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Kilo Option
Kilo Option Read online
Table of Contents
Title Page
PART ONE
1
THE PERSIAN GULF OFF THE COAST OF IRAN
2
THE PENTAGON
3
THE UNITED NATIONS
4
WASHINGTON, D.C.
5
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
6
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
7
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
8
NORFOLK NAVAL BASE
BASE SECURITY’S OPERATIONS READY ROOM
9
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
10
NORFOLK NAVAL BASE
11
EN ROUTE TO NORFOLK NAVAL BASE
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
NORFOLK NAVAL BASE
12
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
NORFOLK NAVAL BASE
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
13
NORFOLK NAVAL BASE
ABOARD THE SILVER METEOR
EN ROUTE TO FAYETTEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
14
ABOARD THE SILVER METEOR
PART TWO
15
BANDAR-É EMN KHOMEINÍ
16
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
MEXICO CITY
17
TEHRAN
18
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
19
THE WHITE HOUSE
GEORGETOWN
20
RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA
TEHRAN
21
ACROSS FROM THE FORMER US EMBASSY TEHRAN
SAVAK HEADQUARTERS
MEXICO CITY
22
TEHRAN
23
BANDAR-É EMN
24
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
TEHRAN
25
THE WHITE HOUSE
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
26
BANDAR-É EMN
SAVAK HEADQUARTERS
TEHRAN: PRAVDA’S OFFICES
27
BANDAR-É EMN
TEHRAN
28
BANDAR-É EMN
FAILAKA ISLAND OFF THE COAST OF KUWAIT
29
FAILAKA ISLAND SAFE HOUSE
30
FAILAKA ISLAND
THE SAFE HOUSE
31
THE EMBASSY OF IRAN KUWAIT CITY
FAILAKA ISLAND SAFE HOUSE
32
ON THE DESERT SOUTHWEST OF BAGHDAD
33
KUWAIT INTERNATIONAL HOTEL KUWAIT CITY
ABOARD THE FAILAKA FERRY
34
KUWAIT INTERNATIONAL HOTEL
35
FAILAKA ISLAND SAFE HOUSE
36
KUWAIT INTERNATIONAL HOTEL
FAILAKA ISLAND
37
FAILAKA ISLAND
38
RAMSTEIN AIR FORCE BASE GERMANY
FAILAKA ISLAND AIR FORCE BASE
PART THREE
39
THE FRENCH RIVIERA
40
THE FRENCH RIVIERA
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY FORT MEADE, MARYLAND
41
KARACHI, PAKISTAN
42
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
THE PERSIAN GULF
43
THE NORTHERN PERSIAN GULF
44
THE NORTHERN PERSIAN GULF
45
THE FRENCH RIVIERA
RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA
46
THE PERSIAN GULF
47
ON THE DESERT NORTH OF RIYADH
SEVASTOPOL, UKRAINE
48
THE PERSIAN GULF
49
CIA TRAINING CAMP NORTH OF RIYADH
RIYADH
50
THE WHITE HOUSE
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
CIA TRAINING CAMP NORTH OF RIYADH
51
WASHINGTON, D.C.
52
MOHAMMAD’S STAR
CGN40 MISSISSIPPI
53
MOHAMMAD’S STAR
CHICAGO
54
MOHAMMAD’S STAR
CHICAGO
55
MV GORKI
CHICAGO
56
MOHAMMAD’S STAR
MV GORKI
57
CHICAGO
58
MOHAMMAD’S STAR
IN THE SEA
59
MOHAMMAD’S STAR
MV GORKI
MOHAMMAD’S STAR
PART FOUR
60
THE WHITE HOUSE
61
MISSISSIPPI
THE SYRIAN DESERT SOUTHWEST OF BAGHDAD
62
RIYADH
63
CIA TRAINING CAMP OUTSIDE RIYADH
64
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S CAMP
65
AR’AR, SAUDI ARABIA
EN ROUTE OVER IRAQ
ON THE DESERT
66
THE WHITE HOUSE
67
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S CAMP
IN THE DESERT
68
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S CAMP
69
ON THE DESERT
AR’AR, SAUDI ARABIA
WASHINGTON
THE WHITE HOUSE
70
ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA
KIEV
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY INTERCEPT CENTER
Copyright Page
This book is for
my friends and fans at BYC.
PART ONE
1
THE PERSIAN GULF OFF THE COAST OF IRAN
A dim red light flashed briefly in the pitch darkness as the afterdeck hatch was opened and closed. A man dressed head to toe in black looked up from where he waited at the rail of the patrol boat gently idling in the three-foot seas. A similarly clad figure beckoned, only his silhouette visible against the nearly featureless backdrop. The man at the rail glanced toward the lights along the coast five kilometers to the north, then turned away. He didn’t want to lose his night vision too soon.
He examined his feelings, switching between anticipation of the job at hand, fear of failure, and a Muslim’s resignation to fate. “In sha’Allah.” God’s will. He whispered the prayer for the future, though he wasn’t sure he believed in it any longer.
Jamal el-Kassem made his way forward, his thickly soled combat boots affording him good footing on the wet decks. The boat was a Russian-built Pchela-class fast-attack patrol hydrofoil. At 83 feet on deck the heavily armed boat displaced 80 tons loaded, but with a crew of twelve men she could make 44 to 50 knots raised on her hydrofoils, pushed through the water, or rather over it, by two diesels pumping 6,000 horsepower into two shafts. She was an old boat, nearly twenty years since her keel was laid, and all the more rare because she was the only ship of any consequence left to what remained of Saddam Hussein’s beleaguered forces.
This and two F/A-18 Jets was all they could count on, Kassem thought unhappily. Not much with which to win back a country illegally taken from them by the infidels. The memory of the last chaotic, horrible days in Baghdad before the Allied forces had entered the city and driven their Supreme leader into hiding in the desert was a blot on his conscience. If he had fought a little harder, held his post a little longer, used a little more creativity and intelligence in his battlefield orders—if they all had tried harder—Iraq would not have been defeated in the second
battle to liberate Kuwait.
The thoughts were almost more than he could bear, as were the memories of his wife and children. He had personally dug their bodies out of the rubble of their apartment building at the edge of the city. They had been murdered in an Allied air strike on the second day of the war, and there hadn’t been a thing he could do about it. But that was about to change. Thanks to Saddam. In sha’Allah.
He began to chant the Shahada softly. “Allahu akbar; Allahu akbar; La ilaha illa ’llah.” God is most great; God is most great; I testify that there is no other God but God and Muhammad is His Prophet.
Kassem was not an ignorant bedouin, nor was he a rabid anti-Western fundamentalist, though he felt that he had every right to be one; he’d been educated at Princeton, had lived among the infidels for four long years, learning international law and economics, and he’d hated every minute of his exile. He’d been an outsider. He’d even been called a nigger. His dark-complected face was deeply lined and weathered from spending years in desert combat training missions. He was large, by Iraqi standards, standing over six three, yet at forty-five he still moved like a desert scorpion, ready at long last, he thought with satisfaction, to lash out with his poisonous stinger. This time the strike would be aimed not only at their Western enemies, but also at Iran—a nation of men who should have been brothers, not enemies.
Two crewmen who were making the rubber raft ready looked up expectantly. “We are nearly finished here, Colonel,” one of them said.
Kassem checked his watch. It was 1:30 A.M. Iran time. “Five minutes,” he said, and was gratified to see their smiles. Good men, too good to continue to waste their lives uselessly. All that would end.
He took the ladder up to the bridge deck where his lieutenant, Karim al-Midafi waited. Where Kassem was large, and solidly built, Midafi was short and sinewy. His muscles stood out from the base of his neck like the deeply bedded roots of a willow that could withstand the most violent storm. Where Kassem looked like a rugby player, Midafi could have been a jockey. He was a night fighter, every bit as competent as his partner. They were friends.
“Are they ready down there?” he asked.
“I told them five minutes,” Kassem said.
“The captain wants to see you.”
“About what?”
Midafi glanced toward the lights on the distant shore, his dark eyes narrowing. He shrugged. “He wants us to understand the consequences if our mission fully develops this morning. The heathen is afraid for his own skin. He thinks that if we’re caught and tortured we’ll tell them how we got ashore. Political troubles. He has to be careful now, because too much is at stake. It’s money.”
Kassem looked into his friend’s eyes. “Will he continue to cooperate?”
“If he doesn’t I’ll kill him with my own two hands.”
“We need him to send out the encrypted radio message. We’re dead without it.”
“He knows it!” Midafi said vehemently. “The bastards are taking advantage of us. When we’ve regained Baghdad, and our oil finally begins to flow again, I say we treat them the same as they’ve treated us. We hold them by the balls!”
“In the meantime we need them,” Kassem repeated gently.
“More’s the shame,” Midafi lamented. “They’re no different than the Americans.”
“Get our equipment and load it aboard the raft. And make sure that we have everything, and that it has not been tampered with. I don’t want to be stuck with weapons that are inoperative, or a transmitter that doesn’t work.”
“I’ve already checked our gear, but I’ll check it again, Jamal.” Midafi nodded toward the bridge hatch. “See what he wants. Then make him understand what will happen to him if he crosses us. I swear by Allah, if he does I will somehow come back and put my hands around his neck, even if it means crawling five hundred miles over the mountains and across the desert.”
“I’ll join you in a minute,” Kassem said, and he opened the hatch and stepped over the raised sill into the bridge which was lit only by a very dim red light and the ghostly pale green raster of the radar set.
The captain stood at the windows, studying the shoreline through a pair of image-intensifying binoculars. The helmsman held the boat into the chop while the radio operator listened to something on his earphones. They wore the same uniform as the captain, which was different than Kassem’s.
“You wanted to see me, Captain?” Kassem asked. “It’s nearly time for us to leave.”
Ukrainian Black Sea Fleet Captain Third Rank Vladislav Sidorenkov lowered his binoculars and turned his square-featured Slavic face to Kassem. “We’re on station. I wanted to make sure that you were ready before I call for your air strike.”
“Karim is checking our equipment. We leave in two minutes.”
“Don’t be hasty. Your government has very few assets to waste on a futile operation, or because of bad timing, or bad luck.”
“Leave that part to us. Just do your job.”
Sidorenkov’s thick lips curled into a smirk. “Without us you wouldn’t have gotten this far.”
“It is just you and your bridge crew and chief engineer. We would have drawn the personnel from our own navy.”
The Ukrainian laughed harshly. “From where? What navy?”
“Do not underestimate us.”
Sidorenkov laid his binoculars down, and motioned to the radio operator, who slid the headphones half off his ears.
“The operation begins in two minutes. Get that off to Base One.”
“Da,” the operator replied tersely, and he turned back to his equipment.
Kassem studied the Ukrainian. He knew that it was possible that they would be betrayed. That there would be no boat to return to no matter how the operation went. This one had already been paid, and he would leave to save his own skin. Later he could claim that they’d detected an Iranian warship heading their way and had to run, and he would be believed. That was the part that hurt the most: The Ukrainian would be believed by enough of those in the Revolutionary Command Council that Saddam could be convinced.
“Be here when we’re finished,” Kassem said uselessly.
“We’ll wait until the agreed-upon time. No longer. Afterward we’ll get out of here. We’re brave, but not fools, Colonel.”
“Is that the message they give you in Kiev? Stand up to Moscow but not the Iranian navy?”
“There is a very large difference between defending one’s homeland and that of another man,” Sidorenkov said with an indulgent smile.
“Yes there is. I suggest you do not forget it.”
“I’m here by orders to help a former ally in a last-ditch stand to save itself. But I will not stick my neck out very far. Nor do I have orders to do so. Baghdad is no longer yours. None of your cities are. Nor are your oil fields, or your airstrips, or your eighty kilometers of coast line. Saddam Hussein only has his deserts, this ship, two jets, and little else. You have nothing to defend. I will not forget that.”
“There is honor and loyalty.”
Sidorenkov started to laugh again but then thought better of it. “I’ll give you that much, Colonel. But this is not my fight, it is yours. Get on with it, and I’ll stay as long as I think it is practical for me to do so.”
“See that you do.”
The hatch opened and Midafi was there in the darkness. “We’re ready.”
“Wish us luck, Captain,” Kassem said gravely.
“Even if you are successful tonight, what will it accomplish?” Sidorenkov asked not unkindly.
“We’re seeking information, nothing more,” Kassem replied at the hatch. “With knowledge there is power.”
“With armies and navies and air forces there is power. With money—”
“With oil,” Kassem interrupted. “And we have the oil.”
Sidorenkov was about to say something when his radio operator pushed the earphones off his ears. “Base One acknowledges. The mission clock is go.”
Kassem left the
bridge without another word, and climbed down to the gently rolling afterdeck with Midafi. The Iraqi crewmen were lowering the fourteen-foot black rubber inflatable over the lee side of the boat where the water was calm. The mission equipment was lashed to the floor of the raft in floatable watertight backpacks. Midafi handed Kassem an American-made M-16 assault rifle, and four extra thirty-round magazines of .223-inch body-armor-piercing ammunition.
“If we need all this we’ll be in trouble,” Kassem said, pocketing the magazines.
Midafi grinned viciously. “In that case we’ll take as many of the bastards with us as we can.”