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    Fatal Terrain

    Page 5
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      is rightfully ours!" Admiral Sun shouted, sweeping his copy

      of the war plans onto the floor. "We are doomed to failure

      28 DALE BROWN

      unless-we commit ourselves to using every weapon in our

      arsenal."

      "That is quite enough, Comrade Admiral," Qian intedected

      sternly. "The war plans do not call for the use of nuclear

      weapons against our own province-may I remind you that

      the island of Formosa is our territory, our twenty-third prov-

      ince-and it does not call for using nuclear weapons against

      the Americans, South Koreans, Japanese, or anyone else. I

      think this news has unsettled you. You appear to be on the

      verge of a mental breakdown." And that was the end of the

      discussion.

      This was a travesty, Sun Ji Guorning thought, as the others

      filed out of the conference room-for all he cared, the war

      plans didn't exist. China was completely unprepared for what

      had just happened and what was about to happen.

      Sun Ji Guoming had his own plans, and they had nothing

      to do with missile and air bombardments or massive naval

      engagements. Taiwan could be taken, without prompting war

      with the United States or hatred from the other Asian nations.

      It would be simple to isolate Taiwan, even from its staunchest

      supporters.

      But capturing Taiwan and making it part of Zhongguo again

      was not the most important mission facing them right now-

      the biggest threat was the domination of the United States in

      every aspect of life in the Far East. 'Me Americans' ability to

      project its military power throughout this region was crushing

      China's struggle to take its placeas the most important power

      in Asia. Yes, the Americans' military might was awesome, its

      technological superiority enormous. But Asia was far away,

      mysterious; its military had been greatly downsized, its econ-

      omy was unsteady, its leadership tenuous. America's influence

      on its Asian allies was not as strong as it once was.

      Sun believed that he had a way to topple the great United

      States of America off its perch-and now was the time to do

      it.

      "ONE WHO SPEAKS

      DEFERENTIALLY BUT INCREASES HIS

      PREPARATIONS WILL ADVANCE;

      ONE WHO SPEAKS BELLIGERENTLY

      AND ADVANCES HASTILY

      WILL RETREAT."

      -Sun-Tzu,

      'Me An of War

      OVER AMERICAN-PROTECTED AIRSPACE

      MONDAY, 26 MAY 1997, 0741 HOURS PT

      (1041 HOURS ET)

      ATTENTION, DATALINK BOGEY, ELEVEN O'CLOCK LOW,

      "Sharon" reported.

      U. Air Force Major Scott Mauer saw the flashing diamond

      floating before his eyes even before the computer-synthesized

      female voice they had named "Sharon"-after actress Sharon

      Stone, whose voice could have been an exact duplicate of the

      computer's-issued its advisory. Mauer immediately jammed

      his back and butt deeper into the ejection seat of his F-22

      Lightning fighter and locked the inertial reel, securing himself

      tightly in his seat. The action was about to start.

      Mauer moved his head until a circular target designator

      symbol centered on the diamond symbol, then toggled the ra-

      dio transmit button on his right throttle quadrant down to the

      "intercom" position and said, "Lock bogey." "Sharon" was

      much more than a verbal warning system as the first-

      29

      30 DALE BROWN

      generation "Bitchin' Bettys" had been in earlier fighters-

      Sharon had a five-thousand-word vocabulary, could respond

      to questions with a surprisingly human voice, and could acti-

      vate almost all of the F-22's subsystems. It was more akin to

      a human copilot than a computer.

      BOGEY LOCKED, Sharon replied, and instantly a box sur-

      rounded the white diamond symbol and the bogey's flight in-

      formation-speed, altitude, heading-displayed in midair.

      Mauer's F-22 Lightning, the Air Force's newest air-superiority

      fighter'and attack plane, was equipped with the new "super-

      cockpit" system, which included a helmet-mounted virtual

      display (VD), replacing the standard heads-up display mounted

      atop the instrument panel with symbols and information that

      could be seen no matter where the pilot looked-left, right,

      straight down, or even backward, the pilot could always "see"

      his flight and target readouts. Most of the heads-down cockpit

      dials, gauges, and multifunction displays in the F-22 fighter

      had also been replaced with three seamless color computer

      monitors that could be configured to display anything the pilot

      wished to see-radar, infrared, digital map, satellite photos,

      text, or flight instruments-called up and displayed by asking

      the computer or by touching the screen.

      "Interrogate the bogey," Mauer ordered.

      INTERROGATING ... Sharon the computer replied; then, after

      a short pause: NEGATIVE REPLY. Sharon had sent out an IFF

      (Identification Friend or Foe) signal, to which only friendly

      aircraft would reply. The white diamond in Mauer's VD

      changed to red-it was no longer just a "bogey," an uniden-

      tified aircraft. It was now a "bandit," a hostile aircraft.

      Mauer was a ten-year Air Force fighter veteran and knew

      how to close in and kill a hostile aerial target from any direc-

      tion, speed, or attitude, but the attack computer system was

      new and he wanted to put it through its paces. He keyed the

      intercom button: "Give me an intercept vector on the bandit."

      SAY AGAIN, PLEASE, Sharon replied in a surprisingly seduc-

      tive voice.

      Mauer took a deep breath, containing his frustration and

      forcing himself to relax. "Say again, please" was Sharon's

      favorite phrase. The computer system did not need voice

      coaching for individual pilots, but if a pilot started to get ex-

      cited or hurried, the computer would not understand his voice

      commands. Mauer touched the supercockpit screen to call up

      FATAL TERRAIN 31

      the weapons status display and moved it with his finger to the

      upper right comer of the suPercOckpit display-in case his

      voice commands wouldn't take, he was ready to finish the

      intercept without it. "I said, display intercept vector on the

      bandit.

      She understood that time, and a twin-tiered 3-D ribbonlike

      Path appeared in thin air. Naturally distrustful of computers to

      do their thinking for them, pilots called the computer's attack

      recommendation the

      "Primrose Path." Despite its name, how-

      ever, it was not a bad recommendation, Mauer thought-high,

      left rear quarter, the westbound bandit's pilot would be looking

      into the rising sun trying to find him-so he decided to follow

      it. Mauer maneuvered the F-22 so he was flying in between

      the two Parallel ribbons, then ordered, "Engage the autopilot

      on the intercept course."

      AUTOPILOT ENGAGED, Sharon verified. The autopilot would

      now automatically fly the entire intercept. Mauer was a good

      stick and he loved flying, but unlike most of his fighter-jock

      colleagues, he wasn't
    afraid to let the ultrasophisticated com-

      puters relieve some of the workload. The "Primrose path"

      pulled Mauer's F-22 into a steep descent, and Mauer kept the

      throttles at just below mil power and let the airspeed build up

      toward the Mach. With all of its weapons and fuel stored in-

      temally, the F-22 had few speed restrictions-it could go to

      its max speed of Mach 1.5 at any time in clean configuration,

      and the Lightning liked to go fast. Its weapons bay doors

      opened inwardly as well, so there was no speed restriction on

      missile launch either.

      The intercept was workine out perfec

      UY. SO far the bandit

      was cruising along fat, duni6, and happy, still subsonic and

      Mostly traveling in a straight, uncomplicated course, flying low

      but not doing any real aggressive terrain masking. The radar

      lock was intermittent, but that was understandable, because

      Mauer's F-22 was not tracking the bandit. One hundred miles

      away, an Air Force E-3C Sentry AWACS (Airborne W g

      amin

      and Control System) radar plane had picked up the bandit and

      had datalinked the target information via the JTIDS (Joint Tar-

      get Information Distribution System) to Mauer's F-22, which

      processed and displayed the data as if the F-22's own radar

      were tracking the target. The bandit's threat radar warning re-

      ceiver would pick up only the AWACS, not the F-22. Even

      better, Mauer could launch the F-22's AIM-120 AMRAAMs

      32 DALE BROWN

      (Advanced Medium-Range Air To Air Missiles) using JTIDS

      information until the missile's own active radar picked up the

      target-he didn't even need the fighter's radar to launch his

      radar-guided missiles.

      "Recommend a weapon for the attack," Mauer asked on

      interphone. As before, he didn't need Sharon to tell him which

      missile to fire, but it was fun and educational to play with the

      new system. He purposely did not ask only for missiles but

      for any weapon, just to see if the computer would select the

      correct one.

      RECOMMEND AIM-120, Sharon replied, and both of the F-

      22's AMRAAM missiles depicted on the weapon status page

      blinked green. Mauer's Lightning was lightly loaded on this

      mission, and carried only two AIM-120s and two AIM-9P

      Sidewinder missiles in the weapons bay, plus five hundred

      rounds of ammunition for the 20-millimeter cannon.

      "Arm AIM-120."

      ROGER, Aim-120 ARMED, WARNING, MISSILE ARMED, Sharon

      responded, and the left AMRAAM missile changed from green

      to yellow, indicating it was powered up and receiving target

      and flight information from the attack computer.

      "Time to launch?"

      TEN SECONDS TO LAUNCH, Sharon responded, with only a

      hint of hesitation.

      They were still screaming earthward at 3,OW feet per min-

      ute, and the hills below were starting to become a factor.

      Mauer knew that he was getting a little target-fixated, so he

      expanded his look-down supercockpit display to a God's-eye

      view of the surrounding area. Only one other plane within fifty

      miles, and that was a friendly, another F-22. The "primrose

      path" was steering him around some high terrain-the navi-

      gation computer had all of the terrain elevations programmed-

      but he was still flying close to those hills. The computer-

      generated flight path was too gentle and not aggressive enough

      for Mauer's taste, so he laid his hands on the control stick and

      throttles and said, "Autopilot heading nav mode off, autopilot

      altitude nav mode off, fail-safe terrain avoidance mode on."

      ROGER, HEADING NAV OFF, ALTITUDE NAV OFF, WARNING,

      CHECK AUTOPILOT MODES, ROGER, TERRAIN AVOIDANCE MODE

      ENGAGED, Sharon replied. The F-22's terrain-avoidance mode

      would provide a last-second emergency fly-up in case he

      strayed too close to the ground or the hills.

      FATAL TERRAIN 33

      "Time to launch?"

      SAY AGAIN, PLEASE, Sharon replied. Mauer was getting ex-

      cited again-his voice was getting clipped, more high-pitched,

      and therefore harder for Sharon to understand. NO matter-he

      saw the time-to-launch countdown on his virtual display and

      didn't ask again. He was breathing faster and shallower. Relax,

      dammit, relax! he told himself You've got this intercept

      nailed. Even without Sharon's -help, he had it wired.

      Mauer now knew what the bandit's target was: the industrial

      site, the fifly-acre military weapons and research facility. It

      was imperative that this plant be protected. The Air Force had

      assigned two F-22 Lightning fighters, their most modem and

      high-tech warplane, to the industrial site's defense. A Patriot

      air defense missile site was active in the area, but with the F-

      22s operating in the area at the same time, the Patriot would

      be kept in reserve until the air defense fighters ran out of

      missiles.

      "Tell me when to shoot," Mauer said.

      MAX RANGE IN FIVE SECONDS ... MAX RANGE IN TH REE

      SECONDS TWO SECONDS ... ONE SECOND ... MAX IN

      RANGE ... OPTIMAL IN RANGE, Sharon said.

      Mauer keyed the intercom button: "AIM-120 shoot," he

      ordered.

      ROGER, AIM-120 SHOOT, AIM-120 SHOOT ... WARNING,

      WEAPONS DOOR OPENING ... AIM-120 AWAY. Mauer felt the

      rumble of the weapons doors sliding inwardly, felt the slapt

      of the gas ejectors forcing the left AMRAAM missi le into the

      supersonic slipstream, then saw a streak of white smoke arc

      across the sky from the belly of his Lightning fighter. The VD

      display showed an estimated "time to die" countdown: nine

      seconds ... eight ... seven ... six ... at five seconds, the AM-

      RAAM's own active radar seeker head activated, which would

      guide the missile in'the last few seconds of its kill....

      The bandit suddenly dipped from 1,000 feet above the ter-

      rain to fifty feet-literally in the blink of an eye!-then made

      an impossible left turn behind a tall butte. The AMRA",

      just seconds from impact, lost sight of its target. The missile's

      seeker head was only a ten-degree cone and its turn rate was

      about seven Gs-the bandit had turned ninety degrees and

      pulled fifteen, maybe twenty Gs. There was no way, no- way,

      any bomber could turn like that. The AMRAAM missile was

      1 PPP__

      34 DALE BROWN

      lost, smoothly and completely faked out by a move that would

      make Jerry Rice hang up his cleats.

      Mauer yanked the Lightning fighter left. "Radar on, lock

      on bandit. . . " But before the ship's radar could lock on and

      send new steering signals to the missile, it had plowed into the

      ground. Clean miss! That was the first time Mauer had ever

      seen an AMRAAM missile miss its intended target. What kind

      of bomber was this? The F-15E Strike Eagle was not this fast

      or agile with weapons aboard ... was it a foreign job, like the

      Japanese FS-X or a Messerschmidt X-31? Maybe an F-16XL

      cranked arrow ... ?

      Just then, Mauer glanced off to his right and saw it-a cloud

      of black smoke over the industrial site. Mau
    er had been hoping

      to reacquire the bandit on this southbound jog before it turned

      westbound again toward the industrial site, but he was too late.

      The industrial site was hit. Dammit, looked like a direct fuck-

      ing hit-wait, no, not quite. The bad guy's intel was obviously

      poor-the hit was on the center of the big building, mostly

      crating and shipping stuff and empty space. The bandit got a

      hit, but it didn't do much harm!

      Westbound again, radar on in wide-area look-down search-

      got him! BANDIT ONE O'CLOCK LOW, TWELVE MILES, Sharon

      advised.

      "Lock bandit, an-n AIM-1201 AIM-120 shoot," Mauer or-

      dered immediately -

      BANDIT LOCKED... ROGER, AIM-120 ARMED, WARNING,

      WEAPONS ARMED... AIM- SHOOT, AIM-120 SHOOT, WARNING,

      WEAPONS DOORS OPENING. . .. Aim-120 AWAY, Sharon re-

      sponded in rapid-fire succession, and his last AMRAAM mis-

      sile was flying. But almost as soon as it launched, Mauer could

      see its white smoke trail wobbling, then breaking first hard to

      the left, then in a wide sharply arcing curve to the right, then

      again to the left in an even wider arc. He knew it was going

      to miss well before the -time to die" meter ran down to zero.

      That bandit had made two high-G Jinks that again beat the hell

      out of the highly maneuverable AIM-120 missile.

      Another cloud of black smoke-another hit on the industrial

      site, and this time it was on the smaller building southeast of

      the large building, where a lot of finished munitions and prod-

      Ucts were stored awaiting transportation. That son of a bitch

      had actually gone all the way around and reattached, with a

      fighter on his tail! He had balls, that's for sure-any mud-

      FATAL T E R RAI N 35

      mover worth his wings would hit, then get Out Of the defended

      area as fast as he could.

      Enough of this super-autowated datalink shit, Mauer

      thought-time to call in some help. They were supposed to

      stay off the voice radios and use the datalink as much as pos-

      throttles

      sible, but he was in deep shit and his first priority was to

      defend his territory. He rocked the radio switch on the

      UP to the UHF position: "Saber One-Two, this is One-One on

     


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