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    Fatal Terrain

    Page 45
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      "Oscar-Mike" challenge code--OM, or Old Man, was usually

      reserved as a radio tribute to him. "Zero-One authenticates

      Charlie."

      "Loud and clear, Zero-One." They repeated the procedure

      with the other UHF radio, with the secure UHF, and finally

      with the satellite teletype terminal.

      The next step: checking the weapons. With the weapons

      monitoring system off, Roma checked each weapon station to

      be sure each weapon and each weapon release circuit was in-

      deed off. He then turned the system on and flipped through

      4

      FATAL TERRAIN 301

      each weapon station again, watching for green sAm lights in-

      dicating each weapon was safed and had passed its continuity

      and connectivity self-tests with the B-IB's weapon computers.

      Checklist complete, he shut down the weapons-monitoring

      system.

      Next he checked the PAL, or Permissive Action Link, the

      computer that would allow him to prearin the weapons. He

      entered a test code and received a good sAm and READY in-

      dication. Once programmed with the correct prearming code

      transmitted to the crew by the National Command Authority-

      the President of the United States, along with the Secretary of

      Defense-the PAL would allow the crew to prearm the nuclear

      weapons. The PAL would allow only five incorrect prearming

      attempts, then automatically safe the weapons permanently.

      The PAL was mounted on the forward instrument panel be-

      tween the OSO and DSO, and Roma got his DSO's attention

      so he could visually double-check that the PAL was good.

      "Paul, PAL check."

      The DSO, Paul Wiegand, leaned over and checked the light

      indications on the PAL. "SAFE and READY checks."

      "Push to test," Roma said, hitting the MT button. All of

      the lights on the panel illuminated, with the SAFE light flashing.

      I 'Checks."

      "PAL off," Roma said, shutting off the system. "Arming

      switch lock lever safety wire."

      Wiegand looked over and saw that the safety wire to the

      mode switch lock lever was installed and secure. "Secure,"

      he responded. Because the PAL was a nuclear weapon com-

      ponent, protected just like a nuclear weapon itself, access to

      the PAL was strictly two-person control-no fewer than two

      persons had to be present whenever handling the PAL or any

      nuclear weapon or component. Additional safety was added by

      providing a single, physical, positive action to any attempt to

      prearm any nuclear weapon, such as breaking the thin steel

      safety wire off the lock lever before moving the lock lever

      over so the anning switch could be moved from SAFE to ARM.

      By this time, the navigation gyros had fully aligned, and he

      set the mode switch to NAV. "Chris, I'm in NAv, ready for

      engine start. "

      "Defense is ready for engine start."

      "Rog," the copilot replied. A few minutes later, the pilots

      started all four engines, then began their electrical, hydraulic,

      302 DALE BROWN

      fuel, environmental, flight control, terrain-following computer,

      and autopilot checks, swept the wings back and forward, and

      cycled the bomb doors and rotary launcher. One of the flight-

      control computers flunked a mode check, so the crew chiefs

      were scrambling to find a spare computer to swap. It took an

      hour and a half before a spare was found, and another half

      hour to finish the checks and shut down the engines. The crew

      then performed the "cocking" checklist, which configured all

      switches and systems so the aircraft could be ready for taxi

      and takeoff just minutes after hitting one button.

      "Control, Sortie Zero-One, code one, cocked on alert," the

      copilot reported after the crew finished their checklists.

      - Zero-One, control copies, cocked on alert. Assume normal

      alert, time two-one-zero-eight-zero-seven, authentication Os-

      car. Control out."

      Roma looked up the date-time group and checked the au-

      thentication code; it was correct. "Authentication checks,

      crew," Roma announced. The only response was the interior

      lights switching off as the pilots turned off the battery switch,

      and they were left in the dark. As the crew climbed out of the

      big bomber, motored the entry hatch closed, and walked to-

      ward the squadron headquarters building, Joe Roma thought

      that he was being left in the dark in more ways than one.

      It was after one-thirty in the morning, but Roma's day 'was

      just beginning. The Wing's goal was to generate four of its

      twenty B-IB Lancer bombers and six of its eighteen KC-135R

      Stratotanker aerial refueling tankers for nuclear alert within the

      first twelve hours, ten bombers within thirty-six hours, and

      sixteen planes within forty-eight hours. Crews that had just

      finished placing one plane on alert were immediately cycled

      back to begin preflighting another plane while its crews were

      being briefed. Roma was assigned the task of giving refresher

      briefings to oncoming crews on nuclear weapon preflight and

      handling procedures, and he also filled in giving route and

      target study and inventorying the CMF, or Classified Mission

      Folder, boxes for the crews placing aircraft on alert.

      . At the twelve-hour point, nine A. local time, Roma was

      in the Wing Battle Staff Room, attending the hourly battle staff

      meeting and the first major progress briefing of the alert force

      generation. The news was not good: Sortie Zero-Four was still

      at least thirty minutes to an hour from being ready, and it

      might even require an engine swap or a completely new air-

      K

      FATAL TER RAI N 303

      plane. It was no secret that the morale of the B- I B community

      was at an all-time low after flying hours were cut and after

      learning that all of the B -Is would be going to the Air National

      Guard or Air Force Reserves starting in October--crew mem-

      bers, officers, and enlisted troops alike were spending more

      time looking for new assignments or applying for Guard or

      Reserve slots.

      "Aircrew response has been marginal to good overall,"

      Roma said when asked about how the aircrews were reacting

      to the recall and late-night generation. "About thirty percent

      response in the first hour, seventy percent in three hours-not

      bad when you consider the average commute time is forty

      minutes for the crew members that live off-base, which is

      about two-thirds of the force."

      "It's unacceptable," the group commander interjected an-

      grily. "The crews were dogging it."

      "I don't think anyone was dogging it, sir," Roma said. "It's

      Friday night. We just finished a wing deployment exercise and

      an Air Battle Force exercise. People were out of town for the

      weekend, going to graduation parties, getting ready for sum-

      mer vacation-this was a bolt-from- the-blue nuclear genera-

      tion."

      "All right, all right," the wing commander interrupted.

      "The bottom line is we have more crews than planes right

      now. What's the problem?"

      "Tbe t
    raining on the SIOP-required gear and availability of

      spare parts for the numberbf planes required for alert, sir,"

      the chief of logistics interjected, referring to the specialized

      equipment needed to generate a plane for war under the Single

      Integrated Operations Plan. "We're having to break into pre-

      positioned deployment packs for spare parts and equipment.

      Going from zero planes available for nuclear generation to

      fifteen ready in just thirty-six more hours is eating up our

      supplies and overloading the avionics shops."

      "Besides, it's beenalmost a year since we've moved nukes

      for real, sir," the munitions maintenance chief added. "We've

      got a whole generation of troops that only have basic education

      and virtually no experience in special weapons."

      The strain was showing on the wing commander's face.

      "No excuses, dammit," he said, rubbing a hand over his

      weary face. "Our job around here is to generate planes and

      get ready for combat operations, and I'll shit-can anyone who

      304 DALE BROWN

      doesn't understand that. How well we do on our generation

      schedule depends on the leadership abilities of the men and

      women in this room. I want us back on schedule before the

      next battle staff meeting-I hold the senior staff officers and

      group commanders responsible. Cancel the intelligence brief-

      ing-we've got a job to do out on the ramp. Dismissed."

      Things had been somewhat disorganized during the first sev

      eral hours of a the full nighttime nuclear alert generation-

      that was situation-normal in any unit Roma had ever been in-

      but by midmorning things appeared to be humming along

      pretty well. By the time Roma returned to his office in the

      squadron building, his entire staff-including everyone re-

      called from leave-was busy. Everyone had been assigned an

      alert sortie. Most were not scheduled to start generating their

      alert line for several hours, so they were busy running simu-

      lator sessions, running mobility line duties, running errands for

      the Wing staff, or helping the maintenance crews to bring a

      plane up to preload status.

      Roma's E-mail mailbox had more than two dozen new mes-

      sages in it in just the last thirty minutes, so he turned on the

      TV in his office to get the latest news and sat down to start

      reading and returning messages. The news seemed to be a

      jumble of confusion, very much like the situation at Ellsworth

      Air Force Base as five thousand men and women were trying

      to get twenty planes ready to fly off and unleash nuclear dev-

      astation on the People's Republic of China.

      Little else was known about the nuclear disaster in Japan

      except what had been reported hours ago: the American air-

      craft carrier USS Independence, all eighty thousand tons of it,

      including approximately 5,200 officers and enlisted men and

      women, had disappeared when what eyewitnesses called pt

      small nuclear explosion erupted in the late-morning hours in

      the Gulf of Sagami, about sixty miles south of Tokyo.

      Roma couldn't believe what he was I hearing.

      The disastrous news didn't stop there. Two escort frigates

      and a 50,000-ton replenishment ship carrying 150,000 barrels

      of fuel oil cruising near the carrier had capsized in the explo-

      sion, and all hands were feared lost--460 more men and

      women presumed dead. Two guided-missile cruiser escorts had

      been substantially damaged in the explosion, with hundreds

      more dead or injured. Several other vessels, civilian and com-

      mercial, in the vicinity of the explosion had also been lost.

      FATAL T ER R AI N 305

      The force of the blast was estimated to be equivalent to 10,000

      tons of TNT.

      The Japanese prime minister, Kazumi Nagai, immediately

      blamed the accident on the United States, saying that the In-

      dependence had been carrying nuclear weapons and that one

      of the warheads had gone off when a C-2 Greyhound cargo

      aircraft made a crash landing. U. President Kevin Martindale

      went on national radio and TV immediately, reporting the ac-

      cident and denying that the Independence or any U. warships

      near Japan were carrying nuclear weapons, but his denials

      seemed to be falling on deaf ears throughout the world.

      The Japanese Diet, under heavy pressure by Nagai, imme-

      diately ordered all American military bases in Japan sealed and

      all U. vessels, military or civilian military contract, to remain

      in port until they could be inspected by Japanese nuclear of-

      ficials and Japanese Self-Defense Force soldiers. Again, Japan

      was the site of a nuclear explosion, and accusing eyes were

      on America. South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia,

      Australia, and New Zealand immediately followed Japan's pre-

      cautionary move-no U. warships or civilian ships con-

      tracted by the U. military could enter their territorial waters,

      and they could not leave, until they were inspected and corti-

      fied that they carried no nuclear weapons.

      The People's Republic of China went one step further, re-

      stricting all U. warships from coming within a hundred miles

      of its shores or they would consider it an act of war. They

      knew that the Independence had been bound for the Formosa

      Strait, and they surmised that the United States was using the

      attacks on the two frigates Duncan and James Daniel as a

      pretext to launch a preemptive nuclear strike on China. All

      U. warships already within the one-hundred-mile buffer zone

      had twenty-four hours to get out, or they would be attacked

      without warning. China then revealed the position and even

      the identification of four U. submarines in the Formosa Strait

      and South China Sea, including two ballistic missile attack

      subs, and estimated that perhaps as many as ten more were in

      the vicinity, ready to wage war on the People's Republic of

      China.

      In hours, virtually the entire Pacific Ocean was off-limits to

      the U. Navy.

      Joe Roma knew all of this was bullshit. First, he knew from

      intelligence reports that all nuclear weapons had been removed

      306 DALE BROWN

      from all Navy warships except some ballistic missile subs, just

      as they had been removed from American bombers, since

      1991-and nothing that he had been briefed lately caused him

      to believe that the recent incidents with China had altered that

      policy. It was possible that the President had changed his mind

      and rearmed hundreds of capital warships around the world in

      less than a month, but Roma thought it very unlikely.

      Second, nuclear warheads do not go off by themselves, no

      matter how badly they are abused. Roma knew enough about

      the inner workings of a modem-day nuclear warhead to know

      that it would take much more than a crash landing to set it

      off, even one that had been prearmed and was ready to be

      released or launched-they had dozens of safety devices and

      delivery parameters that had to be met before a full nuclear

      yield could result. If one parameter or interlock was not sat-


      isfied, or if there was the slightest bit of damage to a weapon,

      it simply would not function. It was possible that an accident

      or internal failure could cause a large non-nuclear explosion,

      scattering radioactive debris, but a full yield from a damaged

      weapon, even if it had been prearmed, was virtually impossi-

      ble.

      Bottom line: the nuclear device had to have been set. The

      protests in Yokusuka Harbor before the Independence set sail

      would have provided the perfect opportunity for a terrorist to

      plant a device somewhere on the hull.

      But for some reason no one was suggesting this might be

      the work of a terrorist. There were plenty of so-called experts

      on all of the networks, and almost all of them were blaming

      the United States for sloppy handling of nuclear weapons dur-

      ing a time of crisis caused by the United States flying stealth

      bombers all over Asia. The United States government, and

      President Kevin Martindale and his administration in particu-

      lar, were being blamed for the deaths of nearly six thousand

      American soldiers, the loss of fifteen billion dollars' worth of

      military hardware, the astronomical environmental disaster that

      was likely to occur in northeastern Japan and the northern

      Pacific Ocean, and for threatening the world with thermonu-

      clear war.

      While Roma had a "compose new message" window open

      on his computer answering other messages, he decided to drop

      a line to his old teacher and mentor, Lieutenant General Terrill

      Samson, commander of Eighth Air Force. No doubt Samson

      FATAL TER RAI N 307

      was at U. Strategic Command headquarters right now, in the

      huge underground command center that had formerly been the

      nucleus of the Strategic Air Command. It was a simple mes-

      sage, not demanding a reply: "What's happening, boss?"

      along with his phone number and E-mail address. He then

      forged ahead with the pile of E-mail messages waiting for his

      response.

      Roma was halfway through his list of E-mail messages

      when he was interrupted by a page. When he tried to return

      it, he was notified by an electronic voice that he needed a

      secure telephone to dial it. The only STU phone he knew of

     


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