Jintao sat back in his chair and stared at the ceiling. Then he turned to Legchog Raidi Zhuren, the chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, who had so far remained quiet.
“Will two thousand troops give you a sufficient level of security until we can replace your armor in four or five days?” Jintao asked.
“Mr. President,” Zhuren said. “Tibet has been quiet for years—I don’t see that changing any time soon. Now, if I may be excused, I should be leaving for my return to Tibet.”
Jintao turned to General Quing. “Order it done.”
Next, Jintao turned to the Chinese ambassador to Russia.
“You,” he said loudly, “figure out what the Russians have planned. If they are planning to annex Mongolia, let them know we won’t stand for that. The Mongols conquered us once—I’m not going to give them a chance to try it again.”
Within two hours of the meeting, the first Chinese transport planes began to land at Lhasa Airport and began ferrying troops north to Xinjiang Province. In the haste to counter the Russian threat, the organization of the Chinese army in Tibet would suffer. Junior officers would be placed in charge of partially staffed battalions. Weapons and ammunition would be depleted. The mission and purpose would be compromised.
CABRILLO was napping in the rear of the Gulfstream when his secure telephone buzzed.
“Go ahead,” he said, instantly awake.
“It’s me,” Overholt said, “with good news. The NSA just called the DCI, who called me. The Russian bluff is working. Transport planes are leaving the airport in Lhasa and hauling troops north. In addition, a column of tanks has just left the city and they’re traveling at breakneck speed. Everyone said it’s looking up so far.”
Cabrillo glanced at his watch. “I’ll be there in about an hour or so. Are we all set up for the meeting?”
“It’s all taken care of,” Overholt said.
“Good,” Cabrillo said. “If we reach an agreement there, I’ll continue north.”
“You really think you can sell everybody on this idea?” Overholt asked.
“This mission’s like an onion,” Cabrillo said. “Every time I peel back a layer, there’s a layer underneath.”
“That’s not the half of it,” Overholt said. “The Dalai Lama has a new plan.”
“I can’t wait,” Cabrillo said.
“I think you’re going to like it,” Overholt told him.
38
THE
Six men—Seng, Murphy, Reyes, King, Meadows and Kasim—would be tasked with the offensive operations. They would link up with the
The thirteenth member was Cabrillo. He would arrive after he finished his pair of meetings.
To the untrained, the mission looked like suicide: a dozen or so against a force that was close to two thousand. Odds of one hundred and fifty-plus to one. It looked like a bloodbath in the making. A trained observer, however, would be praying for the Chinese troops. First, one had to consider the
That was where the Corporation excelled.
Already, most of the Chinese forces inside Tibet were heading north in a helter-skelter deployment that had left little time for planning and even less for preparation. The troops left around Lhasa were not the cream of the crop; they were the leftovers—the administration clerks, mechanics and painters, plodders and planners. The officers were not combat trained, would not be knowledgeable about their individual soldiers’ strengths and weaknesses, and would lack a complete picture of where all the parts fit together.
Right now in Tibet, the army was a jigsaw puzzle without a design.
KASIM walked from the truck and approached the C-130 radio operator. “What have you got from inside?” he asked.
“We have another plane circling out of sight of the Chinese deployment, capturing their signals and bouncing them here,” the operator said. “Right now, most of the communications pertain to laying fuel dumps on the road north. The tanks are outrunning the fuel supply.”
“Have you heard from the tail?” Kasim asked.
The operator, a Chinese American formerly employed by the Defense Intelligence Agency and now attached to the CIA proprietary airline supplying the C-130, scanned his notes. “As of nineteen thirty Zulu time, the rear of the convoy had passed through Naggu.”
“They’re making good time,” Kasim noted. “At this speed, they will pass through Amdo before eleven P.M. and then another two hours or so and they will make the border with Tsinghai Province.”
The operator stared at a classified satellite photograph and compared it with a detailed Defense Mapping