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    Sky Masters

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      is off the flight line for a few months, so this'll work out perfectly.

      I've got a staff meeting with J. C. Powell and McDonnell-Douglas in

      about an hour, and I'll clear the desk and schedule an afternoon staff

      meeting on this project. We'll be back out here taking measurements"-he

      paused, then gave Ormack a sly smile-"right after we get back from

      lunch. Your treat, I believe?" THE GOLD ROOM OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN OF

      THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF THE PENTAGON, WASHINGTON, D.C. MONDAY, 15

      AUGUST 1994, 0800 HOURS LOCAL CC6ood morning, sir, " Navy Captain

      Rebecca Rodgers, senior staff officer, Pacific, of J-2, the Joint Chiefs

      of Staff Intelligence Directorate, began. "Captain Rodgers with this

      morning's intelligence report. The briefing is classified top secret,

      sensitive sources and methods involved, not releasable to foreign

      nationals; the room is secure." She paused to doublecheck that the

      thick mahogany double doors to the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff

      Conference Center, referred to as the "Tank" or the "Gold Room, " were

      closed and locked and that the red "Top Secret" lights were on. Rebecca

      "Becky" Rodgers could feel the tension of the men and women in the Tank

      that morning, and her news was not going to help to cheer them up one

      bit. Captain Rodgers was at the briefer's podium at the base of the

      Tank's large, triangle-shaped conference table where everyone could see

      her and the screen clearly. It was a most imposing and decidedly

      uncomfortable spot-seven of the most senior, most powerful military men

      on the planet watching her, waiting for her, no doubt evaluating her

      performance every moment. The first few sessions in this room had been

      devastating for her. But that was a half-dozen crises ago, and it

      seemed like old hat now. She didn't need the old trick of trying to

      imagine the Joint Chiefs naked to get through her nervousness-the fact

      that she knew something that these powerful men and women did not know

      was comfort enough. Present for the briefing was JCS Chairman General

      Wilbur Curtis; the Vice Chairman, Marine Corps General Mario Lanuza; the

      Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Randolph Cunningham; Commandant of the

      Marine Corps General Robert Peterson; Air Force Chief of Staff General

      William Falmouth; and Army Chief of Staff General John Bonneville, plus

      their aides and representatives from the other J-staff directorates.

      Curtis insisted on attendance by all Joint Staff members and

      directorates for these daily briefings-it was probably the only

      opportunity for the staff to get together as a team during their busy

      week. The Chairman sat at the blunted apex of the triangle, with seats

      available beside him at the head of the table for the Secretary of

      Defense and the President of the United States if they chose to attend,

      although in his two years of office, the President had never set foot in

      this place. The four-star Joint Staff members and their aides and

      staffers sat on the Chairman's left, the J-staff directorate

      representatives on the right, and guests and briefers at the base of the

      triangle near the back. Each seat had a small communications console

      and computer I TV monitor embedded in the table, which was fed from the

      giant Global Military Communications, Command, Control, and Intelligence

      Network operations center on another level of the Pentagon. The back

      wall of the Tank was a large rear-projection screen. Arranged above it

      was a series of red LED digital clocks with various times, and several

      members of the staff, by force of habit after long years aloft or at

      sea, gave themselves a time hack from those ultra-precise clocks every

      morning. "The number-one topic I have for you today is the Philippines

      and South China Sea incidents, " Rodgers said after concluding her

      routine force status briefings. "In response to the attack on an

      oil-exploration barge a few months ago in the neutral zone in the

      Spratly Island chain, both the Philippines and China have stepped up

      naval activity in the area. "Specifically, the Chinese have not added

      any new forces except for a few smaller shallow patrol boats. They have

      a very strong contingent there, including the destroyer Hong Lung, which

      carries the Hong Qian-9 1 surface-to-air missile system, the Fei Lung-7

      and Fei Lung-9 antiship missile systems, and a good complement of

      dual-purpose guns. Additionally, they have two frigates, four patrol

      boats, some minesweepers, and other support vessels. They usually

      detach into three smaller patrol groups, with a missile craft leading

      two groups and Hong Lung and its escorts comprising the third. Vessels

      from the South Sea fleet, headquartered at Jhanjiang, rotate with the

      ships about once per month; however, Hong Lung rotates very seldom.

      Their base on Spratly Island is very small, but they can land

      medium-size cargo aircraft there to resupply their vessels. "The

      Filipinos have substantially increased their presence in the Spratly

      Islands following the attack on the oil barge. They have sent two of

      their three frigates into the disputed area and are now patrolling their

      section vigorously with both sea and air assets. "But despite the naval

      buildup, the Philippine naval fleet is practically nonexistent, "

      Rodgers concluded. "All of their major combatants are old, slow, and

      unreliable. The crews are generally not well trained and rarely operate

      more than a day's cruise away from their home ports."

      "So without the United States forces to back them up, they're sitting

      ducks for the Chinese, " Admiral Cunningham said. "Sir, the Chinese

      fleet is not that much more advanced than the Philippine fleet, at least

      the vessels that operate near the Spratly Islands, " Rodgers said. "Most

      are small, lightly armed patrol boats. The exception, of course, is the

      flagship, Hong Lung. It is without question the most capable warship in

      the entire South China Sea, comparable in performance to U.S. Kidd-class

      destroyers but faster and lighter. The frigates are heavily armed as

      well; most have HQ-6 1 SAM missiles, which would be very effective

      against the Filipino helicopters and may even be capable against the Sea

      Ray antiship missile. All are comparable in performance to U.S. Oliver

      Hazard Perryclass frigates, except without helicopter decks or the

      sophisticated electronics. "The main Chinese offensive thrust would

      obviously be their overwhelming ground forces-they could land several

      hundred thousand troops in the Philippines in very short order, "

      Rodgers concluded. "Although we generally classify the Chinese Navy as

      smaller and less capable than ours, their naval forces are very capable

      of supporting and protecting their ground troops. An amphibious assault

      on the Philippines by the Chinese would be concluded very quickly, and

      it would push the necessary threshold of an American counter strike to

      very high levels-very much along the lines of our DESERT SHIELD

      deployment, although without the advantage of forward basing."

      "So if the Chinese want to take the Spratly Islands, there's not much we

      could do about it, " General Falmouth summarized. "Sir, at
    the current

      force levels in the area, if the Chinese wanted to take the Philippines,

      there would be little we could do about it..." There was a very animated

      murmur of voices at that comment. Curtis was the first to raise his

      voice above the others: "Wait one, Captain. Is this a J-2 assessment or

      an opinion?"

      "It is not a directorate finding, sir, but it is nevertheless a

      statement of fact, " Rodgers replied. "If they so decided, it would

      take the People's Liberation Army Navy less than a week..."

      "Ridiculous..." "They wouldn't dare..." "Absurd..." "According to the

      directorate's preliminary report, sir, " Rodgers explained, getting

      their attention, "if the Chinese captured five strategic military

      bases-the naval facilities at Subic Bay and Zamboanga, the Air Force

      bases at Cavite and Cebu, and the Army base at Cagayan de Oro-and if

      they defeated Second Vice President Samar's militia at Davao, they could

      secure the entire country." She paused, then looked directly at them.

      "Gentlemen, the New Philippine Army is nothing more than a well-equipped

      police force, not a defense force. They have relied on the United

      States for its national defense-and obviously would have to again, if

      the need arose. General Samar's Commonwealth Defense Force is a

      welltrained and well-organized guerrilla-fighting force, but they cannot

      stand up against a massive invasion. The Chinese have a thirty-to-one

      advantage in all areas. General Wilbur Curtis surveyed his Chiefs of

      Staff with a look of concern-the information Captain Rodgers had just

      conveyed had silenced them all. He had heard a lot of bad news during

      the past six years that he'd chaired the Joint Chiefs. He had learned to

      quickly decipher between isolated incidents and incidents that had a

      broader, far more serious impact if left untended. He knew the

      implications of what Rodgers was saying could be far more serious than

      any of them had previously thought. "I think we all wanted to believe

      this was just another skirmish. But with the United States out of the

      Philippines, there is a large power vacuum in the area. We knew there'd

      be that danger. Still, I don't think anyone believed the Chinese would

      consider moving so soon-if they really are." Curtis turned to Captain

      Rodgers again and asked, "Are the Chinese likely to attempt an

      invasion?"

      "Sir, if the Joint Chiefs would like a detailed briefing, I should get

      Central Intelligence involved, " Rodgers said. "I had been concentrating

      on the military aspects and hadn't prepared a full briefing on the

      political situation. But J-2 does feel that the Philippines are ripe

      for the picking." Curtis waited for additional thoughts from the Joint

      Chiefs; when there appeared to be no concrete suggestions, he said, "I'd

      like to review the current OPLANS for dealing with a possible Chinese

      action in the Philippines, then. I need to know what plans we have

      built already, and if they need to be updated. Captain Rodgers, I'd like

      Central Intelligence to get involved, and I'd like Current Operations to

      draft a response plan that I can present to the Secretary of Defense for

      his review. Include a Philippines update in the daily briefings,

      including satellite passes and a rundown on naval activity in the

      Spratlys and in the Chinese South China Sea fleet. Let's get on top of

      this thing and have a plan of action before it threatens to blow up in

      our faces." HIGH TECHNOLOGY AEROSPACE WEAPONS CENTER (HAWC) DREAMLAND,

      NEVADA WEDNESDAY, 17 AUGUST 1994, 0905 HOURS LOCAL The phone line

      crackled. "Brad! How the hell are you?" Lieutenant General Brad

      Elliott leaned back in his chair and smiled broadly as he recognized the

      caller. "I was expecting you to send young Andy Wyatt out here to

      harass me again, sir, but I'm glad to hear from you. "Can the 'sir'

      stuff with me, you old warhorse, " Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

      Wilbur Curtis said over the snaps and crackles in the scrambled phone

      line. "You know better. Besides, it's been a long time since we've

      spoken. When are we going to get together?"

      "I have a feeling it'll be soon, my friend. I've been getting calls

      from half the J-staff, a bunch of calls from Space Command-you had to be

      the next caller. Let me guess-you want some air time on some satellites

      of mine. "Now how the hell did you know that?"

      "Every time I build a new toy, you want it, that's how I know it."

      "That's why you're out there, you stupid bastard. You're supposed to be

      developing toys for us to play with, not polishing your three stars.

      Stop whining."

      "I'm not, believe me." Elliott chuckled. "I assume you want to use the

      new Masters NIRTSats, the ones that can downlink radar, infrared, and

      visual imagery all in one pass in real-time both to the ground stations

      and aircraft. Right?" "You're not telepathic are you?" Curtis joked.

      "They tell me you can receive satellite images on your B-2 bomber as

      well as your B-52 Megafortress?"

      "We flight-test PACER SKY at the Strategic Warfare Center in a couple

      weeks, " Elliott said, "but ground tests have gone really well. Let me

      guess some more: you want pictures of a certain area, but don't want to

      use DSP or LACROSSE satellites because you don't want certain Superpower

      countries to know you're interested. Am I close?" "Frightfully close, "

      Curtis said. "We're watching a Chinese naval buildup in the South China

      Sea. We think they might be getting ready to plug away at either the

      Spratlys or the Philippines. If we send a DSP or KH-series bird over

      the area, we risk discovery."

      "The Philippines? You mean the Chinese might try an invasion?"

      "Well, let's hope not, " Curtis said. "The President is a big fan of

      President Mikaso's. We've been expecting something like this for years,

      ever since we realized there was a good possibility we were going to get

      kicked out of the Philippines-now it might actually happen. We've got

      our pants pretty much down around the ankles as far as Southeast Asia

      goes right now. What with the buildup in the Persian Gulf and the

      closing of a bunch of bases overseas, we've got zilch out there...

      "Well, if you need the pictures, you got 'em, " Elliott said, running

      his hand across the top of his hair. "We can transmit the digitized

      data to J-2, or Jon Masters can set up one of his terminals right on

      your desk there-providing you don't keep stretching your secretary out

      over it all the time."

      "My secretary is a fifty-year-old Marine Corps gunnery sergeant that

      could grind us both down into little nubs, you old lech." Curtis

      laughed. "No, transmit it to J-2 and J-3 out here at the Pentagon

      soonest. They'll give you a call and tell you exactly what they want. "I

      know what you want, sir, " Elliott said. "Hey, don't be so sure, big

      shot, " Curtis said. "Man, some guys-they get on the fast track, tool

      around the White House for a few months, and it goes right to their

      heads. And stop calling me sir. You'd have four stars, too, if you'd

      climb up out of that black hole you've built for yourself out there and

      join the real worl
    d again."

      "What? Leave Dreamland and miss the opportunity for some first-class,

      four-star abuse? No way." Elliott gave his old friend a loud laugh and

      hung up. U.S. AIR FORCE STRATEGIC WARFARE CENTER ELLSWORTH AFB, SOUTH

      DAKOTA "Room, ten-HUT!" Two hundred men and women in olive drab flight

      suits moved smartly to their feet as Air Force Brigadier General Calvin

      Jarrel and his staff entered the auditorium briefing room. The scene

      could have been right out of Patton except for the ten-foot-square

      electronic liquid-crystal screen onstage with the Strategic Air Command

      emblem in full color, showing an armored fist clutching an olive branch

      and three lightning bolts. Otherwise it looked like the setting for

      countless other combat-mission briefings from years past-except these

      men and women, all SAC warriors, weren't going to war... at least not

      yet. It was easy to mistake General Cal Jarrel for just another one of

      the four hundred or so crew dogs at the Air Force Strategic Warfare

      Center, and that was just fine with him. Jarrel was an unimposing five

      foot eleven, one-hundred-sixty-pound man, with boyish brown hair and

      brown eyes hidden behind standard-issue aluminum-framed aviator's

      spectacles. Many of those close to the General thought that he was

      uncomfortable with the trappings of a general officer, and everyone on

      the base agreed that at the very least he was the most visible one-star

      anyone had ever known. On the flight line or on the indoor track in the

      base gym, he could be seen jogging early each morning with a crowd of

      several dozen staffers and visitors, which was how he kept his slight

      frame lean and trim despite an ever-increasing amount of time flying a

      desk instead of a B-52 Stratofortress, B-1B Excalibur, or F-1 11 G Super

      'Vark bomber. He was married to an environmental-law attorney from

      Georgia and was the harried father of two teenage boys. Like many of the

      men and women in the Strategic Air Command of the mid-1990s, Jarrel

      appeared studious, introspective, unobtrusive, and soft-spoken-unlike

      their hotshot fighter-pilot colleagues, it was as if they understood

      that the awesome responsibility of carrying two-thirds of the nation's

     


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