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“On the night of February 9, 1991,” Smitz began, “one of the ArcLight gunships went out on a Scud hunt. It left a secret air base in western Saudi Arabia at about 0230 hours, with a crew of thirteen. It was carrying three miniguns and a light howitzer, all fully armed. It was also hauling, among other things, various EW/ECM pods.

“After taking off, this particular airplane reached its first radio checkpoint, where it indicated everything was OK—and then it just disappeared.”

Smitz paused for a moment. He was staring out at twenty-six people, all wearing very quizzical looks.

Now comes the hard part, he thought.

Smitz lowered his voice and began again. “Everyone at CIA and the Pentagon was certain this airplane had splashed that night and was at the bottom of the Gulf somewhere. They looked for it, but never very hard. Turns out it landed on solid ground—or it was shot down. We still don’t know.”

Another pause. A few people in the room began to stir.

“But whatever happened to it,” Smitz went on, “it was refurbished by someone. And now… well…” He turned back to the frozen video again. “Here it is.”

There was a long, disturbing silence now as Smitz let his words sink in.

“You mean that plane is responsible for tearing up all that real estate?” someone up front finally asked.

Smitz nodded soberly. “That appears to be the case,” he said. “And obviously, it is no longer under our control.”

Those gathered remained absolutely silent. Even Gillis and Ricco were transfixed.

“The ArcLight 4 gunship reappeared about sixteen months ago,” Smitz went on. “It took out an Omani patrol boat that had been tailing some illegal arms shipments going up the Gulf. There were no survivors. Then it was reported over Somalia a few weeks later, firing at a rival faction of some warlord currently in power. Then it showed up again over the Gulf sinking a bunch of boats carrying ammo up to some Shiite rebels in Basra. But in the last two months it’s been very active.”

“Who’s pulling the strings?” Delaney called out with a belch.

Smitz shrugged. “Officially,” he began, “the Iraqi government is suspected of giving aid and comfort to this situation. The plane is now apparently based somewhere in Iraq. And the fact that it was used against some Iraqis nationals—well, that happens every day over there. But…”

“But?”

“But it has also been reported taking out some Checs—and they are enemies of Iran. And as you saw, it was in Bosnia, at least once, doing someone’s bidding. And in Somalia. And out over the Indian Ocean. And these are just the incidents we know about. There’s a chance this thing is out there every night, shooting up something. It’s only on the rare occasion that it leaves a lot of evidence behind.”

“Are you saying that someone is renting this thing out?” Norton asked.

Smitz just shrugged again. “It’s a good question—and a hard one to answer,” he replied. “When we look at the targets it’s hit, they have a few things in common. They are all low-priority stuff. Lightly defended, if at all. Many involve civilians. And they all seem to be, if you’ll pardon the expression, ‘small’ enough not to cause a whole lot of attention.”

“Like flying hit men,” someone in front called out. “Quiet. Efficient.”

Smitz paused; he was obviously choosing his words very carefully.

“To answer your question, no one knows for certain if this thing is flying around as a kind of airborne mercenary. That’s why everyone here has been called in. That’s why this unit has been thrown together.”

Another thirty seconds went by in absolute silence.

No one said a thing. No one moved. The briefing had suddenly taken a surreal turn. They’d all sat through thousands of mission pre-briefings, post-briefings, and backgrounds. They were always routine. But not this one. This seemed right out of a bad movie.

“Thrown together?” another voice finally asked. “As in thrown together to stop this thing?”

Smitz just nodded. “Those are our orders.”

More silence, but now it was broken by some murmuring.

Delaney raised his hand as if he was in the fifth grade.

“Can I ask a question?” he said. “Who shot that last tape? The one of the refueling?”

Smitz checked his NoteBook. “‘One of the NSA’s airborne assets,’ is all it says here.”

“Is that to mean a spy plane of sorts?”

Smitz just nodded again. The guy in the Angel cap shifted a little in his seat.

“Well,” Delaney went on. “If you can get a spy plane in close enough to shoot that footage, and you really want to get rid of this thing, why not just go in with a couple F-15’s loaded for bear and shoot the fucker down? Poof! End of problem.”

It was another good question. If the rogue airplane is causing so much destruction and you know where it is, why not just go in and blow it out of the sky?

Smitz thought a long time before replying. Finally, he just said: “I believe the answer to that question is classified.”

But Delaney was puzzled—they all were. “Classified? Well, let me rephrase it then,” he said. “Why do you need us or anyone else to go in and take it out?”

Smitz just shook his head again.

“Because your mission is not to destroy that AC-130,” Smitz replied. “Your mission is to recover it—and free the original crew. We believe they are being held captive at the same location the plane is operating from. If this is the case, then you will go in, rescue them, carry them out, and if possible, fly the plane out too.”

Now a storm of gasps went through the room. No one could speak. Not even Delaney for a moment. But finally he managed to blurt out: “You mean you want us to fly over to Iraq, stop whoever is flying the airplane, recover it, and bring the original crew back?”

“Precisely,” Smitz replied.

* * *

The briefing would last for two more hours.

Smitz wound up fielding the same angry questions over and over again. Why didn’t the U.S. just send in some fighters to shoot down the rogue airplane while in flight? Why not destroy it with cruise missiles while it was on the ground—then go in and get the original crew? The people in the room came up with a hundred different ways how the gunship could be destroyed—and sending in a helicopter-borne force, manned mostly by inexperienced personnel, was not among them.

But Smitz stood his ground, answering truthfully that security concerns prevented all the remedies suggested—and mandated the one the CIA had put into motion. A helicopter force would transit to the Middle East, find the rogue airplane’s base, raid it, rescue the original crew, and if possible fly the airplane back out. Those were the mission specs.

But how that was going to be accomplished would not be revealed to the unit just yet. There was still more training to do, Smitz explained. Live training. This meant the marathon sessions spent by the pilots in the simulators were coming to an end.

But there was little cheer in this. The lack of details about the operation itself upset those assembled to the point of revolt. If the most essential information on their mission wasn’t going to be revealed to them now, one of them complained, then this wasn’t “the mother of all briefings” as had been promised.

But Smitz held firm again. Later on they would learn the logistics of the raid. Those were the orders.

To that, Delaney declared with a loud burp: “Then you should call the next session the ‘motherfucker of all briefings.’”

Things deteriorated further after that. The comments got more raucous, more acid-toned. But as it turned out, the one question Smitz had dreaded the most didn’t get asked until just before the briefing ended. Oddly, it was one of the SEAL medics who brought it up.