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Authors: Marc Stiegler

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BOOK: David's Sling
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The binoculars themselves were anachronisms. He could see his forces—not only the ships fore and aft, but the aircraft as well—arrayed on the wall-sized, computerized battle board. But the battle board only gave him facts; it could not give him the feel of his fleet.

He glimpsed the fire and smoke of an F-26 Cheetah catapulting from the deck below before he returned to his battle analysis. His ship, the
Nimitz
, jerked ever so slightly as she hurled the Cheetah into the light blue sky. A chill ran through him. It was a beautiful day for a war.

The admiral still couldn't quite believe they were at war with Russia, even though his fleet had struck one of the first naval blows. An Alfa-class submarine had come clipping across SOSUS IV on a direct intercept course with his flagship. It was a foolish thing to do: the Alfas were so noisy you could track them halfway across the ocean. Clearly, the sub's commander had counted on driving so deep and fast that the American torpedoes could go neither deep enough nor fast enough to hurt him.

So Billingham had sent a pair of ancient, battered P3 patrol planes out, with half a dozen of the fast, new deep-diving Mark II homing torpedoes. The submarine became permanently quiet.

A soft bell sounded. Ensign Fletcher turned to him. "Sir, the Brits have identified a regiment of Backfire bombers coming across the gap south of the Faeroe Islands. It looks like they're coming toward us.''

The admiral nodded. "Are the Brits going to take care of them?"

"They don't know if they can, sir. They're scrambling against a bomber attack on Heathrow right now."

"I see. So the question is, which attack is a diversion? Let's see what Batty recommends," he said. They turned to the battle board.

Batty was the name of the on-board battle management computer, the machine that ran everything in the room.

Over a hundred of the best software and engineering minds in the United States had dedicated years to the task of bringing Batty to life. Dozens of innovative products benefiting both civilian and military projects could have been developed by this unusually bright and energetic team; instead, all efforts had gone to molding the Battle Management System. If Batty proved ineffectual, a tremendous national resource—the minds that had created the system—would have been wasted.

But Batty had entered service as a spectacular success. It had shown itself to be one of the rare miracles of military technology. It was modem, it was efficient, it did everything it was designed to do very well indeed. It was even flexible. The developers had known from the start that no commander would accept the advice or decisions of a computer programmed by landlocked engineers. No commander would agree with any "optimal" strategy chosen by some military board of "experts."

So the designers wisely avoided that approach. Batty had started operation with a clean slate. It had learned strategy and tactics from Admiral Billingham himself. It might not be as creative as the admiral when faced with unique situations, but for the most part, it used the best ideas the Admiral had ever devised.

When Billingham first met Batty, he had wondered why anyone would bother to build such a perfect mimic. Why not just let the admiral make his own decisions? But after the second fleet exercise, Billingham understood the answer. Batty was
fast
. Batty made the decisions in seconds that Billingham would have made if he had had several hours to game out the alternatives.

So together, Batty and Billingham had outmaneuvered and outgunned the rest of the navy in exercises again and again, though the competition was getting tougher as the other carriers received Batty's sibling systems. Together, Batty and Billingham seemed invincible.

And now they had a real enemy to outgun. Enemy bombers swept toward them at the speed of sound. Fortunately, Batty worked at close to the speed of light.

Batty opened a conversation window on the battle board. Recommendations appeared. The plan called for a soft redeployment of the nine patrolling Cheetahs that formed a loose circle around the fleet, shifting six of them eastward far enough to meet the attackers. But this would not be enough of itself. Batty also recommended launching four planes to intercept and chop up the regiment before they reached this standard patrol. Batty listed out the calculations that drove this conclusion, the probabilities of kill, the radius of intercept, the radius of enemy missile launch, the amount of time the patrol would have to fight before the Backfires launched their missiles, the probability of a successful hit on the Nimitz by one of those missiles. Billingham nodded in approval. After scrambling four more fighters, it would take some time to lift additional aircraft against a second threat; but what kind of threat could arise that suddenly? Even a second regiment of Backfires passing by England couldn't get close enough fast enough to be dangerous.

The four fighters lifted off and headed toward the bombers. They were still well out of range when the Backfires mysteriously turned around and headed home. Pursuit was out of the question; the interceptors were at the edge of their range.

"Ha!" Admiral Billingham muttered. "Now the big question is, were they gun-shy? Or were they a diversion?"

Ensign Fletcher looked over at him. "What was that, sir?"

"Never mind," the admiral replied.

Another soft bell sounded, this time a warning, rather than an alert. Billingham looked up at the section of the wall Batty now lit with new information.
Admiral Billingham
, Batty explained,
recent satellite photos suggest that a regiment of Blackjack bombers has disappeared from their airfield near Murmansk. These may be the bombers that the Soviet Union recently modified for stealth missions. I recommend sending a second E2 north to search for them.

"Yes!" Billingham yelled. "Ensign, launch that E2 immediately."

Fletcher looked up. "Yes, sir."

Billingham shook his head in amazement. The missing Blackjacks were probably not part of a sneak attack on the Nimitz; more likely, they were beating the hell out of some poor Norwegian target. But had they not had Batty watching with a world-girdling hookup to sensors and data, such an attack could have been very dangerous. As it was, Batty was already routing the Cheetahs back to their normal loitering positions. In minutes, the fleet would be fully rearranged to meet such a Blackjack threat.

But even as they prepped a second E2 early warning airplane, another alert went off—a harsh bell of immediate danger. The E2 circling overhead had just picked up some dim reflections. They were almost certainly reflections from the missing Russian airplanes.

How had they flown so far without being detected? The admiral couldn't believe it. There were hundreds of sensor systems on Iceland and Greenland that had a shot at them as they came through the Denmark strait. He could see on the map, even without Batty's new highlighting, that that was their probable course.

The admiral now became a spectator. The enemy was too close to be handled by human decision-making reflexes. Batty ordered more Cheetahs to veer to intercepting paths while she brought the three closest patrol fighters together for a combat run. As the additional interceptors veered, however, Batty and Billingham both knew that additional interceptors were probably wasted. The Blackjacks would be in range to launch their missiles before the extra Cheetahs could arrive.

Furthermore, this detour for the Cheetahs would consume fuel. They could not return to the carrier; they would have to ditch in the ocean. Normally, such a waste of fighters would seem insane.

But the Blackjack's missiles gained terrific accuracy when launched from closer range. Batty understood that the enemy bombers
had to
be forced to launch from the greatest possible distance. Otherwise, there would be no carrier for any Cheetahs to return to.

The attacking patrol planes came into firing range. As the battle had moved out of Billingham's control a few minutes earlier, it moved out of Batty's control now.

The Blackjacks would fire their missiles while cruising well beyond the range of the fleet's surface-to-air missiles. Hence, only the three Cheetahs would be able to shoot at the bombers before they launched their attack. No new strategies or tactics could alter the next series of events. The whole encounter collapsed to a game one could play with dice. With cold precision, Batty printed out the results of the fight before the first shot was fired.

Number of Blackjacks: 24

Kill rate for the Cheetahs: 25%

Surviving Blackjacks: 18

Number of missiles per Blackjack: 6

Total missiles: 108

Kill rate for surface-to-air missiles against missiles: 7.5%

Surviving missiles: 100

Success rate for electronic countermeasures and decoys: 40%

Missiles on-target: 60

Kill rate for point-defense guns and rockets: 45%

Missile hits: 33

Probable number of hits required to incapacitate Nimitz:12

Probable number of hits required to sink Nimitz: 21

Percent overkill used to destroy Nimitz: 57%

Admiral Billingham saw at last a serious defect in the Battle Management System computer. Batty couldn't summarize the results in human terms; it couldn't understand its own calculations.

Batty didn't realize that they would all die.

Within the hour, over five billion dollars, 40,000 man-years of human labor, and 1,000 valiant American seamen sank forever beneath the gently lapping waves.

April 22

The end of the Industrial Age saw the creation of the largest most effective killing machine in history: the Soviet Army. The individual rationalist would necessarily run to escape. Fortunately, free men of the Industrial Age were not half so rational as they were stubborn.

—Industrial Age Societies:
A Historical Perspective

Nathan looked at the president. She stood in sunlight, facing him. The bay windows to her left flooded the room with brightness that splintered as it touched her shoulder, that cascaded to the floor and returned, reflected in her hazel eyes. It struck Nathan as unnatural that the President of the United States should be beautiful. Then it struck him that nothing could be more natural.

Finally, he realized that much of her beauty was a creation of his own mind. Her silhouette stretched too long and thin. Her nose hooked just enough to please the nation's cartoonists. At this moment, as she squinted past the glare of sunlight to gaze back at Nathan, tense lines radiated from the corners of her eyes. She was not, by some objective scrutiny, beautiful.

Yet when she shook her head, loose strands of hair waved gaily, in exuberant contrast to her tightly pulled bun. And her voice, though serious, held confidence—the confidence of a woman who sees a brighter future, for she will make it brighter. "Mr. Pilstrom, the senator tells me you have a bunch of wild ideas. He thinks some of them might save Europe."

Nathan chuckled, crossing the room to avoid the sunshine's glare. "You have summarized the situation with clarity, Madam President."

Her eyes narrowed for a moment; she was not yet accustomed to the honorific. She replied, "Hilan has told me a bit about your Sling Hunters, just enough to tantalize me. Frankly, they sound like excellent toys. The big question is: can they work in combat?"

"I don't know. But I do know that our alternatives are few and bleak."

"True enough." She gazed into the distance, as if at a field filled with corpses. "It's too late to use tactical nuclear weapons to defend Germany. We'd kill more of our own people than we'd kill of theirs. So in the absence of a miracle, we have only two choices. We can surrender Europe, or we can drop a nuke on the Soviet Union." Her eyes shifted back to Nathan. "At least if we surrender Europe, we know exactly how great the loss will be."

"Yes." The simple precision of her words pleased Nathan. Obviously, she had learned in her own ways and her own time how to filter the thousands of facts, theories, opinions, and rumors that assaulted an American president. She had extracted the fundamental points; only relevance remained when she spoke.

Nathan tried to match her. "The third alternative is a miracle—and the Sling is about the only magic box left. Let me see what rabbits I can pull out for you." Nathan inserted a videotape into the president's system and started the simulations of Hunters in action. He gave her the speech that he had once given Hilan Forstil.

Nell nodded with quick understanding from time to time. At the end she held up two fingers. "Two questions. Clearly, your Hunters qualify as a potential miracle. But are they miracle enough? Our forces are now scattered in helpless little clusters; I'm not even sure we can get the HopperHunters to the battlefield, because our logistics collapsed along with the front lines. Our people no longer know where the battlefield is. They are no longer sure where they themselves are." She crossed to the empty table by the bookshelves and sat down.

Nathan joined her. "I don't know if the Hunters are enough of a miracle. They may no longer be adequate, even assuming they perform brilliantly—and there will surely be some problems when they first go into the field. But let me point out that the Sling Project is the
kind
of miracle that can make the difference. With the Sling system, we are talking about a quantum leap—the transition from an Industrial Age system to an Information Age system. That jump is every bit as great as the jump that mankind made in going from the Agricultural Age to the Industrial Age.

"Let me draw an analogy. Suppose we could put a single Industrial Age weapon into the middle of an Agricultural Age battle. For example, suppose we dropped an M60 tank into the Battle of Thermopylae. Who would win?"

Nell wrinkled her nose. "Whoever had the tank would win."

"Exactly." Nathan pounced on her words. "Even though the Spartans were outnumbered by more than ten to one, if they had that one Industrial Age weapon, they would win."

He tapped the table top. "Similarly, a single Information Age weapon could decide any Industrial Age battle, even in the face of a ten-times-more-powerful enemy. What good is an army, if it does not know where to go? What good is an army, if it can no longer process enough information to make decisions?
That
is what an Information Age weapon would do to an army. That is what the Sling Project is all about." Nathan could feel his whole body pulsing with the strength of his convictions. He realized he had lost control of his enthusiasm, even as Nell gestured in mock surrender.

"I see your point," she said. "My second question is the more difficult of the two, however: can you complete the project in time?"

"I don't know," Nathan answered with dull sorrow. "We've collected the Sling team outside the Yakima Firing Range to work as fast and as hard as they can."

"Does it make sense to add more people to the team? Is there anyone—anyone in the country—whom you'd like to have with you at Yakima?"

Nathan shook his head. "No, it's too late to add people." He chuckled again and gazed at Nell with pleasure. "Madam President, I'm surprised that you're
asking
about adding people, rather than demanding it. Most politicians and businessmen don't understand how dangerous it is to add technical staff at the last minute when you're creating a new system. Adding people works so well when duplicating copies of old systems that they find it difficult to understand how harmful even the brightest added people can be."

"I've worked with engineers before," Nell replied drily. "I know they work best in small teams." Her eyes narrowed. "And I know how much effort it takes to go from a system that
almost
works to a system that
does
work."

Nathan nodded. "Exactly. So we return to the question, can we be done in time?" He took a deep breath. "How much time have we got? Good as my people are, determined and driven to succeed as they may be, I can't believe we can have something useful in less than a week." His voice shrank, fearing the answer to his next question. "Do we have a week?"

Nell shrugged. "Perhaps. Even though we've been scattered and mutilated, our men are still fighting. Jesus, they're fighters." Her eyes glistened. Nathan remembered the regular reports coming across the Atlantic of incredible stands being made by once-ordinary soldiers. "Fortunately, the Soviets are neither gods nor demons. They've made mistakes, too." Her smile might have chilled an iceberg. "At the beginning of the war, there were only a handful of railroads that could carry heavy military supplies to Germany from the Soviet Union. And their fuel came via the oil pipelines that Europeans built for them 20 years ago. Well, the railroads are wrecks now, as are the pipelines. Supplies barely trickle across the border to their troops in Germany. And their whole strategy is based on lots of supplies."

"So we have some time."

"Only a little." Nell responded sharply to the sound of relief in Nathan's voice. "Perhaps enough."

Nathan swallowed. "So you'll back the Sling Project?"

"Yes, granting one more condition." She closed her eyes, and for a moment, the lines of worry lifted from her face. Nathan stared raptly at the moment's vision of tranquility. When she opened her eyes again, they held laughter, the joy of a fond mother humoring a child. "The commanders of our armed forces aren't very happy with the idea of tossing an untried weapon into the middle of the battlefield."

"I can hardly blame them. I don't like the idea myself."

"I'm glad you see their point of view. Anyway, they're willing to go along—they're willing to grasp at any straws now—but they want the last chop on sending these things to the field."

Nathan laughed. "I'm not surprised. Madam President, the military organization is carefully designed to
prevent
men from grasping at straws. The American military has rarely achieved its victories with great strokes of brilliance. Few armies ever have. The failure of just one brilliant stroke could cost you more than a dozen brilliant strokes could gain. Cautious movements have historically kept men alive longer; and if you kept your men alive long enough, you usually won."

"I suppose so. Anyway, the major general we're sending should be helpful as well. If he were just a judge and jury, I wouldn't have let the Army foist him on you. He's a brilliant tactician, I'm told, as well as an able program manager. And he is very fair." She smiled. "He's also a skeptic about gadgetry. If the Sling passes his inspection, we'll have a winner."

Nathan laughed at the propriety of having a skeptic pass judgment on a Zetetic project. "We'll do our best to keep him entertained. I look forward to meeting him."

Nell laughed. "I suspect you're lying," she said, "but it's a gallant lie, nonetheless." She rose, offering Nathan her hand in dismissal. "I hope the next time we meet, we'll have more pleasant prospects to discuss."

A mirror hung in the hall beyond the president's office. Nathan saw his own reflection: a man with unwavering eyes, with the alertness of a sometimes swift intelligence, with a gentleness that might be construed as dignity. The man he saw might well have trouble controlling flights of fancy and impossible daydreams.

He shook his head at himself. How foolish he would have to be to fall in love with the President of the United States.

With a last shake of his whole body, his mind returned to other matters. He wondered how things were going in Yakima.

Leslie had started the day feverish with excitement. The Sling team would come together at last, in a heroic effort to finish the Hunters, to end the war and save humanity from nuclear holocaust. At last he was free of the politicking that had wasted his time. At last he was free of the endless negotiations that had wasted his energy, his begging for small sums of money to keep the project slogging forward. Now those issues had been thrust aside, leaving Leslie with only the technical problem of building the best Hunters he knew how, in the shortest time he could manage. Certainly the technical problems formed a formidable array, but at least they were clear, understandable problems—problems of a kind he knew he could solve.

Now, three hours later, Leslie stood by the vast picture window of the airport terminal, alone and exhausted, the taste of disappointment dry on his tongue.

The passengers from Seattle disembarked in ragged groups. He recognized Juan Dante-Cortez immediately. Though they had never met in person, they had held numerous video conferences together. Leslie shuffled toward the gate, forcing himself to move, though he barely had enough enthusiasm and energy to stand. Leslie did not call to the other members of the team to come meet Juan, though they also waited in the terminal. Even without another introduction, interpersonal frictions had already made the great meeting of the Sling team a frightening failure.

Flo and Ronnie stood near the baggage conveyors, looking uncomfortably out of place. Kurt and Lila stood at another corner of the great room, within spitting distance of one another, poised with the tension of wrestlers at the beginning of a bout. Their bickering had started when Lila had arrived and Kurt had picked up her bag to carry it for her. She had made a rude comment. He had tossed his own bag at her, telling her she could carry it as well if she wished. Somehow, when the loud words ended, Kurt held both bags. Leslie wondered if they enjoyed the antagonism in some way beyond his own comprehension.

What peculiarities would Juan bring to the group?

"Hi," Juan called to him, entering the building on the tail of a gusting wind. "I'm glad to meet you at last. It's always so odd having friends that you've never met, if you know what I mean."

Leslie nodded, and opened his mouth to speak, but Juan rushed on. "Where's the rest of our team—I thought we were all arriving more or less the same time—oh,
there
they are." He had spotted Kurt and Lila in their corner. With long strides that picked up speed, Juan whirled across the room and stopped himself by throwing one arm around Lila and one arm around Kurt. "Boo," he said saucily.

Leslie expected to see Juan get punched in the stomach from both directions. Instead, Lila and Kurt stepped back uncertainly, then smiled. "Where's Ronnie?" Juan asked next. As he twisted his lanky frame around, Ronnie and Flo were already walking toward him. "Howdy," Juan said, offering a vigorous handshake to Ronnie and a gender one for Flo. "So the gang's all here." He looked at Leslie. "We ready to go?"

Rejuvenated by Juan's energy, Leslie pointed to the Thunderbird Motel's shuttle waiting outside. "You bet. "

Juan kept up a steady chatter until they boarded the shuttle. Once in motion, however, he stopped suddenly, a runner hitting the wall. He seemed totally spent, as if the extra energy he had used in his arrival had cost him far more than it might another man. By the time he stopped, however, the icy mood had broken, and the other members of the team were speaking eagerly about their plans. Besides Leslie, only Lila watched Juan with questioning concern.

As they drove through Yakima, Leslie looked around with a surprising sense of warm contentment. He had not passed through the town of Yakima in years—not since the days of Interim FAAD, a combined Army/Air Force project that had planned to use commercial equipment and that had been killed several times by government bureaucracies.

Yakima had not changed much. Sweet Evie's restaurant still offered simple yet wonderful home-cooked meals; Leslie remembered the flavor of their roast beef gravy on mashed potatoes from long ago.

The Thunderbird Motel still stood on the edge of civilization: on one side of the motel, buildings and parking lots crowded together, back to back. On the other side, a scattered handful of worn storefronts quickly yielded to barren sands.

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