Launch Code

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Launch Code Page 32

by Michael Ridpath


  He had discussed it with Alice, who had been worried about the risks. But she was also proud that he wanted to do it.

  Toby could still pull out. Bill had never put any pressure on him to follow the suggestion he had made on the beach at Barnholt. But Toby felt an obligation to the man who had decided to risk his life by staying with him on the cliffs at Hunstanton.

  He also felt a sense of obligation to Lars. Both Lars and Bill were brave men, and their bravery deserved to be remembered.

  He took a breath and dialled the number.

  ‘Hello?’

  ‘Hi. Is this Charles Laverick at the Investigative Journalists’ Cooperative?’

  ‘Yes, it is.’ The accent was American. ‘With whom am I speaking?’

  ‘My name is Ed,’ Toby said. ‘I’m speaking on behalf of a former US Navy Lieutenant named Lars da Silva. I have some information you may find interesting. It’s about what happened on board the nuclear submarine USS Alexander Hamilton in November 1983. About how the world nearly came to an end.’

  Author’s Note

  The launch procedures for nuclear missiles on US Navy submarines in the 1980s were, understandably, top secret.

  While there are no detailed descriptions of launch and other operational procedures in the 1980s publicly available, there are a small number before and after, and I have relied heavily on these. These are: Three Knots to Nowhere, a memoir by Ted Dubay (1960s); the film Crimson Tide and the novel by Richard Henrick (1990s); Big Red: three months on board a Trident nuclear submarine by Douglas Waller (early 2000s) and the excellent novel The Trident Deception by Rick Campbell, a former ballistic missile submarine commander (2010s).

  The procedures in force in the 1980s were in some important respects different from those described later once the Cold War had ended, and I have tried to infer these differences as best I can. If I have made mistakes, I apologize, especially to those who actually served on nuclear submarines at that time.

  There are elaborate procedures set up in all nuclear nations’ armed forces to prevent an accidental nuclear war, and by and large these have worked. But the last line of defence when the machines and the procedures screw up is human common sense. I came across nine near accidental launches during the Cold War relating to humans overriding messages from the system to launch a nuclear war. All of these were covered up initially. There must have been more that have remained secret.

  All of these instances took the form of cock-up followed by cover-up, rather than conspiracy. This seems to me far more credible and indeed inevitable than a rogue actor or state causing a nuclear war. It’s a little scary.

  I should like to thank the following people for their help: Wing Commander Brian Pratt, Ann Estin, Commander John F. Howard U.S. Navy retired, Eric C. Baatz U.S. Navy Retired, U.S. Navy veteran Richard Alan Dow, Caroline Driggs, Peggy Roberts, Andres Kabel, Donna Cansdale, Wayne Leiniger, Nicky Lovick, my agents Oli Munson and Florence Rees and my editor Susannah Hamilton at Atlantic Books. And, as always, Barbara.

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  Also by Michael Ridpath

  Stand-alone thriller

  Amnesia

  Magnus Iceland Mysteries

  Where The Shadows Lie

  66 Degrees North/Far North (US)

  Meltwater

  Sea of Stone

  The Wanderer

  Spy Novels

  Traitor’s Gate

  Shadows of War

  Financial Thrillers

  Free To Trade

  Trading Reality

  The Marketmaker

  Final Venture

  The Predator

  Fatal Error

  On The Edge

  See No Evil

  About the Author

  Michael Ridpath is the author of eight financial thrillers, a series of crime novels featuring the Icelandic-American detective Magnus Jonson, two spy novels and a stand-alone psychological thriller, Amnesia. He splits his time between London and Massachusetts.

  You can find out more about him and his books on his website www.michaelridpath.com or on Facebook.

  First published in Great Britain in 2019 by Corvus, an imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd.

  This edition published by Yarmer Head

  Copyright © Michael Ridpath 2019

  The right of Michael Ridpath to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or otherwise, without written permission from the author.

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters in this book are fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

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