Shadows of War (33 page)

Read Shadows of War Online

Authors: Larry Bond

The Pentagon
Zeus propped his hands on both cheeks,
holding his face about four inches from the surface of the conference room table where he'd taped the large-scale map of Vietnam's western provinces. The map's features were a blur of yellow, green, and brown, swirling before his eyes. He needed sleep, real sleep, and if he couldn't get that, he needed coffee, the stronger the better.
“Trying to learn by osmosis?” said Win Christian across the room. The snicker in his voice was anything but subtle.
“I got the map memorized already,” Zeus said, lifting his head slightly. “I'm trying to blank out your face.”
“Very good, Zeus. Just remember, I'm chief of staff. Anything you want, from dental floss to a weekend off, goes through me.”
“Nice.” Zeus knew he wouldn't be getting any free time for the foreseeable future, and he'd already stocked up on dental floss. “I'll tell you what I do need. Real-time access to the satellite data. Can you arrange that? There's no reason we can't have it immediately, not an hour later. I don't need the analysts to tell me what I'm seeing.”
“We all need it. Intel is screaming for it.”
“They should scream louder.”
Zeus stretched his muscles. The Chinese plan to invade Vietnam clearly incorporated American doctrine—lightning strikes away from the main centers of resistance, along with coordinated air and armor movements. Cover a lot of ground, don't let the enemy know precisely what you are up to. It was Shock and Awe, Chinese style.
But the Chinese army wasn't the American army, and it wasn't fighting in a desert, where Shock and Awe had had its proving ground. There were flaws in the strategy—plenty of them, starting with the limited road network in the areas they were attacking, and the decision to keep the flanks lightly protected. The latter had been a feature of the second Gulf War, where the risk was carefully calculated and deemed acceptable. In this case, it seemed like an even greater
gamble, though the Vietnamese had yet to make the Chinese pay for it.
Tanks were the keystone of the attack. The Chinese Type 99 main battle tank was a hell of a weapon, a main battle tank that, while not quite on par with the American M1A1, easily overmatched anything the Vietnamese were able to field. It was fast and powerful, capable of moving along the roads at high speed and then overcoming all but the most concentrated defenses. Its most glaring vulnerability was the fact that, like the Russian designs that had inspired it, its extra ammo was kept in the crew compartment, an invitation to disaster if it met a high-powered antitank round.
Had this been a simulation, Zeus could have blunted Red's attacks by making the most of this vulnerability. He'd hit the leading edge of the attacks with old but sturdy A-10A Warthogs, chewing up the leading edge of the invading force. He could mop up with special operations teams deposited near key intersections, who could strike with shoulder-held antitank weapons when the tanks came through.
But in real life, the Vietnamese had no A-10s. Their antitank weapons were either old Russian designs or Chinese-made-for-export missiles that conspicuously lacked the punch to get past the Type 99's skin and explosive reactive armor. Even if they somehow managed to get defensive forces in the right place—a big if at the moment—the Vietnamese weapons were the equivalent of peashooters as far as the tanks were concerned.
That could be partly solved by giving the Vietnamese new weapons. But even if they were flown over immediately from Army stockpiles, there'd be a delay in training and deployment. Several days at the very least, and by then the Chinese would have enough of the country that it wouldn't matter.
So there had to be another way to stop the Chinese. Or at least slow them down.
They'd just taken Na San and were staging there for their next big run. As Zeus saw it, tonight they would zoom down Route 6, probably overrun Moc Chau, and then go on either to Hanoi or farther south, down to the area of Nimh Binh.
Nimh Binh was the far better choice. From there, they had a real road network south. They could cut Hanoi off, take it at their leisure.
Everything they had done so far pointed south. Think of Shock and
Awe—the big defenses were initially bypassed, then attacked at a time of the aggressor's choosing. The Chinese would do the same here. The Vietnamese expected the attack around Hanoi—most of their forces were very close to the city, even north of it. So that would be the last place the Chinese would go.
The country would open up after Nimh Binh. There were real highways, and plenty of them. Plus, the satellites had shown some activity on Hai Ham on their last pass. The Chinese island off the Gulf of Bac Bo pointed like a fist to Vietnam's midsection. It was the perfect place to stage an amphibious assault from.
A pincer from both directions, once Hanoi was cut off. The south was the real prize, and it lay nearly unprotected.
So what would I do if this were Red Dragon?
Slow the tanks down. That was the first job. Make the Chinese take their time. Even if meant steering them directly toward Hanoi. Hanoi was a battle that the Vietnamese were prepared to fight. They might not win, but they at least had defenses in place.
Or send the Chinese into Laos. Easy pickings, but it would upend their timetable. The roads there were even worse than in northwestern Vietnam, especially in rain. Plus, they wouldn't be able to hide behind the PR line that they were invading Vietnam only to ensure their own safety.
As if anyone would believe that anyway. Anyone outside the UN, that is.
He needed a bottleneck, something more than just a road.
“General, I didn't expect you here tonight,” said Christian as General Perry came into the room.
“Well, I am. Zeus, how are you?”
As the general walked across the room, Zeus flinched involuntarily. He started to salute, then realized Perry wanted to shake his hand.
“Good to have you aboard, Zeus,” added Perry. “Win has filled you in on the details?”
“Yes, sir,” said Zeus, though it had sounded more like a statement than a question. “I'm coming up with a strategy for the Vietnamese.”
“You have the problem solved yet?”
“If I could get some A-10As over there, sure.”
“I'm afraid that's not going to work.” Perry's smile disintegrated into a frown.
“No, sir.”
Did generals have to turn in their sense of humor when they took their first star? Or did the promotion board limit its review to candidates who never got a joke?
Christian was smirking behind Perry, as if to say,
You idiot; now you're on my turf.
That burned Zeus. Really burned him.
“I, uh, did have a little bit of an idea,” he told Perry.
“Let's hear it.”
Zeus looked down at the map, hoping inspiration would strike.
“They'll come down this way, the main attack, right down Route 6 to Moc Chau. All the intelligence points to it,” said Zeus.
Perry looked at the map. Zeus stared at it as well, hoping it would spark his imagination. It didn't.
“How are the Vietnamese defenses there?” Perry asked.
“About on par with their defenses everywhere else except Hanoi,” said Zeus. “Almost nonexistent. But I don't think they should take their stand there.”
“No?”
“They'd get creamed.”
“You're not suggesting they run away, are you?”
“If it would work, definitely. But, uh, what they have to do is, uh, slow the tanks down, try and get some of the momentum back—they have to stop the tanks temporarily and get the Chinese commanders to have to think on their feet. The um, Shock and Awe, which is what they're trying, is predicated on flexibility. Chinese doctrine isn't flexible. It hasn't been. Some units—their commandos are very good. But most of the infantry is very poorly educated and trained. Some of them are just basically farmers and, uh, in some cases criminals.”
“How does this help the Vietnamese?” asked Christian. “How do they stop the tanks?”
“What they should do is flood the plain here,” Zeus said, the idea coming to him as he saw the red line of the highway curling around the reservoirs at Song Da. “Divert the water from Song Da Lake south, destroy the road right before Routes 6 and 15. If they did a good enough job with the water, blew up the bridges, gutting the road—if they do that, the Chinese would have to stop. They'd have to stop.”
The idea blossomed full in Zeus's mind. He saw the strategy now—cede Moc Chau, give up everything down to the Ma River. Using the water from Song Da—the tanks would be forced through a narrow,
slow passage. The Chinese might cut a road through the jungle—or they might do the next logical thing and divert eastward, going after Hanoi. In either case, their plan would be thwarted. They'd need days—maybe weeks—to reorganize everything. Time to get help to the Vietnamese.
General Perry said nothing as Zeus fleshed out the plan, possible strategies popping into his mind. It was all a big roll of the dice, but at this point anything the Vietnamese did was a roll of the dice.
“What's to keep the Chinese from just blowing through Laos?” said Christian. There was a sneer in his voice. “They can slam right through there, bypass whatever the Vietnamese try setting up at the reservoir, then turn up in Saigon.”
“That's mountainous terrain, mostly jungle, with even fewer roads than where they are now,” said Zeus. “I mean, they may try it—it may be an alternative for them, especially if they're not planning an amphibious landing. But getting through those mountains with the tanks—they've done okay so far on paved roads, but Laos is a lot worse. Narrower—you can check the intel and—”
“Amphibious landings are not their forte,” said Christian.
“That's right. But intelligence shows a buildup of activity on Hai Ham.”
“A landing in Vietnam would give them practice for Taiwan,” said Perry drily. “Your thinking is very sound, Major. Do you think the Vietnamese would agree?”
“I couldn't, uh, speak for them, General.”
“A rhetorical question, son. You'll come with me to explain it to them. We'll both find out together.”
“We're going over to the embassy?”
“We're going to Hanoi,” said Perry. “There's an RT-1 waiting for us at Andrews. We'll be there in a few hours. The Vietnamese want our help. Unofficially, of course.”
Northwestern Vietnam
A sharp pain pinched Josh's chest as he watched
the soldiers move across the field. Every muscle froze. He couldn't breathe.
M
tugged at his hand.
“Yeah, we have to go. We have to—go,” said Josh, forcing the words out. He pushed his legs to move, walking stiffly to the next room, which had a wall facing the front of the house. Halfway to the window, he spotted soldiers outside, up near the road. They were just standing there, but they could easily see the window.
“This way,” Josh said, pulling M
backward with him. He fought against the panic trying to seize his chest and slipped into the scarred and battered room at the rear corner of the house. The soldiers hadn't reached the rear yard yet.
Josh grabbed M
, holding her under his side as he skirted the hole and then climbed over the rubble. As soon as they were out of the building, he threw himself and the girl down to the ground.
“Crawl,” he whispered. Then he pulled her up and showed her how to go, on all fours, toward the rough grass and weeds a few yards away.
M
needed no urging; staying low to the ground, she scampered ahead and disappeared in the brush.
When he reached the grass, Josh turned back around to try and get a look out at the field and see what the soldiers were doing. He couldn't see much of the barn, or the field in front of the house. He backed up, still on hands and knees, pushing the grass back and forth—a telltale sign, he knew, that someone was hiding there.
Josh froze, then eased his head to the side, looking for a passage where he could crawl without disturbing the vegetation. He spotted one a few feet away. Pressing his stomach into the earth, he moved toward it as wormlike as possible. The earth smelled wet, with a vague manure scent.
His nose started to twitch.
Josh caught the sneeze in the crook of his arm, smothering it. He held his breath, and bit the side of his lip with his mouth. The pain felt
almost good, reassuring. It was an easy trade—endure this pinprick of pain in exchange for safety.
But there were no deals to be made with fate. The soldiers began to yell. Once more Josh froze.
Some gunshots.
M
!
He started to jump up, rifle poised. He knew exactly what he was going to do: run out to the soldiers, finger pressed on the trigger of the rifle as he ran. He'd get a small measure of revenge before they killed him. He'd release his anger—not just from the assault by the Chinese, but from everything, from the unfair slaughter of his family when he was a child, from everything.
As he started to spring up, a small hand gripped his side. M
's touch was light, but it stopped him. Josh folded forward.
The girl curled herself around him. He pulled M
close, expecting the soldiers to run to them at any second.
But they didn't. There were more shouts, a little farther away.
Josh smelled smoke. He let go of the girl and crawled forward a few feet, raising his head.
The barn was made of wood. There were stacks of bamboo near the sides. The soldiers had taken these and set fires.
The door opened. Two figures emerged, coughing. Some of the soldiers nearby began firing. The men fell.
They looked like farmers to him. They definitely weren't soldiers.
There were more shots. From the barn? Josh couldn't tell.
The soldiers were running, moving toward the barn.
Go, now, while everyone's attention was there.
He took out his video camera, fumbling with it. There was about forty-five seconds of memory left, part of the file he'd erased the day before. He pressed the button and began shooting.
Go! Get out of here!
Another figure came out of the barn, hands up. The soldiers cut her down as well.
The memory on the camera was full. He turned it off, slid it back into his pocket.
More gunfire. They were firing into the barn now, blindly.
M
was kneeling next to him. Rising into a crouch, Josh poked her to come with him. He started moving through the field, gradually rising, moving so fast that he was tugging the girl.
“Come on,” he growled at her beneath his breath. Finally he reached down and pulled her up on his hip, running full speed toward a thick wedge of trees. Just as he reached it, he saw it was bordered by a barbed-wire fence. Afraid he couldn't stop in time, he plunged down to the side, rolling on the ground and then into the wire.
M
began to cry.
“Sssh,” he said sharply.

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