Authors: Nick Cook
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Persian Gulf Region - Fiction, #Technological, #Persian Gulf Region, #Middle East, #Adventure Stories, #Espionage
âSomething changed their minds. Maybe the British Government denied permission for use of the bases at the last minute. Remember all the crap we got for supporting the Libyan bombing mission in â86?'
âWhat if we tried our Administration sources on this?' Kelso asked.
âI don't think that would be a good move.'
âWhy not?'
âIf the US Government thinks we have the story - provided it is a story - they'd leak it to the
Post
, or the
New York Times
. It's basic damage limitation, Bob, you know that. If we went to the States with this, we'd be tossing it to the opposition on a plate.'
Kelso nodded pensively. âSomebody over here must have been sufficiently alarmed to have turned down a request to use UK bases. It kind of contradicts the pattern of things over the past forty years. You know, the Anglo-American âspecial relationship' and all that.'
Kelso allowed himself another moment of contemplation. âPerhaps we should tough it out. Hit the Ministry of Defence with what we've got.'
âRun it past DPR?'
Kelso and the MOD's Director of Public Relations were old friends - and professional adversaries.
âWhy not?'
âNot the sort of man you can trouble with trivia,' Girling said.
âSo convince me the story's worth it. Here. Now.' Kelso sat back in his chair and brought his hands together.
Girling knew he would be allowed only one stab.
âExercises are planned long in advance, for obvious reasons. The tankers are one thing, the fighters something else. If this F-15E fighter deployment was last minute, it would prove they were mobilized in response to some genuine emergency and not an exercise. Reasonable?'
Kelso nodded, not sure where all this was leading.
âSo,' Girling continued, âI have to prove that the fighter deployment was last minute. There is a way.'
He consulted his notebook, wrote down a number, and handed it to Kelso. âThis is a special phone number for pilots, ordinary people like you and me who own private planes. It tells them which areas around the UK have been closed to commercial traffic because of military aircraft movements. It's run by the National Air Traffic Service.'
Kelso stared at the piece of paper. âSo what do I want with this?'
âDial the number.'
Kelso hesitated.
âJust do it,' Girling said. He continued talking while Kelso punched in the numbers. âOn their way here, those F-15Es would have needed mid-air refuelling in an area called Refuelling Area One, off northwest Scotland. That's standard procedure. When you get through, ask them whether Refuelling Area One was closed to commercial traffic on Tuesday, the day the F-15Es got here. If they say yes, then ask when the order came through.'
Kelso held his hand up for silence the moment he made the connection. He mumbled two sentences into the receiver and listened intently for the response.
A few seconds later he put the phone down. âMonday,' he said. âThey closed the son of a bitch the very day before the fighters arrived in this country.'
âThat's your proof,' Girling said, managing to control his voice. âThe rest is up to you.'
Girling had not been back long at his desk when the phone rang. It was Kelso. âGet your arse in here smartish,' he said.
When Girling walked into Kelso's office, his editor was jotting words onto a desk pad, face flushed to the roots of his thinning ginger hair.
Girling steeled himself for a bollocking.
âI just got a call back from the MOD,' Kelso said. âThey want to know where the fuck we got this information from.'
âThey denied it, you mean.'
Kelso laughed. âOf course not. There's probably a bloody witch hunt going on for our informant right now. Denbeigh thinks there's been a high-level leak.'
The DPR, Alan Denbeigh, was a shrewd operator, a good man to know well. Few journalists could claim that privilege, but Kelso was one of them.
âWhat did he say?' Girling asked.
âNothing attributable, naturally. But when I convinced him we had the story, and we weren't going to drop it, there was no holding him back. Here is the news. The US Air Force was poised to launch bombers from Lakenheath against a target in the Middle East. This week. All the preparations were made. The bombers were to have flown in under cover of the exercise.'
âStalwart Divider?'
âExactly as you said.'
Kelso burrowed in the top drawer of his desk and produced a box of Villiger cigars. He offered one to Girling.
Girling shook his head. âAnd London approved the plans?'
âCertainly.'
âSo what happened to make the Americans change their minds?'
Kelso lit his cigar and sucked the end thoughtfully. âDenbeigh said there had been a difference of opinion within the National Security Council. The doves won. The hawks, mind you, did not have a very strong case, it seems.'
âHow come?'
âThey didn't know who they were meant to be bombing.'
âI don't understand.'
âCome on, Tom. Work it out for yourself. There's a small US task force floating off the Lebanese coast right now. Extrapolate a little. Use your imagination.'
Girling got up and walked to the window. He stared across a building site that would shortly yield another new office block.
âSay US special forces storm the airliner, extract the relevant information from the terrorists, and flash it back to Washington. The F-15Es are already here, ready to go. Once they have the identity of the hijackers, or the terrorists' camp plotted, the bombers fly, right? Instant reprisal. Just like Libya.'
Kelso clapped his hands. âBravo. The matter, though, has become academic. It would appear that Washington thinks the Middle East is unstable enough as it is.' Kelso puffed a smoke ring across his desk. âStill, it's a bloody good story. We've just got to hold on to it for two days, till we hit the streets.'
Girling suspected that the compliment was aimed at him. Praise from Kelso was as elusive as one of his smiles in recent months.
Girling walked to the door. He stopped short and turned. âOf course, the most curious aspect of this whole story is that America - with all those vast resources to hand - has no idea who these terrorists are. Or at least who's backing them. Doesn't that strike you as strange?'
Kelso was already measuring up a page, drawing imaginary boxes, allocating photographs.
âYes, I suppose it does.'
Girling closed the door.
CHAPTER 4
Girling pulled the cuttings from their file in the library, took them back to his desk and started to read.
The hijackers had boarded a Pakistan International Airlines flight at Karachi, bound for Paris. Some-where over the Arabian Sea they had made their move, storming into the 747's flight deck and killing the co-pilot; there had been no time for the crew to send a distress signal.
An hour from Dubai International Airport, the hijackers ordered the pilot to make an emergency descent. Dubai tower picked up a Mayday indicating the jumbo had suffered explosive decompression at thirty-two thousand feet. The tower was informed there were casualties on board.
The pilot requested an immediate descent into the airport and called for ambulances to meet the aircraft as soon as it rolled to a stop.
Once on the ground, the hijackers waited for the medics to board the plane, overpowered them, and donned their uniforms. The aircraft was then booby-trapped with explosive devices positioned around the cabin. The terrorists told the passengers and crew that the detonators were primed with infra-red sensing fuses and the slightest movement would set them off.
The terrorists - witnesses later described them speaking Arabic - boarded the ambulances and moved across the airfield to the Pan-Am 747, on which the US Ambassador to Riyadh and his staff were sipping their champagne in the first- and business-class sections. In the cockpit of Clipper 497 the pilot was waiting to receive departure clearance from the tower.
Predictably, the newspapers had been quick to chastise the US Administration for allowing so many of its diplomatic staff to travel on the same commercial flight. In fact, because of the flurry of diplomatic shuttle missions around the Gulf that week, all US Air Force VIP transport aircraft in the region were already in use.
The flare-up in the Gulf the previous month, not for the first time, had taken everyone by surprise. The pace of diplomatic activity to halt hostilities had been breathtaking. Ambassador Franklin - as the USA's chief legate in Riyadh his role in the initiative was pivotal - had been returning to Washington to brief the President on the Saudi Arabian peace proposals. The cease-fire, though precarious, had lasted five days. The way things had been going, the US President would have sanctioned another bombing mission against Iraq, until the Saudis came up with the goods. Franklin and his team of negotiators had spent two days in Riyadh getting to grips with the Saudi scheme. Reluctantly, Baghdad had said it would allow Saudis, not Americans, to dismantle its underground nuclear weapons facility outside Mosul - incredible, Girling thought, that every US intelligence asset had missed it. Now, instead of the Gulf, the media's attention - always fickle - had shifted to the hijacking. For the moment, the crisis in the Gulf was on the back burner.
If US protection policy for its diplomats had received a pasting from the press, the security arrangements on the âairside' of Dubai International, normally an exemplary airport, fared worse.
The terrorists had been able to park their ambulance by the wheels of the Pan-Am jumbo and were not so much as challenged until they boarded the aircraft. Two air marshals mingling with the passengers had tried to resist, but were shot dead, their bodies thrown onto the tarmac.
The terrorists told the pilot to taxi out for takeoff. The leader of the group made it clear to the tower that any form of obstruction would result in the aircraft being blown up.
The 747 left the coastline of the United Arab Emirates at 0530 and headed north-west up the Persian Gulf. Ten minutes later, the police entered the PIA 747 through the forward wheel well and managed to deactivate the somewhat crude infra-red trigger linked to the explosives.
The
New York Times
established that a Royal Saudi Air Force E-3A AWACS - complete with US crew-members - had been scrambled to track the 747's progress up the Gulf. The AWACS vectored F-14s from a carrier off the Straits of Hormuz to intercept the airliner and coerce the hijackers into turning back.
The 747 beat the F-14s to the coast. Low on fuel, the Navy planes were forced to turn back, to rendezvous with a tanker.
The airliner flew on, passing briefly through Jordanian and Syrian airspace. Above the wastes of the Syrian Desert the hijackers announced their intention to land at Beirut International. After frantic dialogue between the co-pilot and the tower, the 747 touched down in the Lebanon some four hours after it left Dubai.
Beirut, as ever, was perfect. The airport was in a state of chaos, as it had been for years. Though held by Amal guerrillas, no one was really in charge.
In the mayhem within the perimeter fence, no one noticed the group of commandos stealing across the tarmac until it was too late. Their strength boosted by reinforcements, the hijackers' position began to appear unassailable. For the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington the rescue options were running out.
Since then, the Amal militia groups âguarding' the jumbo had kept a respectable distance. Even they seemed to fear an unpredictable response by the terrorists.
In the three days that the 747 had been there, languishing in a desolate corner of the airport, there had been no end of rumour-mongering by the tabloids - as well as some of the more respectable papers - about the likelihood of a storming operation by Navy SEALs or Delta Force, the US Army's elite antiterrorist unit.
This anticipation was heightened by the arrival of the Sixth Fleet's carrier battle-group off Lebanese waters.
Just as awesome, even to the war-hardened Lebanese, was a small-scale invasion of Beirut's suburbs by the more intrepid members of the world's press corps. Even though regular flights had long ceased in and out of Beirut, there were established routes into the capital for those who knew them. Sensing safety in numbers, the press was lodged in an encampment of tents on the edge of the airfield. Through the miracle of satellite transmission, people were able to catch up on the hijack drama through snatched glances over cereal bowls, or in windows of TV rental shops. From Arkansas to Archangelsk. It was like Baghdad all over again.
Just about every nation in the region had its forces on readiness. The Middle East, for decades a tinder-box of prejudice and racial hatred, had become set to explode once again. In the twinkling of an eye, the crisis had moved from the Gulf to the Levant.
Girling stared hard at a newspaper photo of the 747, prominent against a background of desert scrub and the Mediterranean beyond. A hijacker's masked face was visible at one of the windows.
âWho in hell are you?' he heard himself whisper.
In three days, no one had managed to make contact with the hijackers. Grainy pictures of shadowy faces, masks twisted by the distorting effects of the aircraft windows, were splashed across some of the newspapers. The tabloids ran headlines like âthe face of terror', or âthe mask of death' above them.
The terrorists had made no demands and had not issued the customary declaration of their identity or political aims. That alone set this incident apart.
Against his better judgement, Girling found himself taking notes.
Yesterday's evening papers had carried the news of the biggest breakthrough. The terrorists, quite unannounced, had released all Arab nationals. These people were the first to give eyewitness accounts of conditions inside the aircraft.
Every hostage had a story of terror to tell, but it was the plight of Ambassador Franklin which touched Girling most. Separated from the rest of the hostages, he had borne his torture with courage and dignity. Girling, well hardened to stories of suffering, could not hide his revulsion at the accounts of the ambassador trussed to his seat. Artists' impressions in some of the papers depicted the wire running across his neck that led to the grenade taped to the back of the chair.
In that morning's press, no one was any closer to establishing the identity of the terrorists, although most âobservers' and âexperts' â called upon by the media believed an Iranian-backed Shiite group to be responsible. Knowing something of Washington's own confusion, Girling knew that the pundits were shooting in the dark.
He tilted his chair and stared at the ceiling. So what were the options for ending the incident? A negotiated settlement seemed unlikely - even attempts to deliver food and water to the aircraft had met with stony silence.
After the Arab exodus, there were still almost a hundred mouths to feed. Pretty soon, people would start dying of thirst.
Where were the demands for the release of political prisoners from Israeli jails, or fellow âfreedom fighters' from the cells of the West's prisons?
The failure to negotiate was a worry to everyone. If these guys were Hizbollah, then they had every good reason to be concerned.
On October 23 1983, Hizbollah, the sprawling Iranian-backed terror organization, had issued no warnings, no demands to the French and American peace-keeping forces in Beirut. But by the end of that day two hundred and forty-one American marines, fifty-eight French paratroopers, and two more martyrs of Islam were dead.
The truck which struck the US Marines' complex contained six tons of explosives. The detonation was the single largest non-nuclear blast since the Second World War.
Organizations with links to the Palestine Liberation Organization operated with a shade more method in their madness; but not much.
Girling closed the file and walked it back to the library. Others - people like Stansell in Cairo, for instance - could handle the story. He was best out of it.
By the time Girling was back at his desk, most of the staff had gone home. He raised his eyes to the TV, which remained on throughout the day in the corner of the newsroom, pumping out the usual diet of CNN news bulletins.
A jumbo jet was sitting in the glare of media and arc lights at an airport some two thousand miles away.
Yet another news bulletin, telling the same old story. The hijacking had been relegated to third place in the pecking order of world news.
At the next desk, Mallon shut his computer down. The reporter had put a nice story to bed. His investigations showed that passengers had been on Concorde, quite ignorant of the real purpose of its flight over the North Cape.
Furthermore, the UK's billion-pound radar system, commissioned into service that year, had not been able to track the supersonic airliner until it was just off the Shetland Islands, north-east of the Scottish mainland. Girling shook his head. Britain would have to put its trust in the Russians instead. Given the persistent rumours of further coup attempts by Soviet hard-liners, that was not necessarily a comfortable thought.
âYou got time for a drink?' Mallon asked, getting to his feet. âI'm heading down to the Punch.'
The Punch was the office watering hole a few blocks away.
Girling looked at his watch. âNot tonight. Got to get back home.' He'd promised he'd speak to Alia that evening and already it wasn't far off her bedtime. She'd been with her grandparents for the best part of a week and he missed her terribly.
Mallon pulled on a thick overcoat and turned up his collar against the icy temperature outside. âI'll see you tomorrow then. Big day.'
The buzz surrounding a good exclusive made press day all the more frantic.
Girling gave him a half wave. âGoodnight, Kieran.'
There was no one left in the newsroom, except for the night editor, Joe Cornelius, an old hand from the days when the Street hummed with the presses of newspapers most people had never heard of. Cornelius sat in a stupor at his desk, his eyes raised to the TV.
The box, perched on a shelf in the corner of the room, pulsed out its mute images, the volume turned too low for Girling to hear. In another corner, one of the wire machines jerked into life. Cornelius rose to inspect the message, glanced at it cursorily and moved back to his seat.
On the TV, the chat-show host grinned into the camera, then turned back to his guest. Girling reached out and shut down his PC.
It was only when he was on his feet that he noticed the package from the photo labs in his in-tray. He had not spotted it amongst the cuttings, press releases, and scrawled notes that lay strewn across his desk.
He pulled the six glossy enlargements from their folder and began to leaf through them.
He smiled to himself. His efforts to capture the 11-76 Candid at Machrihanish were somewhat haphazard. One of the pictures was wide of the hangar, but showed the hills and the stormy sky behind to advantage.
Of the rest, one was reasonable enough to print. The guy with the walkie-talkie was screwing his eyes against the bright hangar lights behind the great white fuselage of the transport aircraft, his arm raised. The object of the man's attention was hidden by the partially open cabin door.
Girling reached for his coat, then hesitated. He might still catch someone at the Ministry of Defence.
He dialled the number of the press office and waited. If any of them were working this late, it would be a miracle, but it was worth trying out just to establish the MOD's line on the Candid's presence at Machrihanish.
The phone answered on its first ring. Girling recognized Peter Jarrett's voice on the other end of the line. âWhat are you still doing there, Pete? This was supposed to be a long shot.'
âWho's that?' The voice sounded tired and irritated.
âTom Girling,
Dispatches
.'
âTom, sorry, didn't recognize you for a moment. Contrary to what you lot think, some of us do actually put in some hours here.' Jarrett paused. âWell, if you must know, the wife's coming up to town. We're going to catch a show in the West End tonight. What can I do for you?'
Girling pulled a notepad out from his top drawer and scribbled on a page to ensure his pen was working. âIt's about something I saw during Exercise Stalwart Divider. You know your boys arranged an exclusive facility for us to cover the story from the back seat of a Tornado...'