Jackson looked back at her, upset by her anger but unwilling to concede her point. 'I certainly hope not, Laura.'
Martian Planetary Guard Base Troop Club — Eden
The smell of marijuana smoke hung thickly in the air, overpowering even the odor of alcohol and tobacco smoke. The ventilators in the room struggled to keep up with the outpouring but it was a hopeless task. Scores of off-duty MPG soldiers of all ranks, sexes, and ages were sitting at the bar or at cocktail tables; smoking and drinking the intoxicating substances, unwinding from the stressful twenty-four hours that had just occurred. Even though the bar contained about twice as many MPG members as usual, particularly for a weekday, the absence of any marine personnel was conspicuous and a constant reminder of what had occurred.
The speech that Whiting and Jackson had just witnessed had been played in the club on the large Internet screen above the bar; the sound reproduced perfectly by speakers at every table. During the speech itself the room had been eerily quiet, the silence broken only by the occasional outraged muttering from a soldier that knew what Williams was saying was a lie. But the final part of her speech, the part addressed to the soldiers in this room, had been met with stony, worried silence.
When the speech ended conversation erupted everywhere, much of it angry, some of it terrified and hysterical.
At a table near the rear of the room, Lisa Wong and Brian Haggerty sat together. Lisa was taking a thoughtful draw off a bong the server had brought to her. She had paid for the double hit with her debit card; forking over six dollars for it, and was now smoking the last of it. Across from her Brian was sipping out of a bottle of beer. He'd declined the marijuana, not caring much for it. The two partners had coincidentally run into each other at the front door of the club an hour ago and decided to sit together.
'Brian,' Lisa said, 'you're in a combat branch and I'm only in admin so I want you to give me an honest opinion.'
'Okay,' Brian agreed, already knowing what she was going to ask.
'Can we win this thing? Can we actually hope to defeat the WestHem marines when they land here? I mean really? I know most of what that WestHem bitch said was bullshit, but she wasn't bullshitting about them sending marines over here to take this planet back from us.'
'No,' he agreed thoughtfully, 'she wasn't. They're gonna send a shitload of them here.'
'So are we fighting a hopeless cause here? I don't mind fighting for Mars. In fact I'd be more than proud to do it. And since Whiting is opening up combat branches for women, I'll volunteer for combat duty.' She smiled. 'I should be able to get in given my background, don't you think?'
Brian nodded.
'I don't even mind fighting if the odds are way against us. I will gladly take the consequences of losing too. But are there any odds? Is there
Brian picked up his beer and took a sip from it. He stared at his partner thoughtfully, thinking of a way to say what was on his mind. 'I met General Jackson a few times,' he finally said.
'Oh?'
'I did more than just meet him once. We were at a formal party for MPG promotions and I actually got to sit down and talk to him for a while. He's a very smart man. You can tell that just from a few minutes of talking to him.'
'What did you talk about?' Lisa asked, suspecting that whatever they talked about had bearing on her questions.
'Military history,' Brian replied. 'Of course I never got much further than tech school. I'm not one of the elite that was allowed into our university system. But I have studied quite a bit of military history on my own. Do you know what General Jackson's degree is in?'
'Military history,' she answered. 'Any MPG member knows that.'
'That's right,' he said. 'Military history is his passion. In the fifteen-minute conversation I had with him I could see that he was more than an expert on the subject. He is
'What?'
'There were three of them that fascinated him. Three that he told me he'd studied extensively. One is very famous; the war that brought the beginnings of what would become WestHem eventually.'
'The American Revolution,' Lisa replied. 'The birth of capitalism and so-called democracy.'
'Right,' he said. 'But the other two wars were very obscure conflicts. Most school kids today have probably never even heard of them. The first was called the Vietnam War. The second was called the Afghanistan War. Both took place in the second half of the twentieth century. All three of these wars have a single thing in common. Do you know what that is?'
Lisa's mind, assaulted by cannabis, could not think of a common thread. She shook her head.
'In all three of these wars,' he told her, 'an enemy that was better equipped, in better numbers, and that was absolutely sure of victory, invaded a smaller country expecting the conflict to be over in a matter of weeks with their unconditional victory. And in all three cases the under-equipped, undertrained, understaffed inhabitants of those lands defeated those enemies. Soundly defeated them.'
'I'm not sure I'm following you,' she said, although she was starting to get a glimmer.
'In all three of these cases the enemy — the Russians in Afghanistan, the French and the Americans in Vietnam, and the British in the revolutionary war — were invading unfamiliar terrain at the end of long supply lines. They were fighting an enemy on their home ground, an enemy that was committed to
'A shithole,' Lisa replied. 'Or worse.'
'Do you think any of the WestHem marines are going to want to die for this place? To give their life to return Mars to the WestHem corporations? Because no matter what kind of bullshit the WestHem ruling council slings via the media, anyone with any intelligence on that planet is going to
'So you think we can defeat them?' she asked. 'Drive them off this planet with poor morale? Even though they'll have five times the equipment that we do?'
Brian pulled a pack of cigarettes from his pocket and lit one with a laser lighter. He drew deeply, exhaling a plume of smoke into the air. 'I've been thinking about this a lot lately,' he told his partner, his friend. 'It goes back to those three wars. Now General Jackson hasn't confided his plans in me or anything, but I can make a few guesses as to what he's going to do. Do you know what the major factor in the victory of those three wars was?'
'Home ground?' she ventured.
He nodded. 'Exactly. The victors were on their home ground. They knew every nook and cranny of the battlefields. And they all made extensive use of guerrilla warfare. They were all under-equipped forces, with inferior weaponry. They rarely, if ever, hit the enemy head on. What they did was pick at them, piece by piece in their own rear areas. A few squads of harassment troops here and there, squads whose job was to pick off soldiers one by one, when they were least expecting it. The concept is simple.
'I believe General Jackson is going to employ a lot of special forces teams whose job it will be to do just that. To go out into the wastelands, to their very landing sites, and pick at them. To position themselves along the march and hit their tanks and APCs with lasers. To knock them off one by one and to degrade their morale.'
'And that can win the war?' she asked.
'Yes,' he said. 'Although in all of the above cases it was a long, protracted process that cost a lot of the
