Guerilla Warfare (2006)

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Guerilla Warfare (2006) Page 18

by Terral, Jack - Seals 02


  A half hour later when all were dressed properly, they formed up in their usual formation. Punzarron stood to their front. "Ahora--now," he said, "you are about to become men. Real men! We are going to turn you into soldiers. Before today we simply lined you up and ushered you from place to place for your work. It is time you learned what is called drill. We will take it a lesson at a time, and before you know it, you will look dignified and impressive as you march like soldiers when you go about the garrison." He turned to Muller. "Sargento! Al frente y centro! Marche!"

  Muller marched up beside Punzarron and came to a halt, stamping his feet to the ground.

  "Observe how the sargento is standing," Punzarron said. "He is at the position of attention. His chin is raised, shoulders back and squared, and his hands are straight and aligned with the seams of his trousers. His heels are together with his toes turned out at a forty-five-degree angle."

  The convicts took careful note of how Muller stood. "Now! Observe this!" Punzarron said. He looked at Muller. "At ease!"

  The sargento smartly snapped his hands around behind his back, simultaneously grasping them together. At the same time, he moved his left foot to the left with another stamping of boots on the ground.

  "Notice how marcial--soldierly--he is when he moves," Punzarron said. Once more he turned to the demonstrator. "Pongase en posicion de firmes!"

  Muller whipped into the position of attention.

  "Pongase en posicion de descanso!"

  Muller assumed the position of at ease.

  From that point on, the three Falangists ran the convicts through the drill. It didn't take them long to catch on, and they moved from "attention" to "at ease" with military smartness. The only one having trouble was Gordo Pullini's main man Navajaso Coletti. He had always been a slow learner, and several times he reacted too late to the commands. Punzarron's good humor faded when Coletti had gotten a step behind and was standing at ease when he should have been standing at attention. The suboficial charged into the ranks and hit the convict as hard as he could. Coletti went to the ground but came up fighting.

  "Calmate!" Pullini shouted at him. "Take it easy!"

  Coletti pulled back his fists but glared at Punzarron. Then he brought himself to the right position. He took an additional hard slap across the face from the suboficial without reacting to it.

  From that point on, the instructors put the students through the rudiments of marching. They went from "forward march" to "halt." Then "to the rear march" was introduced, and they began moving forward and back, keeping in step as Punzarron bellowed out the cadence, "Uno, dos, tres, quatro!"

  Things began going better until they moved into the column and flanking movements. From that point on, all mistakes were dealt with punches and kicks from the trio of Falangist drill masters. But eventually, bruised and angry, the convicts responded quickly and correctly to the commands as the period of training continued.

  .

  1800 HOURS

  GENERAUSIMO Jose Maria de Castillo y Plato stood with Coronel Jeronimo Busch at the entrance to the convicts' camp. They watched as the prisoners marched back in a column of twos, eyes to the front, shoulders back, and in step with the cadence. Punzarron marched his charges inside, put them through a couple of "left flank,"

  "right flank," "to the rear" and column movements, then halted them, facing them toward him. He dismissed them, and the tired men walked wearily to their tents to prepare their evening meal.

  Punzarron reported to the two officers while Chaubere and Muller headed for the noncommissioned officers' mess bunker. Castillo was pleased. "I congratulate you, suboficial, you have shaped that scum into something resembling soldiers."

  Punzarron smiled at the compliment. But inside the camp, Navajaso Coletti walked up to the gang leader, Gordo Pullini. He spoke softly to his chief, saying, "If you ever decide to have that Portuguese hijo de puta killed, I would like the honor of sending him to hell."

  "That I promise you, Nava," Pullini said. "Now let's eat and get some rest after all this nonsense."

  Chapter 13

  PETROLEO COLMO FIELD OFFICE GRAN CHACO

  6 JANUARY

  0515 HOURS LOCAL

  THE EC-635 helicopter had landed five kilometers to the southwest of the field offices, out of sight and hearing of the site. Now, after a quick cross-country hike from the aircraft, Coronel Jeronimo Busch and his companion Suboficial Adolfo Punzarron peered at the facility through their binoculars. They were fifty meters away, well hidden under their camouflage capes as they observed the target of that morning's mission. Twenty meters farther behind the command duo, Sargento-Mayor Amaud Chaubere and Sargento Antonio Muller, along with four Falangist troops, were also concealed in the grass of the savannah.

  The bright red Petroleo helicopters, tied down on their pads, were easily visible, but no guards were within sight. "They are careless with their security," Punzarron remarked.

  "I do not think they want to give an outward impression that they are a tactical combat outfit," Busch said.

  This mission was planned and put into execution the evening before. The Falangist intelligence officer, newly promoted Comandante Diego Tippelskirch, had been radioed a confirmation that the Petroleo Colmo Oil Company was a CIA front. This verification also contained the information that three missing Falangist fighters captured by the bandidos were being held in the firm's field office in the southeastern part of the Gran Chaco.

  Now Busch turned toward Chaubere and Muller to signal them to move forward with the four troops. They approached with Star submachine guns locked and loaded to join Busch and Punzarron. The group moved en masse toward the building with Busch in the lead. When they reached the door, they paused only long enough to listen for any activity within the building. There was none. The coronel kicked the front door open, and they rushed inside.

  The raiders found nothing but a small office, and they wasted no time in charging through another door that led farther into the interior of the building. This was a dormitory of sorts with four men lying in bunks. They had just awakened and opened their eyes in time for a quick glimpse of their killers. Eight submachine guns spurted bursts of 9-millimeter slugs that swept across the sleeping area. The oil company men were visibly pummeled by the bullet impacts, and a couple toppled out of their bunks onto the floor.

  Muller noticed some keys hanging on a far wall by another door. He went over and took them off the wall. After unlocking the egress, he stepped into a short hallway that led to a cell at the end. He hurried to the barred gate and saw the three Falangists. Two were standing up grasping the bars, while the other looked up weakly from where he lay on his bunk.

  One of the standing prisoners grinned widely. "Por Dios! We are glad to see you!"

  The other man on his feet, a veteran sargento of the Chilean marines, was so happy he laughed alo hijos de chingadas were going to send us back to Santiago for court-martial:'

  Muller quickly opened the cell, and the two shook hands with them both, looking down at the man who still lay on his bunk. "How's he doing?"

  "Not too good," the first prisoner said. "He was given some medical attention, but they said he would have to go to a hospital for proper treatment. They were going to fly us out this afternoon."

  The second prisoner gestured at their badly injured comrade. "He's not really fully conscious." He looked into Muller's eyes. "We don't have the facilities to do anything for him if we take the poor tipo back to Fuerte Franco. And if we leave our poor companero here, they will take him away for treatment, but after that, he will go under intense interrogation."

  Muller walked over and sat down on the bunk. "Hello, amigo," he said. "We can have you flown to an army hospital just over the Argentine border. They will have you on your feet in no time." As he spoke, he pulled his Beretta automatic pistol from its holster on his web belt. He gently placed the muzzle against the delirious man's temple. A pull on the trigger sent brains and blood splattering over the cell wall. Mull
er got to his feet. "Let's go, companeros!"

  The trio went back into the dormitory. When they walked in they saw that an uninjured man had been found under one of the bunks. He stood in his shorts and T-shirt with his hands in the air. Busch stood in front of him, scowling. "Y to nombre?"

  "Me Ilamo Roberto Torres-Martinez," Alfredo said, using a cover name. "Soy de Puerto Rico."

  "A Puerto Rican, eh?" Busch remarked. "That means you're an American citizen, does it not?"

  "Wait a minute!" Muller exclaimed. "I've seen this fellow before!" He walked over and studied Alfredo's face. "Segura! He was on the helicopter that landed after that patrol was ambushed. I found a good place for concealment in the grass." He laughed loudly. "The bastards were looking all over for me."

  The Chilean ex-marine confirmed it. "That is true. He was there when they captured us."

  Busch punched Alfredo once, causing him to stumble backward. He hit him hard again, then a third time that sent the CIA man to the floor. Chaubere walked over and picked him up. He clipped him too, and Alfredo wisely went down, feigning that he was badly dazed.

  The punch-up was interrupted when Punzarron came in from another side room. "There is a radio in there, and somebody is calling over it."

  Muller picked Alfredo up and frog-marched him into the commo room with Busch and Chaubere following. A voice came over the speaker. "Petrol, this is Brigand. Over. I say again. Petrol, this is Brigand. Over."

  Busch looked at Chaubere. "You speak English, do you not?"

  "Yes, sir," the Frenchman answered. "But I am afraid it is like my Spanish. Heavily accented."

  Busch reached out and yanked Alfredo from Muller's grasp. "I know damn well that you speak English, puertorriqueno'

  "Yes," Alfredo said in English. "I speak the language fluently."

  "Then answer that transmission!" Busch ordered.

  Alfredo picked up the microphone and waited. As soon as the call was repeated, he pressed the TRANSMIT button. "Brigand, this is Petrol. We are compromised. I say again. We are compromised! We are--"

  Chaubere knocked the microphone from Alfredo's hand. The ex-Special Forces sergeant major reached over and pulled Muller's pistol from the holster with the flap still unfastened. But before he could fire, Busch swung up his submachine gun and squeezed off a long burst.

  Alfredo toppled to the floor, althost cut in half.

  Busch looked from the mangled corpse over to his men. "Which of you brought the plastic explosives?"

  "It is I, mi coronel," one answered as he snapped to attention.

  "Take care of those damn red helicopters out there," Busch said. "I don't want to see another one of those in the sky over the Gran Chaco."

  "Si, mi coronel!"

  The Falangist pulled the white blocks of C4 from his haversack as he walked from the building to destroy the Petroleo Colmo aircraft.

  .

  SEAL BASE CAMP COMMO HOOTCH

  0545 HOURS LOCAL

  FRANK Gomez looked up at Lieutenant Wild Bill Brannigan, who stood beside him. "That was Alfredo, sir."

  "Shit!" Brannigan exclaimed. "What the hell could have happened?"

  "He said he was compromised, sir."

  "Godamn it, Gomez!" Brannigan snapped. "I know what he said. I'm wondering what went wrong."

  "Yes, sir."

  "This is a lost fucking cause," Brannigan said. "Our local support is completely wiped out. Get the SOI to see what we do in a case like this."

  "Aye, sir." Frank reached over to a niche hacked in the dirt wall. The SOI, sealed in plastic with an AN-M14 incendiary thermite grenade standing on it, sat in the small excavation. He pulled it out, ripped off the covering, then handed it to the Skipper. Brannigan went through it, finding the information he was looking for. He showed it to Frank.

  Frank tuned to the correct frequency, then began transmitting. "Matrix, this is Brigand. Over."

  "This is Matrix," came an immediate reply. "Authentication kilo-papa-zulu-echo-tango. I say again. Authentication kilo-papa-zulu-echo-tango."

  "This is Brigand," Frank replied. "Wait." He turned to the proper section of the SOI, reading through columns and rows of five-letter groups. "This is Brigand. Authentication follows. Uniform-whiskey-victor-zulu-mike." Then he added the day and month. "Zero-six-zero-one. Over."

  "This is Matrix. Authentication verified. Over."

  Frank handed the microphone to Brannigan. The Skipper spoke directly and plainly as he passed on the word of the disaster at the oil company's field office. "Petrol is compromised. Over."

  A short pause followed before a reply was transmitted. "This is Matrix. You will move to map coordinates six zero--five one--two four--two two--three five--zero niner. I say again. Six zero--five one--two four--two two--three five zero finer. Out."

  Frank had copied down the coordinates. He ripped the page out of the pad and handed it to Brannigan. "There you are, sir."

  "Yeah," Brannigan said, taking the piece of paper. "That's it. End of transmission. Period."

  "They don't want to talk to us no more, sir," Frank said. "That's SOP."

  "Yeah," Brannigan grumbled. He reached into his side trouser pocket and pulled out his map. He opened it up and read the grid lines right and up. "Well, hell! We've got a good ways to go:'

  "Where're we headed, sir? Frank asked.

  "The Selva Verde Mountains," Brannigan replied. "That range is completely covered by jungle. The Rio Ancho will take us there, which means we can go by boat. But the contour lines on this fucking map are so close together a gnat couldn't piss between 'em. That means a steep, difficult climb up to our objective."

  "Jesus," Frank said. He had already missed Thanksgiving and Christmas with his family. Now it looked like it would still be a long time before he got. home--if he made it. "What the hell are we do up there?"

  "Our best to fucking survive."

  .

  FUERTO FRANCO

  HEADQUARTERS BUNKER

  1430 HOURS LOCAL

  GENERALISIMO Castillo called a conference with his senior field commander and intelligence officer. Coronel Jeronimo Busch and Comandante Diego Tippelskirch sat in the bunker with Suboficial Ignacio Perez off to one side at his little desk to take notes of the meeting.

  Busch was in a good mood. "The bandidos are now without CIA assistance via the Petroleo Colmo Company. And we are the only ones with air support."

  Castillo had a concern. "But what if another CIA cover unit moves into the area? Surely they would bring aircraft with them, no?

  "That would create no difficulties for us, mi generalisimo," Busch said. "If we see other aircraft in the Gran Chaco, we will shoot them down. Do not forget that the EC-635 has a twenty-millimeter cannon in the nose."

  "You're right," Castillo said, relieved. "Well, in the meantime, I have been studying the map and putting myself in the place of the chief of the bandidos. As far as I can determine, he has but two choices. He can either give up the fight and withdraw from the Gran Chaco or carry out his campaign with a new source of support."

  "I am not worried," Comandante Tippelskirch said. "Our intelligence net grows stronger at almost a daily rate. Nothing can be moved into the Gran Chaco without our operatives discovering it before it's done. We will be forewarned at every turn of the card in this game."

  "Bueno," Castillo said, "what if the bandidos decide to carry out the fight with the resources they have?"

  "I believe I've already come up with a plan to take care of that eventuality," Coronel Busch said. "We could send out hunter-killer teams to engage them in battle. Since the only helicopters in the campaign are ours, speed will be in our arsenal. We are the ones who can now move quickly from spot to spot to deal with trouble."

  "And that is exactly what we shall do," Castillo said.

  "Mi generalisimo," Busch said. "I would like to have Punzarron, Chaubere and Muller permanently assigned to me from this point on. I want those three men close by wherever I go."

  "The four would
be invincible," Tippelskirch said with a smile.

  "Indeed!" Castillo said. "And I think you and Coronel Busch should get together to design some operational combat plans we can put into immediate effect."

 

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