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    Day of the Cheetah

    Page 5
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      had seen him in the hallway at the elevator. They raised their

      glasses toward him, smiling.

      "Well, Romeo," the waitress said. "What are you waiting

      for? I I

      Slowly, carefully, Maraklov rose to his feet. To his surprise,

      he found his legs and knees quite strong. Without thinking, he

      reached into his wallet, extracted the first bill he touched and

      handed it to the waitress as he picked up his cocktail. It was a

      twenty dollar bill.

      "Thank you, Mr. James," she said. "A real gentleman, as

      always." She lowered her voice, moved toward him. "If those

      waihilis don't do it all for you, Mr. James, why, you just leave

      a message for me at the front desk. Mariana knows what you

      want'

      Still feeling shaky inside, he made his way toward the bar,

      smiling. Andrei Ivanschichin Maraklov was about to experi-

      ence his first night as an American named Kenneth James.

      Now he was the real Ken James. The only one.

      30 DAIE BROWN

      McConnell Air Force Base, Kansas

      August 1994

      "Required SATCOM reports are as follows," Air Force Cap-

      tain Ken James said. He motioned to a hand-lettered, expertly

      rendered chart beside him but kept his eyes on his "audience"

      and did not refer to it. "As soon as possible after launch we

      transmit a sortie airborne report. If we launched on an execu-

      tion message we transmit a strike-message confirmation re-

      port." He pointed to a large map on another easel. That

      depicted the strike routing of his B-IB Excalibur bomber as it

      proceeded on its nuclear-attack mission.

      "After each air refueling we transmit an offload report, ad-

      vising SAC of our aircraft status and capability to fulfill the

      mission. On receipt of a valid execution message, if we weren't

      launched with one, we would acknowledge that message as

      well as any messages that terminated our sortie. After each

      weapons release, if possible we, transmit a strike report that

      gives SAC our best estimate of our success in destroying each

      assigned target. The message also updates SAC on our progress

      and advises them of any difficulties in proceeding with the mis-

      sion. Of course, staying on time, on course and alert has pri-

      ority over all SATCOM or HF message traffic. All strike

      messages can wait until we climb out of the low-level portion

      of the route and are on the way to our post-strike base. These

      messages can also be delivered to other SAC personnel heading

      stateside, to U. foreign offices, or to overseas military bases

      capable of secure transmissions to SAC headquarters."

      He pointed further along the route. "Other messages will

      include launch reports from the post-strike and each recovery

      base: NUDET-nuclear detonation-position reports, GLASS

      EYE combat damage reports, severe weather reports,

      continental-defense-zone entry reports and sortie recovery and

      regeneration reports.

      James lowered his pointer and stepped away from the charts.

      "SIOP communications are extremely important, and the SAC

      aircraft involved with the execution of our Single Integrated

      Operations Plan are a front-line asset in keeping the Strategic

      Air Command, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the National Corn-

      mand Authority advised of the progress worldwide of any con-

      flict. We feel we have the' world's most up-to-date and

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 31

      surviva ble communications networks, but of course it's no good

      unless each aircrewman uses it effectively." He looked around

      the empty briefing room. "That concludes my annual Mission

      Certification briefing, Colonel Adams. Any questions, Sir?"

      "Not bad, not bad-for a pilot," came a voice from the back

      of the room. Kenneth frowned at the man who came in now

      and began to pack up the briefing charts and diagrams.

      "Kiss my ass, Murphy," Ken said. "It was a perfect brief-

      ing-even for a navigator."

      Captain Brian Murphy, James' offensive-systems officer on

      his B-1 crew, had to admit it. "Yeah, it was, Ken. No doubt

      about it. But why are you spending so much time on that

      stuff? On an Emergency,War Order certification, briefing is

      done by the radar nav or the defensive-systems operator. Not

      by the pilots."

      "I heard Adams likes to hit his mission-ready crews with

      little surprises," Ken said. "His favorite is mixing up the usual

      briefing routines to make sure each guy on the crew is familiar

      with the other guy's responsibilities. He likes to hit navs with

      pilot questions, too-how well do you know your abort-decision

      matrices? "

      Murphy shrugged. "I'll bone up on that stuff before the brief-

      ing tomorrow. These briefings are bull anyway . . . Coming to

      the Club with us for lunch?"

      "In a while, it's only eleven-thirty. I'll meet you there at

      noon.

      "Man, you are so dedicated."

      "Knock it off."

      "No, really, I mean it," James' crew navigator said.

      "You're always studying. You know your stuff backwards and

      forwards, and you know everyone else's too. If it's not EWO

      communications procedures it's security or avionics or corn-

      puters or target study. You got your hands in everything.

      "That's my job, Murph.

      "Well, at least you're getting some reward for it. Making

      commander of a B- I Excalibur in less than two years was moon-

      talk until you came along. They're saying you might make

      flight commander in a few weeks. You're really burning up the

      program.

      James slapped his pencil down on the table, smiled. "You're

      32 DALE BROVIN

      buttering me up, man. Okay, okay, I'll buy lunch. Just let me

      finish.

      "Hey, hotshot, can't you take a compliment? I know atta-

      boys are rare around here, but I think you can still recognize

      one. "

      James raised his hands in surrender. "Okay, okay. Thanks,

      Murph, but I'm not doing anything special here. I do this stuff

      because it's my job and because it really interests me, and

      because my ass will be grass if I don't learn this communica-

      tions staff by tomorrow morning."

      "Message received. I'm outta here." Murphy stood and

      headed for the door, then stopped. "You're an Academy grad,

      aren't you?"

      "Right.

      "Top of your class, from what I heard."

      ames looked at Murphy. "Get to the point, Murph."

      J. thought so, I just want to know why you chose B -Is

      You

      could have had your pick of any hot jet in the inventory, but

      you picked B- Is."

      .'I liked them. I always did. They're big and sexy-just like

      your wife . . . "

      "Asshole.

      ... and I still have a stick and afterburners and Mach-one

      speed like a fighter. I hated it when Carter canceled them. I

      think they should build another hundred of them. At least. An-

      swer your question?"

      Murphy nodded. "But you seem a little, I don't know, out

      of place."

      "Out of place?" His stomach tightened as he look
    ed closely

      at his radar nav.

      "Yeah. Like B-Is are just a jumping-off place for you I

      mean, you're not advertising it or anything, but somehow, Old

      buddy, I get the feeling you're on your way somewhere. Care

      to tell?

      Ken James forced himself to smile. This big Irishman was

      hitting too close. "Just between you and me and the fence-

      post?

      "Sure, man.

      "I did get an assignment, I think. When I filled out my last

      dream sheet I was sort of . well, daydreaming. Appropriate,

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 33

      huh? Anyway, I put down that I was interested in the High

      'Technology Advanced Weapons Center--

      "HAWC! You got an assignment to Dreamland? I don't be-

      lieve it! Do they actually give assignments there?"

      "I didn't think they did, either. Like I said, it was a long

      shot. And I don't have any assignment yet. But I did get a

      letter back from the deputy commander, a Brigadier General

      Ormack. He sounded interested. It was sort of a don't-call-me-

      I'll-call-you letter, but at least I got an answer back."

      "I don't believe it," Murphy said. "Dreamland. You real-

      ize that all of the world's hottest jets and weapons in the past

      thirty years went through there? Those guys fly planes and test

      weapons out there that are years ahead of anything that exists

      in the real world. And you're going to be assigned there-"

      "I said I don't have an assignment, Murph. So keep this

      under your hat, okay? Besides, how do you know so much

      about Dreamland?"

      "I don't know much of anything, except that anybody who

      even accidentally overflies Dreamland gets sent to our version

      of the old Gulag Archipelago. Every now and then you hear

      about an ex-Los Angeles Center air-traffic controller telling

      stories about Mach-six fighters or planes that fly vertically to

      fifty thousand feet over Dreamland. It's got to be the assign-

      ment of a lifetime."

      "Well, like I said, keep all this under your hat," James said.

      . Now take off. I want to polish my briefing before we do our

      dry runs this afternoon."

      After Murphy left, James got up from his seat, went to the

      door, locked it, put a chair in front of it. He returned to the

      small pile of red-covered books and manuals on the desk

      the front of the conference room and selected one marked:

      "COMBAT CREW EMERGENCY WAR ORDER COMMUNICATIONS

      PROCEDURES-TOP SECRET/NOFORN/SIOP/WIVNS." It was the

      master document used by all the American strategic combat

      forces all over the world-aircraft, submarines, intercontinen-

      tal missile sites, and command posts-outlining every one of

      their communication sources and methods, procedures, fre-

      quencies, timing and locations of the nation's domestic and

      overseas communications facilities. The hieroglyphics after the

      title warned that the document was top secret, not releasable

      to foreign nationals, pail of the Single Integrated Operations

      34 DALE BROVIN

      Plan-the master plan on how the United States and its allies

      would conduct "the next world war." This particular volume

      was dated I October 1994, some two months from now, be-

      cause it belonged to the new SIOP revision scheduled to take

      place at that time. The procedures in that manual would be

      used by all strategic forces for the next twelve months after-

      ward.

      It made it convenient for him and the KGB, Ken thought, to

      have to do these once-a-year briefings for the wing corn-

      mander. The annual Mission Certification briefings were re-

      quired by law. The wing commander of each SAC base with

      nuclear missions had to certify to the Commander-in-Chief of

      SAC, and he in turn to the President of the United States, that

      each crewman knew precisely what his duties were in case the

      SIOP was "implernented--a euphemism for the so-called un-

      thinkable, the declaration of World War Three. Normally the

      certification briefings were given once, when a crewman be-

      came mission-ready. But the SIOP was revised each year, re-

      flecting new rules, new tactics, and so every year each crewman

      had to dig out the changed books, study them, then brief the

      wing commander on the revised mission. The top-secret books

      were trotted out for the certification, studied for a week, then

      locked away, usually never to be seen again except for base-

      wide exercises or inspections. The opportunities were rare to

      have such free access to these manuals, and Ken had to work

      fast.

      He opened the manual to section four, "ELF, LF, HF and

      SATCOM SIOP Frequencies and Broadcast Schedules," and

      ped the pages open with a couple of books. This section

      prop

      detailed all of the frequencies used by aircraft and submarines

      to broadcast and receive coded messages from SAC and the

      Joint Chiefs of Staff, along with what time of the day these

      broadcasts would be made. Anyone knowing these frequencies

      and times could jam or disrupt them, specific broadcasts could

      be intercepted and decoded. The crew charts had stickers that

      had only one frequency, but this book had all the frequencies

      for the nuclear strike force of the United States.

      James unzipped a leg pocket of his flight suit and took out

      what looked like a thick-barreled marking pen. Moving his

      chair so his body would cast no shadows across the pages, he

      twisted and pulled the cap, held the device a couple of feet

      DAY OF THE CHEETAH 35

      r the pages, and pressed the pocket clip to activate the shut-

      ove

      ter.

      Murphy was close, James thought as he worked. He would

      have liked to get assigned to F- I 5s or F- 16s, or the new F- 1 17

      Stealth fighter unit, but he went where Moscow told him to go,

      and that was where he could learn as much as possible about

      the new B-I's nuclear-strike mission. Drearnland was the most

      secret base in the country. B-I Excalibur bombers were fine,

      but he would give anything to get his hands on the United

      States newest fighters.

      Two minutes later Kenneth James had finished photograph-

      ing the entire chapter and its accompanying appendices with

      the tiny microdisk camera. He wrapped the device in a hand-

      kerchief to help protect it, then zipped it safely away in his leg

      pocket, out of sight so no one would be tempted to ask to

      borrow his "Pen."

      Satisfied, he packed up his charts and books and turned them

      back to the vault custodian. He would put the camera in his

      car outside the alert facility to prevent discovery during one of

      the commander's frequent no-notice locker searches on the alert

      pad, then deliver it to the prearranged drop point for his KGB

      contact from St. Louis after he got off seven-day alert.

      Dreamland, Nevada

      Monday, 3 December 1994, 0730 PDT (1020 EDT)

      stiff, uncomfortable

      Ken James was strapped securely into a

      chest bound by heavy leather

      steel chair, wrists, ankles and

      stra
    ps. His head was immobilized by a strong steel beam. The

      room where he lay on the rack was dimly lit, buzzing with the

      sound of power transformers and smelling of the ozone created

      by electronic relays and microcircuits. Two men in Air Force

      blue fatigues rechecked his bonds, making sure they were extra

      tight; one of them adjusted a tiny spotlight directly onto James'

      right eyeball, smiling as James tried to squint against the glare.

      The sergeant knew there was nothing James could do to him.

      James had been sweating in the steel chair for nearly an

      hour, the two technicians hovering over him, before another

      man entered the room. Tall and lanky, he looked considerably

      older than his mid-thirties, thanks to a bald head and a few

      36 DALE BROWN

      stray shocks of gray hair that seemed to be haphazardly stuck

      onto his skull. He spoke briefly with the techs, then walked

      over to the rack and inspected the fitting and bonds. He stuck

      his face close to James, smiled and said, "Now, Captain James,

      I'll ask you once more-where were you on the afternoon of

      August eleventh?"

      In fact, Ken James was photographing top-secret documents

      in a vault at McConnell Air Force Base in Kansas. He rolled

      his eyes in exasperation. "Very funny, Dr. Carmichael. Now

      can we get on with this?"

      "Couldn't help it, Ken," Alan Carmichael, the white-coated

      researcher, said. "Seeing you trussed up gives this place the

      look of some futuristic interrogation chamber."

      Which was precisely what Maraklov was thinking himself.

      He was wearing a heavy suit made of thick metallic fabric. The

      suit had several thick cables and conduits sewed into it that ran

      all through his arms, legs, feet, hands and neck. A raised metal

      spine ran along his backbone from head to tail, so thick that a

      channel had been cut into the chair to accommodate it. There

      was a bit of cool circulating air flowing through tubules in the

      suit, but it did little to relieve the oppressive heat and stuffi-

      ness.

      "Have you been practicing your deep breathing exercises9

      Carmichael asked.

      "Don't have a choice. I either breathe deep in this getup or

     


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