

  “We don't have a federal death-penalty statute, do we?”

  “No, neither does Colorado as a matter of fact.” Murray took a moment to understand where Ryan was heading. “Oh.”

  * * *

  Golovko had considerable trouble tracking Ryan down with his phone call. The report on his desk from Dr. Moiseyev, sitting there amid all the other things, had dumbfounded him, but on learning Jack's plans, it was easy to set the rendezvous.

  * * *

  Perhaps the only good news of the week was the rescue. The Admiral Lunin pulled into Kodiak harbor at dawn. Alongside the pier, she offloaded her guests. Of the Maine 's crew of one hundred fifty-seven, perhaps a hundred had gotten off before the submarine was claimed by the sea. Dubinin and his crew had rescued eighty-one of them, and recovered eleven bodies, one of which was Captain Harry Ricks. Professionals regarded it as an incredible feat of seamanship, though the news media failed to cover the story until the Soviet submarine had put back to sea. Among the first to call home was Ensign Ken Shaw.

  * * *

  Joining them on the trip out of Andrews was Dr. Woodrow Lowell of the Lawrence-Livermore Laboratory, a bearded, bearish man, known to his friends as Red because of his hair. He'd spent six hours in Denver reviewing the damage patterns.

  “I have a question,” Jack said to him. “How was it the yield estimates were so far off? That almost made us think the Russians did it.”

  “It was a parking lot,” Lowell replied. “It was made of macadam, a mixture of gravel and asphalt. The energy from the bomb liberated various complex hydrocarbons from the upper layer of the pavement and ignited it — like a great big fuel-air explosive bomb. The water vapor there — from the snow that flashed away — caused another reaction that released more energy. What resulted was a flame-front double the diameter of the nuclear fireball. Add to that the fact that snow cover reflected a lot of the energy, and you got a huge augmentation of the apparent energy released. It would have fooled anybody. Then afterwards, the pavement had another effect. It radiated residual heat very rapidly. The short version is, the energy signature was much larger than the actual yield justified. Now, you want the real bad news?” Lowell asked.

  “Okay.”

  “The bomb was a fizzle.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “I mean it should have been much larger, and we don't know why. The bomb residue was lousy with tritium. The design yield was at least ten times what it actually delivered.”

  “You mean?”

  “Yeah, if this thing had worked…”

  “We were lucky, weren't we?”

  “If you want to call that luck, yeah.”

  Somehow Jack slept for most of the flight.

  The aircraft landed
the next morning at Beersheba. Israeli military personnel met the aircraft and convoyed everyone to Jerusalem. The press had found out some of what was happening, but not enough to be a bother, not on a secure Israeli Air Force Base. That would come later. Prince Ali bin Sheik was waiting outside the VIP building.

  “Your Highness.” Jack nodded to him. “Thank you for coming.”

  “How could I not?” Ali handed over a newspaper.

  Jack scanned the headline. “I didn't think that would stay secret very long.”

  “It's true, then?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “And you stopped it?”

  “Stopped it?” Ryan shrugged. “I just wouldn't — it was a lie, Ali. I was lucky I guessed — no, that's not true. I didn't know that until later. It's just that I couldn't put my name to it, that's all. Your Highness, that's not important now. There are some things I have to do. Sir, will you help us?”

  “With anything, my friend.”

  “Ivan Emmettovich!” Golovko called. And to Ali, “Your Royal Highness.”

  “Sergey Nikolay'ch. Avi.” The Russian walked up with Avi Ben Jakob at his side.

  “Jack,” John Clark said. “You guys want to get to a better spot? One mortar round sure would waste a lot of top spooks, y'know?”

  “Come with me,” Avi said, who led them inside. Golovko briefed them on what he had.

  “The man is still alive?” Ben Jakob asked.

  “Suffering all the pains of hell, but yes, for another few days.”

  “I cannot go to Damascus,” Avi said.

  “You never told us you lost a nuke,” Ryan said.

  “What do you mean?”

  “You know what I mean. The press doesn't have that yet, but they will in another day or two. Avi, you never told us there was something lost out there! Do you know what that might have meant to us?” Ryan asked.

  “We assumed that it had broken up. We tried to search for it, but—”

 

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