The Dark Chronicles (77 page)

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Authors: Jeremy Duns

BOOK: The Dark Chronicles
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It made no sense. On the one hand, Ivashutin claimed the West had a military doctrine of a surprise attack. On the other, he thought such an attack would always be detected early enough, and that very few in the West now believed it even possible. Either way, the situation he outlined was very close to the one they now faced, which I supposed was why they had included it in the papers for the Defence Council.

Let us suppose that the United States is actually capable of destroying the Soviet Union several times over. Does this mean any kind of military superiority? No, it does not, because the USSR possesses such strategic capabilities that ensure a complete destruction of the United States in the second strike. It does not matter how many times over the United States will be
destroyed. One does not kill a dead person twice or three times.

He seemed to be arguing that a nuclear attack would destroy the West, but have little impact on the Soviet Union. That was familiar enough propaganda – the kind that could be read on a regular basis in
Pravda
– but this was a top secret document by the head of military intelligence about their strategy for nuclear war. If they couldn’t even be honest with themselves in such a document, there was a serious problem. Was it that they couldn’t admit the reality of the situation to each other for political reasons – or were they completely blinded to it? Worryingly, it seemed like the latter was a real possibility. Discussing the West’s military bases, Ivashutin concluded that the major ones were in the US, Britain and West Germany, and most could be destroyed by medium-range missiles and bombers in a first launch.

But it was a section titled ‘Ground Forces’ Operations’ that stopped me in my tracks. It discussed ground troops overtaking enemy territory and ‘cleaning up the consequences’ of nuclear strikes.

Nuclear weapons will incur damage on troops by shock wave, light emission and radioactive emission. These are very dangerous factors, and it is very difficult to protect oneself against them. Still, we can soften the impact of nuclear explosions. Tanks, trenches, dug outs, shelters, natural hills – all give good protective cover from the shock wave; they will substantially reduce the damage. One has to protect the eyes as well as face and open parts of the body from light emission. Each soldier should have dark eyeglasses, or a mask with dark glasses, and gloves. A closed car, tank, gas mask or
an overcoat will help protect from the penetrating radiation…

‘Zones of contamination’ would be passed through by helicopters and ‘protected vehicles’ such as tanks, while ‘clearing teams’ would put out fires with explosions and cover radioactive ground with new soil. Roads would be cleaned with the help of ‘street-sweeping vehicles operated from a distance’.

It seemed the Soviets believed that they could carry out an extensive ground war following a nuclear one. This was delusional. They wouldn’t be able to send troops through the West after nuclear missiles had been launched, whatever precautions they took – there was no protection at all from that kind of contamination and I knew it, having read the Strath Report and several like it. As well as watching the footage, I’d also read the reports from Grapple X, our hydrogen bomb test on Christmas Island. At the flashpoint, the servicemen kneeling twenty miles from ‘Ground Zero’ facing in the other direction had been able to see the bones in their hands through their masks. The resulting fireball had been over a mile across, and the blast had scorched much of the island’s earth. In a nuclear war, most of Europe would be a ‘zone of contamination’.

I closed the folder and took a breath. I walked over to the tiny window and pulled the curtain back a fraction, but it didn’t seem to look out onto anything, and the window was glued shut.

I had also pulled back the curtain on the world, I felt. The last few months had shown me more vividly than I could ever have imagined what a sham my life had been – now I saw that the whole of the Cold War was a hollow little sham. The document was amateurish, childish propaganda – and so misguided it was terrifying. The head of Soviet military intelligence thought they could send troops across Western Europe following a series of nuclear strikes, wearing dark glasses and with their coats wrapped tightly to avoid the contamination, the way ahead cleared by street-sweepers. Either he was lying to his superiors or, more likely, he
was completely deluded. They could have recruited an army of double agents and they still wouldn’t have a clue. Service, Five and JIC reports might get things wrong, but they were never worded in terms of outright propaganda. It was obvious that the Russians simply didn’t have the mindset to understand the West. And that made the risk of war greater.

The fact that there could be no victors in nuclear conflict was the deterrent on which the whole fragile situation rested. But it seemed that some in the Soviet Supreme Command thought they could win such a war. If Ivashutin convinced Brezhnev of his view, he would be much more likely to order a strike.

Whitehall’s INVALUABLE exercise had, in fact, been completely worthless. The scenario we had gone through had envisioned a gradual build-up of tensions, whereby a hawkish faction in Moscow had taken control of the Politburo and had begun flexing their muscles. But this was a much more frightening prospect: a war resulting from misunderstanding, acted on too rapidly.

Yuri had estimated the Soviets might have to consider launching a strike within twelve hours. But how many hours ago had he estimated that? In the meeting, he’d said that the B-52s would enter Soviet airspace at around noon if they continued on their current path. But would they continue on that path, or would they break off and circle again, as they had done earlier? How close would they have to get to Soviet airspace before Brezhnev acted? An hour away, perhaps two? Or would he hold off a little longer than that?

I stuffed the papers back into the case, locked it, and flushed the toilet. I walked over to the mirror and examined myself quickly. I didn’t look too bad, considering. My suit was ragged and half-sodden, there were dark circles under my eyes and I was as pale as a monk, but none of these things were all that out of place in this part of the world.

I filled the basin with lukewarm water and splashed my face thoroughly, thinking through the take from the case. The documents proved what was happening – but they had to reach the
right hands. I needed to find a way to show this material to the Service at once, because they could get into direct signals with London through their protected line, and from there someone could contact the Americans and get them to bring down their planes before it was too late.

But neither Sarah nor I could go anywhere near the embassy, because the moment we entered the gates we would be on British territory, and they would find a way to take us back to London and no doubt lock us both up. The embassy was also guarded, as all embassies were here, by Soviet sentries. I picked up the case and unlocked the door.

We couldn’t go there – but they could come to us.

*

‘Enough evidence?’ asked Sarah once I’d sat down.

I nodded. ‘More than enough. But I can’t go to the embassy because they won’t trust me, so I want to bring them here. I think we’ll have more leverage.’

‘I can call them,’ she said. ‘It might be better coming from me.’

‘Yes, but I think I’ll be able to get through quicker – nothing like the name of a traitor to prick up the ears. Do you mind?’

She didn’t exactly smile, but her cheeks dimpled fractionally. ‘Staying in the warm while you risk being picked up on the streets? I think I can manage.’

‘Watch for any new arrivals, and get out fast if you see anything suspicious. If you’re not here when I get back, I’ll meet you at the main entrance to Detsky Mir in an hour from now.’ I thought it unlikely that Yuri would think to send men back there. ‘Agreed?’

She nodded. ‘Agreed.’

Without thinking about it, I leaned down and kissed her lightly on the forehead. She didn’t flinch, and I kept my lips there for a moment longer.

‘I’ll be back before you know it,’ I said, and turned towards the door.

*

I walked quickly through the streets, scanning the corners and the reflections for signs of uniforms or anyone tailing me. At one point I saw a traffic policeman and crossed the road to avoid him, but otherwise the way was clear. The first public telephone I came across was broken, the guts of the box ripped out – so much for the crime-free Soviet Union. But there was another one farther down the same street, and it was in working order. Having read the instructions, I shoved a fifteen
kopek
coin in the slot and picked up the receiver, then dialled 09 for information: Moscow’s only telephone directory is held at the Central Post Office and that was in Kirov Street, a long way away. I asked the operator for the number for the British embassy, presuming that the authorities couldn’t be monitoring every call in the city immediately. After a few seconds I was given the number, and I dialled it. It rang for some time, but finally someone picked up.

‘Good morning, this is the British embassy.’

Nasal quality to the voice. Didn’t sound promising. One of those officious bastards.

‘I would like to speak to Jonathan Fletcher-Peck.’

He got me to repeat the question as the line wasn’t clear. There was a moment’s hesitation, then: ‘I’m sorry. Mr Fletcher-Peck is no longer with us.’

Shit.

Of course he bloody wasn’t. The very fact that I knew he was the Head of Station meant they’d posted him back to London. Sasha hadn’t got round to asking me the names of all known British agents, but no doubt he would have done soon enough. I’d effectively ruined Fletcher-Peck’s career. Well, it wasn’t the first, and now wasn’t the time for a fit of remorse.

‘Can I speak to his replacement, please? It’s urgent.’

‘I’m sorry, sir, he’s not in the office at present. If you would like to leave a message, I’m sure—’

‘This is an emergency,’ I said. ‘My name is Paul Dark.’

He paused, and I held my tongue. He would know my name, and I had to hope that he couldn’t risk ignoring it.

‘Can I take your number please, sir, and I’ll call you back?’

‘Yes, but do it from a telephone well outside the embassy, and please do it quickly. I’ll wait here.’

I gave the number and replaced the receiver, then started pacing around the cubicle. There was no sign of any of Yuri’s men. Yet. How long would it be before the message went out to every
militsiya
patrol in the city? All calls to and from the British embassy would be monitored as a matter of course, but the Station staff knew that and so rarely said anything of great interest on the internal lines. Under normal circumstances, the transcripts of the embassy’s calls probably went to the KGB only once a week, if that, unless something notable was said. But if Yuri had thought on his feet, and if the bureaucratic wheels had turned fast enough, he would have given the order to report all calls to and from the British embassy at once. He could already have given that order, in fact, as they might be listening out for when the Service scrambled its staff to the cellars and senior officers said goodbye to their families.

And so I’d told them to call back from an outside telephone. In Prague, we’d always had at least one car on standby for situations such as this, and several call-boxes within a five-minute drive that we felt were not listened to with the same level of scrutiny as those inside the embassy. The calculation was that all telephones in the Soviet Union were likely to be bugged, but that it was impossible for the authorities to monitor every single conversation in the hope of catching discussions between foreign agents.

I couldn’t remember precisely what Moscow Station’s telephone set-up was, and wished I’d asked Sarah before leaving the café. I hoped the call-boxes they used weren’t too far away, because I couldn’t wait here long: every moment that passed gave Yuri more time to think of his next move. One of those would probably be to step up surveillance on the British embassy and follow anyone
who left it, so if they didn’t take the usual precautions they might find themselves tailed by a KGB or GRU car, which would then radio back which call-box to listen in on, and then the whole thing would be…

‘Have you finished? Kindly make way.’

I looked up to see an elderly woman in a plastic coat glaring at me. She had already taken her money out of her purse and was trying to push past me. I told her I was still using the telephone, and she gave me a dirty look.

‘I don’t have all day to wait for you to receive calls, young man,’ she said, and made to step into the cubicle. I stepped in front of her, barring her from reaching it.

‘Get out of the way!’ she shouted, raising a cane in my direction.

I had to do something, and fast. She was going to attract a patrol.

‘I’m waiting for a call,’ I said. ‘Please wait, it won’t take—’

The receiver rang and I swivelled and snatched at it.

‘Yes?’

‘This is the British embassy.’

Thank God. It was a new voice – a little lower in register, a little more authoritative. I nodded at the old woman, indicating that the call was the one I’d been expecting, and she stepped back, muttering curses before turning on her heel and stomping off down the street.

‘Hello,’ I said into the receiver. ‘Thank you for calling back. Are you outside the embassy?’

‘Yes.’

‘Tailed?’

Hesitation, then a peevish: ‘No.’

‘Good. I need to meet with the Head of Station.’

He didn’t say anything, but I could hear him breathing.

‘I have information HMG needs to hear,’ I said. ‘It suggests Clasp.’

The breathing came to a sudden halt.

‘Where?’ said the voice, finally.

‘Victory,’ I said. ‘It’s a café on Neglinnaya. In half an hour’s time. Tell him to come alone.’

I replaced the receiver.

*

I walked quickly back to the café, watching for tails again but also weighing up the response I’d received. I had taken a risk using the word ‘Clasp’. It was the codeword to signify ‘the beginning of a period of tension’, usually meaning an impending nuclear strike. Or at least it
had
been the codeword – they might well have changed it now. It was risky, because I wanted the British to be aware that the Soviets were considering a strike so they could defuse the situation, not so they could panic and launch their own strike as a result.

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