Through his FLIR (forward-looking infrared) targeting system Smirnov could see the images of the Chechens hurriedly preparing their fighting positions among the trees and the rocks as he swept toward the target area. He chuckled over the net to his copilot, “Like shooting fish in a barrel. Five seconds…”
Then he heard the dreaded warning buzzer, and the instrument panel lit up with red lights flashing in the Cyrillic alphabet: РАКЕТЫ ВОЗДУХ=ЗЕМЛЯ. Surface-to-air missile.
He cut a startled glance out the left side of his canopy, just managing to glimpse the vapor trail of the missile streaking upward toward him at 1,300 miles per hour.
Detonating an instant before impact, the warhead’s directed-energy fragmentation blast utterly devastated the engine compartment of the Hind, severing three of five control rods to throw the rotor completely out of balance, causing it to cant backward and slice off the aircraft’s tail. The helo exploded midair, falling out of the sky along with its bomb load nearly a hundred yards shy of the enemy encampment, erupting against the forest floor in a giant secondary explosion that shook the earth for a quarter mile in every direction.
27
Major Nikita Yakunin heard and felt the explosion as he and his men were entering the forest. The Spetsnaz men immediately took cover, watching the sky as the two remaining Hinds broke north and south away from the target area just over three hundred meters ahead.
“Find out what the hell happened!” Yakunin ordered his RTO (radio telephone operator). Then he ordered three men forward to take up point across the line of advance, adding, “Keep your eyes open!”
The Hinds circled back around to engage the encampment from a safer distance.
“Where the hell are they?” demanded Yakunin, unable to see either helo. “It sounds like they’re firing from Moscow!”
“They’re standing off,” reported the RTO. “Smirnov was shot down with a missile.”
Yakunin’s intel reports had said nothing about Umarov’s men possessing MANPADS.
“A missile or an RPG?”
“A missile! The pilots are afraid to get any closer, and their rockets are impacting in the trees. They don’t have a clear shot on the camp.”
“Tell them to fly higher!” Yakunin ordered.
The RTO relayed the order. “They say they’ll be vulnerable to missile attack if the enemy has line of sight. Their orders are not to directly engage in the presence of a missile threat.”
“What fucking use is an attack helicopter if can’t be used to attack?”
The RTO shrugged. “Do you want me to ask them that?”
Yakunin glared at him and then ordered his men to form up in three columns of eight.
“You tell those cowards in the sky to keep the enemy pinned down as we advance!”
The RTO immediately relayed the command.
Umarov told Basayev to get on the radio to their friends camped to the east. “Tell them we need reinforcements,” he said calmly, with Russian rockets exploding in the treetops. Debris showered down on the encampment, but so far no one was hit.
Basayev ducked into the cave to grab the radio, and Umarov rallied five men.
“See that crocodile?” He pointed south through the treetops at the Hind, where the land sloped gradually away from the encampment. “He’s holding his position — firing sporadically to keep our heads down. That means the Spetsnaz are advancing! The five of you take RPGs and run through the forest to get beneath him. You will fire at the same time: to his left, right, rear, and front!” He pointed his finger, singling out one of the men. “You will fire straight up the middle! He’ll be completely bracketed, with nowhere to maneuver. Now run! Bring him down!”
The Chechen fighters slung their AK-47s and took off through the trees to the south, each with an RPG-7 over his shoulder.
Lom appeared at Umarov’s side. “Where do you want me, Uncle?”
Umarov put a hand on his shoulder and grinned. “Great shot! You saved us.”
Lom shrugged, knowing the value of humility in combat. “He practically flew right into it. Where do you want me?”
“I want you to run east as fast as you can,” Umarov said. “Take the old koza trail. Find Prina’s people and lead them back here.”
“Why don’t we all escape that way?”
Umarov shook his head. “We can’t fight a running battle against Spetsnaz and crocodiles. We’ll be destroyed. This is a good position. We’ll make our stand here and let them batter themselves bloody. Now, run. Run as fast as you can.”
Lom darted off through the trees, adrenaline coursing through his veins.
Umarov called for three more men with RPGs.
The first five grenadiers scrambled through the trees with their RPGs, the ripping sound of the helo’s Yak minigun cutting through the air, and its red tracers snapping the limbs of the hardwoods high above them as it fired on the camp from an oblique angle. They were arriving at their optimal firing position when the pilot spotted them and canted the aircraft in their direction, letting loose a torrent of machine-gun fire and rockets.
One of the grenadiers was hit in the torso with a burst of 12.7 mm fire and virtually exploded in a splash of blood and guts. Without missing a step, the grenadier behind him snatched the fallen RPG from the ground and continued on. An 80 mm rocket detonated against the ground directly in front of him and blew off his legs.
The remaining men stopped abruptly to take up firing positions. The leader called out three separate firing points, and they fired simultaneously, bracketing the Hind as best they could from the left, right, and dead-on.
The pilot saw the rockets streaking toward his aircraft and knew his best chance was to yank back on the stick and show his titanium underbelly. All three rockets missed, and he canted the nose forward again to let loose another hellish torrent of machine-gun fire. With the crew’s attention focused on killing the remaining Chechens, neither man spotted the second team of grenadiers that Umarov had sent southeast to flank the helo once it had engaged the sacrificial first team.
The three men fired in unison, and all three RPGs detonated against the starboard side of the aircraft, which broke apart in the air, exploding in an orange-black fireball and crashing in pieces to the forest floor.
Yakunin heard the second explosion and swore a blue streak, realizing there would be very little to keep the enemy from escaping eastward once the last remaining Hind ran out of ammo. “That bastard Umarov has more luck than anyone I’ve ever heard of!”
He ordered his men to double-time it the last two hundred meters, fearing his prey might already be fleeing.
When they arrived at the perimeter of the Chechen encampment, they were met with a hail of machine-gun fire. The RTO was hit in the face and went down, his mandible and teeth shot completely away, leaving his tongue dangling from the open neck. The wound was survivable, but the man would never speak, eat, or look like a human being again.
Yakunin shot him through the head with his AK-105 carbine and ordered one of the others to take over the radio.
Without being told, the Spetsnaz broke into groups of three, leapfrogging aggressively through rocks and trees with AN-94 assault rifles in 5.45 mm. They took hits, and one man went down, but they were heavily armored and determined to kill Umarov before he escaped again. Half the AN-94s were fitted with GP-34 40 mm grenade launchers (similar to the American M203) mounted below the barrel. They fired a veritable hail of 40 mm grenades into the Chechen encampment.
Dirt and rock and splintered trees flew in every direction as Umarov’s men were forced flat to the ground under the heavy barrage. The Chechens had used their entire supply of RPGs bringing down the second Hind, and seven more men were killed quickly. The remaining helo began to engage from the rear. Rockets exploded near the encampment, and the Yak minigun began finding targets.