Read Dancing with the Dragon (2002) Online
Authors: Joe - Dalton Weber,Sullivan 02
"I can believe it. They've finally figured out how vulnerable they are to outside factions--the ones who would like to take complete control of Panama."
"Someday," he said with a smile, "Panama may invite the Yankees back to stabilize the economy and the environment--same with the Philippines."
"Yeah, they're singing a different tune now," Jackie said. "Two of the Philippine senators who voted to kick the U. S. military out in '92 later reversed themselves--that must have been a humbling experience. Now they want us back to protect their vital interests."
"Another fine example of brilliant decision making by totally incompetent politicians. One of those senators is now the president of the country--a really scary thought--and the other is the secretary of national defense. Think about it."
"I know," Jackie said with a fleeting look. "Unbelievable, but true--the wizards who oversee the Philippines."
He surveyed the lush tropical plants and exotic flowers along the road. "After the Filipinos kicked us out of Subic Bay and Clark Air Force Base, the Chinese moved rapidly to fill the power vacuum in the South China Sea. They claimed part of the Spratly Archipelago that parallels Asia's most important air and shipping lanes."
Jackie slowed and turned into the parking lot at the hotel.
Scott unbuckled his seat belt. "Beijing is becoming more and more belligerent to the Filipinos--to everyone in Southeast Asia--and it wouldn't take much for the entire region to erupt in open warfare."
"Hey, give it a rest," Jackie said. "Aloha, mai tai--and all of that island lingo. You're in Hawaii--safely--and we're going to enjoy every minute we have together."
He broke into a wide grin. "You're damn right--can the problems. Let's get this party under way."
The Taiwan Strait
Also known as the Formosa ("Beautiful") Strait, the Taiwan Strait is about a hundred miles wide at its narrowest point and lies between the coast of China's Fujian Province and the island of Taiwan. Located in a notorious and deadly typhoon zone, the strait extends from the South China Sea northeast to the East China Sea. It reaches a maximum depth of approximately 230 feet and encompasses the Pescadores ("Fishermen") Islands, which are considered a hsien (county) under the jurisdiction of the government of the Republic of China on Taiwan.
The drama and tension being played out on and over the strait was rapidly increasing. The sporadic air-traffic-control system over the Taiwan Strait was having an adverse effect on everyone. Foreign pilots and U. S. pilots, both civilian and military, were in agreement about the lack of an ATC capability. It was the proverbial accident waiting to happen. The problem was made even more difficult by the growing number of fighter planes, aerial tankers, helicopters, and surveillance aircraft in the confined area.
Even the notices on the aeronautical Operational Navigation Charts covering the strait were ominous: WARNING--AIRCRAFT
INFRINGING UPON NONFREE FLYING TERRITORY MAY BE FIRED ON WITHOUT WARNING. CONSULT NOTAMS AND FLIGHT INFORMATION PUBLICATIONS FOR THE LATEST AIR INFORMATION.
Mainland Chinese jets had buzzed the Ma-kung Naval Base, located on the Taiwanese island of Penghu. Chinese torpedo patrol boats and the destroyer Luhai were loitering near the Taiwanese-controlled islands of Matsu and Quemoy.
In addition to the strained relations in the strait, Beijing and Taipei officials had ordered their combat pilots to fly closer to each other's shoreline than had been allowed in the past.
In response to the Chinese pilots' extremely aggressive moves toward a Taiwan C-130H transport, including a head-on pass from a frontline Sukhoi Su-27 fighter-interceptor, the Taiwanese F-5s and F-16s were flying almost over the shoreline of the Chinese province of Fujian.
The USS Kitty Hawk and her battle group were northeast of the Taiwan Strait at a point halfway between Taipei, Taiwan, and Naha, Okinawa. Flanked by her escorts Cowpens, Rodney M. Davis, Fife, Curts, and the hunter/killer attack submarine USS Greeneville, the carrier had four BARCAP (barrier combat air patrol) F-18 Hornets between the flattop and the coast of China.
The Hornets were flying a racetrack pattern outside the Asian Coastal Buffer Zone east of Songcheng and Fuzhou. They would be refueled twice before being relieved on station and returning to the carrier. F-14 Tomcats would take their place as the BARCAP continued around the clock.
Two other Alert Five Hornets were manned and ready for launch. High above the Hawk, an E-2C Hawkeye was airborne and keeping a watchful eye on the Chinese and Taiwanese fighter pilots.
Shortly after 3:00 A. M. a Taiwanese Air Force captain and his wingman flew their F-16s low over Fuzhou, the capital of Fujian Province. Enraged by the aggressive act, the senior PLA officer in charge of eight antiaircraft artillery sites scattered around the perimeter of Fuzhou ordered them to open fire on the encroaching jets.
The wingman's F-16 was hit and went out of control, trailing fire and black smoke. He attempted to eject, but his parachute hadn't fully deployed when he slammed into the Min Chiang River alongside his blazing fighter. The flight leader escaped by flying at rooftop level over the neighboring town of Luozhou and safely returned to his base.
Space-based assets, reconnaissance aircraft, and the E-2C Hawk-eye witnessed the episode. The information was immediately sent to the Pentagon, State Department, Central Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency, and the White House.
Less than an hour later DengJu-shan, a Chinese military ship disguised as a modern freighter, got a radar lock on the Hawkeye. A
bright bluish-white object slashed past the E-2C a number of times, made a sweeping turn, and went straight over the Hawkeye a split second before a bright flash startled the pilots.
The starboard engine of the E-2C burst into flames and the wing failed between the engine and the fuselage. The flight crew, pinned into their seats by excessive G-forces, never had a chance to bail out. The aircraft tightly spun into the strait fifty-five miles due west of Taipei, Taiwan.
With both reconnaissance aircraft and spacecraft observing, there was no doubt about the cause of the crash. The laser beam that lasted 1.7 seconds came from the deck of Deng ju-shan. The evidence was undeniable. Beijing would be held responsible for destroying the Hawkeye and killing the entire flight crew.
The Halekulani
Situated on five acres of prime beachfront, the famous resort is a luxurious oasis of tranquility in the heart of Waikiki. With its expansive courtyards and lush tropical gardens the "House Befitting Heaven" embodies the true spirit of Hawaiian hospitality.
An attractive and gracious young lady of Samoan heritage escorted Jackie and Scott to their suite, where registration was completed in privacy. They were impressed with the bowl of fresh fruits and the assorted Halekulani chocolates arranged on a table.
Once the administrative details were completed, they went to the lanai and soaked in the panoramic view of Waikiki Beach and Diamond Head. Many visitors considered the monolith of hardened lava to be the most recognizable symbol of Hawaii. The clear emerald waters along Waikiki were dotted with surfers and outrigger canoes. In the distance a stately cruise ship was barely visible on the horizon.
"This is fantastic--incredible," Scott said, turning to Jackie. "Especially being here with you."
"My sentiments exactly." She looked down at the oceanside swimming pool and the open-air restaurant. "How about a dip in the pool--then a nice quiet lunch?"
He smiled and shook his head. "After last night, I don't know if I'm ready to go back in the water."
"I promise, there are no submarines in the swimming pool."
After a refreshing swim, they toweled themselves and went into the covered open-air restaurant. They ordered seafood and had an unhurried lunch while watching a light rain shower pass.
When he was finished with his meal, Scott leaned back and folded his napkin. "One of the things I like most about Hawaii is the rainbow that accompanies every shower."
"That and the smell of the flowers," Jackie said, pausing as the waitress removed their plates.
They sat quietly for a few minutes, drinking in the scene along the world
-
famous beach.
"A penny for your thoughts?" Jackie asked.
"Sorry," Scott said, and reached for his iced tea. "I just can't get this situation with the Chinese off my mind."
"What do you think is going to happen with the China and Taiwan standoff--more rhetoric or some military action?"
"Well, this ongoing game is about more than Taiwan moving toward independence. It's about Beijing's belief--and they're firmly convinced by their obsessive distrust of others--that there's a conspiracy among the U. S., Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan to destroy China and force them into a mold that suits the U. S."
"Like bringing the gunboat diplomacy from Kosovo to China. The U. S. will change the cognitive and psychological profiles of the people in China to match our model of what's right and perfect in the world."
"Precisely." Scott glanced at a darkly tanned woman in the smallest bikini he'd ever seen.
"Heell-oh!" Jackie waved her hand in front of Scott's face. "We're having a conversation here, remember?"
"Sorry." Scott chuckled. "The Chinese leaders have always relied on high diplomatic theater, lots of theatrics and huffing and puffing to get their way. They've always expected other nations to send emissaries to the Chinese capital to present tribute, bow a lot, and kowtow to the emperor."
Jackie nodded. "And Liu Fan-ding sees that tradition changing with the rapidly expanding Westernization of China."
"Of course. Reality is setting in and it scares the hell out of him.
The U. S. is a powerful country. He knows we move fairly rapidly. Fan-ding's country is very large, twenty percent of the world's population, but at the present time it's a middle power at best--and they move at glacial speed."
Scott leaned back to avoid a collision with one of the many birds scavenging for crumbs. "We, on the other hand, are making the U. S.-China gap grow larger by our quantum leaps in technology, both in the civilian sector and the military. We have long-range sea power and air power, space superiority, and a helluva lot more nukes."
"That could change if we continue to let the Chinese steal us blind, undermine the foundations of our financial markets, and build a military power along the Panama Canal."
"True, but Beijing really had a meltdown when we agreed to cooperate with Japan on research and development for a theater ballistic missile defense program."
Jackie frowned. "What really rankled them was when we announced that the missile defense shield would protect not only Japan but much larger areas of the Asia-Pacific region."
"That's right. The operative word is Taiwan."
"I'm sure they had the same reaction in Pyongyang." "Yeah, I'll bet that caused some tirades."
"I can just hear the North Koreans," she said. -Japan and the U. S. are going to jack-slap us into the dirt if we don't stop screwing around.'"
"I think you have accurately captured the essence of their reaction." He looked down the beach at the surfers and the colorful outrigger canoes. "Economically, China is way, way overrated, and they have a petroleum deficit of over six hundred thousand barrels a day. Militarily, it's a second-rate regional menace with hopes to evolve into a powerful blue-water navy using the technologies they have purchased or stolen."
"With Taiwan under their control."
"Taiwan, the Spratly Islands, through the Ryuku Islands, across the Philippines, and then sweeping around the South China Sea--a dangerous neighborhood where trust is a foreign word."
"It seems to me, if Beijing had a large enough blue-water navy, the dragon could swim out to Japan, down through the Western Pacific, on to Indonesia, Thailand, and Vietnam."
"True," Scott said. "But we're back to China's problems. At the present time they're not a major power and their economy is relatively weak. Politically, Beijing's influence is feeble, and the country is basically backward, isolated from the rest of the world and the technology revolution."
"Not totally isolated from the technology gains."
"Okay, but we're diametrically opposite." Scott caught her eye. "The U. S. is a nuclear superpower that can checkmate Beijing at any given moment."
"I agree with what you've said, but I still believe China is a wild card that could do a lot of damage if they go berserk in Beijing."
He nodded. "I'd have to agree with that assessment. They do have some long-range nukes that are capable of hitting our West Coast."
"And, thanks to you, the White House has confirmation that the Chinese possess some very powerful laser-based weapons cruising the oceans of the world--they could be everywhere."
"That's the problem with China--their tendency to employ military force in all directions."
"And now they have their sights set on reclaiming Taiwan," Jackie said with a trace of scorn.
Scott glanced at a distant yacht. "Let's lighten the conversation and take a nice barefoot stroll down the beach--all the way to Diamond Head."
"Sounds good," Jackie said, gathering her things. "It's time to relax and have some fun."