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    Sky Masters

    Page 20
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      ever seen. It was just on the horizon, almost directly off the nose.

      And just as quickly the light enveloped and blinded him. His eyes

      became two red-hot spheres of excruciating pain, burned, it seemed, by

      molten lava. Behind him, Pilas was screaming and Tamalko realized he,

      too, was screaming. The roar of the F-4E's big engines was gone, which

      meant they had been hit by something big enough to cause a double

      flameout-a big missile must have exploded right in front of them,

      blinding them and shelling out the engines. The control stick was

      beginning to tighten up as hydraulic power bled away-soon it would

      freeze up completely. He hauled back on the stick to try to start a zoom

      maneuver and trade some of their Mach one speed for altitude-if they

      ejected at Mach one, the windblast would tear them apart. He couldn't

      tell if they were gaining altitude... there wasn't time to think.

      "Eject! Eject!" Tamalko screamed, then crossed his wrists in front of

      him, grasped the ejection ring between his legs, and pulled. The canopy

      ripped off in the slipstream before the crewmen's heads crashed through

      it, and both he and Pilas were rocketed free and clear of the stricken

      plane. Tamalko's body was flying forward at almost seven hundred feet

      per second. The wall of compressed, superheated air rushing toward him

      from the explosion of the single RK-55 nuclear warhead of the Fei Lung-9

      missile was traveling at two thousand feet per second. When the two

      met, Tamalko, Pilas, and the crippled F-4E Phantom II fighter were

      mercilessly crushed into powder, then vaporized by the

      five.thousand-degree heat of the fringes of the fireball that had

      already destroyed the Philippine corvette Quezon and its three antiship

      helicopters. FIRST AIR WING COMMAND AND CONTROL OPERATIONS CENTER

      CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN AFB, COLORADO SAME TIME A young Air Force staff

      sergeant, Amy Hector, was on the FOREST GREEN console at the U.S. Air

      Force Space Command's Command and Control Operations Center, deep within

      the Cheyenne Mountain NORAD complex, when her detection board went

      crazy. "Red Collar, Red Collar, " Staff Sergeant Hector called on the

      center-wide intercom, pressing the "Call" button on her console so that

      her warning message would override all the other transmissions in the

      Operations Center. The words "Red Collar" would also ensure immediate

      attention by all-the effect those simple code-words had was akin to her

      screaming at the top of her lungs: "FOREST GREEN with an event-detection

      warning, all stations stand by.. ." Hector waited a few more

      'heartbeats, then quickly began reading her detection figures aloud,

      knowing ~7~~~, :r'~ ~~//~ ~~i~~~Ur~~j~/hJPJf~~rP >cr~zzibJizig to their

      ~~ats azid chcc&zg ~~ "FOREST GREEN shows three units with amphtu~e

      pu'Ise threshold readings. System reports confirmation of readouts,

      repeat, system reports readout confirmation, event confidence is high."

      Technicians at Cheyenne Mountain seldom used words like "nuclear

      detonation" or "explosion"-these were collectively called "events" and

      "readouts." emotional detachment prevalent inside the Mountain, as if

      they could somehow block the horrors they saw by naming them something

      harmless. It was a relatively low-tech device that issued a warning on

      that Wednesday afternoon, a device that had gone all but unused for

      years. In an effort to increase the number of nuclear detection devices

      in orbit without increasing the actual number of satellites, in the late

      1 970s and early 1 980s a secret program code-named FOREST GREEN was

      implemented. NAVSTAR Global Positioning System navigation satellites

      were fitted with electromagnetic pulse sensors and devices called (quite

      appropriately for nuclear detonation detection) Bhangmeters, which were

      sensitive optical flash detectors that could determine the explosive

      yield of a nuclear explosion by the brightness of the flash. Unlike

      AMWS, which were used only on specific (albeit very wide) areas of the

      Earth, FOREST GREEN had global coverage because the eighteen-satellite

      NAVSTAR constellation had at least three satellites looking at every

      piece of the Earth at every moment. A nuclear explosion has a definite

      pattern of two pulses-the first less intense than the second-caused

      first by the detonation of the triggering device, followed exactly

      one-third of a second later by the main explosion; this was the reason

      Bhangmeters were mounted in pairs, with one more sensitive than the

      other. The EMP detectors on the three FOREST GREEN satellites also

      registered the disruption of the ionosphere before communication between

      the satellites and their receivers on Earth were abruptly cut off. The

      senior controller in the Operations Center, an Air Force colonel named

      Randolph, immediately put the staff sergeant's console display up on the

      "big board, " a rectangle of six 2-by-3foot screens in the front of the

      Operations Center. The display was relatively uninformative at this

      point-three lines out of eighteen on the display were flashing, with a

      string of numbers showing the system readings and the threshold levels

      preprogrammed into the system. "All stations, this is Randolph. I

      confirm a FOREST GREEN event detection and classification, I need a

      status check and report in thirty seconds, all stations stand by." The

      problem with the FOREST GREEN sensors was that they were not highly

      directional-the sensors could accurately record a nuclear detonation but

      not precisely pinpoint the explosion's location; when the Bhangmeters

      were installed on older Vela nuclear-detection satellites, the device's

      telescopic eye could pinpoint the location of the detonation, but on

      NAVSTAR satellites the sensors were relegated to area reports only. In

      a few moments Amy Hector had replaced the cryptic lines of data with a

      graphic pictorial of the information: a chart of the Earth that was

      within line-of-sight reach of the three NAVSTAR satellites that had

      suddenly gone off the air. Somewhere within the three overlapping

      shaded spheres, the first aboveground nuclear device in thirty years had

      detonated. Unfortunately, the display showed the explosion could have

      occurred anywhere from Hawaii to Thailand and from Japan to Australia.

      "I need better information than that, " Colonel Randolph said. "Find

      out why no DSP systems issued an alert." DSP was a constellation of

      satellites so sensitive that they could detect brush fires, structure

      fires, or even high-performance aircraft using afterburners-all from

      twenty-two thousand miles in space. "Sir, this is Staff Sergeant Hector

      on FOREST GREEN, " Hector interjected. "I think I can come up with a

      rough triangulation."

      "Let's have it, Sergeant." "I've got the exact time when all three of

      the NAVSTAR satellites shut down, " Hector explained, "and I've got the

      time down to one-one-hundredth of a second. I can Randolph looked at

      her. "I get the picture, Sergeant Hector. Speed of gamma particle

      versus time. Are the off-air times that different?"

      "Stand by, sir." There was a slight pause, then Hector replied: "Two

      times are the same;
    the other is different. I can poll the sensor

      threshold-release circuits and get a more exact time; I can also try a

      laser orbital velocity measurement to see if the event changed the

      orbits-"

      "Just do it, Amy." This was the first time he had ever recalled calling

      Hector by her first name, but it seemed oddly appropriate now. "But

      first, I need an acknowledgment of a suspected FOREST GREEN event from

      CINCSPACECOM right awayalso get SAC and JCS on the line."

      "Yes, sir. "NORAD hasn't issued an alert yet, " Randolph muttered

      half-aloud. "Why the hell haven't they said anything? Something big

      enough to knock out three satellites is not good news. ABOARD SKY

      MASTERS DC-10, OVER CALIFORNIA SAME TIME Jon Masters had his feet up on

      the bulkhead, was on his third plastic squeeze bottle of Pepsi and

      halfway through a bologna and cheese sandwich when the toneless,

      emotionless voice of the Air Force mission control tracking officer on

      the radio said, "Masters One, College, contact lost with Jackson One."

      Masters sat upright, put down the Pepsi, and quickly checked his

      readouts. "College, this is Masters One, I-" He did a double-take.

      Seconds ago he'd been getting a stream of position and velocity readouts

      from the NIRTSat in its orbit. Now the readouts were zero. Masters

      sighed. "Confirmed on this end. Stand by. I'll try to re-establish

      communications." On the interphone to his crew, he said, "Give me a

      turn westbound and a climb to best altitude. We've got a problem with

      the satellite." Helen Kaddiri entered the flight deck. "What is it,

      Jon?"

      "We lost contact with the satellite." She looked at him as if to say,

      I'm not surprised. Instead, she said, "Same problem we had before?"

      "That was a loose plug, Helen, this"-he scratched his head in an

      uncharacteristic moment of confusion-"has got to be something else. But

      what, I don't know." ABOARD WHISPER ONE-SEVEN, OVER POWDER RIVER MOA,

      MONTANA SAME TIME McLanahan began programming the final launch

      instructions on his Super Multi Function Display so they could take out

      the last few sortie targets in General Jarrel's setup and then head

      home. The display shimmered and abruptly changed. "What the-" McLanahan

      muttered. Instead of the gently rolling hills and dry gullies of

      southeastern Montana, the SMFD showed a confusing pattern of light spots

      in a blank, featureless background. It did have one very prominent

      terrain feature-a mountain nearly twenty thousand feet high and sixty

      miles wide. It was as if Mount Everest had just been transplanted into

      the middle of the Great Plains. "I don't believe this . . ." McLanahan

      said, staring at the SMFD. "What is it?" Ormack asked. "That doesn't

      look like the target area."

      "The computer must be decoding the signal wrong, McLanahan guessed.

      Amazingly, the computer began plotting a recommended course on the

      erroneous computer display, with sharp changes in heading away from the

      larger moving spots but fairly close to the smaller, non-moving ones.

      The computer even made weapon selections, although with only two weapons

      on board the choice was relatively simple-the longer-range SLAM missile

      for the large moving spots that were to be circumnavigated, and the

      STRIKER glide-bomb for the smaller, stationary ones. The strike computer

      began the arming and countdown procedures to attack these "targets, "

      and that's when McLanahan got tired of this. "There's some glitch in the

      system and it's not 1 clearing. I'll reset the system and go manually

      until I get a usable display back." But he did not simply reset the

      computers-he used the on-board computer memory to save the last few

      seconds of images first before clearing the bogus display. "What do you

      think is the problem?" Ormack asked. "I don't know, " McLanahan

      replied. "I'll check switchesthe system will report on any switches out

      of position in the post-mission computer dump. Maybe there was a glitch

      in the satellite. Who knows?" He bent toward the screen and began

      identifying radar aimpoints, getting ready for the "bomb" releases.

      "Probably something minor. . But that new satellite image did not look

      like something minor, McLanahan thought uneasily. It was more than a

      glitch. The computer was processing the data it received from NIRTSat

      as if it were real, uncorrupted data, and he knew enough about the

      NIRTSat system to know that the computer would reject false data. No,

      whatever that twentythousandfoot~high "mountain" was, McLanahan thought,

      it was real. Something very serious had just happened somewhere in the

      world. HIGH TECHNOLOGY AEROSPACE WEAPONS CENTER "What the hell

      happened?" Colonel Wyatt exclaimed. They were looking in stunned

      amazement at the high-definition TV monitor, and at the monstrosity that

      the computer was showing them: a mountain thousands and thousands of

      feet high and dozens of miles wide, engulfing ships in its path with

      devastating power. "Must be a sensor glitch. .. a solar flare or a

      power spike, " Major Kelvin Carter tried. He spoke with the

      technicians, but none of those present could understand the display.

      "Whatever it is, it killed the satellite, " Carter said. "This is the

      last image received; the satellite is off the air."

      "Too bad, " Wyatt said. "McLanahan's run was looking real good, too."

      Captain Ken James' attention was riveted on the display frozen on the

      screen. "It's a weird picture, but the computer is displaying valid

      data on it, " he said. "Look: height, width, speed, density, course-the

      thing is moving and growing all at once. "But it's showing it as

      terrain, Ken, " Carter said. "That can't be right. We were looking at

      the Philippines first, then at Montana. There's no mountain in either

      place." Wyatt shrugged, then began packing up his notebook. "It was

      still a spectacular display, gents, " he said, "but I-"

      "Sir, phone call for you, " one of the technicians said. "Urgent from

      NMCC." As Wyatt trotted to the phone, James turned to Carter and asked,

      "Nimic? What's that?"

      "National Military Command Center, " Carter replied. "The War Room at

      the Pentagon." James nodded, making a mental note. STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND

      HEADQUARTERS OFFUTT AIR FORCE BASE, NEAR OMAHA, NEBRASKA WEDNESDAY, 21

      SEPTEMBER 1994, 1425 HOURS LOCAL neral Larry T. Tyler, commander in

      chief of the Strategic Air Command, was getting ready to make his first

      serve of the tennis match between members of the headquarters staff when

      the beeper on his portable radio went off. But, like a baseball pitcher

      halfway into his windup, he completed the serve and managed to hit his

      Reserve Forces Advisor, Colonel Hartmann, in the left leg. Hartmann was

      distracted and didn't expect his boss to finish his serve. "Cheap shot,

      General, " Hartmann shouted. Tyler raised his racket to offer an

      apology to Hartmann, who politely waved it off, then trotted over to the

      bench, where his radio was sitting. Tyler's driver, a young buck

      sergeant named Meers, heard the beeper and immediately started up the

      General's staff car, which was waiting just a few dozen yards away. In

      Tyler's
    footsteps was his doubles partner, the former commander of

      Pacific Air Force's Philippine-based Thirteenth Air Force, Major General

      Richard "Rat Killer" Stone, who was to become Tyler's Deputy Chief of

      Staff of Pacific Operations in a few weeks. It had been said that

      CINCSAC-the Commander in Chief of the Strategic Air Command-was a

      prisoner of his job, and to a certain extent it was true-the radio, the

      car, and the driver were his constant companions. But the

      fifty-six-year-old ex-Notre Dame football quarterback was determined not

      to let the awesome responsibility of his position disrupt his lifeand

      that responsibility was truly awesome. Tyler was in charge of the United

      States' smaller but still potent nuclear combat force of ninety B- lB

      Excalibur bombers, two hundred B-52G and H-model Stratofortress bombers,

      ten B-2A Black Knight stealth bombers, six hundred Minuteman III

      intercontinental ballistic missiles, one hundred railgarrison

      Peacekeeper ICMBs, fifty MGM-134A Mustang road-mobile ICBMs, eight

      hundred AGM-129A advanced cruise missiles, and one thousand AGM-131A

      Short-Range Attack Missiles. In addition he commanded several hundred

      aerial refueling tankers, strategic reconnaissance aircraft, airborne

      command posts, and communications aircraft, and a total of about eighty

      thousand men and women, civilians as well as military, all around the

      globe-and his job was to stay within momentsnotice contact with each and

      every one of his sixty active and reserve units at all times. Although

      he was at the very pinnacle of his Air Force career, he was determined

      not to get jabbed in the ass by its sharp point. As Tyler made his way

      to the bench where his radio sat, he noticed the amber rotating lights

      at the street intersection nearby-the SAC command post was recalling the

      alert crews, and the amber warning lights told other drivers to be aware

      of alert crews heading toward the flight line. Offutt Air Force Base

      had an alert force of four KC-135 aerial refueling tankers that would

      prepare for takeoff to support airborne command post aircraft at Offutt,

      as well as other strike and communications aircraft. The alert crews

      were tested regularly to make sure their response time was always within

     


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