SEALS: BATTLELINE
SEALS 05
JACK TERRAL
HIT AND RUN LIKE HELL
Two M-203 grenade launchers barked, and as their projectiles arced across the thirty meters of ground toward the objective, Tex Benson pumped the trigger of his SAW, sending three short bursts of 5.56-millimeter rounds straight into the enemy fighting position. As soon as the two grenades struck their target and exploded, the entire section leaped to their feet and made a quick rush toward the objective. No fire was being returned, and Cruiser continued the attack completely up the slope without resistance. They reached the top and could see the ripped-up body of a Zaheya soldier sprawled in his own blood on the dirt inside his post.
Suddenly more enemy soldiers appeared from a bunker exit fifteen meters away. They jumped back as soon as the SEALs opened up on them. Cruiser knew that he and his section had pressed their luck about as far as they could. It would be only moments before the whole enemy force responded to the assault.
"Haul ass!"
*
Titles in the SEALS series by Jack Terral
SEALS
SEALS: GUERRILLA WARFARE
SEALS: BATTLECRAFT
SEALS: ROLLING THUNDER
SEALS: BATTLELINE
SEALS: BATTLELINE
*
NOTE: Enlisted personnel in this book are identified by their ranks (petty officer third class, chief petty officer, master chief petty officer, etc.) rather than their ratings (boatswain's mate, yeoman, etc.) for clarification of status and position within the chain of command. However, when a man's rating is significant in the story, he is identified by that designation.
*
TABLE OF ORGANIZATION
BRANNIGAN'S BRIGANDS
HEADQUARTERS
Lieutenant William "Wild Bill" Brannigan
(Commanding Officer)
PO2C Francisco "Frank" Gomez (RTO)
PO3C James "Doc" Bradley (Hospital Corpsman)
.
SNIPER TEAM
PO2C Bruno Puglisi
PO2C Josef "Joe" Miskoski
.
PATROL TEAM
PO1C Michael "Connie" Concord (Team Leader)
PO2C Mikael "Mike" Assad
PO2C David "Dave" Leibowitz
PO2C Garth Redhawk
PO2C Edward "Matty" Matsuno
.
FIRST ASSAULT SECTION
Lieutenant Junior Grade James "Jim" Cruiser
(Section Commander)
PO3C Earl "Tex" Benson (SAW Gunner)
.
ALPHA FIRE TEAM
PO1C Guttorm "Gutsy" Olson (Team Leader)
PO2C Peter "Pete" Dawson (Rifleman)
PO3C Enrico "Rick" Morales (Grenadier)
.
BRAVO FIRE TEAM
PO1C Montgomery "Monty" Sturgis (Team Leader)
PO2C Andrei "Andy" Malachenko (Rifleman)
PO3C Wallace "Wally" Halonen (Grenadier)
.
SECOND ASSAULT SECTION
Ensign Orlando Taylor (Section Commander)
PO3C Douglas "Doug" MacTavish (SAW Gunner)
.
CHARLIE FIRE TEAM
PO1C Paul Schreiner (Team Leader)
PO2C Reynauld "Pech" Pecheur (Rifleman)
PO3C Uziel "Uzi" Melech (Grenadier)
.
DELTA FIRE TEAM
PO1C Antonio "Tony" Valenzuela (Team Leader)
PO2C Arnold "Arnie" Bernardi (Rifleman)
PO3C George Fotopoulus (Grenadier)
.
THIRD ASSAULT SECTION
Senior Chief Petty Officer Buford Dawkins
(Section Commander)
PO3C James Duncan (SAW Gunner)
.
ECHO FIRE TEAM
PO1C Lemar Smith (Team Leader)
PO3C Guy Devereaux (Rifleman)
PO3C Paulo Garcia (Grenadier)
.
FOXTROT FIRE TEAM
PO1C Thomas "Tom" Greene (Team Leader)
PO3C Chadwick "Chad" Murchison (Rifleman)
PO3C J. T. Snooker (Grenadier)
.
FIRE SUPPORT SECTION
Chief Petty Officer Matthew "Matt" Gunnarson
(Section Commander)
.
FIRST MACHINE GUN CREW
PO2C Charles "Chuck" Betnarik (Gunner)
PO3C Arlo Bartholomew (Rifleman/Ammo Bearer)
.
SECOND MACHINE GUN CREW
PO2C Dennis "Tiny" Burke (Gunner)
PO3C Humphrey "Hump" Dobbs (Rifleman/Ammo Bearer)
.
THIRD MACHINE GUN CREW
PO2C Gregory "Greg" Beaver (Gunner)
PO3C Terrence "Terry" O'Rourke
(Rifleman/Ammo Bearer)
*
Prussian General Karl von Clausewitz, Principles of War, as paraphrased by PO2C Bruno Puglisi of Brannigan's Brigands:
You're always open to attack unless you're attacking, so what you gotta do in the meantime is cop a defensive attitude and use all the cover and concealment you can until you're ready to come out and kick some serious butt.
PROLOGUE
ZAHEYA POSITIONS
IRAN-AFGHANISTAN BORDER 1 JUNE
THE newly organized unit was the spearhead of the Iranian Army's special warfare operations that had been put together for a desperate gamble in that part of the world. It had been officially designated as Zur Jamie Entegham (Strike Force Vengeance) and was referred to by its Farsi acronym of Zaheya. It numbered four officers who commanded sixty noncommissioned officers and enlisted men, and although it was nowhere near brigade size, the overall commander was a brigadier. His name was Shahruz Khohollah, one of the organizers of Iran's recently established Special Forces. This able leader had been chosen to lead the Zaheya not because of its size, but because of the far-reaching consequences of the mission assigned it.
This objective was both military and political, with the ambitious goal of bringing all the Shiite Muslim insurgencies in the entire Middle East under the command and control of the Iranian government. This ambitious project was designed to ultimately create a modern Persian Empire that would rule that part of the world while benefiting from its massive oil reserves.
The opening salvos of this newly hatched imperialistic plot was happening along the Iran-Afghanistan border, but at this point in time, neither the civilians in the Iranian government nor the General Staff of the national army wanted to create an attention-grabbing incident. Certain political and diplomatic events that they hoped were only temporary limited their grandiose scheme for conquering surrounding nations. Thus an all-out war of fully equipped division-size units would do more to impede those ambitions than advance them.
Thus Brigadier Khohollah suggested that a smaller group of elite troops could make very effective probing attacks into Afghanistan to eventually gain control over a large, isolated area in the mountains. These tactics would not attract undue attention, and the territory gained would provide a central base of operations from which a larger invasion could be launched in the future.
The Zaheya consisted of a group of twenty well-trained Arabs in a unit designated as al-Askerin-Zaubi (Storm Troopers). They were led by a deserter from the British Army named Arsalaan Sikes, who was respectfully addressed as Sikes Pasha by his men. Additionally, a handpicked unit of twenty Iranian Special Forces troopers led by hard-core Captain Naser Khadid of the Iranian SF served as an essential part of the assault element. A fire support group was under the direct command of Brigadier Khohollah. He had chosen his newly appointed adjutant, Captain Jamshid Komard, as the actual field commander of the heavy weapons organization. They were set up for rapid deployment to specific areas when needed.
Khohollah could also expect infusions of Arab insurgents from time to time. These would be graduates of the Iranian Special Forces Training Center, set up to prepare the mujahideen for unconventional warfare. After the tough eight-week course, the volunteers were destined to be funneled into Sikes Pasha's unit. This Brit turncoat enjoyed the very real possibility that he might end up with a hundred or so fully equipped and well-trained assault riflemen under his direct command.