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    Fatal Terrain

    Page 49
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      bomb attacks on Taichung and Tainan could be seen as a line

      FATAL T E R RAI N 327

      of tiny pinpoint flashes of light that streaked across the dark-

      ness far below.

      "Radar reports rebel fighters launching from Taipei, Ad-

      miral," the copilot aboard Sun's H-7 bomber reported. "One

      or two at a time, disorganized flights."

      "Probably escaping, not coming after us unless one wants

      to be a hero looking to try to ram one of our bombers in the

      darkness," Sun commented. He never even considered that his

      aircraft might be in danger-with those nuclear explosions rip-

      ping into the arms and legs of the Nationalist dragon, the rebels

      seemed completely defeated already. "In any event, our bomb-

      ers will escape. Where are the returning flights of rebel fighters

      heading?"

      "North, towards Taipei," the copilot responded.

      "Excellent," Sun said. The rebel air forces obviously didn't

      feel like fighting after learning -that several Chinese bombers

      had slipped through their fingers and that their homeland had

      just been ripped apart by nuclear and high-explosive bombs.

      Chiang Kai-shek International Airport and Sung Shan Air Base

      near Taipei were probably the only large air bases surviving

      west of the Chungyang Mountains.

      They would make easy targets for follow-on strikes. The

      third wave of Sun's attack on Taiwan should be launching

      now-M-9 mobile ballistic missile attacks from secret pre-

      surveyed launch sites in Jiangxi and Zhejiang Provinces. The

      M-9 missile had a range of about three hundred miles, and Sun

      had targeted at least six missiles on each of the surviving major

      civilian and military airfields in Taiwan. The missiles were not

      as accurate as bombers, but they did not need to be@the first

      two missiles targeted against all but the airfields around Taipei

      had nuclear warheads, again programmed for high-altitude air-

      bursts so as to spread out the blast effects of the warheads and

      minimize radioactive fallout and residue at ground zero.

      The volleys of missiles aimed at Chiang Kai-shek Interna-

      tional, all non-nuclear, should ensure that the airport could not

      be used to launch military strikes against the mainland. Sun

      was very careful not to explode any nuclear weapons over

      Taipei. The Nationalist capital was still the capital of the prov-

      ince of T'aiwan, the twenty-third province of the People's Re-

      public of China, and it would not do to kill any loyal

      Communist Chinese. He would need the support of the people

      328 DALE BROWN

      to complete his task of reuniting the island with its mainland

      motherland.

      In the meantime, an armada of two hundred Q-5 Nanchang

      fighters, copies of the Soviet Mikoyan-Gurevich-19 attack

      plane, would be arriving from Guangzhou, Nanjing, Wuhu,

      and Wuhan Air Bases to Fuzhou. At daybreak they would

      conduct non-nuclear mopping-up strikes against all the Tai-

      wanese military bases, loaded with a long-range drop tank and

      two 2,000-pound bombs or cluster munitions. One by one, they

      would attack any major surviving targets.

      Sun wanted more Man H-6 bombers for these attacks, but

      he had been allotted only the H-6s used by the People's Lib-

      eration Army Navy for this raid-the air force's H-6s were

      still held in reserve, committed to long-range nuclear attacks

      against targets in Russia, India, and Vietnam. Perhaps after

      President Jiang and the Central Nfilitary Committee learned of

      his success over the rebel Nationalists, Sun thought, it might

      be possible to convince them to let him have the rest of the

      H-6s so he could continue the air offensive against Taiwan.

      With most of the rebel's long-range air defense radar system

      down, the H-6 bombers would stand a better chance against

      the surviving Taiwanese air defenses.

      Then, he thought happily, perhaps the Paramount Leader

      would allow him the honor of destroying China's other re-

      gional enemies and adversaries. Defeat was unthinkable at this

      moment.

      The- nuclear-armed M-9 ballistic missiles easily reached the

      military bases on the east side of the island, hittin Lotunig,

      Hualien, and Taitung. Sun could see the bright flashes of light

      far on the horizon as the missiles hit their targets.-The accuracy

      of the M-9 missile was poor, perhaps one-half to one mile

      miss distance after a three-hundred-mile flight-poor by most

      standards, but perfectly acceptable with nuclear warheads.

      Sun never once thought about the devastation he was cre-

      ating down there. ne rebel Nationalists were bugs to be

      squashed, nothing more. Sun truly believed that the vast ma-

      jority of citizens on the island of Formosa wanted to rejoin

      their long-lost friends and families on the mainland, and that

      the subversive Nationalist government, supported by the ter-

      rorist rebel military, was preventing reunification by declaring

      their so-called "independence," as if that were possible or

      even thinkable. Although most would probably prefer the less

      FATAL T E R RAI N 329

      intrusive, capitalist society that existed there now., Sun be-

      lieved that they would accept a Communist government as

      long as all the Chinese people were reunited. Sun was killing

      only filthy rebels, not fellow Chinese. If it took a nuclear

      weapon to reunite his motherland, so be it.

      Sun Ji Guorning did not delude himself-he knew that it

      was very unlikely that rocket or bombing raids alone would

      destroy even a substantial portion of the rebels' military force.

      He knew that the rebels had perfected the art of building vast

      underground shelters and hiding huge numbers of troops,.

      equipment, and supplies within the eastern mountains. Que-

      moy Dao had turned many of their 1950s- and 1960s-era un-

      derground shelters into tourist museums, so it was possible to

      see the quality construction of some of these complexes-they

      were certainly strong enough to withstand any kind of shelling

      or bombing, except perhaps for a direct groundburst hit with

      a nuclear weapon. Sun had no plans to use nuclear ground-

      bursts in any attack. If they had any desire at all to occupy

      the land they took back from the Nationalists, it was not a

      good idea to make that ground radioactive.

      Rumors had been flying for years about huge army bases

      underground, where two entire generations of citizens and sol-

      diers had grown up and trained. Sun had even heard about

      caves cut into the rock big enough to hide a cruiser, or massive

      underwater caves turned into submarine pens where the only

      access in or out of the base was underwater, as in Sweden. He

      dismissed most of these rumors. Anything big enough to house

      a capital warship, several submarines, or more than a few hun-

      dred men had to be carefully engineered, and that took time,

      money, and vast amounts of equipment and manpower-and

      that meant security leaks and evidence. In all of Sun's years

      in the People's Liberation Army, with al
    l the spies they em-

      ployed all over Asia and the world, no exact proof had ever

      been produced of any legendary rebel underground military

      bases.

      Admiral Sun switched to his interphone and keyed the mike:

      "Continue on course," he ordered. "Notify me when your

      attack checklists are complete." He received an acknowledg-

      ment from his crew. The H-7 bomber started northward toward

      Fuzhou, staying close to the mainland coast in case any sur-

      viving rebel fighters tried to take a pass at them. It was ac-

      companied by a single HT-6 Man tanker aircraft. After passing

      330 DALE BROWN

      near Fuzhou, Sun's H-7 and the HT-6 took up a northbound

      course, out over the East China Sea.

      The attack on Taiwan's major military bases was a great

      success, but Sun knew that the real threat to China didn't come

      from Taiwan, but from the United States of America. Sun had

      managed to keep the area around Taiwan clear of American

      aircraft carriers by planting a "backpack" nuclear device on

      the USS Independence and detonating it just after it had left

      its Japanese port of Yokosuka-and to his immense surprise,

      the United States had not retaliated against anyone, not China,

      not Japan, not Iran. The nearest American carrier was nearly

      a thousand miles away, and intelligence reported that it might

      take up stations in the Sea of Japan to defend Japan and South

      Korea, instead of moving toward the Formosa Strait to assist

      the rebel Nationalists.

      America had to be stopped, Sun knew. The United States

      had to learn to respect the waters and airspace around China,

      as the United States expected other nations to do around its

      waters.

      But the political leaders around the world, even in China,

      did not have the stomach to do what was necessary to ensure

      their sovereignty in their own territory when faced with the

      threat of domination by the United States. Sun Ji Guoming

      knew what must be done, and he knew that he must force his

      own political leadership to accept what was right and what

      was necessary. There was no choice, no other way.

      Admiral Sun switched his radio panel to the Great Wall

      satellite communications system again, linking directly into the

      Beijing emergency military command center, and asked to

      speak with the Paramount Leader again.

      "The wrath of the entire planet will be upon the people of

      China for what has been done today," President Jiang Zernin

      intoned, when he came on the line a few moments later. He

      had obviously been informed of the extensive and deadly nu-

      clear attack on Taiwan, and the doubt and worry crushing his

      every thought was evident in his tired, wavering voice. "Our

      lives, our future- will never again be the same."

      - The future is now, Comrade President," Admiral Sun said.

      "You have seen to that. You have opened the way for us to

      reunite our shattered country from the destruction of foreign

      imperialism. But there is one more step to be done. Give the

      order,.and it will be done."

      FATAL T ER RAI N 331

      "I cannot do it. It is insanity."

      "Comrade, you may rely on me to be the instrument of your

      vision," Sun said in a firm, confident voice. Jiang did not order

      him to abort the mission or return to base, so he was positive

      that Jiang was going to give the order. He was a little hesi-

      tant-but who wouldn't be? "I will be the sword of your

      promise to the Chinese people. Give me the order, and I shall

      accomplish the deed. Afterwards, you may tell the world that

      I was an insane man who stole a jet and nuclear weapon at

      gunpoint-if you must betray me, so be it. I will always be

      loyal to you, to the motherland, and to the Chinese Communist

      Party. But this must be done. You know it to be true. We

      cannot succeed if the final step is not taken."

      "You have done enough, Admiral," Jiang said.

      Again, the Paramount Leader was expressing doubts, but he

      still did not give the order to abort. "You must tell me to abort

      the mission and return to base, Comrade President," Sun said.

      "If you do, I will obey. But you will also lose the opportunity

      to all but eliminate the Western imperialist-dominated threat

      to China's existence. I urge you, sir-no, I demand it. Save

      Zhongguo. Save China. Give the command."

      There was no response-not even a "wait." A few rno-

      ments later, a command post operator relayed an order from

      the president to stand by.

      Sun continued northward over the East China Sea and, al-

      most an hour later, they were just a hundred miles east of

      Shanghai. Sun ordered the final refueling to commence, and

      thirty minutes later the HT-6 Xian tanker was left with just

      enough fuel to return to base at Wuhan. Sun's H-7 Gangfang

      bomber turned slightly west and continued into the Yellow

      Sea, beginning a descent from 30,000 feet to 5,000 feet, sneak-

      ing in under the long-range radar coverage from Kunsan and

      Mokpo in South Korea, now less than three hundred miles to

      the east. After the attack on the rebel Nationalists, the Amer-

      icans and South Koreans would surely be on their highest

      states of alert, and any unidentified aircraft flying anywhere

      near their shoreline or bases on the Korean Peninsula would

      quickly be intercepted.

      Although a fully fueled H-7 had an endurance of about

      seven hours, Sun could not wait that long to get a response

      from Beijing. He would simply fly to his next checkpoint-if

      he did not receive approval for the final phase of his plan, he

      332 DALE BROWN

      would head westbound and land at Wuhan People's Liberation

      Army Air Force Base, then begin planning another night of

      attacks on the Nationalists. It was important that-

      "Attack One, this is Dark Night, respond, please."

      "Dark Night, I am listening. Go ahead, please."

      "Attack One, you are ordered to proceed. Repeat, you are

      ordered to proceed. Do you understand?"

      Admiral Sun Ji Guoming wore a smile like a young child's

      at his first circus. "Attack One understands," he responded.

      "Attack One out." Sun then switched to the interphone and

      instructed the stunned bomber crew to carry out the attack

      orders.

      The attack was simple and completely without threat from

      anywhere. From an altitude of 5,000 feet and an airspeed of

      240 knots, the H-7 Gangfang bomber flew toward a prepro-

      grammed point in the north-central part of the Yellow Sea,

      about one hundred miles east of the North Sea Fleet head-

      quarters base at Qingdao, and then two long, slender shapes

      dropped from their semirecessed spaces in the H-7 bomber's

      belly. Three large parachutes deployed immediately from each

      object, and by the time the objects were 1,000 feet above the

      water, they were both hanging almost exactly vertical in their

      chutes, almost all rocking motions stopped. The H-7 bomber

      turned westward and accelerated to its maximum speed of

      nearly the speed of sound ...


      . . . so it was well clear of the area when the rocket motors

      of the two M-9 ballistic missiles ignited. The stabilizer para-

      chutes released seconds after the flight computer detected full

      power chamber pressure in the rocket motors, and the M-9

      missiles climbed rapidly in the night sky. One missile headed

      eastward, while the other headed northeast-both over the Ko-

      rean Peninsula.

      The Republic of Korea AN/EPS- 1 17 air defense radar sta-

      tion at Seoul was the first to detect the missile launches, just

      seconds after the M-9s crossed the radar horizon, and the U.-

      made Patriot and 1-Hawk surface-to-air-missile sites at Inchon

      and Seoul were instantly alerted. By the time missile-launch

      detection was confirmed, the second missile was out of range

      as it headed farther north over the demilitarized zone. The first

      missile was tracked and engaged by eight Patriot batteries-

      one by one they opened fire with double Patriot anti-missile

      missile launches.

      FATAL TERRAIN 333

      The first two Patriot missiles hit their target, breaking the

      M-9 missile into several pieces. The other Patriot batteries con-

      tinued to fire at the larger pieces of the Chinese missile-in

      all, eight Patriot missiles were launched, effectively chopping

      the thirty-foot-long, eighteen-inch-diameter M-9 missile into

      pieces no larger than a suitcase. The M-9's nuclear warhead

      was hit directly by one Patriot, detonating the high-explosive

      fusion initiator portion of the warhead and scattering radio-

      active debris over Inchon and the west-central coastline, but

      there was no nuclear yield.

      The Korean People's Army Air Force of North Korea did

      not detect the second M-9 missile until after it had crossed the

      coast and was headed down over the center of the Korean

      Peninsula. The KPAAF's SA-2 and SA-3 fixed missile sites at

      Kaesong and one SA-5 mobile missile site at Dosan were the

      only units capable of attempting to intercept the M-9 missile,

      but all of these missiles were older, larger, less reliable stra-

      tegic air defense missiles and were not designed to shoot down

      something as small and as fast as a ballistic missile. Untouched

     


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