“And we’ll have a barrel of fun,” a few voices chimed in. But the hilarity collapsed beneath the rumble of more massed Soviet artillery than any of them had heard before.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
In pitch darkness, flying low over the sea six hundred miles southeast of Mednyy Island, the smaller of the two windswept Komandorskiyes, or Commander Islands, Col. Sergei Marchenko’s attack wing of fourteen MiG-27 Flogger Ds, with three drop tanks apiece, were now turning due south toward Adak Island seventy miles away. With a jagged, rugged coastline and topography, the U.S. island, one of the Aleutians’ chain of forty-six volcanoes, looked large enough on the map, but in reality it was at no point more than twenty miles wide. Marchenko was glad they were on satellite navigation. At their attack speed, it wouldn’t take more than two minutes for the entire wing to pass over the island.
With almost half their fuel for the 1,553-mile round trip gone, they would have approximately five minutes over Adak Naval Station from the initial aiming point of the thirty-six-hundred-foot-high Mount Moffett. If all went well, they would drop over ninety-two thousand pounds of iron and laser-guided bombs on the remote American submarine base. A half hour later, Adak radar out, one thousand SPETS paratroopers, already in the air aboard seven Candid transports from both Mednyy and Beringa in the Komandorskiyes, would be chuted into the remains of Adak to take over the bomb-gutted submarine listening and provisioning base that threatened the entire Soviet east flank.
It would be strictly hit-and-run, with high losses expected. And though Sergei Marchenko’s wing would not run from a fight, the orders from STAVKA via Khabarovsk command were very specific. No aircraft were to be sacrificed in dogfights with either the advance U.S. carrier screen fighters or the relatively few American fighters on Adak. Dogfights usually meant going to afterburner, and fuel suddenly sucked up at twenty times the normal rate, leaving the Floggers with insufficient fuel to make the return journey.
To lend weight to STAVKA’s order, Sergei Marchenko, during engine start-up on Mednyy strip, had stressed that even if the enemy carrier
Hopefully all the enemy fighters between Adak and Shemya would be drawn in, the Americans logically assuming that as the prelude to any Soviet invasion of the Aleutians, the first Soviet target would be the massive early-warning radar arrays on Shemya, which was only 350 miles from the Kamchatka Peninsula ICBM sites.
Four hundred miles east of Adak, one of the huge phased radar arrays on Shemya, looking like some great wedge of black cheese in the night, was picking up six surface vessels. Either big Japanese trawlers or possible hostiles, they were bearing 293 at a distance of 150 miles. Coming in behind them at five hundred feet were nine blips traveling at Mach 1.05. Undoubtedly fighters. To cover a possible invasion force? wondered Shemya’s CO.
There were other unidentified aircraft Shemya had been tracking, but they had been much slower, possibly a long-range reconnaissance sub-hunting force. In any case, they had now passed into Adak’s radar envelope well to the east. The CO quickly turned his attention back to the faster blips and the six ships. If it was an invasion force, it was a small one. On the other hand, if the ships were chopper and VTOL — vertical takeoff and landing — fighter carriers, it would constitute a major fleet attack.
The commanding officer, or “Gatekeeper,” as he was known because of Shemya’s strategic importance, was taking no chances. He ordered eight F-4 Phantoms aloft to intercept the suspected hostiles, withholding his fourteen much faster swing-wing F-111Fs in the event of other attacks that might be coming in on the deck, successfully evading his radar to the north, south, and west of him.
The thing that puzzled CO Shemya most was that if the Soviets were going to try to take out Shemya’s early-warning capability, why hadn’t they used an attacking force of their long-range supersonic Blackjack swing- wing bombers? The duty officer, however, turned to the vast, triangular area of ocean covered by Shemya in the west, Adak four hundred miles to the east, and the
In fact, the commanding officer was half-right about the Soviets using Blackjack bombers. Six of them, from the Kurile Islands base south of Kamchatka Peninsula, each replete with over thirty-five thousand pounds of bombs, the most sophisticated electronics in the Soviet Air Force, and with a range of over eight thousand miles, were now approaching the
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
Two hundred miles south of Ireland, a bulge suddenly appeared on the surface of the dark blue Celtic Sea. The next moment the bulge erupted in a phantasm of white, the “boomer,” in this case the USS
It was the submariner’s worst nightmare, and Robert Brentwood knew that the acrid smoke pouring from the sub’s sail would alert the enemy for a hundred miles around. Yet he was the epitome of calm as he kept his men moving through Control up the sail, where he had posted his executive officer. If the fire was uncontainable, he had to get as many men as possible out and into the inflatables before setting the destructive charges that would be sure to destroy code-safe and disks along with the sub. In any event, with the carbon dioxide scrubber system out of action, the men had to get fresh air. Several off-watch crewmen, asleep when the fire had broken out, were unable to get their masks on in time and were asphyxiated by the highly toxic fumes. In the face of their loss, the thing Brentwood was most proud of, as he stood in Control, overseeing the evacuation through the dense smoke, was that there was no panic — he might have been a coach welcoming his team back to the dugout after a losing but hard-played game.
Up in the sail, Executive Officer Peter Zeldman saw men were also coming out of two of the six-foot-diameter hatches, one forward above Command and Control, the other leading up from the reactor room. But no one as yet was exiting the stern hatch above the turbine/drive space, and he reported this to Brentwood.
Brentwood knew there was a fifty-fifty chance that the fire-fighting party, having sealed themselves off in one of the forty-one cylinders that, welded together, formed the sub, might extinguish the flames if they could get in quickly enough behind the panels. But as captain, he couldn’t have taken the chance of staying submerged with the lives of over 100 men in his hands. He called up to Zeldman, “Officer of the deck, I want every available man on deck acting as a lookout. Don’t load the inflatables till you get my word.”
“Every man a lookout. Don’t load inflatables. Aye, sir.”