“I’m not sure ‘upset’ is the word I’d use.”
“You should thank me. You killed American agents, but I saved your ass. Thanks to me, officially, the men you killed in the Summer Garden in Saint Petersburg were Iranian agents. I shredded their 201s myself.”
“Who were they really?”
Harris stared at his drink. “Iranian Americans. Sleepers. Patriots. Victims. They didn’t know it, but it was a one-way mission. Whether it was you or Ivanov or the bomb going off, there was no way they were going to get out of Russia alive.”
Scorpion took a sip of the whiskey and put his glass on a side table. “There’s just one problem, Bob. The bomb was real. If I hadn’t killed her, Najla would’ve set it off. Maybe a million people dead. Hassani was brilliant. You underestimated him.”
Harris looked at him, his eyes sea-blue and utterly cold. “We didn’t underestimate anybody,” he said.
“You son of a bitch!” Scorpion snapped, jumping to his feet. “That’s why you blew my cover in Castelnuovo and pulled me off the mission in Rome. To stop me so I couldn’t prevent it from happening. You wanted the bomb to go off in Saint Petersburg! You wanted the Russians to go after the Iranians! Let ’em kill each other! That was your wet dream, wasn’t it?”
“Screw you! If you weren’t the apple of the DCIA’s eye right now, I’d burn you myself. Only a real attack would’ve convinced the Russians about the Iranians. Now we have to hope and pray that Ivanov tracking the bread crumbs back to the Islamic Resistance and the MOIS will convince them. You risked everything over a piece of Arab pussy!” Harris snapped back.
“A million dead! That doesn’t matter? The end justifies the means, is that it?”
“Always.”
“You know, I know why Najla and the Palestinian became who they were, but what rock did you crawl out from under?”
Harris stood up to confront Scorpion. “My job is to protect America. So is yours. If that means a lot of dead Russians, so be it. We stopped a possible world war. What you did was a betrayal. My conscience is clear. I sleep just fine.”
Scorpion picked up his glass.
“I’m glad I stopped it. Thanks for the drink,” he said, and started to drink, but instead threw the whiskey into Harris’s face.
“That’s a waste of good whiskey,” Harris said, wiping the liquor from his eyes with his sleeve. “I was right about you. You’re a sentimentalist. You still believe in right and wrong. You’re in the wrong business.”
“Change your shirt. You’ve got whiskey all over it,” Scorpion said, and left.
Harris made his way to the bathroom. He took off his shirt and washed his face and hands in the sink. He wiped his face with a towel and went back into the living room.
Something drew him to the window. He went over and looked down at Fifth Avenue, still busy with people and traffic far below. He wondered if Scorpion would go to the DCIA. Then he thought, the DCIA was a political appointment. They came and went, but he would stay. For a moment he thought he saw Scorpion walking away from the hotel. He blinked and tried to spot him again, but Scorpion had disappeared in the crowd.
U.S., RUSSIA ISSUE JOINT STATEMENT ON IRAN SANCTIONS
By Thomas Cohen and Jason Wilson,
Special to the New York Times.
MOSCOW-U.S. Secretary of State Jane Hinton and Russian Prime Minister Sergei Dimitriyov issued a joint statement on Tuesday on an agreement to impose severe new economic sanctions on Iran. The new sanctions cover a broad range of activities, including restrictions on international travel by Iranian officials and scientists and on companies doing business with Iran, a ban on the export of gasoline and other refined fuels to Iran, and strict oversight on international financial and banking transactions with Iran. Any exports to Iran involving nuclear material and technology or advanced weaponry are strictly banned under the new agreement.
These sanctions are considered a reversal of Russia’s prior policy on Iran. Russia had previously opposed the imposition of stricter sanctions long advocated by the United States and its major European partners, France, Germany, and Great Britain. As Iran’s principal supplier of fissionable material, nuclear technology, and military hardware, such as the advanced S-300 missile system, analysts believe that Russia’s agreement will have a significant impact on the Iranian economy and on Iran’s nuclear and military ambitions.
It is believed that this agreement will also affect the ability of the Iranians to make the new atomic reactors at Bushehr fully operational, since these reactors were being built under a contract with the Russians. Among the permanent members of the UN Security Council, only China now still opposes heavier sanctions on Iran.
When asked what caused the change in the Russian policy, Prime Minister Dimitriyov stated that this was not really a change in Russia’s position, which has always opposed nuclear proliferation. He added that the declaration was in response to the latest IAEA report to the UN Security Council on Iran’s uranium enrichment program.
Secretary of State Hinton stated: “This breakthrough was achieved not through military action or the work of intelligence agencies, but through long, hard diplomatic efforts by both Russia and the United States. Military power and intelligence services are useful tools and they have their place, but nothing can replace the importance of the everyday work of diplomacy in resolving serious international problems.”