Read On Wings of Eagles Online
Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Military, #Espionage, #General, #History, #Special Forces, #Biography & Autobiography
"Their husbands and sons are unjustly imprisoned, so they gather here,
wailing and crying to the guards to let the prisoners go. 91
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 223
Simons said: "Well, I guess I feel the same about Paul and Bill as those
women do about their men."
"Yes. I, too, am very concerned about Paul and Bill."
"But what are you doing about it?" Simons said.
Rashid was taken aback. "I am doing everything I can to help my American
friends," he said. He thought of the dogs and cats. One of his tasks at the
moment was to care for all the pets left behind by EDS evacuees-including
four dogs and twelve cats. Rashid had never had pets and did not know how
to deal with large, aggressive dogs. Every time he went to the apartment
where the dogs were stashed to feed them, he had to hire two or three men
off the streets to help him restrain the animals. Twice now he had taken
them all to the airport in cages, having heard that there was a flight out
that would accept them; and both times the flight had been canceled. He
thought of telling Simons about this, but somehow he knew that Simons would
not be impressed.
Simons was up to something, Rashid thought, and it was not a business
matter. Simons struck him as an experienced man-you could see that just by
looking at his face. Rashid did not believe in experience. He believed in
fast education. Revolution, not evolution. He liked the inside track, short
cuts, accelerated development, superchargers. Simons was different. He was
a patient man, and Rashid--analyzing Simons's psychologyguessed that the
patience came from a strong will. When he is ready, Rashid thought, he will
let me know what he wants from
`~-,Do you know anything about the French Revolution?" Simons asked.
"A little."
"This place reminds me of the Bastille-a symbol of oppression. 9'
It was a good comparison, Rashid thought.
Simons went on: "The French revolutionaries stormed the Bastille and let
all the prisoners out."
"I think the same will happen here. It's a possibility, at least."
Simons nodded. "If it happens, someone ought to be here to take care of
Paul and Bill."
"Yes." That will be me, Rashid thought.
They stood together in Gasr Square, looking at the high walls and huge
gates, and the wailing women in their black robes. Rashid recalled his
principle: always do a little more than EDS
224 Ken FoUelt
asks of you. What if the mobs ignored Gasr Prison? Maybe he should make
sure they did not. The mob was nothing but people like Rashid-young,
discontented Iranian men who wanted to change their lives. He might not
only join the mob--he might lead it. He might lead an attack on the
prison. He, Rashid, might rescue Paul and Bill.
Nothing was impossible.
2
Coburn did not know all that was going on in Simons's mind at this point. He
had not been in on Simons's conversations with Perot and Rashid, and Simons
did not volunteer much information. From what Coburn did know, the three
possibilities-4he trunkof-a-car trick, the house-arrest-and-snatch routine,
and the storming of the Bastille---seemed pretty vague. Furthermore, Simons
was doing nothing to make it happen, but appeared content to sit around the
Dvoranchik place discussing ever-more-detailed scenarios. Yet none of this
made Coburn uneasy. He was an optimist anyway; and he--like Ross
Perot-figured there was no point in second-guessing the world's greatest
rescue expert.
While the dim possibilities were simmering, Simons concentrated on routes
out of Iran, the problem Coburn thought of as
Cietting out of Dodge. -
Coburn looked for ways of flying Paid and Bill out. He poked around
warehouses at the airport, toying with the idea of shipping Paul and Bill
as freight. He talked to people at each of the airlines, trying to develop
contacts. He eventually had several meetings with the chief of security at
Pan Am, telling turn everything except the names of Paul and Bill. They
talked about getting the two fugitives on a scheduled flight wearing Pan Am
cabin crew uniforms. The security chief wanted to help, but the affline's
liability proved in the end to be an insuperable problem. Coburn then
considered stealing a helicopter. He scouted a chopper base in the south of
the city, and decided the theft was feasible. But, given the chaos of the
hunian military, he suspected the aircraft were not being properly
maintained and he knew they were short of spare parts. 'Men again, some of
them might have contaminaW fuel.
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 225
He reported all this to Simons. Simons was already uneasy about airports,
and the snags uncovered by Coburn reinforced his prejudice. There were
always police and military around airports; if something went wrong there
was no escape. airports were designed to prevent people wandering where
they should not go; at an airport you always had to put yourself in the
hands of others. Furthermore, in that situation your worst enemy could be
the people escaping: they needed to be very cool. Coburn thought Paul and
Bill had the nerves to go through something like that, but there was no
point telling Simons so: Simons always. had to make his own assessment of
a man's character, and he had never met Paul or Bill.
So in the end the team focused on getting out by road.
There were six ways.
To the north was the USSR, not a hospitable country. To the east were
Afghanistan, equally inhospitable, and Pakistan, whose border was too far
away-almost a thousand miles, mostly across desert. To the south was the
Persian Gulf, with friendly Kuwait just fifty or a hundred miles across the
water. That was Promising. To the west was unfriendly Iraq; to the
northwest, friendly Turkey.
Kuwait and Turkey were the destinations they favored.
Simons asked Coburn to have a trustworthy Iranian employee drive south all
the way to the Persian Gulf, to firid out whether the road was passable and
the countryside Peaceful. Coburn asked the cycle man, so called because he
zipped around Tehran on a motorcycle. A trainee systems engineer like
Rashid, the Cycle Man was about twenty-five, short, and street-smart. He
had learned English at school in California, and could talk with any
regional American accent--southem, Puerto Rican, anything. EDs had hired
him despite his lack of a college degree because he scored remarkably high
marks on aptitude tests. When EDS's Iranian employees had joined the
general strike, and Paul and Coburn had called a mass meeting to discuss it
with them, the Cycle Man had astonished everyone by speaking out vehemently
against his colleagues and in favor of the management. He made no secret of
his pro-American feelings, yet Coburn was quite me the Cycle Man was
involved with the revolutionaries. One day he had asked Keane Taylor for a
car. Taylor had given him one. The next day he asked for mother. Taylor
obliged. The Cycle Man always used his motorcycle anyway: Taylor and Coburn
were pretty sure the cars were for the revolutionaries.
226 Ken FoIku
They did not care: it was more important that the Cycle Man become obligated
to diem.
So, in return for past favors, the Cycle Man drove to the Persian Gulf.
He came back a few days later and reported that anything was possible if
you had enough money. You could get to the Gulf and you could buy or rent
a boat.
He had no idea what would happen when you disembarked in Kuwait.
That question was answered by Glenn Jackson.
As well as being a hunter and a Baptist, Glenn Jackson was a Rocket Man. His
combination of a first-class mathematical brain and the ability to stay calm
under stress had got him into Mission Control at NASA's Manned Spacecraft
Center in Houston as a flight controller. His job had been to design and
operate the computer programs that calculated trajectories for in-flight
maneuvering.
Jackson's unflappability had been severely tested on Christmas Day 1968,
during the last mission he worked on, the lunar flyby. When the spacecraft
came out from behind the moon, astronaut Jim Lovell had read down the list
of numbers, called residuals, which told Jackson how close the craft was to
its planned course. Jackson had got a ftight: The numbers were way outside
the acceptable limits of error. Jackson asked CAPCOM to have the astronaut
read them down again, to double-check. Then he told the flight director
that if those numbers were correct, the three astronauts were as good as
dead: there was not enough fuel to correct such a huge divergence.
Jackson asked for Lovell to read the numbers a third time, extra carefully.
They were the same. Then Lovell said: "Oh, wait a minute, I'm reading these
wrong . . . "
When the real numbers came through, it turned out that the maneuver had
been almost perfect.
All that was a long way from busting into a prison.
Still, it was beginning to look like Jackson would never get the chance to
perpetrate a jailbreak. He had been cooling his heels in Pans for a week
when he got instructions from Simons, via Dallas, to go to Kuwait.
He flew to Kuwait and moved into Bob Young's house. Young had gone to
Tehran to help the negotiating team, and his wife, Kris, and her new baby
were in the States on vacation.
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 227
Jackson told Malloy Jones, who was Acting Country Manager in Young's
absence, that he had come to help with the preliminary study EDS was doing
for Kuwait's central bank. He did a little work for the benefit of his cover
story, then started looking around.
He spent some time at the airport, watching the immigration officers. They
were being very tough, he soon learned. Hundreds of Iranians without
passports were flying into Kuwait: they were being handcuffed and put on
the next flight back. Jackson concluded that Paul and Bill could not
possibly fly into Kuwait.
Assuming they could get in by boat, would they later be allowed to kave
without passports? Jackson went to see the American Consul, saying that one
of his children seemed to have lost a passport, and asking what was the
procedure for replacing it. In the course of a long and rambling discussion
the Consul revealed that the Kuwaitis had a way of checking, when they
issued an exit visa, whether the person had entered the country legally.
That was a problem, but perhaps not an insoluble one: once inside Kuwait,
Paul and Bill would be safe from Dadgar, and surely the U.S. Embassy would
then give them back their passports. The main question was: assuming the
fugitives could reach the south of Iran and embark on a small boat, would
they be able to land unnoticed in Kuwait? Jackson traveled the sixtymile
length of the Kuwait coast, from the Iraqi border in the north to the
Saudi-Arabian border in the south. He spent many hours on the beaches,
collecting seashells in winter. Normally, he had been told, coastal patrols
were very light. But the exodus from Iran had changed everything. There
were thousands of Iranians who wanted to leave the country almost as badly
as Paul and Bill did; and those Iranians, like Simons, could look at a map
and see the Persian Gulf to the south with friendly Kuwait just across the
water. The Kuwait Coast Guard was wise to all this. Everywhere Jackson
looked, he saw, out at sea, at least one patrol boat; and they appeared to
be stopping all small craft.
The prognosis was gloomy. Jackson called Merv Stauffer in Dallas and
reported that the Kuwait exit was a no-no.
That left Turkey.
Simons had favored Turkey all along. It involved a shorter drive than
Kuwait. Furthermore, Simons knew Turkey. He had served there in the Mes as
part of the American military aid
228 Ken FoUeu
program, training the Turkish Army. He even spoke a little of the language.
So he sent Ralph Boulware to Istanbul.
Ralph Boulware grew up in bars. His father, Benjamin Russell Boulware, was
a tough and independent black man who had a series of small businesses: a
grocery store, real-estate rentals, bootlegging, but mostly bars. Ben
Boulware's theory of childraising was that if he knew where they were, he
knew what they were doing, so he kept his boys mostly within his sight,
which meant mostly in the bar. It was not much of a childhood, and it left
Ralph feeling that he had been an adult all Ins fife.
He had realized he was different from other boys Ins age when he went to