“ India would certainly retaliate,” Bain added, “probably with WMDs.”
“Mr. President, President Mazar’s office says he will call you immediately when the current situation has terminated,” the communications officer said.
“Dammit,” Gardner swore. He looked at his advisers around the huge electronic map. “All right, folks, let me hear options.”
“No choice, Mr. President-we have to take those missiles out,” Secretary of Defense Turner said. “Mazar won’t say if he ordered those missiles to deploy or not, or if he’s planning on launching them, or if some Taliban gang got hold of them. A cruise-missile attack is the only way.”
“I agree, sir,” National Security Adviser Carlyle said. “We should launch immediately.”
“General?”
“Agreed,” Bain said.
“Ken?”
“Notify New Delhi and Islamabad first,” the vice president said.
“But I think we might have another option. General Raydon?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You and Undersecretary Page briefed the National Security Council last year on these weapon platforms of yours,” Phoenix said. “You said they were being armed with self-defense and antiballistic-missile weapons, but you also mentioned as a footnote the space attack weapon. I seem to remember you had a successful test of that weapon back then, so I assume you are still testing it.”
“Yes, sir. It’s called ‘Mjollnir’-‘Thor’s Hammer.’” Several of the president’s advisers raised their eyebrows, just now remembering; President Gardner still looked confused.
“What’s its status?”
“Still in research and development, sir,” Raydon said.
“Undersecretary Page and Secretary Banderas seemed to indicate it was well beyond that stage, General,” Phoenix said. “What’s the real status?”
There was a slight, uncomfortable pause; then: “Mjollnir has been deployed on all of the weapon platforms for mate, stability, and connectivity tests, sir.”
“What’s this all about, Ken?” the president asked.
“There’s a weapon on those orbiting garages that can take out those missiles…in seconds, not minutes.”
“What?”
“If a garage is in position, it can fire a precision-guided penetrator that can take out those missiles,” Phoenix said. “General Raydon, when do you have a garage in position?”
“Stand by, sir.” A moment later: “One Trinity vehicle carrying a Mjollnir reentry weapon with three penetrator sabots will be over the target’s horizon in about two minutes, and will be in optimum launch position for about ninety seconds. The next one won’t be in position for twenty-seven minutes.”
“Whoa, whoa, wait a damn minute,” Gardner said. “What are these penetrators? Are they nuclear?”
“They are simply titanium shapes, like a big antitank sabot round, sir,” Raydon said. “They have no explosive warhead of any kind-they’re designed to destroy with sheer velocity and mass. They reenter Earth’s atmosphere at greater than orbital speed: thousands of miles an hour, like a meteor.”
“A meteor?”
“Ninety seconds to go, sir,” Raydon said. “Yes, Mr. President, the reentry vehicle carries three sabots through the atmosphere and then uses sensors to get a precise fix on the target before releasing the sabots at hypersonic speed. Shall I engage?”
“Just shut the hell up, all of you,” the president said. He stared at the holographic map in front of him, uncertainty evident in his face.
“Mr. President, Prime Minister Pawar of India is on the line.”
The president snatched up the phone. “Mr. Prime Minister, this is Joseph Gardner…yes, sir, this is indeed an emergency. We have detected three Pakistani rockets that appear to be in launch position. We have attempted to contact President Mazar but he won’t talk to me. He-yes, sir, I’m told they appear to be Shaheen-2 intermediate- range ballistic missiles.”
“Thirty seconds, Mr. President,” Raydon said.
“Mr. Prime Minister, I don’t have much time,” Gardner said. “I am advising you that I intend on attacking these rockets…using cruise missiles fired from sea.” Most of the president’s advisers looked relieved; Phoenix looked confused. “I’m doing this because…yes, from a U.S. warship visiting Karachi. I don’t want you to mistake it for an attack against India. I don’t know who is in control of those rockets, and for the safety of the entire region I…they are positioned east of Quetta, at a town called-”
“Platform’s over the horizon, sir,” Raydon said. “Ninety seconds before we lose it.”
“Mr. Prime Minister, I didn’t call you so you could attack those rockets yourself,” Gardner said. “I think that would spark a wider exchange between India and Pakistan. I called to advise you of our actions so you wouldn’t try to attack. I’m urging you to let us take action and asking you to be on extra alert but do not take offensive action. I am asking that you-” The president’s expression turned blank, then to disbelief, then to red-hot anger. “Shit, he hung up!” He slammed the phone onto its cradle so hard the holographic images on the Situation Room’s conference table shimmered. “Get him on the line again, and then-”
“Scud, scud, scud!” a female voice shouted. “All stations, this is Armstrong, single ground missile launch detected from location sierra-alpha one-three.” As the stunned presidential advisers watched, one of the holographic images of the Shaheen-2 rockets they were watching lifted off and began to fly above the conference table. “Armstrong is tracking a single ground-launched missile. Preliminary trajectory appears to be suborbital ballistic, flight time estimate nine minutes.”
Ken Phoenix adjusted the display so they could see the computed flight path of the rocket-and sure enough, it was headed directly toward New Delhi, India. “Mr. President, order Armstrong to attack both the missile and the ones on the ground! The platform is in position now-”
“Attack an ally with a hypersonic meteor from space? Are you crazy, Ken…?”
“Sir, if they launch all those missiles and they have WMDs on them, they could kill millions of people,” Phoenix argued. “Even if the Taliban or rogue forces were involved, and not the Pakistani government, it would certainly start a war.”
“I don’t believe the Paks would allow missiles with WMDs to fall into the hands of the Taliban,” Gardner said. “This is a provocation, nothing more. Someone wants to start a shooting war. We tell New Delhi to stay calm and not overreact, and we’ll come through this.”
“But what if you’re wrong, sir?” Phoenix insisted. “What if they’re armed with WMDs? We have a way to stop them. Order the space station to attack.”
“The world will think I’m nuts, firing those meteor things-”
“You can’t just sit back and do nothing, sir-”
“Hey, Phoenix, shut the hell up and remember who you’re talking to!” the president snapped, jabbing a finger at his vice president. The room fell silent except for the reports of the missile’s flight path being relayed from Armstrong Space Station. Gardner looked at the holographic 3-D map for a few moments, his eyes darting here and there; then, his head still lowered, he said in a low voice, “Order the space station to attack those other rockets and nail that one that lifted off.”
“Armstrong, this is General Bain, immediate attack commit authorized by the president,” Bain ordered.
“Armstrong copies, attack authorized,” Kai Raydon responded.
“All stations, all stations, this is Armstrong, attack-commit authorization received,” the voice of Senior Master Sergeant Valerie “Seeker” Lukas said. She was at her monitor and tracking console in Armstrong Space Station’s command module. “All personnel, stand by.” To Kai Raydon beside her, she said, “All combat stations reporting manned and ready, sir.”
“Okay, kids, this is for real this time, but we do it just like we’ve rehearsed,” Kai said on the stationwide intercom. “Line it up, Seeker.”
“Roger, sir,” Lukas said. “Kingfisher Zero-Niner is responding to telemetry and reports ready, sir.” She turned to Raydon. “This will be a Mjollnir and ABM attack from the same platform at almost the same time, sir-I don’t think we’ve ever practiced that before.”