TOM CARLETON
Like Cobb and Ryng, Carleton could sleep anywhere, and he took advantage of the long flight to rest himself as much as possible. But like Pratt and Nelson, he was also excited about his new command. He felt like a child wandering into a candy store clutching five dollars in his hand and with no one to tell him how to spend it.
Yorktown was the key to defending a carrier battle group from air attack. Her AEGIS fire-control system coupled with sophisticated detection and tracking functions could direct the weapons of the entire force. One-third of her cost was for the ship herself, the rest for an electronic installation unrivaled by any in existence. Tom had spent his last six months as a prospective commanding officer in schools and simulators. He’d commanded destroyers before and he was an engineer, but he had to relearn his trade, especially in accepting the reality that the commanding officer of an AEGIS cruiser no longer fought his ship from the bridge. Instead, he sat before a fire-control display system inside an electronics-filled space and communed with a computer to fight his ship.
It was a totally different Navy from the one his father served in during the Second World War. As a child, Tom had thrilled to tales of naval battles in the South Pacific. Today, Nimitz and Halsey and the rest of his great heroes from forty years before wouldn’t have the vaguest idea of how Yorktown operated. Within microseconds, her radars and radios and computers could analyze intelligence from distant submarines or surface ships, planes hundreds of miles away, invisible recon satellites, and strategic and tactical details compiled at shore bases halfway around the world. With all that data, her computers could then coordinate the weapons on those distant platforms.
All of that hidden power was designed to protect the carrier in the battle group from missile attacks long enough to launch her air group to bring the war to the enemy.
For months, Tom Carleton dealt in a mysterious world of microchips and milliseconds, one where electronic gadgets made lifesaving or life-threatening decisions much faster and more accurately than any human being could. The system was designed to battle systems, not men. He also learned that this electronic gadget named Yorktown was only as good as the people who sailed her, that he was still only a valuable cog in her success or failure, as were each of her men. And it was his responsibility to make this marvel work when she was finally called on.
Current doctrine indicated that when it all began, the first salvo from Soviet forces would be awesome. His response, Yorktown’s, would have to be both instant and absolutely correct.
D MINUS 2
The president addressed a special meeting of the UN Security Council regarding the current military situation in Central Europe, and to speak for the censure of the Soviet Union for overt aggressive acts documented by recon satellites. The Soviet Ambassador refused to attend, indicating that any censure of his country would cause the Soviet Union’s withdrawal from the international body.
Massive efforts were undertaken to evacuate as many American dependents in NATO countries as possible, but severe restraints on civilian air traffic limited selection of these evacuees. Special permission had to be granted for landings by American commercial aircraft at specific airfields in Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Italy, the Scandinavian countries, and England. The French government, not bound by NATO agreements, guaranteed protection to American dependents though Paris refused to acknowledge the activation of Soviet reserve divisions in eastern Russia or the fact that French military forces still were not under Condition Two.
The damaged SOSUS array off Bermuda was now back in operation after the emplacement of hydrophones. Similar damage had occurred over the previous forty-eight hours to arrays off Iceland, the Azores, Hokkaido, Adak in Alaska, and Seattle. In each case, escort aircraft were able to determine that Soviet bombers on routine patrols (i.e., following their normal tracks over international waters) released objects that apparently caused the arrays to go silent. Commencing early on D minus 4, all such Soviet patrols were intercepted on the perimeter of a three-hundred-mile circle around SOSUS arrays and escorted under accepted international rules. No further damage was reported.
Seagoing units of the Japanese Military Self-Defense Force steamed in company with units of the Seventh Fleet at the express request of the Japanese Premier. This overture appeared to be an effort to convince the Japanese public that the missile which damaged the Haruna on D minus 3 was definitely not fired by any American aircraft. Within an hour after the incident, Soviet-controlled propaganda identified the source of the missile as an American F-18 on routine patrol over the Sea of Japan. However, the memory bank of an electronic listening device aboard Haruna recorded the missile’s lock-on radar signature as a Russian AS-5. This unfortunately did not have any effect on the rioting by left-wing students. Japanese government reports also indicated the insertion into their country of professional terrorists recently trained in Libya. Commerce remained at a standstill due to rioting and the effective disruption of civilian transportation services. Though it was obvious to the planners in the Pentagon that there would be no attack by Soviet forces in the Far East, these decoy efforts continued. They would have far-reaching effect on the future makeup of the Japanese government.
Due to the disruption of transportation in Japan, NATO countries gave unlimited authority to antiterrorist units in an effort to contain or at least limit damage to surface transportation networks. CIA white papers reported in the past that this would be the goal of Soviet planning before D-Day; though transport was harassed, military logistic movement was almost as steady as intended. The Russians had hurt themselves by being too effective in Japan too early!
An Israeli negotiating team, apparently sent at the behest of the United States on D minus 4, had success in halting raids by Turkey and Greece on each other. Israeli intelligence indicated to both sides (in a report prepared by their own intelligence agency) that the Soviet Union was responsible for terrorist activities that had fomented the military action over the previous three days. CIA reports anticipated that termination of Greek-Turkish activities would affect Soviet plans for controlling the Turkish straits, thereby likely requiring Soviet military action to control the exits from the Black Sea.
The U.S. CAPTOR blockade of the GIUK gap was reportedly in danger of breakdown by D minus 2. SOSUS reports, combined with infrared satellite intelligence, indicated that more than twenty CAPTOR mines had been activated by decoy units radiating an exact signature of a Soviet submarine. Since all but two of the submarines stationed in Murmansk were reported at sea and headed for the gap, it became clear to Washington that those submarines could exit into the North Atlantic via a destroyed CAPTOR barrier. The decoy devices were carried by Soviet bombers from a base on the island of Spitzbergen and deployed from the air. Upon entering the water, they moved at the speed of a submarine and radiated a signature that activated the CAPTOR listening devices. Though a submarine hunter-killer division had departed New London within hours of the first communication from Norway, most Murmansk attack submarines were projected to disappear into the Atlantic beforehand. At that time, Bernie Ryng’s SEAL team had less than twenty-four hours to complete its mission.