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  Dedicated to my two most significant “sea daddies,” who left me this year for their final call:

  Everett E. Barrett, who raised me from a wily “screaming seaman” to First Class Petty Officer, then set me on the path to OCS, where his efforts hit the first milestone.

  AND

  Roy H. Boehm, who frantically tried to teach me how to protect myself in the wardroom and never forget where I came from.

  I hope I made their dedicated efforts meaningful!

  — RICHARD MARCINKO

  THE NAVY SEAL PRAYER

  Dear Father in Heaven,

  If I may respectfully say so, sometimes you are a strange God. Though you love all mankind, it seems you have a special predilection too.

  You seem to love those men who can stand up alone, who face impossible odds, who challenge every bully and every tyrant.

  Those men who know the heat and loneliness of a calvary. Possibly you cherish men of this stamp because you recognize the mark of your only Son in them.

  Since this unique group of men known as the SEALs know calvary and suffering, teach them now the mystery of the resurrection — that they are indestructible, that they will live forever because of their deep faith in you.

  And when they do come to heaven, may I respectfully warn you, Dear Father, they also know how to celebrate. So please be ready for them when they insert under your pearly gates.

  Bless them, their devoted families, and their country on this glorious occasion.

  We ask this through the merits of your Son, Christ Jesus the Lord. Amen.

  By the Reverend E. J. McMalhon, S.J. LCDR, CHC, USN

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Dedication

  The Navy SEAL Prayer

  Part One: Fun and Games

  Chapter 1

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  ( V )

  ( VI )

  Chapter 2

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  ( V )

  ( VI )

  Chapter 3

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  Part Two: Trouble and More Trouble

  Chapter 4

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  ( V )

  ( VI )

  Chapter 5

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  ( V )

  Chapter 6

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  ( V )

  ( VI )

  Part Three: Domino Theory

  Chapter 7

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  Chapter 8

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  ( V )

  Chapter 9

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  ( V )

  ( VI )

  Chapter 10

  ( I )

  ( II )

  ( III )

  ( IV )

  Also by Richard Marcinko

  Copyright

  Win with ability, not with numbers.

  — FIELD MARSHAL PRINCE ALEKSANDR V. SUVOROV, QUOTED IN DANCHENKO AND VYDRIN, MILITARY PEDAGOGY, 1973

  1

  ( I )

  If there’s one thing my sea daddies taught me, it’s that life is short. You gotta grab it by the balls while you still can, enjoy those little moments of pleasure.

  You know the moments I mean. Whether you’re drop-kicking the butt of some tango who’s dreaming of paradise while fondling his suicide vest, or maybe reaming a new orifice for a C21 officer, you have to make the most of the opportunity. Savor it. Life just doesn’t contain that many moments of personal triumph.

  But there are also moments when you have to relax and just let life flow by.

  Like, for instance, when you’re hurtling over the countryside in an Mi-8TV/India helicopter so close to the ground that the crew chief’s spit can rebound off a rock and hit the pilot in the face.

  Those tracers in the distance?

  Nothing to worry about. They’re not even firing in your direction. Yet.

  The surface-to-air missile battery looming to the right?

  What’s the fuss? That’s designed to shoot down airplanes, not helicopters.

  The fact that you’re flying over the disputed area of Kashmir, across one of the most volatile borders in the world?

  Certainly a plus.

  You don’t think?

  Then maybe it’s a good thing you weren’t with us.

  But truth be told, I couldn’t have been more relaxed if I was back at Rogue Manor, sipping a medicinal Sapphire prescribed by the good Dr. Bombay himself.

  There were plenty of reasons to relax. For one thing, I had no direct role in the operation. On paper at least. I was just there to observe, a guest of the Indian government.

  Of course, we weren’t in India at the time, but I’m never one to stand on technicalities. I was certainly ready to observe — watching the bullets fly out of my MP5 counts, right?

  So why shouldn’t I relax and let the helo toss me around a bit?

  * * *

  This would normally be the part where I’d explain what the hell I was doing in Kashmir. But my editor likes it when I get right to the action, so we’ll save the explanation for a little later.

  For now, let’s just say I wasn’t in Kashmir, or India for that matter, to knit sweaters.

  * * *

  The helo banked into a sharp turn to tuck around the mountain. Treetops scraped the undercarriage, tussling it a bit before letting go. Our Mi-8TV/India was a special demonstration version of the Russian Mi-8TV, which itself is a souped-up Mi-17 with guns, missiles, and assorted nasty shit designed to complicate the enemy’s day. You can think of it as Russia’s answer to the MH-60DAP, the armed Blackhawk hand-built to ferry spec op troops deep behind the bad guys’ lines (DAP = Deep Armed Penetrator, or some vulgar variation thereof).

  The Indians had recently purchased several Mi-17s and were reviewing the Mi-8TV/India as part of their plans to upgrade their military. Helicopters have a problem flying at high altitude, which can be a problem in the Himalayas, since even when you’re low there you’re pretty high. Kashmir ain’t the Himalayas, but some of the valleys there clock in at five thousand feet, so it ain’t low either. I’m happy to say the Mi-8TV was doing fine. Better than my stomach, even.

  I’d mentioned tracers.

  These were actually not being fired at us, even though they were in the general vicinity. They were part of a training exercise being conducted by the Indian army close to the border of the disputed area it shares, or rather doesn’t share, with Pakistan. Kashmir-Jammu is claimed by both Pakistan and India, and occupied by both … and China. Just to keep things interesting.

  China?

  That’s right. China controls about twenty percent of the historical demarcation of the region claimed by India. That’s not quite as much as Pakistan, which I believe has between thirty-five and thirty-nine, but it’s more than enough to keep things interesting.

  (And complicated. The State Department used to have some good backgrounders available to the public, but you won’t find them online anymore, at least not unless you have my intel and computer geek Shunt’s skills. If you care for a book, Victoria Schofield’s Kashmir in Conflict is among the better choices.)

  Pakistan and India ar
en’t at war right now, but tensions are always high between the two countries. Both armies have been known to hold maneuvers on their respective sides of the line, partly to keep their troops sharp, partly to show the other side they’re not taking guff, and partly just because.

  Tonight’s action was none of the above. The maneuvers, with live ammo, were being staged to draw the Pakistan army’s attention away from our little op. While all eyes were focused on the border area, we were dropping in on a little schoolyard roughly fifty miles behind the Pakistani lines.

  Generally when you’re a passenger in a helicopter, you don’t measure distance in miles, or kilometers for that matter. You measure it in time and stomach acid.

  It took us roughly fifteen minutes and two Maalox moments before we cleared the mountain and slid down into the valley that ran up toward our destination. It was a long fifteen minutes. Every one of the fifteen people aboard, including yours truly, felt their intestines steadily tighten with every minute that passed.

  Save one.

  That exception was Shotgun, aka Paul “Shotgun” Fox, one of my young bucks who was shadowing me on the mission. Besides his mandatory Twinkies and a slightly crushed package of Drake’s cakes, Shotgun had brought along a huge bag of peanuts for the mission. He ate them the entire time we flew, cracking each with his fingers, pinching the nuts into his mouth, then tossing the shells on the floor. I don’t think I’ve ever been in a helicopter that smelled just-roasted before.

  One that wasn’t on fire, I mean.

  I have no idea how he managed to eat them. In my mind, you can’t eat peanuts without a cold beer to savor the flavor.

  None of the Indians we were with complained. It wasn’t surprising. Shotgun stands maybe six-eight in his bare feet. He weighs three hundred pounds, give or take a side of roast beef or two. Which he’d had a particular hankering for ever since we came to India.

  Not to give you the impression that the Indians we were with were small guys, much less that they were wimps. On the contrary. We were observing the inaugural mission of India’s Special Squadron Zero — the rough Indian equivalent of my old Red Cell outfit. And they were about to take action against a terrorist cell that was using Pakistan as a safe haven.

  Our target had once been a small farm on the outskirts of a village I’ll call Heartburnville. I’m using a fake name because the village was not affiliated with the terrorists, and in fact was exploited by them. The tangos would go into town and take what they wanted from the stores without paying — not usual tango practice, I might note, and a real mistake in this case, since it stirred up feelings against them. At the time, I thought this had helped lead to our receiving the intelligence on their plans. That little ass-u-me assumption proved incorrect.

  But I’m getting ahead of the story.

  The helo took one last hard bank and pitched forward, pirouetting into a small field at the base of a hill. “Go! Go! Go!” yelled the team sergeant, urging the men out of the chopper.

  The sergeant was Sanjin Phurem, a fortyish army noncom who’d served in Kashmir before being assigned somewhere in southern India. Like everyone else in Special Squadron Zero, he was a volunteer.

  Shotgun and I followed the Indians out. There was just enough moonlight to see the rocks that littered the field. I moved to my left, looking for the unit’s commander, Captain Dyas Birla.

  Birla was an Indian naval officer who had been part of Marcos — the Indian Marine Commando Force or MCF as it’s often called in India. You can think of MCF as a marine recon unit with SEAL aspirations. His skills were more administrative and political than actually combat-related, an unfortunate by-product of the Indian military system. Still, he did lead from the front, the number one characteristic you need in a special warfare officer.

  “Good so far, yes, Commander Rick?” he asked as I ran up.

  I’m not sure exactly why or when he had decided to give me the title — he must have skimmed my first book,2 stopping about midway, then put three and two together — but he meant it as a compliment, so I grunted. Things were looking decent, but we had a bit of a walk ahead of us — so as not to attract too much attention, the helo had dropped us a little more than three miles from the actual target. The chopper’s muffled engines would have been almost impossible for anyone there to hear.

  “We will commence our operation at exactly 0300,” Captain Birla told his men as they set out. “We will observe strict radio silence until this point, unless there is the necessity of communication.”

  That gave us two hours to walk exactly 3.2 miles, or 5.15 kilometers. Piece of cake.

  Shotgun smirked at me.

  “No communication until Murphy steps in,” he said.

  “Murphy doesn’t use a radio,” I told him. “He’s everywhere.”

  “Kind of like Santa Claus,” said Shotgun. “Or the Good Humor man. Want some peanuts?”

  I shook my head and started walking. Shotgun’s reference set is a little different from most normal human beings.

  Roughly an hour later, we arrived at the fence of a madrassa — or “a Muslim school, college, or university that is often part of a mosque” as Webster succinctly puts it in his dictionary.

  What Webster doesn’t say is that such schools are often used as training sites and havens for terrorist organizations — most famously the organization operated and funded by a certain Saudi Arabian real estate developer known for his great love of Americans and general kindness.

  Good to see you recognize sarcasm when you hear it, grasshopper. You can sit at the head of the class.

  The madrassa in this case was run by a lovely group of religious fanatics and would-be mass murderers who called themselves India for Islam. When they were feeling a bit loose, they would let go of “for” and just use India Islam. Clearly a bunch of wild and crazy guys.

  Like a lot of Muslim terrorist groups, India for Islam wasn’t directly associated with bin Laden, at least as far as we knew. It had sent a few suicide bombers into the Indian portions of Kashmir, but had had relatively small ambitions until very recently. Over the past six months, it had recruited committed jihadists and nuts — excuse me, dedicated Islamic students — wishing to engage in a demonstration of the Prophet’s peaceful intentions. It had established this school, filling it with some three dozen bright and bushy-tailed freshmen. Their study included Blowing Up Infidels 101 and Torching Nonbelievers 102.

  We were about to give them an upper level class in Butt Kicking, with Ass Whipping as an elective.

  Now if this had been an American operation, we would have arrived with all sorts of real-time intelligence literally at our fingertips. At a minimum, we would have had a Predator overhead, supplying real-time infrared, and more than likely a communications-stealing “asset” probing the airwaves as well.

  But this was an Indian operation, and they don’t have a flock of Predators, let alone Global Hawks and EC-130s straining to get into action. So the mission had been planned according to old-school doctrine. Our little group was just the advance team, scouting ahead for the main assault team, a Marine Marcos force of roughly three platoon-strength that would arrive in fifty-nine minutes.

  To be honest, I kind of like the old ways. Eyes in the sky are never a substitute for boots on the ground. And intelligence is never a substitute for common sense. But then I was an old-school guy before old-school was popular.

  The squad circled the perimeter of the property, observing the two large buildings at the center of the compound …

  We’ll skip ahead — you’re only missing the boring, crouch-through-the-mud-and-breathe-silently stuff …

  Within a half hour, Special Squadron Zero had determined that there were two lookouts on duty, both on the eastern side of the school facing in the direction of the border. Additionally, each building had a sentry sitting in the vestibule near the door. Our intelligence had indicated that the building to the east — one-story, flat roof, school-type structure with eight or nine classrooms —
would generally be empty for the night. The second structure to the west — three stories, also a flat roof, about three-quarters as long as the first, though just as wide — was used as a dorm, housing one to two dozen “students” and at least three teachers.

  The students were committed jihadists; their teachers were crazy psychos, and we should consider them all armed and dangerous. Even when asleep.

  So far, so good. Intel solid, and the op was running right on schedule. The captain radioed the main assault team and gave them a green light.

  Shotgun practically giggled.

  “When’s Murphy showing up?” he asked, shaking his head. He produced a Three Musketeers bar from his tac vest — I have no idea how he manages it, but the boy is basically a walking snack bar. If he were in the Peace Corps, he’d be a one-man famine relief force.

  “Who is this Murphy, Commander Rick?” asked Birla.

  I thought Shotgun was going to choke on his chocolate.

  “You don’t know who Murphy is?” he asked. “Murphy is the king. Murphy is the man. He makes the law.”

  “Law?”

  “Jeez, Captain. Murphy’s Law. You never heard of it?”

  “Is this physics? Every action there is an opposite and equal reaction?”

  Murphy’s Law — whatever can go wrong will go wrong, at the worst possible moment — is indeed a law of physics, but I set the captain straight. I didn’t want Shotgun choking on his food.

  “Oh, yes. Plenty of room for Murphy,” said Birla. “We are ready for all contingency.”

  Shotgun winced. If there’s one thing my guys know, you don’t bait Murphy. You never ever say out loud that you have the drop on him.

  Even if, like Special Squad Zero, everything is under control. Especially then.

  But you can’t blame Captain Birla, really. Things were in good shape. The helicopters with the main assault team were twenty minutes away. All we had to do was wait for them to arrive.

  And we would have — if that had been the plan.

  * * *

  A few of my most faithful readers have taken it upon themselves of late to point out that yours truly is no longer the proverbial spring chicken. Concerned about my health, they have suggested that I take a more laid-back role in my ops, going so far as to suggest that I now devote myself less to fun and games and more to mellower pursuits.