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The Sahara Intercept
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The
sahara
intercept
A ross brannan thriller
THE secret cold war series - Book 5
A Novel by
RG Ainslee
The Sahara Intercept: A Ross Brannan Thriller
The Secret Cold War Series - Book 5
Published by RG Ainslee
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2018 by RG Ainslee
Cover Image: By Author & CCo Public Domain
No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author/publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
The Sahara Intercept: A Ross Brannan Thriller is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, incidents, and events are products of the author's imagination. It draws from the historical record, but any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. Certain institutions and agencies are mentioned, but the characters involved, depiction of the agencies' operations or sources/methods of collection/analysis presented should not be construed as factual.
This is the fifth book in the Secret Cold War Series.
For any inquiries about this book, please contact the author at rgainslee.com
The first Electronic version: June 2019
Table of Contents
1 ~ Unit 8200
2 ~ The Golan
3 ~ The Ustica Mystery
4~ Roman Holiday
5 ~ Škorpion Brigade
6~ Disaster
7 ~ Hansen
8 ~ Gulf of Sidra
9~ The Incident
10 ~ Marsden
11 ~ The New Operation
12 ~ The Team
13 ~ Alix
14 ~ The Sahara
15 ~ Reflections
16 ~ The Piste
17 ~ HA-HO
18 ~ The Plan
19 ~ Twin Beech
20 ~ The Flight
21 ~ The Intercept
22 ~ Harry
23 ~ Agadez
24 ~ N'Djamena
25 ~ Bangui
26 ~ Wilson
27 ~ Return to N'Djamena
28 ~ Al Wigh
29 ~ Second Chance
30 ~ Abeche
31 ~ Change of Plans
32 ~ Attack
33 ~ Revenge
34 ~Fate
35 ~ Kisangani
36 ~ Complications
37 ~ Nairobi
38 ~ Cyprus
39 ~ The Final Plan
40 ~ The Raid
Epilogue
Glossary
Author’s Note
The Secret Cold War Series
About the Author
A word from RG Ainslee
The Sahara Intercept is a story of Cold War Electronic Intelligence (ELINT) long hidden behind a curtain of secrecy. ELINT is intelligence derived from collecting, processing, and analyzing radar and guidance control systems.
Soldiers, Sailors, and Airmen of the security services manned the front line of the Cold War. Assigned to isolated foreign outposts, naval vessels, or flying along the Iron Curtain, they collected signals intelligence and provided an extra layer of early warning. All too many died by accident or enemy action. The first American combat death in Vietnam was a soldier of the Army Security Agency. The Secret Cold War Series is dedicated to their memory.
Thomas Jefferson: "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance."
1 ~ Unit 8200
Thursday, 26 June 1980, Tel Aviv, Israel
El Al forces passengers to travel unarmed. That’s why I arrived at Ben Gurion International Airport, site of the 1973 Lod massacre, without my Walther PPK pistol. Always thought the best way to stop a hijacker was to blow his head off.
This was a routine trip. But then it never hurts to practice situational awareness. Not paranoia, a prudent attention to details. The most important things: blend in, keep a low profile, and don’t project an image someone will remember. The key: act confident and natural, like you belong. Resolute in my ability to spot imminent threats, I strode into the main lobby.
"Mr. Ross Brannan?"
A young woman dressed in a crisp-pressed olive-green army uniform, stood before me. Her self-assured smile and deep penetrating green eyes enhanced by the 9-millimeter Uzi slung over her shoulder.
"That's me." How did she pick me out?
"Shalom, welcome to Israel. I am Tamara Alon, your escort." The way she said escort was both sexy and suggestive.
She seemed pleasant enough and not bad looking. "Thanks. How did you know who I was?"
"They showed me your picture." She paused with an intriguing grin. "I watched for the cowboy from the movies."
In the past, what some people thought was a faint resemblance to Steve McQueen had proved socially useful with the ladies. Not much use if you're trying to keep a low profile. I changed the subject. "What now?"
She smiled an open friendly, even inviting smile. "I will drive you to the hotel."
"Is it far?"
"Oh, no, nothing in Israel is far away, we are such a small country. O only thirty kilometers, on the beach near Camp Glilot."
Beach, maybe this won't be so bad.
As we exited the airport terminal, she brushed against my hip. "Is this your first visit to Israel?"
"First time," I lied. In fact, my second visit. The first, officially unofficial, the less said, the better.
"If you wish, I can show you the sights later." There it was again, a sultry suggestive tone. "Do you like to dance? I know all the popular discos."
Oh, man, gotta watch out. Is she coming on to me, or is this some sort of honey trap? Don't need to look for trouble — its right beside me.
Torn between expectation and sound judgment, I stammered, "Sorry, I can't. I … I'm married." My sixth sense told me to be wary.
"We can still have a little fun, can't we?" Her eyes came alive. "We can go for a swim at the hotel."
The way she said it, an inflection that suggested there's more to come, made me tingle. My situational awareness shoved aside and stomped to the ground. I imagined her in a bikini.
Gotta get this under control. "No, we have a new baby and…"
"Very well." She switched off the charm in an instant. "Here is the jeep."
We left the airport in silence. The open jeep, not air-conditioned. I started to sweat. Living in Albuquerque, I sweat a lot, but Tel Aviv was hotter than Wyatt Earp's pistol at the O.K. Corral. A trip to Alaska or some cool place would've been preferable, but no, I was in Israel, the Middle East — the hot dry Middle East.
Hopelessly distracted, I tried to refocus. As we approached downtown Tel Aviv, I asked, trying to break the tension, "How long you been in the army?"
"Eighteen months," she said without emotion, "Only a few more to go."
"Then what?"
"I am undecided." She paused as if to contemplate her future for the first time. "Perhaps modeling or whatever."
"You should do well." She probably will. "I'll look for you on the cover of Vogue." When do I ever read Vogue? Lisette doesn't even read Vogue.
"Oh, thank you." The smile returned. "Tell me about your wife."
"She's French."
"Oh la la? Do you live in Paris? How did you meet?" She started to bubble again. "Oh, I love Paris."
"We met in Africa, in Kenya, on Lamu Island."
"You were married in Africa?" Her astonishment appear
ed real.
I laughed. "No, we were married in Mexico, Baja California."
"You live in Mexico? How strange."
"No, we live in New Mexico, north of the border."
"Now I am confused."
"New Mexico is in the United States, next to Texas."
"You are a cowboy?"
I gave up on the geography lesson. "Yeah, I guess you could say so." Tamara responded with a silly smile and concentrated on the evening traffic. At least she didn't ask if I rode a horse. "Where's my hotel? I need to clean up before I check in with your people."
"Further on, close to the unit." She stared straight ahead, all business again. "I will come for you tomorrow at 0900."
Friday, 27 June 1980, North of Tel Aviv, Israel
The headquarters of Israel's signals intelligence service, Unit 8200, lay only a half mile down the road from the seaside hotel. Tamara ushered me through the security checkpoints and down into the bowels of the center. Her demeanor, all proper and military, with none of yesterday's flirting.
A balding average sized man, about my age, wearing an olive-green uniform sat behind a cluttered desk. He stood to greet me. "Shalom, I am Major David, welcome to Camp Glilot." He motioned for me to take a seat. "Thank you for coming on such short notice."
He spoke English with a slight BBC accent. At first glance, one wouldn't give him a second thought. Up close, he had presence, an aura of poise and authority, a natural leader. He didn't reveal his position in the organization.
I decided to be cautious too. "Ross Brannan from Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico." I didn't tell him whom I worked for: The Special Signals Research Project, a joint venture of the National Security Agency and the Central Intelligence Agency. He doubtless knew anyway.
The SSRP, located at Bolling Air Force Base in Washington D.C., focused on clandestine ELINT (Electronic Intelligence) collection involving Soviet radar and telemetry signals. Our mission was to deal with situations where conventional methods proved neither effective nor practical. My unit, Detachment R-1 or Raven-One, was stationed in Albuquerque. A matter of hiding in plain sight, camouflaged as a routine and dull Air Force outfit doing mundane research on radio propagation and antenna testing.
"Your engineering specialty is electronic warfare?"
"No. I'm not an engineer, a signal analyst. Learned everything I know in the military." I had spent eleven years in Army Security Agency as an electronic intelligence analyst and intercept operator, travelling the world collecting data on enemy radar systems to aid in development of effective countermeasures.
"Oh, you were an intelligence officer?"
"No, an enlisted man."
Had the impression he expected someone else. My boss Colonel Wilson called two days ago, with the news: pack your bags you're going to Israel. He said they needed some help analyzing a radar signal and didn't give any details. He wanted me to approach the problem with no preconceptions, to keep an open mind. Even so, I had a preconceived notion: another waste of time, it usually plays out that way.
The major nodded. "I was informed you are one of the best."
"Suppose that's why I wasn't an officer."
My answer prompted a wry grin. "Good. That is the way we train our people. We prefer young soldiers schooled in our ways, not prima donna academic types. We stress teamwork along with individual initiative. Like your service, we take only the select few."
"Believe me, I understand. That's why I'm a civilian." I loved my army job but grew tired of bureaucratic runarounds and broken promises. My civilian job paid a lot more, not getting rich, but doing okay. Now I was married, had a baby boy, and settled down. I glanced around, wanting to explore the place. "Nice facility you have here."
"Yes, I would conduct a tour, but our security protocols will not allow."
"Sure." Should've known. "What do you have for me?"
I wanted to get it over and go home. I didn't feel comfortable dealing with the Israelis. Something to do with the U.S.S. Liberty, the intelligence collection ship their forces attacked during the 1967 war. I worked with a guy who had been on board and I never did buy the official versions of what happened. I doubted if Major David had anything to do with the incident, but it bothered me, nevertheless.
"Yes, the matter." He hesitated a few seconds. "Our collection site intercepted a signal with an atypical element two weeks ago." He noticed I was about to ask and answered, "The azimuth pointed deep inside Syrian territory. Our analysts examined the parameters and failed to come to a firm conclusion as to its function."
"What band was it operating in?"
"E band. The signal seemed to be in conjunction with a Soviet 2K12 air defense system."
"The SA-6."
He nodded. "Correct."
I continued, "The fire control for the SA-6 is I band. Could it have been emitting from a P-40 Long Track early warning radar?"
"That was our first assumption, but the signal exhibited somewhat different characteristics."
"Like what?"
"The base signal produced an almost perfect sine wave, except it changed to a saw tooth pattern at short random intervals."
A quiver of anticipation ran through my body. "Have you been able to check the third harmonic?"
His face lit up in astonishment. "No. What do you mean?"
"Let me examine your tape."
A harmonic is a signal whose frequency is a multiple of the frequency of the base signal. Nearly all signals produce energy at harmonic frequencies unless the signal is a perfect sine wave. Square waves, saw tooth waves, and triangular waves have large amounts of energy at harmonic frequencies.
Halfway through the tape, I hit the jackpot. The signal had Marsden's fingerprints all over it. J. Andrew Marsden, the electrical engineer who defected from the Cochise Project at Fort Huachuca and took his secrets to the Soviet Union — the rat-bastard that shot me and killed a policeman in Mexico — the one person I would kill on sight. Last year Marsden disappeared into the woodwork and now he was back. I trembled in expectation.
"Are you familiar with this signal?" asked the major.
"Not at this frequency, but I have a good idea." I struggled whether to tell him the whole story. Wilson sent me with no guidelines. What was I authorized to say? How much should I reveal?
"What is the significance of the third harmonic?" he asked with an edge to his voice. He seemed to understand I was holding back.
Nothing ventured, nothing gained. I reckoned Wilson sent me for a good reason. "If this is what I think it is, the third harmonic contains random micro bursts with missile guidance instructions."
The major's face tensed with suspicion: "It is impossible to—"
"No, I worked with the inventor J. Andrew Marsden before he defected. Marsden developed a method to embed a guidance signal within the third harmonic. He was able to produce harmonics with enough power to carry the signal by changing the waveform to a saw tooth pattern at short random intervals."
His brow furrowed in disbelief as I continued, "Unfortunately, we were unable to maintain adequate signal stability to produce a reliable and workable system."
"You say, this harmonic provided guidance—"
"They contain the entire set of missile guidance instructions. The main tracking system never switches to the guidance mode. All the instructions are hidden in the acquisition signal."
"Your air force has this system?"
"No. We were never able to achieve a stable signal. But the Russians were working on the same concept and Marsden provided the missing piece of the puzzle."
"You have collected this signal by satellite?"
"No. The only way to collect the entire set is during the combat acquisition and tracking phase. The chance of picking the signal up by satellite intercept is slight."
"A clever deception. So, you worked with this Marsden?"
"Yeah, and if I ever catch up with the SOB again, I'm going to carve him up in little pieces." I took a deep breath, no use t
elling him everything. "Is there a chance I can go to your intercept site?"
2 ~ The Golan
Friday, 27 June 1980, Golan Heights, Israel
The flight from nearby Sde Dov Airport to Kiryat Shmona, in an Israeli Air Force Beechcraft Bonanza, took less than a half hour. The drive up the winding road to Mount Hermon, the highest and most northern point of Israel, took about the same time.
Major David explained we were over 2,000 meters above sea level, 7,300 feet to be exact. We exited the jeep and walked to an overlook. He continued, "The nights are cool up here, even in summer. To the south, we have a superb view of the mountains of Galilee, to the east the Golan, and Lebanon to the north."
"I'm surprised to see snow." White patches covered the upper parts of the mountain. "Was that a ski area we passed?"
"Yes, Mount Hermon is home to the only ski resort in Israel. This place is called Mitzpe Shlagim, translated as snow lookout."
"Must be one of your most important sites?"
"Mount Hermon is essential because of its strategic position. On a clear day, like today, you can see deep into Syria. The distant haze is over Damascus. Most of the land mass of Israel is at sea level. The Syrians do not have good radar coverage of Israel's airspace because of the Golan Heights. They can't detect anything below 1,000 meters over northern Israel. Our aircraft can operate low along the northern coast without being detected by Syrian radar."
"Yeah, I can see. This mountain shades their early warning capabilities. Offers you a potential element of surprise?"
"True, but they have a heavy concentration of SAM-sites along the Golan Heights and around Damascus." Major David ushered me into the main structure. "The outpost consists of three levels. Up here are the operations center, dining hall, and observation posts. Below are underground bunkers with living quarters and storage for supplies. Tunnels connect to outlying guard lookouts."
"I noticed some Merkava tanks outside."
"Yes, we must be ready. Our forces first captured Mount Hermon in sixty-seven during the Six Day War and managed to retain control after the seventy-three Yom Kippur War. The Syrians recaptured the mountain, but we eventually prevailed. We don't intend to relinquish it again."