Line of Control (38 page)

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Authors: Tom Clancy,Steve Pieczenik,Jeff Rovin

Tags: #Pakistan, #Crisis Management in Government - United States, #Action & Adventure, #Intrigue, #Fiction - Espionage, #India, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Espionage, #Adventure Stories, #War & Military, #Military, #Government investigators - United States, #National Crisis Management Centre (Imaginary place), #Crisis Management in Government, #Thriller

BOOK: Line of Control
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    Plummer considered what Ambassador Simathna might be up to. Plummer decided on three possibilities. He certainly would have reported the intelligence to the chief executive of the republic. General Abdul Qureshi. Either Islamabad or the embassy might then draft a press release condemning New Delhi for their duplicity. The Indians would vehemently deny the charges, of course. That would rally the people around their respective leaders and ratchet tensions even higher.
    Especially at Op-Center, which would surely be cited by Islamabad for having provided them with the information.
    The second possibility was that there would be no press release. Not yet. Instead, Qureshi and the generals of Pakistan's National Security Council would plan a swift, merciless nuclear strike against India.
    They would attempt to destroy as many missile installations as possible before releasing the intelligence Op-Center had provided. That would drag the United States into the conflict as a de facto ally of Pakistan.
    Hood and Plummer had known that those were both possibilities.
    They simply hoped that reason would triumph. On the whole. Ambassador Simathna was a reasonable man.
    That allowed Plummer to hold out hope for a third possibility, what he called "the one-eighty." It was an option the experts never considered, a development that popped up one hundred and eighty degrees from where the common wisdom had staked its tent. It was the Allies invading Normandy beach instead of Calais during World War II, it was Harry Truman beating Thomas Dewey for the presidency in 1948.
    Simathna's parting words, about there being a footnote that only he could access, gave Plummer hope for a one eighty The door opened while Plummer was reading the ninety year-old paper signed by Khan.
    "I often stand where you are and gaze at that document," the ambassador declared as he entered the room.
    "It reminds me of the dream for which I am an honored caretaker."
    The Pakistani shut the heavy door and walked toward his desk. The ambassador seemed to be a little more distracted than before. That could be a good thing or a bad thing for Plummer. Either diplomacy had triumphed and Islamabad would give Mike Rodgers time to try to finish the mission.
    That meant the ambassador would be the hero or the scapegoat.
    Or else the children of Aga Khan III were about to write a new Muslim League document. One that would be blasted into the history books by plutonium 239.
    Simathna walked quickly behind his desk. He gestured toward a chair on the other side. Plummer sat after the ambassador did. Simathna then turned a telephone toward the American political liaison.
    "Would you please call Mr. Hood and ask him to connect you to General Rodgers," Simathna said.
    "I must speak with them both."
    Plummer sat forward in the armchair.
    "What are you going to tell them?" he asked.
    "I spoke with General Qureshi and the members of the National Security Council," the ambassador told him.
    "There was deep concern but no panic. Preparations are quietly being made to activate defense systems and policies already in place. If what you say about the Indian woman is true, we believe the situation need not escalate."
    "How can Op-Center help?" Plummer pressed.
    Ambassador Simathna told Plummer what the Pakistani leaders had discussed. Their plan was more than a one eighty It was an option that Plummer never could have thought of.
    Plummer also realized that the plan carried an enormous risk. The Pakistanis could be looking for an ally in the war against India. If the ambassador were misleading Plummer about their intent, the Pakistani proposal would put the United States at the epicenter of the conflagration.
    Literally.
    Fortunately or unfortunately, all Ron Plummer had to do was make the call.
    Paul Hood was the one who had to make the decision.
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE.
    
    Washington, D. C. Thursday, 1:36 p. m.
    Paul Hood was stealing a slice of pizza from his assistant's desk when the call came from Ron Plummer. Hood asked Bugs to have Bob Herbert join him. Then he hurried back to his desk to take the call.
    "What have you got?" Hood said as he picked up. He heard the slight reverberation sound that indicated he was on speaker. Hood engaged his own speaker option.
    "Paul, I'm here with Ambassador Simathna," Plummer said.
    "He has a proposal."
    "Good afternoon, Mr. Ambassador," Hood said.
    "Tell me how we can help you."
    Herbert wheeled in then and shut the door behind him.
    "First, Director Hood, I want to offer my condolences on the tragic loss of your Striker unit, and my government's appreciation for what they were attempting to accomplish," Simathna said.
    "Thank you," Hood replied. The ambassador sounded a little too compassionate. He had obviously figured out that the team had not been in the region to help stop Indian aggression.
    Herbert was a little more blunt. The intelligence chief made an up-and-down motion with his fist.
    "Second, my government has a plan that may assist General Rodgers and his personnel," Simathna went on.
    "As I have already explained to Mr. Plummer, it will require an understanding with your government that details of the operation must remain confidential."
    "I am not in a position to speak for the government, only my small corner of it," Hood said.
    "If you tell me your idea I will immediately confer with people who are in a position to offer those assurances."
    Paul Hood was dying inside. Vital seconds and quite possibly lives were slipping away while he and Ambassador Simathna postured. But this was how the dance was done.
    "The plan we propose is that your group proceed to a nuclear missile site that our military has erected in the glacier," Simathna said.
    "It is a remotely operated site with video cameras monitoring the interior. The Indian woman can make her broadcast from inside the silo."
    Hood stared at Bob Herbert. Mike Rodgers was being invited to visit one of the silos Striker had originally been sent to find. The irony of the proposal was almost painful. What was difficult to process, however, was the dangers inherent in the plan.
    "Mr. Ambassador, would you excuse me a minute?" Hood asked.
    "Given the situation 1 would not take much longer than that," Simathna replied.
    "I understand, sir, but I need to confer with one of my associates,"
    Hood replied.
    "Of course," Simathna said.
    Hood punched the mute button.
    "What do your instincts tell you. Bob? Are they using us?"
    "Man, I just don't know," Herbert admitted.
    "My gut says that the team needs to get to the nearest, warmest refuge as soon as possible. The more I looked at photographs of the glacier the more I started thinking they'll never be able to cross it without more gear and supplies than they're carrying.
    And the weather reports for the region suck. It's going to be around ten below zero before midnight. But I have to tell you, of all the places they could go. a Pakistani nuclear silo would be my absolute last choice."
    "I agree with all of that," Hood replied.
    "The problem is we also have to get Nanda Kumar on-camera as fast as possible."
    "Nanda, yes," Herbert said.
    "The problem is Mike and Ron Friday. If the Pakistanis get them on video there's no telling what bullshit story Islamabad might concoct.
    They could kill the audio, release the video to the news media, and say that Mike and Friday are there as technical advisors. How's that going to play in India, Russia, China, and God knows where else? An American general and intelligence officer working closely with Pakistani nuclear missiles?"
    "They'd say we were in on the Pakistani operation from the start," Hood said.
    "I'm just not seeing any other viable options."
    Herbert shook his head.
    "Nothing's jumping out at me either."
    "Then let's move this along and just watch our step," Hood told him.
    "The first thing we have to do is try to get Brett on the line. Let's see if he can even contact Mike." "I'm on it," Herbert said.
    "I'll get the coordinates of the missile silo from Simathna," Hood told him.
    "Then I'll call Hank Lewis, Senator Fox, and the president and let them know what we want to do."
    "You won't get support from Fox or the president," Herbert said.
    "I know, but I don't think they'll shut the operation down," Hood replied.
    "We're already in this too deep. If Mike and Friday cross the line of control with the Pakistani cell, Islamabad will say the United States was helping them escape. That would be nearly as damaging."
    Herbert agreed. He turned and wheeled himself into a corner of the office and punched the TAC-SAT number into his wheelchair phone.
    Meanwhile, Paul Hood got back on the line with Ambassador Simathna.
    Hood turned off the speakerphone so his conversation would not interfere with Herbert's call.
    "Mr. Ambassador?" Hood said.
    "I am here," Simathna replied.
    "Thank you for holding, sir," Hood said.
    "We agree that your proposal should be pursued."
    "Pursued,"
    " the ambassador replied.
    "Does that mean you are also considering other courses of action?"
    "Not at the moment," Hood said.
    "But you might," the ambassador pressed.
    "It's possible," Hood agreed.
    "Right now we're not even certain we can contact General Rodgers, let alone get him to the silo. We also don't know the condition of his party."
    "I appreciate your uncertainty but you must understand my concern," the ambassador said.
    "We do not wish to give out the location of our defensive silo unless your officer is going to use it."
    The conversation was becoming an exercise in hedging, not cooperation.
    Hood needed to change that, especially if he were going to trust Mike Rodgers's fate to this man.
    "I do understand, Mr. Ambassador," Hood said.
    Suddenly, Herbert turned. He shook his head.
    "Hold on, Mr. Ambassador," Hood said urgently. He jabbed the mute button.
    "What is it. Bob?"
    "Brett can't raise Mike," Herbert told him.
    Hood swore.
    "All he gets on the radio is heavy static," Herbert went on.
    "Sharab tells him the winds won't cut out for another five or six hours."
    "That doesn't help us," Hood said.
    Hood thought for a moment. They had thousands of satellites in the air and outposts throughout the region. There had to be some way to get a message to Mike Rodgers.
    Or someone with him. Hood thought suddenly.
    "Bob, we may be able to do something," Hood said.
    "Tell Brett we'll get back to him in a few minutes. Then put in a call to Hank Lewis."
    "Will do," Herbert said.
    Hood deactivated the mute.
    "Mr. Ambassador, can you stay on the line?"
    "The security of my nation is at risk," Simathna said.
    "Is that a 'yes," sir?" Hood pressed. He did not have time for speeches.
    "It was an emphatic yes, Mr. Hood."
    "Is Mr. Plummer still with you?" Hood asked.
    "I'm here, Paul," Plummer said.
    "Good. I may need your help," Hood said.
    "I understand," Plummer replied.
    "I'm putting you on speaker so you can both be a part of what's going on," Hood said.
    The ambassador thanked him.
    Simathna sounded sincere. Hood hoped he was. Because if Simathna did anything to jeopardize Rodgers or the mission, Hood would know about it immediately.
    Ron Plummer would make sure of that.
CHAPTER FIFTY.
    
    The Siachin Glacier Thursday, 11:40 p. m.
    It was the last thing Ron Friday expected to feel.
    As he neared the kneeling body of Apu Kumar, Friday felt the cell phone begin to vibrate in his vest pocket. It could only be a call from someone at the National Security Agency.
    But the signal absolutely should not be able to reach him out here. Not with the mountains surrounding the glacier, the distance from the radio towers in Kashmir, and the ice storms that whipped around the peaks in the dark. The friction of the ice particles produced electrostatic charges that made even point-to-point radio communications difficult.
    Yet the phone line was definitely active. Absurdly so, as if he were riding the Metro in Washington instead of standing on a glacier in the middle of the Himalayas. Friday stopped and let the gun slip back into his pocket. He reached inside his coat, withdrew the phone, and hit the talk button.
    "Yes?" Friday said.
    "Is this Ron Friday?" the caller asked in a clear, loud voice.
    "Who wants to know?" Friday asked incredulously.
    "Colonel Brett August of Striker," said the caller.
    "Striker?" Friday said.
    "Where are you? When did you land?"
    "I'm with Sharab in the mountains overlooking your position," August said.
    "I'm calling on our TAC-SAT. Director Lewis gave us your number and the call code 1272000."
    That was the correct ID number for the NSA director in coded communications. Still, Friday was suspicious.

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