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Ghost Recon gr-1

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by Tom Clancy




  Ghost Recon

  ( Ghost Recon - 1 )

  Tom Clancy

  Grant Blackwood

  David Michaels

  The U.S. Army’s Special Forces are known for their highly specialized training and courage behind enemy lines. But there’s a group that’s even more stealthy and deadly. It’s comprised of the most feared operators on the face of the earth — the soldiers of Ghost Recon.

  Tom Clancy, Grant Blackwood, David Michaels

  Ghost Recon

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  The author would like to thank the following individuals whose technical advice and support made this book possible:

  Mr. Tom Clancy

  Mr. David Shanks

  Mr. Tom Colgan

  Mr. Michael Ovitz

  Mr. Chris George

  Ms. Sandra Harding

  Mr. Robert Lang

  Mr. James Ide, chief warrant officer, U.S. Navy (Ret.)

  Major Mark Aitken, U.S. Army

  Mr. Randy McElwee, master sergeant, U.S. Army (Ret.)

  Major William R. Reeves, U.S. Army

  Major Craig Walker, U.S. Air Force

  Mr. Jean-Louis "Dutch" DeGay, Natick Soldier RDEC, U.S. Army

  Mrs. Carole McDaniel (carole.mcdanieldesign.com)

  William and Belinda Telep

  From Blackhawk Products Group:

  Mr. Mike Noel, U.S. Navy SEAL (Ret.)

  Mr. Tom O'Sullivan, U.S. Army (Ret.)

  Mr. Michael Janich, U.S. Army (Ret.)

  Mr. Steve Matulewicz, command master chief, U.S. Navy SEAL (Ret.)

  Mr. Brent Beshara, Canadian Special Forces (Ret.)

  From Ubisoft:

  Mr. Yves Guillemot

  Mr. Gerard Guillemot

  Mr. Serge Hascoet

  Mr. Alexis Nolent

  Mr. Olivier Henriot

  Mr. Richard Dansky

  Mr. Oliver Green

  Mr. Cedrick Delmas

  Mr. Terence Mosca

  Mr. Eric Moutardier

  Mr. Thomas Leroux-Hugon

  Mr. Joshua Meyer

  The Ubisoft Legal Department

  I had rather have a plain, russet-coated captain that knows what he fights for, and loves what he knows, than that which you call a gentleman and is nothing else.

  — Oliver Cromwell

  Be extremely subtle, even to the point of formlessness. Be extremely mysterious, even to the point of soundless-ness. Thereby you can be the director of the opponent's fate.

  — Sun Tzu

  Minimal consumption — use the least amount of combat resources sufficient to accomplish the objective.

  — Colonel Qiao Liang and Colonel Wang Xiangsui, Unrestricted Warfare

  PERSONNEL LIST

  Ghosts

  Operation War Wraith

  Alpha Team

  Captain Scott Mitchell

  Master Sergeant Jose "Joe" Ramirez

  Sergeant First Class Paul Smith

  Sergeant First Class Alex Nolan

  Bravo Team

  Master Sergeant Matt Beasley

  Sergeant First Class Bo Jenkins

  Staff Sergeant John Hume

  Sergeant Marcus Brown

  Charlie Team

  Sergeant Alicia Diaz

  Ghost Command

  Lieutenant Colonel Harold "Buzz" Gordon

  Major Susan Grey, D CO. 1st BN. 5th SFG

  General Joshua Keating, Commander of USSOCOM

  Dr. Gail Gorbatova, Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)

  Spring Tigers

  Operation Pouncing Dragon

  Major-General Chen Yi (Target Alpha)

  Colonel Xu Dingfa (Target Bravo)

  Vice Admiral Cai Ming (Target Charlie)

  Major-General Wu Hui (Target Delta)

  Deputy Director Wang Ya, CMC Political Department

  Captain Fang Zhi

  USS Montana Control Team

  Commanding Officer Captain Kenneth Gummerson

  Lieutenant Commander Sands, Executive Officer

  Master Chief Suallo, Chief of the Boat

  SEAL Chief Tanner

  SEAL Chief Phillips

  Lieutenant Jeff Moch, Predator Support

  Lieutenant Justin Schumaker, Predator Support

  MAPS

  ONE

  BASILAN ISLAND

  SULU ARCHIPELAGO, SOUTHERN PHILIPPINES

  AUGUST, 2002

  Master Sergeant Scott Mitchell blinked at the sweat in his eyes and pushed on through the rubber plants, their leathery leaves brushing against his boonie hat and cheek. Ahead lay a slight clearing in the otherwise dense, twilit jungle, and Mitchell used his M4A1's barrel to lift a thin branch as he hunkered down at the edge.

  Captain Victor Foyte, his detachment commander, moved ahead beside an uneven stretch of wilting palm fronds still dripping from a storm that had rolled in several hours ago. "Ricochet, this is Road Warrior 06," the captain whispered into his radio. "Think I see something. And I hear some buzzing, like flies. Let's check it out, over."

  "Right with you, Boss," answered Mitchell.

  Although Foyte outranked him, Mitchell was the team sergeant, responsible for fighting all twelve members of Operational Detachment Alpha (ODA) 574. The captain and warrant officer coordinated with the twelve-man Filipino and Taiwanese teams they'd been cross-training with for the past two weeks.

  Mitchell started forward as up to his right a snake coiled around an overhanging limb, its tongue fluttering. Special Forces operators ate bad guys for breakfast and snakes for supper; consequently, they weren't unnerved by either. Nevertheless, Mitchell grimaced and got out of there to join the captain.

  Barely three steps later, a whoosh of musty air, a rustle of leaves, and the sharp crack of a rope sent lightning bolts through his gut. He looked up and gasped.

  The captain had been moving toward a pole stuck in the ground. Atop that pole was a human head with long, brown hair flowing around it.

  A twenty-one-year-old American missionary had recently been captured by Abu Sayyaf, the local pseudo-Islamist terrorist group affiliated with al Qaeda. Military and police forces had been combing the island, looking for her and for Abu Sayyaf's stronghold, hidden somewhere deep in the mountainous interior.

  It seemed the captain had found the missing woman — and much more. A rope had snapped taut around one of his ankles, and now he was being hurled three meters into the air, screaming, "Ambush!"

  Mitchell was about to get on the radio when the captain swung forward, a human pendulum heading straight for a tree impaled by rows of razor-sharp punji stakes now revealed as fronds strung up by more ropes fell away — all part of the carefully designed booby trap.

  Captain Victor Foyte was only twenty-four years old, and in the next breath he slammed back-first into the punji stakes, the foot-long pieces of sharpened wood driving into his arms, neck, and torso.

  The team had been operating light, forgoing body armor in the rainy, hundred-plus-degree jungle. Foyte shrieked and gurgled as the stakes grew slick with his blood.

  Chief Warrant Officer 02 James Alvarado, who'd been positioned about a dozen meters behind them, burst forward crying, "Captain!" Alvarado cut loose multiple rounds below the tree where Foyte now hung, inverted and bleeding to death.

  Again, Mitchell keyed his mike, ready to issue orders, but Alvarado's gunfire cut him off.

  This was Mitchell's first live mission as a Special Forces operator. He was an experienced infantryman and team leader from an Opposing Force (OPFOR) recon unit at Fort Irwin. He already had an impressive resume and was hoping to make a name for himself in the Special Forces community — yet in a flash, he'd already lost his first CO.


  A strange thumping noise sounded as Alvarado ceased fire and advanced into the clearing. The warrant suddenly clutched his neck, where a tiny dart extended from between his fingers. He screamed as he tugged it out.

  Mitchell dropped onto his gut as more thumping sounded behind them. Alvarado wobbled forward then crumpled to the ground, poisoned and probably dead.

  The team was, it seemed, being attacked by loinclothed savages whose traps and blowguns had ironically overpowered the men with their thunder sticks.

  "Mitchell?" called the captain, his voice burred by the agony, his face now drenched in blood. "Mitch… ell?"

  Unable to stare at Foyte any longer, Mitchell finally got on the radio. "This is Ricochet. Ambush! Ambush! The captain and warrant are down!"

  Before he could continue, the terrorists somewhere out there, crouching in the wet foliage, revealed they were not the loinclothed savages of Mitchell's imagination but were, in fact, ruthless and modern killers.

  So much automatic weapons fire blasted through the clearing that it sounded as though a thousand men with machetes were cutting apart the trees and fronds. Rounds from AK-47s and machine guns popped and boomed, wood splintered, and birds squawked and flew off as holes appeared in the leaves, the debris tumbling down on Mitchell as he rose to his elbows and spied his first pair of muzzle flashes.

  At the same time, voices erupted over the radio:

  "Ricochet, this is Rumblefish," called the team's weapons sergeant, Jim Idaho. "We're taking fire from both flanks! Can't get any shots from here! Need orders!"

  "Ricochet, this is Red Cross. Got two men down," reported Lance Munson, the team's senior medic. "I need to evac these guys now!"

  "Ricochet, I think we got incoming mortar—"

  That last voice belonged to Rapper, one of the team's engineers, who was cut off as a flash lit up the jungle just northeast of Mitchell's position. A second later, the ground trembled, and a powerful explosion boomed across the landscape as showers of shrapnel and debris needled through the zone.

  These terrorists were reckless, stupid, or insane, perhaps all three. They were laying down mortar fire on their own position. They didn't care how many of their own they took out, so long as they killed the Americans.

  Willing himself not to panic, reminding himself of who he was and the countless hours of training he had gone through, Master Sergeant Scott Mitchell, twenty-six, took command of the ODA team. "This is Ricochet! Listen up! Rumblefish? You and the rest of Bravo Team get to those wounded men and fall back south to our first waypoint. Rutang, Rockstar, and Rino, regroup on me. Move out!"

  The team had been operating as two six-man units: Alpha and Bravo, with all radio call signs beginning with the letter R. Mitchell would exploit their division in order to provide cover for evacuating the wounded.

  Another whistle rose in the night, this time closer, and suddenly the next mortar exploded, gray smoke and more shrapnel hurtling up through the canopy.

  "Ricochet, this is Rutang," called the team's assistant medical sergeant, Thomas "Rutang" McDaniel. "Me and Rockstar are good to go, but Rino is gone, man. Hit by that last mortar. No pulse!"

  There wasn't time to tally up the dead. All Mitchell knew was that he needed support — ground, air, anything — and he needed it now. He acknowledged Rutang's call, then switched frequencies, calling up Captain Fang Zhi's Taiwanese team. They were much closer than the Filipino team and were working the grid on the other side of the creek. "Wushu 06, this is Ricochet, over."

  He waited, listened to the sound of his own breathing, the withering gunfire booming somewhere nearby, the shrill hiss of yet another mortar round, falling, falling…

  "Wushu 06, this is Ricochet, over."

  Mitchell switched frequencies once more to call upon the Filipino Team. "Black Tiger 06, this is Ricochet, over."

  Boom! That distant mortar finally detonated.

  "Ricochet, this is Black Tiger 06. I've heard what's happening. We're moving to your location, but we're still pretty far. ETA about twenty minutes, over."

  "Roger that, Black Tiger. I have a lot of men down. Need you ASAP." Mitchell fed the captain his current GPS coordinates, then added, "Don't be late."

  "We are running, Sergeant."

  "Good! Ricochet, out."

  Captain Gilberto Yano, aka Black Tiger 06, was a member of the Philippine Army's elite Light Reaction Battalion (LRB), the Delta Force of their army and specifically trained in counterterrorist activities. Yano was well-liked by his men and the rest of Mitchell's team. Knowing Yano and his boys were already on the way felt good, but it was going to be the longest twenty minutes of Mitchell's life.

  And quite possibly the last.

  Again, where the hell was Captain Fang Zhi? Mitchell called once more. No answer. Was he back in one of the nepa huts, smoking a cigar, while men died out here in the jungle?

  Rutang and Rockstar hustled up and dropped down beside Mitchell.

  Rutang was a baby-faced assistant medic and competitive video game player. He'd even entered and won several national tournaments, though he rarely bragged and was, for the most, curiously insecure about himself and his skills.

  Staff Sergeant Bennet "Rockstar" Williams was the assistant engineer, a hard-faced African-American who hated rock music but who had pissed off the company commander by insulting the commander's AC/DC collection. The incident had become infamous, and the call sign had stuck.

  Mitchell eyed both of them, drenched in sweat like he was, eyes bugged out, breath ragged.

  "We need to cut off these guys and buy Bravo some time to evac. I saw muzzle flashes on our flanks."

  "Me, too," said Rutang. "No telling how many yet, damn."

  "Don't worry," Mitchell said, pouring more confidence into his tone. "We'll swing around, come in from the west, and tag their asses. That simple. You ready?"

  "Sergeant, are you sure about this?" asked Rockstar.

  "Of course he's sure," said Rutang. "Shut up!"

  "I'm just saying—"

  "Rock, I'm sure," said Mitchell, putting some real steel in his voice. "Go now!"

  Mitchell took point, and they began scissoring their way through the jungle. He clutched his rifle a little too tightly, and the chin strap of his boonie hat began digging into his skin. He took a sharp turn around two trees, and the sounds of gunfire grew louder, along with the trickle of running water out there, beyond the jagged tree line.

  At the next cluster of palms he called for a halt and slid back his boonie hat. Then he dug out his binoculars and scanned the area.

  Despite the growing darkness, Mitchell still picked out several men dressed in nondescript fatigues with bandannas tied around their heads. They darted south, back toward Bravo Team.

  He issued hand signals to Rutang and Rockstar: Got three, there, let's go!

  They charged off, with Mitchell once again taking point, Rutang and Rockstar on his rear flanks, Rockstar checking their six o'clock as they advanced.

  The ground was muddy, sucking too loudly at their boots as they cut through the brush, came around several more trees and clusters of dark shrubs, and right into a swarm of malaria-carrying mosquitoes that had all of them swatting at their faces. He prayed the layers of bug spray and the vaccinations would do their job.

  As Mitchell's vision cleared, he spotted the three guys, ten, fifteen meters ahead, still weaving forward, seemingly unaware they had been followed.

  Mitchell bolted to the base of the next tree, whose reddish brown bark was alive with ants. He signaled the others to drop and prepare to fire.

  "Got one in my sight," said Rutang.

  "Me, too," Rockstar added.

  "Fire!" Mitchell cried, breaking the silence, but it didn't matter, because their M4A1 carbines echoed like rolling timpani drums, hungry rounds chewing through the air until they caught flesh.

  "Bang, bang, bang, they're dead." Rutang grunted.

  He wasn't lying. They'd dropped the trio cleanly, efficiently.

&nbs
p; "Move!" cried Mitchell, knowing that before they could blink twice, they'd draw incoming fire.

  He was wrong. It took three blinks before the trees and ground exploded as they sprinted past the men they had killed. They moved onto a steep mound, then Mitchell descended and turned back. Rutang came up hard on Mitchell's heels.

  A triplet of gunfire cracked too close for comfort as Rockstar reached the crest. The stoic-faced black man gasped and shook as more rounds tore through his chest a second before he collapsed right on top of Mitchell.

  "Bennet!" cried Rutang as he pulled the man off of Mitchell, who was now lying flat on his back, the tiny speaker in his ear rattling with yet another voice: "Ricochet, this is Red Cross. I cannot fall back. Say again, I cannot fall back. We're pinned down. I count at least eight Tangos and two DP positions. Sounds like they got plenty of rounds for those machine guns, too. We won't last long here. I need support, now!"

  "Aw, Bennet, man, come on." Rutang gasped.

  Mitchell rolled over, took one look at Rockstar, and knew. That warm feeling on Mitchell's neck was Rockstar's blood.

  Rutang wrenched his rifle around, his face twisted with the desire for payback.

  "No, hold fire a second," said Mitchell as he got on his radio. "Black Tiger 06, this is Ricochet, over."

  No response. He called again.

  Finally, Captain Yano answered, though his voice was nearly drowned out by a firefight, that same gunfire thundering in the distance. "Ricochet, this is Black Tiger 06. We've been engaged by the enemy — at least twenty Tangos. We're cut off from your position. Cannot get to you at this time, over."

  "Roger that. Clear that zone and get here, over."

  "We'll try, but they're hitting us hard! I've already got one killed, two wounded, over."

  "I'm not taking no for an answer, Captain. Ricochet, out." Mitchell cursed under his breath and switched frequencies. "Wushu 06, this is Ricochet, over?"

 

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