Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
formally requested that a United States ship board
and search the North Korean freighter, which has
violated their territorial waters. The nearest
U.s. ship will be there in three hours.”
“And if the North Koreans raise the anchor and
sail away?”
“We’ll stop the ship anyway, remove any
United States government property mat we
find.”
“Another international incidentff”…the president
grumped. “The North Koreans will shout bloody
murder, then the Cubans will join the chorus.”
The national security adviser jumped right in.
“Sir, the Cubans can’t prove we had CBW
warheads in Gitmo.”
“Can’t prove? If Fidel Castro doesn’t have
a stolen artillery shell on his desk right now
I’ll kiss your ass at high noon on the
Capitol steps while CNN”
“Sir, we think”
“Let me finish!
Don’t interrupt! I’m the guy the congressmen are
going to fry when they hear about this fiasco. Let me
finish.”
Silence.
The president swallowed once, adjusted his tie.
“And nowea”…he said, trying to keep the acid out of his
voice, “we learn the Cubans have a biological
weapons lab in a building in the heart of
Havana, at the university there. Is that
correct?”‘
“Yes,, sir.”
“What I would like to know is this: Have the Cubans got
any way of using biological weapons on the
United States right now? Today? Have they got a
delivery system?”
“Sir, we don’t know.”
“Well, by God, in my nonmilitary opinion we
ought to find out just as fast as we can. Does anybody
in this room agree with that proposition?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Another thing I want to know: Somebody explain
again how the goddamned Chemical Weapons Treaty
will make countries like Cuba decide not
to build biological and chemical weapons.”
The silence that followed that question was broken by the
chairman of the joint chiefs, General Tater
Totten:
“The Chemical Weapons Convention Agreement
won’t dissuade anyone who wants these weapons from
building them. All it will do is force us to rid ourselves
of the weapons that deter others from using these things.
Chemical and biological weapons are only
employed when a user believes his enemy cannot or will
not retaliate in kind. Your staff knew that and
wanted the treaty anyway so that you could brag about it
on the stump and win votes from soccer moms who
don’t know shit from peanut butter.”
The president eyed General Totten sourly, then
surveyed the rest of them. “At least somebody around
here has the guts to tell it like it isea”…he muttered.
The chairman continued: “Doing the right thing isn’t the
same as getting the right result. We could use more
of the latter and less of the former, if you ask me.”
“Don’t push it, Generalea”…the president snarled.
The gray-haired general motored on as if the
president hadn’t said a word. “To get back to your
question, of course the Cubans have a delivery system,
or several. Biological weapons are the
easiest of all weapons to employ. The delivery
system could be as simple as planes rigged to spray
microorganisms into the atmosphere: after all,
Cuba is just ninety miles south of Key West;
jets could be over Florida in minutes. Or a
few teams of Cuban saboteurs could induce the
toxins into the water supply systems of major
citiestens of millions of people could be infected before
anyone figured out there was even a problem.”
Here was the classic dilemma: The U.s. was
prepared to fight a nuclear war to the finish and lick
anyone on the planet in a conventional war.
Hundreds of billions of dollars had been spent
on networks and communications, on precision weapons
and missile Systems, on an army, navy and air
force that were die best equipped, trained, and led armed
forces on earth. So if there were an armed conflict,
no sane enemy would confront the United States
on a conventional or nuclear battlefield:
guerrilla warfare and terror weapons were the
alternatives.
“What die Cubans probably don’t
haveea”…General Totten continued, “is the engineering and
industrial capacity to turn tankfuls of toxins
into true weapons, weapons that are safe
to handle, can be stored indefinitely, and aimed
precisely. That’s why they want to get tiieir
hands on that shipload of biological warheads.”
“So how do we prevent the use of CBW
weapons”…”…the president asked.
“You have to deter the bad guysea”…Tater Totten
explained. “You have to be willing to do it to, them
worse man they can do it to you. And they have to know that you
will.”
“You’re saying that if the Cubans murder ten
million Americans; we have to kill every human in
Cuba?”
“That’s right. Mutually assured destruction.”
“M-A-D.” .
“Insane. But there is no other way. If these people
think you lack the resolve to retaliate in kind, you
just lost the war.”
“If anyone kills Americans we will
retaliateea”…the president said. “That’s been
U.s. policy since George Washington took
the oath of office.”
The general concentrated on straightening a paper
clip, then bending it into a new shape.
Finally, when the president had had his say, when the
national security adviser had summed up
the situation, the chairman spoke again: ‘The agent in
Havana who found the lab had a request. It was in
the last paragraph of bis message this morning.
Mr. Adviser, do you wish to discuss itr
The adviser obviously didn’t wish to discuss it;
he could have raised the point at any time during the
meeting and hadn’t. A flash of irritation crossed
his face, then he said, “I’ve gone over that
request with the staff, and with State, ah, and both staff
and State feel it is completely out of bounds.”
“What request”…”…the president asked curtly.
“Sir, staff and State feel the request is
absolutely out of the question; I struck it from the
agenda.”
“What request”…”…the president repeated with some
heat.
“The agent wants Operation Flashlight to happen
at onethirty A.m. tomorrowea”…Tater Totten said.
“And that is”…”…the president said, frowning.
“He wants the power grid in central Havana
knocked out.”
“Oh. Now I remember. You want to blow some
highvoltage towers.”
“That’s correct, sir. This operation was discussed and
approved three weeks ago.”
“Oh, no. Three weeks ago I gave a
tentative approval, tentative only.
Sabotage of a power network of a foreign nation is a
damn serious matter. Back when I was in school
we called that an act of war.”
“It still isea”…the national security adviser said. He
was something of a suck-up, General Totten thought.
“I think this matter deserves more discussionea”…the
president said.
“Yes,
sir.”
“What happens if the people setting these charges are
arrested?”
The director of the CIA reluctantly stepped
in. “Sir, that is one of the inherent risks of
clandestine operations. The men who set the charges know
the risks. We know the risks. The fact is that the
possible gains here make the risks worth running.
That’s the same cost-benefit analysis we make
before we authorize any clandestine operation.”
“What if one of these people is arrested? Can the
Cubans prove they work for the CIA?”
“No, sir. They will appear to be Cuban
exiles, in Cuba creating mischief on their own
hook.”
“This operation gives me a bad feeling in the pit of
my stomachea”…the president said. “There are too many
things going wrong all at once.”
General Totten could hold his tongue no longer.
“There is no time to be lostea”…he said. “Four
vials of microorganisms taken from a
biological warfare laboratory located just
ninety miles south of Key West in the capital
of a communist country hostile to the United States
are this very minute being examined in laboratories in
the Washington area. Cuba could become another
Iraq, armed to the teeth with chemical and
biological weapons. This nation cannot afford to let that
happen. Cuba is only
ninety
miles away. The risk is simply too great.”
The president glared around the room. Looking for
someone to blame, General Totten thought.
“Mr. President, Flashlight will take hours
to pull off,”
the CIA director said. “I’ve already given the
order for it to proceed.”
“You’ve already given the order”…”…The president
repeated the words incredulously.
“There was no time to be lostea”…the director
shot back. “These things take hours to set in
motion. The execution time is one-thirty A.m.,
less than six hours away.”
The chairman of the joint chiefs leaned forward in his
chair, rested both elbows on the mahogany table.
“Mr. President, we have no choice in this
matter. None at all. If this administration
fails to move aggressively to learn exactly
what the Cuban threat is and take steps to meet
it, you will almost certainly be impeached and removed from
office by Congress for dereliction of duty.”
The president looked as if he were going
to explode. This was a side of him the voters never
saw. A control freak, like most politicians,
he hated just being along for the ride. Watching the
president seethe, Tater Totten knew his days
on active duty were numbered. The CIA
director had better start thinking about retirement,
too.
“Who is our agent in Cuba”…”…the president
demanded.
The director looked startled. Names of agents were
closely held, never discussed in meetings like this.
Yet he couldn’t refuse to answer a direct question
from the president of the United States.
“Sir, if you need that information, I could write it
on a sheet of paper.”…The director grabbed a
notepad and did so. He tore off the sheet,
folded it once, and passed it down the table. The
president put the folded paper in front of him but
didn’t open it.
“I want to know who authorized this man”…the
president tapped on the folded paper with a finger”…ffg
to Cuba to see what cesspools he could uncover.”
“Sir, this mission was authorized by this council two
months ago.”
“Then why in hell didn’t someone mention it when we
were discussing getting our warheads home from
Guanta”- namo Bay? Why wasn’t that cargo
ship escorted from pier
to pier? Why in hell didn’t we get those warheads
out of there two months ago, two years ago?
Why in hell can’t you people get a goddamn grip?”
Silence followed that outburst. It was broken when the
chairman said, “Instead of fretting over the timing,
let’s pat ourselves on the back for being smart enough to have
an agent in Havana. It’s the Cubans’
weapons lab, not ours.”
When Tater Totten walked out of the room, he still
had his letter of resignation from the joint chiefs
in his pocket. He had prepared it when the national
security adviser struck Operation Lightbulb from
the agenda. Maybe he should have laid the letter on the
president and retired to the golf course before these
fools drove this truck off the cliff. He had
no doubt the mess in Cuba was about to blow up in their
faces, and soon.
The American warship nearest the unnamed cay where the
North Korean freighter was anchored was a
destroyer out of Charleston, South Carolina,
manned by naval reservists on their annual
two-week tour of active duty. The destroyer
had been on its way to Nassau for a weekend port
call when the flash message rolled off the printer.
The destroyer’s flank speed was 34 knots, and
she was making every knot of it now as she thundered down the
Exuma Channel with a bone hi her teeth.
From “five thousand feet Jake Grafton could
see the destroyer plainly eveji though it was twenty
miles away. And he could see the wake lengthening
behind the North Korean freighter,
Wonsan.
“Damn scow is getting under wayea”…Rita said
disgustedly. She was flying the V-22. “It’ll be
in international waters long before the destroyer
gets there.”
“Wonder how many warheads they pulled out of the
water?”
“We’re going to find out pretty soonea”…Jake
muttered. “If this guy stops and lets us board
him, he won’t have a
warhead aboard. If he refuses to heave to,
he’s got a bunch.”
“What are you going to do, Admiral, if he
refuses to stop?”
Jake Grafton didn’t have an answer to that
contingency, nor did he want to make the decision.
If that eventuality came to pass he would ask for
guidance from Washington, pass the buck along to people