The sum of all fears - Tom Clancy [413]
"That makes sense, sir," the weapons officer thought.
"Okay, program it to sound like we are now, and give it a southerly course."
"Right." Maines number-three torpedo tube was loaded with a MOSS, a Mobile Submarine Simulator. Essentially a modified torpedo itself, the MOSS contained a sonar transducer connected to a noise generator, instead of a warhead. It would radiate the sound of an Ohio-class submarine, and was designed to simulate a damaged one. Since shaft damage was one of the few reasons that an Ohio might make noise, that option was already programmed in. The weapons officer selected the proper noise track, and launched the weapon a few minutes later. The MOSS sped off to the south, and two thousand yards away, it began radiating.
The skies had cleared over Charleston, South Carolina. What had fallen as snow in Virginia and Maryland had been mainly sleet here. The afternoon sun had removed most of that, returning the antebellum city to its normally pristine state. As the Admiral commanding Submarine Group Six watched from the tender, two of his ballistic-missile submarines started down the Cooper River for the sea and safety. He wasn't the only one to watch. One hundred ninety miles over his head, a Soviet reconnaissance satellite made its pass, continuing up the coast to Norfolk, where the sky was also clearing. The satellite down-linked its pictures to the Russian intelligence center on Cuba's western tip. From there it was immediately relayed by communications satellite. Most of the Russian satellites used high-polar orbits, and had not been affected by the BMP. The imagery was in Moscow in a matter of seconds.
"Yes?" the Defense Minister asked.
"We have imagery of three American naval bases. Missile submarines at Charleston and King's Bay are putting to sea."
"Thank you." The Defense Minister replaced the phone. Another threat. He relayed it at once to President Narmonov.
"What does that mean?"
"It means that the military action taken by the Americans is not merely defensive. Some of the submarines in question carry the Trident D-5 missile, which has first-strike capability. You'll recall how interested the Americans were in forcing us to eliminate our SS-18s?"
"Yes, and they are removing a large number of their Minutemen," Narmonov said. "So?"
"So, they don't need land-based missiles to make a first-strike. They can do it from submarines. We cannot. We depend on our land-based ICBMs for that."
"And what of our SS-18s?"
"We're removing the warheads from some of them even as we speak, and if they ever get that damned deactivation facility working, we'll be in full compliance with the treaty - we are now, in fact, just the damned Americans don't admit it." The Defense Minister paused. Narmonov wasn't getting it. "In other words, while we have eliminated some of our most accurate missiles, the Americans still have theirs. We are at a strategic disadvantage."
"I have not had much sleep, and my thinking is not at its best," Narmonov said testily. "You agreed to this treaty document only a year ago, and now you're telling me that we are threatened by it?"
They're all the same, the Defense Minister thought. They never listen, they never really pay attention. Tell them something a hundred times and they just don't hear you!
The elimination of so many missiles and warheads changes the correlation of forces -"
"Rubbish! We're still equal in every way!" President Narmonov objected.
"That is not the question. The important factor is the relationship between the number of launchers - and their relative vulnerability - and the number of warheads available to both sides. We can still strike first and eliminate the American land-based missile force with our land-based missiles. That is why they were so willing to remove half of theirs. But the majority of their warheads are at sea, and now, for the first time, such sea-based missiles are totally adequate for a disarming first strike."
"Kuropatkin," Narmonov said. "Are you hearing this?"
"Yes, I am. The Defense Minister