Read On Wings of Eagles Online
Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Military, #Espionage, #General, #History, #Special Forces, #Biography & Autobiography
After a little practice they could all shoot reasonably well except Davis.
Simons suggested he try shooting lying down, since that was the position he
would be in when he was in the courtyard; and he found he could do much
better that way.
134 Ken Follett
It was bitterly cold out in the open, and they all huddled in a little
shack, trying to get warm, while they were not shootingall except Simons,
who stayed outside an day long, as if he were made of stone.
He was not made of stone-when he got into Merv Stauffer's car at the end of
the day he said: "Jesus Christ it's cold."
He had begun to needle them about how soft they were. They were always
talking about where they would go to eat and what they would order, he
said. When he was hungry he would open a can. He would laugh at someone for
nursing a drink: when he was thirsty he would fill a tumbler with water and
drink it all straight down, saying: "I didn't pour it to look at it." He
showed them how he could shoot, one time: every bullet in the center of the
target. Once Coburn saw him with his shirt off. his physique would have
been impressive on a man twenty years younger-
It was a tough-guy act, the whole performance. What was peculiar was that
none of them ever laughed at it. With Simons, it was the real thing.
One evening at the lake house he showed them the best way to kill a man
quickly and silently.
He had ordered--and Merv Stauffer had purchased--Gerber knives for each of
them, short stabbing weapons with a narrow two-edged blade.
"It's kind of small," said Davis, looking at his. "Is it long enough?"
"It is unless you want to sharpen it when it comes out the other side,"
Simons said.
He showed them the exact spot in the small of Glenn Jackson's back where
the kidney was located. "A single stab, right there, is lethal," he said.
:'Wouldn't he scream?" Davis asked.
'It hurts so bad he can't make a sound."
While Simons was demonstrating, Merv Stauffer had come in, and now he stood
in the doorway, openmouthed, with a McDonald's paper bag in either arm.
Simons saw him and said: "LA)ok at this guy--he can't make a sound and
nobody's stuck him yet.'9
Merv laughed and started handing round the food. "You know what the
McDonald's girl said to me, in a completely empty
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 135
restaurant, when I asked for thirty hamburgers and thirty orders of fries?"
"'Wbat?"
"What they always say-'Is this to eat here or to goT
Simons just loved working for private enterprise.
One of his biggest headaches in the army had always been supplies. Even
planning the Son Tay Raid, an operation in which the President himself was
personally interested, it had seemed as if he had to fill in six
requisition forms and get approval from twelve generals every time he
needed a new pencil. Then, when all the paper work was done, he would find
that the items were out of stock, or there was a four-month wait for
delivery, or-worst of all-when the stuff came it did not work. Twentytwo
percent of the blasting caps he ordered misfired. He had tried to get night
sights for his Raiders. He learned that the army had spent seventeen years
trying to develop a night sight, but by 1970 all they had were six
hand-built prototypes. Then he discovered a perfectly good British-made
night sight available from the Armalite Corporation for $49.50, and that
was what the Son Tay Raiders took to Vietnam.
At EDS there were no forms to be filled out and no permissions to be
sought, at least not for Simons: he told Merv Stauffer what he needed and
Stauffer got it, usually the same day. He asked for, and got, ten Walther
PPKs and ten thousand rounds of ammunition; a selection of holsters, both
left-handed and right-handed, in different styles so the men could pick the
kind they felt most comfortable with; shotgun-ammunition reloading kits in
twelve-gauge, sixteen-gauge and twenty-gauge; and cold-weadier clothes for
the team including coats, mittens, shirts, socks, and woolen stocking caps.
One day he asked for a hundred thousand dollars in cash: two hours later T.
J. Marquez arrived at the lake house with the money in an envelope.
It was different from the army in other ways. His men were not soldiers who
could be bullied into submission: they were some of the brightest young
corporate executives in the United States. He had realized from the start
that he could not assume command. He had to earn their loyalty.
These men would obey an order if they agreed with it. If not, they would
discuss it. That was fine in the boardroom, but useless on the battlefield.
They were squeamish, too. The first time they talked about
136 Ken Follett
setting fire to a car as a diversion, someone had objected on the grounds
that innocent passers-by might get hurt. Simons needled them about their Boy
Scout morality, saying they were afraid of losing their merit badges, and
calling them "you Jack Armstrongsafter the too-good-to-be-true radio
character who went around solving crimes and helping old ladies cross the
road.
They also had a tendency to forget the seriousness of what they were doing.
There was a lot of joking and a certain amount of horseplay, particularly
from young Ron Davis. A measure of humor was useful in a team on a
dangerous mission, but sometimes Simons had to put a stop to it and bring
them back to reality with a sharp remark.
He gave them all the opportunity to back out at any time. He got Ron Davis
on his own again and said: "You're going to be the first one over that
fence-don't you have some reservations about that?"
"Yeah. -
"Good thing you do, otherwise I wouldn't take you. Suppose Paul and Bill
don't come right away? Suppose they figure that if they head for the fence
they'll get shot? You'll be stuck there and the guards will see you. You'll
be in bad trouble."
'Yeah. "
"Me, I'm sixty years old, I've lived my life. Hell, I don't have a thing to
lose. But you're a young man--wd Marva's pregnant, isn't she?"
"Yeah. -
"Are you really sure you want to do this?"
'Yeah. "
He worked on them all. There was no point in his telling them that his
military judgment was better than theirs: they had to come to that
conclusion themselves. Similarly, his tough-guy act was intended to let
them know that from now on such things as keeping warm, eating, drinking,
and worrying about innocent bystanders would not occupy much of their time
or attention. The shooting practice and the knife lesson also had a hidden
purpose: die last thing Simons wanted was any killing on this operation,
but learning how to kill reminded the men that the rescue could be a
life-and-death affair.
The biggest element in his psychological campaign was the endless
practicing of the assault on the jail. Simons was quite sure that the jail
would not be exactly as Coburn had described it, and that the plan would
have to be modified. A raid never
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 137
went precisely according to the scenario-as he knew better than most.
The rehearsals for the Son Tay Raid had gone on for weeks. A complete
replica of the prison camp had been built, out of two-by-four timbers and
target cloth, at Eglin Air Base in Florida. The bloody thing had to be
dismantled every morning before dawn and put up again at night, because the
Russian reconnaissance satellite Cosmos 355 passed over Florida twice every
twenty-four hours. But it had been a beautiful thing: every goddarn tree
and ditch in the Son Tay prison camp had been reproduced in the mock-up.
And then, after all those rehearsals, when they did it for real, one of the
helicoptms--the one Simons was in-had landed in the wrong place.
Simons would never forget the moment he realized the mistake. His
helicopter was taking off again, having discharged the Raiders. A startled
Vietnamese guard emerged from a foxhole and Simons shot him in the chest.
ShootinZ broke out, a flare went tip, and Simons saw that the buildings
surrounding him were not the buildings of the Son Tay camp. "Get that
fucking chopper back in here!" he yelled to his radio operator. He told a
sergeant to turn on a strobe light to mark the landing zone.
He knew where they were: four hundred yards from Son Tay, in a compound
marked on intelligence maps as a school. This was no school. There were
enemy troops everywhere. It was a barracks, and Simons realized that his
helicopter pilot's mistake had been a lucky one, for now he was able to
launch a preemptive attack and wipe out a concentration of enemy troops who
might otherwise have jeopardized the whole operation.
That was the night he stood outside a barracks and shot eighty men in their
underwear.
No, an operation never went exactly according to plan. But becoming
proficient at executing the scenario was only half the purpose of
rehearsals anyway. The other half-and, in the case of the EDS men, the
important half-was learning to work together as a team. Oh, they were
already terrific as an inteUectual team-4ve them each an office and a
secretary and a telephone, and together they would computerize the worl"ut
working tDgedier with their hands and their bodies was different. When they
had started, on January 3, they would have had trouble launching a rowboat
as a team. Five days later they were a machine.
138 Ken Folktt
And that was all that could be done here in Texas. Now they had to take a
look at the real-life jail. It was time to go to Tehran. Simons told
Stauffa he wanted to meet with Perot again.
3
While the rescue team was in training, President Carter got his last chance
of preventing a bloody revolution in Iran.
And he blew it.
This is how it happened ...
Ambassador William Sullivan went to bed content on the night of January 4 in
his private apartment within the large, cool residence in the Embassy
compound at the comer of Roosevelt and Takht-e-Jamshid avenues in Tehran.
Sullivan's boss, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, had been busy with the
Camp David negotiations all through November and December, but now he was
back in Washington and concentrating on Iran--and boy, did it show.
Vagueness and vacillation had ended. The cables containing Sullivan's
instructions had become crisp and decisive. Most importantly, the United
States at last had a strategy for dealing with the crisis: they were going
to talk to the Ayatollah Khomeini.
It was Sullivan's own idea. He was now sure that the Shah would soon leave
Iran and Khomeini would return in triumph. His job, be believed, was to
preserve America's relationship with Iran through the change of government,
so that when it was all over, Iran would still be a stronghold of American
influence in the Middle East. The way to do that was to help the Iranian
armed forces to gay intact and to continue American military aid to any new
regime.
Sullivan had called Vance on the secure telephone line and told him just
that. The U.S. should send an emissary to Paris to see the Ayatollah,
Sullivan had urged. Khomeini should be told that the main concern of the
U.S. was to preserve the territorial integrity of Iran and deflect Soviet
influence; that the Americans did not want tc~see a pitched battle in Iran
between the army and the Islamic revolutionaries; and that once the
Ayatollah was in
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 139
power, the U.S. would offer him the same military assistance and arms
sales it had given the Shah.
It was a bold plan. There would be those who would accuse the U.S. of
abandoning a friend. But Sullivan was sure it was time for the
Americans to cut their losses with the Shah and look to the future.
To his intense satisfaction, Vance had agreed.
So had the Shah. Weary, apathetic, and no longer willing to shed blood
in order to stay in power, the Shah had not even put up a show of
reluctance.
Vance had nominated, as his endssary to the Ayatollah, Theodore H.
Eliot, a senior diplomat who had served as economic counselor in Tehran
and spoke Farsi fluently. Sullivan was delighted with the choice.
Ted Eliot was scheduled to arrive in Paris in two days' time, on
January 6.
In one of the guest bedrooms at the ambassadorial residence, Air Force
General Robert "Dutch" Huyser was also going to bed. Sullivan was not