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    Fatal Terrain

    Page 50
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      and unimpeded, the Chinese M-9 missile streaked out of the

      sky ... and detonated its nuclear warhead about 20,000 feet

      above the large military city of Wonsan, on North Korea's

      east-central coastline.

      The warhead had the explosive power of 20,000 tons of

      TNT, so although the missile missed its preprograrnmed target

      coordinates by over a mile and a half, the effect of the blast

      was devastating. The nuclear explosion leveled the southeast

      portion of the city, completely destroying half of the above-

      ground buildings and facilities of the Korean People's Army's

      Southern Defense Sector headquarters, and substantially dam-

      aging the KPA Navy's Eastern Fleet headquarters and the sur-

      face and submarine naval bases located on Yonghung Bay.

      61though the city of Wonsan itself was spared from much of

      the nuclear blast because of the miss distance, almost twenty

      thousand civilians were killed or wounded in the blink of an

      eye that night, along with thousands of military men and

      women and their dependents on the military installations.

      Sun Ji Guoming scanned all the possible radio frequencies

      for any signs of the death and destruction he had caused that

      night, but the atmosphere for hundreds of miles around had

      been charged by the nuclear detonations and all the bands were

      jumbles of static-he could not communicate with anyone un-

      334 DALE BROWN

      til he was almost all the way across the Gulf of Chihli and

      over the coast near Tianjin, just sixty miles from Beijing. No

      matter, he thought. The war was on.

      Soon, Sun knew, China would be handed the keys to its

      twenty-third province, Taipei, by a world praying for the

      bombing and missile attacks and the nuclear devastation to

      cease. The world would soon know that China would not be

      denied complete reunification.

      U. STRATEGIC COMMAND COMMAND CENTER,

      OFFUTT AIR FORCE BASE, BELLEVUE, NEBRASKA

      SATURDAY, 21 JUNE 1997,

      1601 HOURS LOCAL (1701 HOURS ET)

      "The invasion of Taiwan appears to be under way," the in-

      telligence officer said casually. If it were not such a serious

      matter, many of the men assembled before him might be

      laughing at the understated irony of that statement. It was not

      just Taiwan that was under attack-it seemed the stability of

      the entire planet was crumbling.

      "The Chinese are on the move everywhere," the intelli-

      gence officer continued. He was standing at the podium on the

      stage in the U. Strategic Command command center, three

      stories underground in the middle of Offutt Air Force Base in

      central Nebraska. "At least three -divisions massing along Xia-

      men Bay at Amoy, Liuwadian, Shijing, Dongshi, and Weitou.

      At these and several other locations, PLA artillery and rocket

      units have begun shelling the northern shoreline of Quemoy

      in an obvious 'softening-up' attack. We're looking at three

      hundred multiple rocket launcher units, two hundred and

      twenty artillery batteries, and at least sixty short-range ballistic

      rocket units arrayed along the bay. Resupply is coming in

      mostly by rail and by truck."

      "What about amphibious landingcapability?" one member

      of the STRATCOM staff asked. "We've been briefed that the

      Chinese don't have much of an amphibious assault capability.

      How are they going to move three divisions to Quemoy?"

      "The reports of the People's Liberation Army's lack of am-

      phibious capability was apparently grossly underestimated,"

      FATAL T ER RAI N 335

      the briefer responded. "Most forces needed for an amphibious

      invasion were not based with active-duty units, but sent instead

      to reserve and militia units that kept them separate and inac-

      tive. Now that the reserves and militia have been called up to

      support the invasion, we have a better picture'of the PLA's

      amphibious assault capability, and it is quite substantial:

      "The Taiwandse government has already reported airborne

      assaults in the early-morning hours by several cargo aircraft,

      with as many as a thousand commandos dropped on Quemoy

      in the past couple hours. They also report several forty-five-

      and thirty-five-meter air-cushion landing craft spotted along

      the western shores of Quemoy, including three on the beach.

      Each of these can carry as many as fifty troops and two fast

      armored assault vehicles, armored trucks, mobile antiaircraft

      artillery units, or small tanks. The Taiwanese have not reported

      where these commandos may be massing; they speculate that

      it may be part of a large reconnaissance or artillery-targeting

      patrol, or perhaps a plan to insert a great number of spies on

      the island. China was reported to have only a few of these air-

      cushion landing craft, but we're seeing reports of as many as

      a dozen.

      I I

      Several classes of amphibious assault ships have been

      spotted on shore, including some never classified previously

      and many thought to have been discarded or not in service,"

      the briefer continued. "It's very difficult to determine exact

      numbers, but one estimate said that the PLAN has enough

      ships for a twenty-thousand-man assault on Quemoy anytime.

      They could possibly lift an entire brigade onto Quemoy in two

      to three days if unopposed."

      "How many troops does Taiwan have on Quemoy?" one

      of the staff officers asked.

      "Estimated at between sixty and seventy thousand," the

      briefer replied. "But we have not been given any casualty

      reports from the attack earlier today. Any troops stationed in

      unprotected areas might have been injured enough to make

      them combat-ineffective."

      "Estimate of that number?"

      There was a slight pause, as the enormity of the number he

      was about to give caught up with him; then he responded in

      a hard-edged monotone: "Half. As many as thirty-five thou-

      sand casualties possible on Quemoy."

      The STRATCOM members listening were stunned into si-

      336 DALE BROWN

      lence. They could hardly believe what had happened: in re-

      pelling a Taiwanese air invasion of Chinese invasion forces

      arrayed around Quemoy, the People's Republic of China had

      launched several surface-to-air missiles armed with nuclear

      warheads. The entire Taiwanese air invasion armada, estimated

      at thirty-two frontline U.-made F-16 Fighting Falcon fighter-

      bombers-two-thirds of its F-16 fleet and 10 percent of its

      entire active military air inventory-had been destroyed in-

      stantly.

      "The five massive nuclear explosions occurred almost di-

      rectly over Quemoy Island at an altitude of about thirty thou-

      sand feet, high enough so the fireballs did not touch the

      ground, but near enough to cause extensive damage from the

      heat and overpressure," the briefer went on. "Danger of ra-

      dioactive fallout is low; the southern portion of Taiwan and

      northern Philippines might be affected. The aircraft carrier

      George Washington has been diverted to keep it out of th
    e

      danger area."

      "In apparent retaliation for the attacks on the mainland,

      China staged a massive counterattack, beginning with a feint

      by large fighter formations that drew away Taiwan's air de-

      fense fighters, followed by three large formations of heavy

      bombers attacking with short-range nuclear cruise missiles and

      conventional gravity bombs that almost completely destroyed

      four major air bases in the western portion of Taiwan," the

      intelligence officer continued. "The Chinese then followed up

      with medium-range nuclear ballistic missile attacks on three

      eastern Taiwan air and naval bases. The nuclear warheads were

      small high-altitude airbursts, less than forty-kiloton yields, but

      they were very effective. Half of Taiwan's air defense system,

      including substantially all its air forces and a third of its

      ground-based air defense weapons and radars, were de-

      stroyed.

      "Any reports about Taiwan's defense posture?"

      "Virtually nothing from Taipei at all, sir," the briefer re-

      plied. "Lots of reports of Chinese troop movements, but noth-

      ing regarding their own forces. No sign of the sixteen F-16

      fighter-bombers that hit Juidongshan earlier. AWACS radar

      planes report formations of fighters, believed to be F-5s, over

      northern Taiwan, but Air Combat Command and the Navy

      want to get a better picture of the situation over Taiwan before

      moving radar planes closer.

      FATAL TERRAIN 337

      "Now, over to the east, something else broke out between

      North and South Korea about an hour after the attacks over

      Taiwan began," the briefer went on. "The ROK air force de-

      tected a ballistic missile inbound from the west-northwest, pos-

      sibly from the North Korean naval base at Haeju or fi-orn a

      surface ship off the coast. Air defense missile units at Inchon

      and Seoul successfully engaged and destroyed the inbound.

      The ROK then reported a second missile headed north over

      the border. Moments later, a hot nuclear detonation was de-

      tected over Wonsan, the army and navy headquarters base in

      the eastern DPRK. The ROK denies it fired any missiles, al-

      though it does admit they returned artillery and rocket fire with

      the North at many different locations along the DMZ after the

      nuclear explosion.

      "The ROK is on full military alert, as is the North." The

      intelligence officer ran down a summary of the military de-

      ployments on both sides-almost two million troops and

      thousands of tanks, military vehicles, artillery pieces, and rock-

      ets were staring at each other all along the 140-mile-long fron-

      tier, with about a dozen clashes already breaking out in various

      parts of the DMZ. "Of course," the briefer summarized, "all

      nations in the region are on a high state of alert."

      "No shit," Admiral Henry Danforth, the commander in

      chief of U. Strategic Command, gasped aloud. "Any idea at

      all who launched against the Koreans?"

      "Both sides are denying it, as are the Chinese," the briefer

      responded. "We have polled our naval and air forces in the

      Yellow Sea and western Korean Peninsula region, and no one

      fired anything-the Navy is conducting an audit of all its

      forces, but that will be hampered by the alert. We've ruled out

      the Chinese ballistic missile subs-one has been in dry dock

      for some time, and the other two Chinese boomers are being

      shadowed by American attack subs, and they report no activ-

      ity. The only possible explanation is one or two Chinese mis-

      siles that were supposed to hit Taiwan somehow veered six

      hundred miles off course and accidentally hit Korea, but that's

      unlikely. We're still investigating."

      "Sweet Jesus, I can't believe it," Danforth muttered.

      "China actually went ahead and pushed the button." Admiral

      Danforth swiveled around in his seat until he could see General

      Samson, sitting behind him in the second row of the Battle

      Staff Room. "Still think we should recommend to the Presi-

      338 DALE BROWN

      dent that we take the bombers off nuclear alert, General Sam-

      son?" he asked.

      "Admiral, the invasion of Quemoy, Taiwan, and perhaps

      even South Korea was going to occur no matter how many

      nuclear weapons we put back on alert," Samson said. "The

      Chinese destroyed an American aircraft carrier, launched a nu-

      clear bombing raid on Taiwan, and I believe tried to instigate

      a second Korean War by shooting missiles over both North

      and South Korea-but are we any closer to declaring war on

      China, let alone a nuclear war?"

      "I think we are, and the National Command Authority ap-

      parently agrees," Danforth said. "I'm recommending to the

      NCA that we go to DEFCON Three, deploy the ballistic mis-

      sile sub fleet, put the bombers on restricted alert, and MIRV

      up all of the Peacekeeper and Minuteman ICBMs.- The fifty

      LGM- I 18A Peacekeeper missiles were America's largest and

      most powerful nuclear weapon. Headquartered in Wyoming

      but based in underground silos in Colorado and Nebraska as

      well, the huge 195,000-pound missiles, when fully "MIRVed

      up," could carry as many as ten Mk 21 nuclear Multiple In-

      dependent Reentry Vehicles to targets as far as ten thousand

      miles away. The five hundred LGM-30G Minuteman III I'Mis-

      siles now on alert at bases in North Dakota, Wyoming, and

      Montana carried up to three Mk 12 nuclear warheads.

      "Sir, I believe that would be a mistake," Terrill Samson

      said earnestly. "I've got to restate m position for the staff."

      Danforth looked very perturbed-Samson could see a jaw

      muscle flexing in the dim light of the Battle Staff Room. But

      CINCSTRATCOM motioned for Samson to step down. "Let's

      hear it, Terrill," he said. Samson gathered up a folder of notes

      and stepped down to the podium in front of the auditorium-

      like seats of the Battle Staff Room.

      "Admiral, I'll be as blunt as I can-the Chinese won't be-

      lieve we will use nuclear weapons against them because I don't

      believe we would," Samson said, "and if you can't make me

      believe it, they certainly won't."

      "The President, the Secretary of Defense, the chairman of

      the Joint Chiefs, and me say you're wrong," Danforth said

      irritably. "Part of the problem is, General, is that the bombers

      aren't coming up fast enough to make the Chinese think we're

      serious about putting a nuclear strike force on alert. That's

      your responsibility."

      FATAL T ER RAI N 339

      "With all due respect, Admiral, I think you're wrong,

      Samson said. "The bombers are taking twice as long to come

      up as we planned because the crews practice all year for con-

      ventional bombing missions, but almost never for nuclear mis-

      sions. The Chinese know this. We are just now discussing

      moving up the generation schedule for the bombers, several

      hours after we lose six thousand troops in a nuclear attack-

      if we were serious about using nuclear weapons, our counter-

      attack would have been launched long ago."


      "I don't appreciate your talking in absolutes about things

      we have no way of knowing, General," Danforth said. "Make

      your point."

      "Sir, my staff and I have prepared a target list and strike

      plan for central and eastern China that I would like approval

      for issuance of a warning order," Samson said. "I want four

      B-2s, twenty B-IB bombers, and eight KC-135 or two KC-10

      tankers, plus a list of non-nuclear weapons. The target list

      includes Chinese long-, intermediate-, and short-range nuclear

      missile sites, known nuclear weapon storage and maintenance

      bases,.air defense sites, and communications centers ... vir-

      tually the same targets we have at risk under the SIOP, sir,

      but targeted with bombers carrying conventionally armed

      cruise missiles, precision-guided cruise missiles, and satellite-

      guided gravity bombs.

      "We can halt the SIOP generation of the bombers I need

      and reconfigure them easily for the conventional mission,"

      Samson continued. "I plan to launch all twenty-four aircraft,

      pick the best twelve and have them continue to their targets,

      and recover the remaining twelve on Guam for refueling and

      launch them as a follow-on attack. Within twenty-four hours,

      we can have the bombers launched; within eighteen hours, the

      bombers will be striking targets in China and recovering at

      Guam, ready to begin round-the-clock attack operations. Com-

      mit the remainder of the bombers, and we can begin surge

      operations that can hold China's entire military at risk and

      even assist in air operations over North Korea at the same time

      if needed. I can guarantee-"

      "Frankly, General Samson, your management of the Air

      Force bomber fleet up to this point has been something far less

      than adequate," Danforth interrupted, with a definite note of

      exasperation in his voice, "and I don't think you're in a po-

      sition to guarantee anything."

      340 DALE BROWN

      "Sir, I feel that your current deployment of the bomber

      force is a waste of time, money, and manpower, and will do

      nothing to resolve the situation." Samson could see Danforth

      bristling with anger, but decided to quickly press on and say I

     


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