Authors: Geoffrey Archer
âWe'll see,' the General Secretary answered doubtfully. âIt may not be enough.'
In his heart he knew it would take more than TV pictures and a press conference to jolt the Soviet citizenry out of their sloth. With sadness, resignation and fear, he realized it might take war.
* * *
Every time he met the Prime Minister, Admiral Waverley was struck by her small stature and her femininity, which hid a steely determination. Both he and the Foreign Secretary were in a state of some trepidation about the meeting that lay ahead.
âGentlemen, good day,' she greeted them in the hall. âWe'll go straight in and sit down, if you don't mind. I've got to be in the House at two-thirty.'
She led them into the dining room, where a small table was set with just three places, a large bottle of Malvern Water in its centre.
âYou sit here, Admiral, and Nigel, there.'
The Prime Minister placed herself facing the door and nodded to the butler that he could begin serving.
âNow, Stewart, the Defence Secretary has told me about
HMS Truculent
and Commander Hitchens. It's appalling. And the Home Secretary's briefed me on what happened in Plymouth. This KGB officer â he's still on the loose.
Most
unsatisfactory!
âBut it's the implications I'm concerned with. Lucky we had this little lunch arranged. Now, first of all, remind me about Ocean Guardian. As you know, the Russians are making the most extraordinary fuss. Heaven knows why; they've never bothered about it before.'
âThat's right, Prime Minister,' Waverley answered. âBut the exercise has never been quite like this before. We hold them every two years; dozens of warships from several NATO countries deploying to the North Atlantic, but we've never taken the exercise right round the tip of Norway into the Barents Sea before, right to the doorstep of the Russian Navy's main harbours. That's why they're squealing. It's international waters of course, so they've no right to complain. And Norway
is
NATO's northern frontier.'
âSo the Russians could conduct their manoeuvres off the coast of Scotland if they wanted to?' the Foreign Secretary queried. âWe wouldn't like that.'
âSo long as they stayed in international waters, we could do nothing to stop them.'
âThe idea is to be able to bottle up the Soviet fleet at the start of a conflict, correct?' the PM asked.
âThat's right. The Americans took the initiative. They felt defending the Atlantic further south had become too difficult. The Soviets have so many new, quieter submarines.'
âAmbassador Bykov placed another protest on my desk this morning,' Sir Nigel remarked. âArgued in most reasoned terms. Said this was a time of peace and improved east-west relations, and that such an “aggressive rehearsal for war”, as he put it, was quite unacceptable.'
The PM waved him to silence.
âHow big is our involvement? How many ships have we got up there?'
âAbout twenty. The Americans have eighteen, the Canadians, the Dutch, the Norwegians, Germans and French bring the total to over a hundred.'
Just then the door opened and a waitress brought in a tray of soup.
âCarrot soup,' the PM announced. âMy mother's recipe. I do hope you like it.'
The two men made polite, appreciative noises, and reached for their spoons. The waitress closed the door quietly behind her.
âDo continue, Admiral. You were interrupted.'
âThank you, Prime Minister. Our main task is to provide an anti-submarine force centred on the carrier
HMS Illustrious.
With four escorts, she provides a screen ahead of the US strike fleet â the
Eisenhower
group. Our carrier will keep well away from the Russian coast, but two of her frigates will steam into the Barents, together with two of our submarines.'
âBut
Truculent
had a special mission. Those new mines.'
âExactly. She was due to break away from the exercise, to try to slip through the Soviet defences and get to the sort of position where the mines would have to be laid if war threatened.'
âInside Soviet territorial waters?'
âEr . . , yes.'
âAnd the Americans are doing the same?'
âFurther east, Prime Minister.'
âAnd the mines themselves? They're a great advance on anything we've had before?'
âVery much so. Anglo-American development. Launched from a torpedo tube in deep water. Very difficult for the enemy to detect. It's a two part device, with a sonar sensor â very clever â which can be programmed to look out for one particular type of ship or submarine, and the explosive bit which is really a high speed homing torpedo that gets launched once the target's been designated. And the whole thing can sit on the bottom for up to a year, doing nothing, then be activated or reprogrammed by sonar signal from up to forty miles away.'
âRight. We know what
Truculent
was
meant
to do â what is Commander Hitchens
really
going to do, Admiral?'
Waverley sighed uncomfortably.
âWe just don't know, Prime Minister. We've had no response to any signals. He's ignoring orders, but appears still to be heading for the Kola Inlet. An RAF Nimrod picked up his track off Norway this morning, but lost it again. There was a Soviet submarine in the area, too.'
âBut what about the rest of his crew? Are you telling me they're also ignoring orders?'
âCertainly not! But you see, Prime Minister, Hitchens could well say he's acting under secret orders issued to
him personally. Often happens. Submarines operate in extreme secrecy. Frequently most of the crew haven't a clue where they are or why.'
The colour began to drain from the Prime Minister's face. She turned to Sir Nigel. Their looks met, each realizing for the first time the full implications of what Waverley had said.
âWhat . . . ah . . . what could he actually
do?
' Sir Nigel asked, clearing the frog from his throat.
âAt worst, he could sink about a dozen Soviet warships . . .'
âChrist Almighty!'
âBut that's improbable. To launch torpedoes and missiles he'd need the co-operation of his crew. He'd have to convince them war had broken out. Impossible, I'd say. But he has got those mines on board, four of them. It's just possible he could lay them . . .'
The Foreign Secretary put his hands up to his face.
âJust when Savkin's accusing us of undue aggression!' he groaned.
The Prime Minister tapped nervously on the table-cloth with her fingernails as she thought of what had to be done. She reached under the table and pressed a bell-push.
âYour soup's gone cold, Admiral. We'll go on to the next course.'
The waitress returned with her tray. While she cleared the plates and served them a main course of roast pork, the three remained silent.
âNow, Stewart. You obviously have a plan. What is it?'
âWe've got about three days in which to find
Truculent
. . .'
âIt's no good finding her if you lose her again,' the PM chided.
âOur submarines are designed to
avoid
being detected, Prime Minister. Twice he's passed through waters we were monitoring anyway, but keeping track of him when he doesn't want to be tracked is another matter.
âIt's not going to be easy. The RAF are searching round the clock, but our best chance lies with
HMS Tenby
. Another SSN. A Commander Tinker, who knows
Hitchens and is fully briefed on the problem, is flying to north Norway to join the
Tenby.
We have a good idea where Hitchens will go, and if Tinker can pick up his trail, he should be able to communicate with
Truculent
and stop him in good time.'
The Admiral had spoken in the most confident voice he could muster, but the Prime Minister had not been taken in.
âWhat if
Truculent
's not listening?'
âThen we have a very difficult decision to take.'
âTo do what?'
âWell, if we can find her, to stop her by force.'
âHow would you do that?'
âAttack the
Truculent
with a torpedo. Try to cripple her without loss of life.'
âThat's an appalling prospect. Is it possible?'
The Admiral shrugged.
âWe've never tried it. Our weapons are designed to destroy boats, not wing them.'
âHow many are there on board?'
â'Bout a hundred.'
They fell silent again. None of them felt disposed to eat.
âThere must be some alternative?' the PM suggested.
âWe could tell the Russians what's happened,' the Foreign Secretary remarked. âWarn them to keep clear of the mines until we can deal with them.'
âAnd give them a propaganda triumph of unimaginable proportions, Nigel. Just what they need to justify their claim that our manoeuvres are provocative. That's a ridiculous idea!'
âThe earlier we pick up
Truculent
's trail, the better,' Waverley pressed. âAnd the more resources we put into the search, the sooner we're likely to find her. Sounds obvious, Prime Minister, but we've got precious few vessels in the right place. If we got some help from our allies â the Americans, the Norwegians, it could make all the difference.'
âNo! I don't want any other nation to know about this. The name of the Royal Navy is held in the
highest
regard
by friend and foe alike. What
would
people think if they learned that one of our submarine commanders could jeopardize the peace of the whole world? That our command structure has failed to prevent a madman going on the rampage in charge of one of Her Majesty's ships?'
Her eyes bored accusingly into the Admiral's.
âI assume you'll be examining your personnel selection procedures as a matter of urgency, Admiral?'
âThat'll be our
second
priority, Prime Minister,' Waverley bristled. âThe first is to find the boat.'
âThere'll come a time when our allies'll have to know,' Sir Nigel interjected gloomily. âIf you don't stop Hitchens in time, and he's about to blow up the Soviet Navy, it'd be better if our friends know before it happens rather than after.'
âThat's a sound point, Nigel. President McGuire is difficult enough to handle as it is.'
She began to pick at her food and the two men followed suit. She frowned in concentration.
â
Do
you think you'll find him in time, Stewart?' she asked suddenly.
The Admiral swallowed some mineral water before replying.
âThe chances are less than even, I'm afraid. Our best hope is that his officers twig what's going on.'
âWhat do you
think
he intends to do? What are we in for?'
âGod knows! But if he lays the Moray mines outside Polyarny, and several Soviet submarines make a run for the open sea at the same time, he could take out four of them before they realize what's happening. Four nuclear reactors exploding underwater, pollution over a wide area, and at least four hundred dead! Not a happy scenario!'
âAnd all because his wife fooled around with some Russian? It's madness,' Sir Nigel exclaimed.
âA Russian who hasn't been caught,' the PM repeated.
âPerhaps he'll contact Mrs Hitchens again,' the Foreign Secretary mused, half to himself.
His thoughts were moving in a direction quite different from those of his leader. She'd dismissed his idea of
warning the Russians, but it could be the only way to avoid catastrophe. It would have to be done with enormous care, and clearly without the knowledge of âthe boss'.
âIf the worst does happen, Nigel, what's Savkin going to do about it?' the PM asked. âHe'll hardly declare war, surely?'
âI don't know,' Sir Nigel warned. âHe's making a lot of noise about “NATO aggression”, much more than is justified. Got to ask ourselves why. Also this business of a ship-load of MiGs heading for Cuba; that has to have been done for a purpose. If Savkin's intention was simply to supply an ally with new planes, he'd have flown them to Cuba in transporter planes. No fuss that way.
âBut to put them on the deck of a cargo ship and to sail it slap through the middle of the US fleet â I ask you! He
wanted
them to be seen! He
wanted
the Yanks to go screaming around in their helicopters and plastering pictures of his MiGs all over their television news bulletins. They're so bloody predictable, the Americans; they did exactly what he wanted! One more example of Western aggression to show to his own citizens on TV.'
âYes, but come to the point, Nigel. What's Savkin up to?'
âAh, now that's more difficult to say. The one thing we do know is that he's in big trouble with his economy. He's facing an unprecedented wave of strikes and civil unrest. He may be looking for a distraction, and banking on America, and us, supplying it. It's the oldest trick in the book, but it could be the only one he's got up his sleeve.'
The PM frowned with irritation; she'd foreseen her Foreign Secretary's conclusion, before he'd finished speaking.
âBut I return to my point; he'll hardly declare war, will he?' she insisted.
âAnd I repeat
my
point; I simply don't know. The danger is he'll back himself into a corner; if he whips up enough anti-western feeling at home, and our Commander Hitchens then blows up some of his submarines, he may have no option but to declare war.'
The Prime Minister stared at him aghast. Then she turned to the Commander-in-Chief of the Fleet.
âCommander Hitchens must be stopped, Admiral. At
any
price!'