“I’m surprised that it took them this long to find it,” Sergeant Major Suggins said, “not that it took this long after they did decide to tell us to neutralize it.”
Naylor grunted.
“Is everybody here, Wes?”
“Yes, sir. I even mentioned to General McFadden, after we got the ‘We found it’ message, that you would probably want to see him shortly. He was on his way to the golf course.”
“A sound mind in a healthy body, Sergeant Major,” Naylor said. “Round ’em up.”
“Yes, sir.”
Just under five minutes later, what Suggins thought of as the “Heavy Brass” (General Albert McFadden, USAF, the CentCom deputy commander; Vice-Admiral Louis J. Warley, USN, the CentCom intelligence officer; and Lieutenant General George H. Potter, USA, the J-5 special operations officer) and the “Heavy Civilians” (Mr. Lawrence P. Fremont of the CIA and Mr. Brian Willis of the FBI) were all sitting around the conference table in Naylor’s office.
The civilians, Suggins thought privately, weren’t really needed. The CIA and the FBI had done their job. The stolen 727 had been located, even if that had taken a hell of a lot longer than it should have. But if they had not been summoned, Suggins knew, they would have felt left out, and Suggins knew how important it was to Naylor that the civilians felt they were part of the team.
General McFadden was even in uniform. Usually at this time of the morning, he was dressed for the links. It was his practice to come to his office early, read the overnight intel and messages, and then commence his physical training regimen. General officers were permitted to select their own method of physical exercise; McFadden had a permanently reserved 0845 tee time. Rank Hath Its Privileges.
“I’ve just spoken with Secretary Beiderman,” General Naylor began. "CentCom has been tasked with neutralizing the stolen 727, which, as you all know, has been located at an airfield, Zandery, in Suriname. Secretary Beiderman made it clear that he wants this done as quietly as possible.”
He looked around the conference table and had a sudden tangential thought.
I’ll be damned. Here’s my chance to zing McFadden. And I almost blew it.
“Let’s see,” Naylor asked, innocently, “who’s junior?”
“I guess I am, General,” Brian Willis of the FBI said. “But I’d really like to defer to someone in uniform.”
“I associate myself totally with my learned colleague,” Lawrence Fremont of the CIA said.
There were chuckles. General Potter said, “Cowards!” “I guess you’re next up on the totem pole, right, Lou?” Naylor asked.
“Only because the Navy refuses to appropriately acknowledge my talents,” Admiral Warley said.
“Okay, Lou. How do we handle this?”
“The first thing that occurs to me is putting an umbrella over the coast of Suriname, and, if this plane tries to go anywhere, we force it to return to Suriname.”
“And if it refuses to return to Suriname?” Naylor asked.
“Take it out, General,” Admiral Warley said.
“Anything else?”
“The umbrella is Step One. Step Two, in my judgment, would be to send McNab’s people in as backup in case the CIA is unable to quietly neutralize the airplane on the ground. I’m presuming you’re already working on that, right Larry?”
“I don’t want to give the wrong impression when I say, ‘Sure we are,’ ” Lawrence Fremont of the CIA said. “We are, but I understand we have a one-man station there—he’s the guy who made the visual confi
rmation—and there’s not much he can do by himself. I’m sure help is on the way. No telling, frankly, how long that will take.”
“Thank you, Larry,” Naylor said. “And now we will hear from the next-senior officer, General Potter. Is there any doubt in anyone’s mind that he will not suggest sending in the Peace Corps to reason with these people?”
There were chuckles.
“I agree with Admiral Warley that we send in McNab’s people . . .”
“Why am I not surprised?” Naylor asked.
“But not with his priorities. I think McNab—Gray Fox— has the experience to deal with this sort of situation. If you order it done quietly, that’s what you’ll get.”