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    Day of the Cheetah

    Page 33
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      "Radar missile armed. "

      "Launch radar missile . . . now.

      Once again the radar-threat warning blared in Maraklov's head

      but this time he was ready for it. It said that Cheetah was above

      and behind him approximately six miles-a poor position to

      launch an attack at low altitude. The threat-warning receiver

      also did not indicate'that the Scorpion missile's own seeker-

      head was tracking-which meant that the missile was getting

      its guidance information only from Cheetah's radar. A signifi-

      cant disadvantage in the milliseconds game they were now play-

      ing.

      Maraklov began a hard four-G inverted climb directly back

      toward Cheetah, presenting his smallest radar cross-section to

      the oncoming Scorpion missile, which corrected for the sudden

      climb but could not complete the turn in time to avoid plowing

      into the Sierra Madre mountains. ANTARES immediately

      brought its cannon on-line and activated its attack radar to track

      Cheetah in as it sped toward it.

      watched in frustration as DreamStar dodged away from the

      AIM-120 missile, but he was ready for the move. "Set attack-

      mode air cannon. Arm cannon."

      "Cannon armed . . . Warning, radar weapon tracking, twelve

      o'clock. "

      Powell touched the voice-command button. "All trackbreak-

      ers on and transmit."

      "Trackbreakers on and transmitting, " the computer acknowl-

      edged as Cheetah's powerful internal jammers activated-the

      jammers would keep DreamStar's cannon from maintaining a

      lock-on. "I can't believe how fast he can get his guns on-line.

      But he's gotta be out of smash . . . Hang on."

      McLanahan needed no encouragement. pulled up into a

      tight climb, rolled inverted only five hundred feet above ground

      and again tried to line up on DreamStar.

      DreamStar had easily locked onto Cheetah with the attack radar,

      and Maraklov could now track it through its sudden climb. But

      when DreamStar tried to follow Cheetah around to keep the guns

      on him, ANTARES warned that he was approaching stall-speed.

      DreamStar, which had not yet reached optimal flying speed so

      early after takeoff, had used all its energy in its tight evasive

      turn and its pitch-up to track Cheetah and had no power left to

      continue to track him with the nose high in the air. DreamStar's

      canards pushed the nose down, and with that the guns were

      pulled off Cheetah.

      226 DALE BROWN

      Powell pushed Cheetah's nose earthward and on the downside

      of the loop found himself lined up on DreamStar. He pushed on

      the right rudder to slew Cheetah's nose to the right . . . no time

      to get a radar lock . . . just squeeze the trigger, hoping for a

      lucky hit.

      "Altitude," Patrick shouted. "Pull up."

      went to max afterburner and hauled back on the stick

      with both hands. He was so fixed on the image of DreamStar

      dead in his sights that he ignored the rocks and trees rushing UP

      at him. Then he had to roll hard left to fly behind DreamStar to

      avoid hitting him. After that hard turn Powell found himself per-

      ilously close to stall speed and had no choice but to roll wings-

      level at max afterburner and wait until he had regained speed.

      "Dammit," McLanahan shouted, "you had him, You

      could have nailed him-"

      " This isn't no Cessna 152 we're fooling with, Patrick. He can

      turn and attack faster than we can. He could have launched a

      missile by now but he was only tracking us with guns-he never

      got off a missile-track signal. Maybe that means he doesn't have

      any missiles.

      "Well, we're below half-ftiel right now. We need to tag him

      and head back or we'll be walking to Nevada."

      started a right turn back toward DreamStar. "Safe radar

      missiles," he spoke into the voice-command computer. "Set

      attack mode infrared missile."

      "Infrared missile selected, warning, one missile remaining.

      "I got a visual on him," Powell said. He touched the voice-

      command button. "Attack radar standby. Infrared scanner op-

      erate. "

      "Attack radar standby. Infrared scanner on. " Immediately

      the heat-seeking scanner locked onto DreamStar.

      "He's just running," Powell said. "He's not jinking and jiv-

      ing anymore. " To the voice-command computer he ordered,

      "Slave infrared missile to infrared scanner."

      The Sidewinder missile's seeker-head followed the azimuth

      directions of Cheetah's scanner, but the missile did not indicate

      a lock-on. "We need to get in closer .

      "No," McLanahan said. "His tail IR scanner has a greater

      range than our Sidewinder. Launch the Sidewinder in boresight

      mode-it should lock onto him after launch."

      "It's worth a try." It was easier than before for Powell to

      align himself with DreamStar's tailpipe-Maraklov was indeed

      driving straight and level, accelerating as fast as possible. When

      he was aligned with DreamStar's rectangular exhaust Powell

      commanded: "Infrared missile boresight."

      "Infrared missile boresight, caution, no target lock. " The

      missile would normally not launch unless it was tracking a tar-

      get, but in boresight mode the missile could be launched straight

      ahead and the infrared seeker could attempt to lock onto a target

      while in flight; it also was a tricky technique used against slow-

      moving targets to hit them outside the missile's optimal range.

      It was not reliable because of the missile-seeker's narrow field

      of view, but against hot targets that weren't maneuvering it was

      at least a valid attack.

      Powell hit the command button. "Launch."

      "Warning, radar target lock, seven o'clock.

      McLanahan strained again to search behind Cheetah's twin

      tails. "TWo . . . no, four fighters, two flights of two, right be-

      hind us. I can't see what they are but they're coming on fast-"

      "I gotta bredk it off, Patrick-"

      "No, stay on him, nail him-"

      But even then it was too late. DreamStar had picked up the

      same radar indications as Cheetah, and the advanced fighter had

      made a hard break to the right and an even harder one up and

      down to shake off the radar-lock by the advancing strangers. A

      boresight missile-launch was impossible.

      "Infrared missiles to safe. Set attack-mode radar missiles,"

      Powell ordered.

      "Two jets going high, two coming in," McLanahan said. "I

      can't tell for sure but they look like . . . they're F-20s, Mexican

      F-20s . . . "

      "Warning, radar target lock, six o'clock .

      yanked the stick hard night to stay with DreamStar, but

      it had regained its lost speed and was pulling away, staying at

      boulder level.

      "They're still with us," McLanahan said. "Can you get a

      shot off anyway?"

      "I think so . . . here we go .

      "Warning, radar missile lock. A missile was in flight, head-

      ing for them . . .

      hit the voice-command button on his stick. "Chaff right."

      228 DALE BROWN

      The computer ejected two bundles of radar-decoying chaff from


      the right ejector rack as yanked Cheetah into a hard left

      bank, pulling on the stick until the computer issued a stall-

      warning message.

      No missile, " McLanahan called out, straining his head up

      out of the cockpit against the G-forces pushing him into his seat.

      :'Didn't see a missile .

      'They faked us out," said, "they wanted to get our

      attention-

      "Damn it, get back on DreamStar."

      Powell began a hard right turn back toward DreamStar, but

      as he rolled out of the turn they heard: "American F-15 fighter,

      this is Mexican Air Force. You are directed to follow me at

      once.

      Goddanin, there he is, left wing." The F-20 Tigershark, the

      single-engine, high-tech version of the American F-5F Tiger

      fighter, was in loose route formation off Cheetah's left wingtip.

      " Number two is behind us," McLanahan said. "Stay on

      DreamStar." He switched to the VHF GUARD international

      emergency frequency. "Mexican Air Force, this is the F-15

      Storm One. We are on an authorized search mission for Storm

      Two, which is at our one o'clock position. We have permission

      from your government to pursue and destroy this aircraft. Over.

      So he lied a little.

      to , 'We have been advised that no foreign aircraft has permission

      enter Mexican airspace. We will destroy both if you do not

      follow us immediately."

      The XF-34 Storm Two is an experimental aircraft. It's also

      lethal as hell. We will pursue and destroy it. Stay clear."

      "No. Follow me or you will be shot down." The F-20 on

      Cheetah's left wing dropped back a few yards and began a climb-

      ing left turn.

      "Warning, radar target lock, six o'clock. " The F-20 follow-

      ing behind them had activated its tracking radar again. At this

      distance he could hardly miss . . .

      :'I'm open to suggestions, Colonel," deadpanned.

      'DreamStar's moved out to ten miles," McLanahan said,

      checking his radar. "Those other two Mexicans are chasing him

      but it's no contest, he's pulling away-"

      "I've got to follow," said, gently easing into a left bank.

      That guy behind me will hose us if I don't."

      "Damn it, we had him ... he was so close ... can you get

      away from these guys?"

      "Sure. This guy ahead of us is so sloppy I can fill him full of

      holes right now, and I think I can et away from the guy on our

      tail. But then what? We're into our fuel reserves as it is. After

      we lose these guys we'll need afterburner the whole way back

      just to get within missile range of DreamStar, and then the best

      we got is a tail-chase until we run out of gas."

      "So do it .

      "If that's what you really want .

      "What the hell does that mean .

      "That I think you better think pretty damn hard about it. If

      you try to chase down DreamStar from here we won't make it

      home. You'll risk Cheetah for a fifty-fifty chance of downing

      DreamStar. You've already violated Mexican air space and will

      take heat for that, but if you don't bring back Cheetah you're

      guaranteeing yourself a Big Chicken Dinner-"

      "Cheetah was my responsibility. If I let James get away . . .

      we all go down the tubes. As long as there's a chance I'm not

      going to let this guy go."

      "You've done everything you could. Like they say, there's a

      time to chase and a time to get the hell out of Dodge. I suggest

      we boogie."

      McLanahan hesitated. rolled out behind the lead F-20

      and reduced power slightly. The leader reduced his power to

      move beside Cheetah.

      tried the last gambit he could think of to get Patrick back

      to reality . "I don't love chasing DreamStar over Mexico with

      two chilibeans on my tail and sucking fumes but I can live with

      it. But you . . . you have something worth more than DreamStar

      back in a hospital in Vegas. Let's get back and go after him

      another day."

      It worked. Watching the Mexican F-20 off their left wing, with

      one speedbrake raised to slow himself down, McLanahan real-

      ized JC. was right. He'd taken an incredible chance and violated

      a few dozen rules by coming this far. He and had almost

      got James . . . they'd done everything they could . "There's

      going to be a next time," he muttered. "Bet on it.

      added: "The Russians don't have DreamStar yet-a Rus-

      sian has it and he's still ten thousand miles from home."

      "So we've still got these Mexican guys." He strained to search

      230 DALE BROWN

      behind Cheetah. "Number two's back there right between the

      tails.

      "No offense to the Mexican Air Force," said, "but I'll

      bet these bozos never intercepted anything but a soccer ball. The

      lead's got his power way back waiting for us, and his wingman's

      right in our jet-wash. They're both out of position. Hang on."

      jerked the throttles to idle and popped Cheetah's big

      speedbreak. The lead F-20 noticed the sudden power reduction

      and, not realizing how slow he was already going, pulled back

      his power even more. On the verge of a stall, he had no choice

      but to scissor left and fall away to regain his lost airspeed. Mean-

      while, the number two F-20, not watching Cheetah and dis-

      tracted by his leader's sudden departure, never tried to slow

      down. He yanked his stick hard-right just in time to avoid slam-

      ming into Cheetah's tail, and had to spin away. At that moment

      retracted the speedbrake, went into full power and began

      to accelerate and climb away from the Mexican interceptors.

      McLanahan was staring out the back of the large bubble can-

      opy. "They're still below us . . . not climbing yet . . . "

      "Warning, radar search, six o'clock, " from the computer.

      "They dropped from radar track to search," said. "Are

      they getting closer?"

      "I can't see them, they've dropped back."

      "American F- 15, this is Mexican Air Force. Follow us to base

      immediately. Acknowledge. "

      shut off the VHF GUARD channel.

      "I don't think we can make it," McLanahan said a few min-

      utes later, using the computer to check their fuel status. "We'll

      have to divert to a Mexican airport after all. "

      "We'll start a climb and then use an idle descent into a di-

      version base," said, gently pulling back on the stick and

      starting a shallow climb. "Oh, well," he sighed, "I haven't

      been in a Mexican jail since high school. It'll be like old times."

      "Sorry I got you into this, I'm going to waste that son-

      ofabitch if I have to walk back to Nicaragua or Colombia or

      Bolivia or wherever he's headed--

      Suddenly the number one radio, still set to the refueling tank-

      er's operating frequency, crackled to life: "Storm One, this is

      Cardinal Three-Seven. Over."

      "I got it," McLanahan said. On the radio he replied: "Car-

      dinal Three-Seven, this is Storm One. Over."

      "Storm One, this is Cardinal. We're Sun Devil KC-135 out

      of Phoenix-Sky Harbor Airport, one hundred and sixty-first Air

      Refueling Group, Arizona Air National Guard. Set beacon code

      sev
    enty-four, we've got thirty-one. We're at flight level two-niner

      zero, orbiting fifty miles south of Tucson near Nogales. What's

      your situation? Over.

      "Air-to-air TACAN beacon? I haven't used that since I was a

      butter-bar." checked the distance readout. "He's still out

      of ran e, not picking him up yet."

      "Cardinal, Storm One is approximately one hundred miles

      southwest of Chihuahua. Fuel situation critical. We were about

      to divert to Chihuahua for emergency refueling. Over."

      "Copy that, Storm. I guess your boss wants you back real

      bad. We've been ordered to . . . how should I put it? ... have

      a catastrophic navigation failure and come and get you. As I

      speak, our autopilot is mysteriously taking us south across the

      border." A pause, then: "Air-to-air TACAN shows two hundred

      miles, Storm. Can you make it?"

      "It'll be close," McLanahan said.

      "We may have visitors," added. "We left a couple sore-

      head Mexican F-20s in our dust."

      "They should have gotten word by now that you're on an

      authorized sortie," the crewman replied. "Your boss tells us

      that they finally authorized your overflight. But that's not going

      to help you much. I hope you got what you came for, boys-I

      doubt there are going to be any high fives waiting for you."

      "No," McLanahan said, "we didn't get what we came for.

      Not this time .

      Sebaco Military Airbase, Nicaragua

      Thursday, 18 June 1996, 0645 CDT (0745 EDT)

      ANDREI MARAKLOV AWOKE with a start but didn't try to get up-

      his muscles quivered with the slightest hint of exertion. He was

      incredibly thirsty. Beads of sweat rolled down from his eye-

      brows, and the dirt and salt stung his eyes.

      He opened his eyes. He was lying face down on a firin mat-

      tress, his face buried in stiff white sheets. His arms were by his

      side. Judging by feel, he was only wearing a pair of briefs.

      Suddenly he felt a cool sponge touch the back of his neck,

      and a young female voice said in a soft voice, "Dobrahye otrah,

      tovarisch Polkovnik.

      He had prepared himself for this, ever since deciding to take

      DreamStar out of the United States. In hesitant, poorly phrased

      Russian, he replied, "Vi gahvahretye pah angleyski? "

     


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