SIX
E-Ring
“Please have General Richards come right in,” Fitzgerald told his secretary. He glanced at his watch. They had less than ten minutes before his morning staff meeting. “Good morning,” he said as Richards entered. He waved her to a seat. “Is this going to be one of those Mondays?”
“I’m afraid so, sir.” She handed him a leather folder. “I received this by special courier from the State Department twenty minutes ago. We will have to respond. May I suggest we alert Public Affairs for pre-emptive damage control?”
Fitzgerald groaned inwardly. The Secretary of State detested the military and never missed a chance to slap the Pentagon around. He accepted it as part of the give and take of power politics in Washington and never took it personally, although the Secretary of State treated the Joint Chiefs as an evil cabal. He opened the elegant leather folder that was Richards’ trademark and quickly scanned the thin document. He sat upright and slowly read it again. It was a formal complaint filed by the Government of Sudan with the United Nations charging the 4440th with using weapons of mass destruction on innocent nomads at the village of Wer Ping. “Did they specify what WMD they employed?”
“Apparently it was some type of nerve gas.”
“And exactly how did they do that?” It was testing time and he wanted to know if Richards had the technical and operational expertise to analyze the accusation. Thanks to the internet, any rumor, opinion, or accusation had the weight of fact. While it amused him that modern society was confused over the difference, that type of sloppy thinking was not tolerated on his staff. In this particular case, the C-130s deployed to Africa were veteran E models equipped with flares to decoy heat-seeking missiles and totally unarmed. However, the engineers at Lockheed had designed an airframe that was readily adaptable to a variety of missions that ranged from gunship to reconnaissance.
She hit the ball out of the park. “Sir, I’m aware that the C-130s at Malakal are unarmed cargo transports. However, it wouldn’t take much for an enterprising commander to install crop-spraying equipment on the ramp at the rear of the aircraft. A concentrated insecticide could function as a degraded nerve gas. How effective that would be is questionable, but it does raise a possibility we can’t ignore.”
“Are you suggesting we have a rogue commander on our hands?”
“It has been known to happen. Our information is fragmentary, but given the current climate in the UN, I would not be surprised if they arrested Colonel Allston and turned him over to the International Criminal Court to be tried for war crimes. I’m recommending that we recall him immediately and place him under house arrest for his own protection.”
Fitzgerald didn’t answer as he rapidly cycled through his waiting e-mail, looking for a message from Allston. It was number 132 in his private encrypted account with forty attached photographs. Because of a public appearance and traveling over the weekend, he had missed it. Fitzgerald was a realist and knew he was too involved with the 4440th and had to work out a new command structure to handle it. He scanned the message and forwarded it to Jill without opening the attachments. He checked the time. “Thank you, General Richards. Let’s see if Major Sharp has anything for us.” He stood and led the way to the conference room next door.
Richards took her seat in the conference room and checked her personal communicator. The CIA had just confirmed that concentrated forms of agricultural insecticide were available in Malakal. It only remained for her to slam the door on Allston and replace him with a responsible commander who understood that operations were driven by policy. She smiled at the waiting major.
Fitzgerald caught the look on Jill’s face as she concentrated on the computer screen at the podium. He waited until she looked up before nodding for her to start. “Good morning, General,” she began. “Last Friday, two C-130s under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Allston airdropped 121 legionnaires near the village of Wer Ping in South Sudan to rescue a French patrol that had been ambushed by a marauding band of Janjaweed.” She kept glancing at her computer as she recapped the operation and described how Allston had dumped fuel over the Janjaweed to simulate chemical weapons, and then directed small-caliber submachine gunfire from the rear of the aircraft onto the Janjaweed, killing five.
“Now that’s an interesting use of jet fuel,” Fitzgerald allowed.
Richards caught the irony in his tone. It was time for damage control. “Major, are you saying this was a deliberate pollution of the environment by Allston?” Even to her ear, it sounded trivial.
“At the present time, we have no reports of environmental damage. But I will pursue it.”
“That’s not necessary,” Richards said, regretting she had mentioned it.
“Do you have anything else for us?” Fitzgerald asked.
“These photographs,” Jill answered, “were taken at the village of Wer Ping, which was destroyed by the Janjaweed. “ She typed a command into the computer and the photos of the carnage in the village slowly cycled on the big briefing screen. It was the first time Jill had seen them and she instinctively stopped on the photo of the impaled baby. A colonel hurried from the room, his hand over his mouth.
Richards changed her tactics. “Do you know who did this?”
Jill kept glancing at her computer as she answered. “Yes, ma’am, we do.” She typed a command and the screen split, showing dead horses and bodies on a road. “These are the bodies of Janjaweed who attacked the legionnaires. Two of them were carrying pouches made from women’s breasts.”
“And how do you know these pouches came from women of this village?” Fitzgerald asked. Without a word, Jill cycled back to the photos of the burned hut. The charred body of a woman filled the screen. Jill hit a button and zoomed in on the woman’s breasts. Fitzgerald closed his eyes and clamped a steel fist over his growing anger. “Thank you, Major. We’ve seen enough.”
He turned to his staff. “I want a full-court press with the media on this one. Make sure these photos get to the right news outlets. I don’t want them buried. Stress the heroism of the legionnaires and the professionalism of the aircrews in extracting them.” He turned to Richards. “Please relay to your contacts in the UN that at the first mention of arresting Colonel Allston, I will recommend to the President that he implement the American Service-Members Protection Act of 2002. In case those clowns don’t get the message, remind them that ASPA allows the President to use all means necessary and appropriate to free any of our service personnel who are detained or imprisoned by the International Criminal Court. Tell them we call it ‘Invade the Hague Act’ for a damn good reason.” The meeting was over.
Richards was pleased that Jill was waiting in the hall for her. “Well done, Major. I assume you had just received those photos and intelligence update.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Richards wanted to know the source of the photos but assumed that Jill was too low-level an intelligence officer to have access to that information. She paused, thinking. “We’re dealing with too many unknowns and need more information. Have you ever been to the Sudan?”
Jill answered with the truth. “No, ma’am.”
“I want to send you there on a fact-finding mission. Can you handle it?” Jill nodded. “Good. We need to get you there soonest. Pack your bag.”
“Yes, ma’am.” Jill turned and hurried down the hall.
Richards thought for a moment and pushed through the door into Fitzgerald’s outer office where the tall and lanky, gray-haired lieutenant general who served as the Deputy Chief of Staff for Manpower and Personnel was waiting for an appointment. They exchanged pleasantries and she asked if she might segue in for a quick word with Fitzgerald. Since she was the subject of his meeting with Fitzgerald, the three-star readily agreed. Contrary to protocol, he held the door for her and followed her in. Once inside, the three-star let Richards do the talking. She came right to the point. “Sir, we’re operating in the blind in the Sudan and getting blindsided. We must be more proactive and need our own eyes and ears on the ground reporting directly back to us. I want to send Major Sharp on a fact finding mission to Malakal.”