- Home
- Don Pendleton
War Tactic
War Tactic Read online
PROFIT PIRATES
Tensions between China and the Philippines are on the rise, and a series of pirate attacks on Filipino ports and vessels only makes things worse. Phoenix Force discovers that the pirates are armed with American weapons. As they struggle to neutralize the threat on the sea, Able Team must hunt down the mastermind behind the attacks before the United States is forced into war.
STONY MAN
The best military fighters and cyber techs from around the world, the Stony Man teams are on the front lines of America’s war against terror, wherever it takes them. These elite black ops warriors put their lives on the line in the name of freedom.
“NOW, GARY, NOW!”
Manning made no reply. He didn’t need to. The automatic grenade launcher began spewing 40-millimeter death at the already crippled motor launch. The grenades blew the little boat to cinders, biting off great chunks of it, as if the vessel were being devoured from stern to bow. The flaming bodies that were thrown into the sea bore horrible testament to the destruction.
McCarter turned his attention back to the boat that was still moving.
Grimaldi did the same. He was harrying the motor launches to keep them from targeting the Filipino ship again with their handheld rockets.
From what McCarter could see of the men on the decks, they didn’t look military. At least, they weren’t wearing uniforms. But there was more. Military men had a certain bearing and, from what little he could see through the smoke, the sailors on the motor launch didn’t have it. They were casual. Pirates, or maybe civilian contractors. But how would such men get their hands on the latest high-tech weapons from the US, weapons whose export was strictly controlled?
Either RhemCorp was careless or RhemCorp was dirty. But they didn’t yet know which.
Other titles in this series:
#72 ROLLING THUNDER
#73 COLD OBJECTIVE
#74 THE CHAMELEON FACTOR
#75 SILENT ARSENAL
#76 GATHERING STORM
#77 FULL BLAST
#78 MAELSTROM
#79 PROMISE TO DEFEND
#80 DOOMSDAY CONQUEST
#81 SKY HAMMER
#82 VANISHING POINT
#83 DOOM PROPHECY
#84 SENSOR SWEEP
#85 HELL DAWN
#86 OCEANS OF FIRE
#87 EXTREME ARSENAL
#88 STARFIRE
#89 NEUTRON FORCE
#90 RED FROST
#91 CHINA CRISIS
#92 CAPITAL OFFENSIVE
#93 DEADLY PAYLOAD
#94 ACT OF WAR
#95 CRITICAL EFFECT
#96 DARK STAR
#97 SPLINTERED SKY
#98 PRIMARY DIRECTIVE
#99 SHADOW WAR
#100 HOSTILE DAWN
#101 DRAWPOINT
#102 TERROR DESCENDING
#103 SKY SENTINELS
#104 EXTINCTION CRISIS
#105 SEASON OF HARM
#106 HIGH ASSAULT
#107 WAR TIDES
#108 EXTREME INSTINCT
#109 TARGET ACQUISITION
#110 UNIFIED ACTION
#111 CRITICAL INTELLIGENCE
#112 ORBITAL VELOCITY
#113 POWER GRAB
#114 UNCONVENTIONAL WARFARE
#115 EXTERMINATION
#116 TERMINAL GUIDANCE
#117 ARMED RESISTANCE
#118 TERROR TRAIL
#119 CLOSE QUARTERS
#120 INCENDIARY DISPATCH
#121 SEISMIC SURGE
#122 CHOKE POINT
#123 PERILOUS SKIES
#124 NUCLEAR INTENT
#125 COUNTER FORCE
#126 PRECIPICE
#127 PRODIGY EFFECT
#128 REVOLUTION DEVICE
#129 PULSE POINT
#130 ATOMIC FRACTURE
#131 TRIPLECROSS
#132 COLD SNAP
#133 DOMINATION BID
#134 DEATH DEALERS
#135 MIND BOMB
#136 DOUBLE BLINDSIDE
#137 CITADEL OF FEAR
WAR TACTIC
CONTENTS
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Epilogue
PROLOGUE
The South China Sea
Yanuar Wijeya squinted at the ship in the distance as he stood on the bow of the Penuh Belut, a rust-eaten, twenty-five-meter dhow, or Arab freighter, that served as the mother-tender to his two fast-attack motor craft. Salt spray flecked his face. In his gnarled fingers he held a pair of binoculars, only one half of which still worked. The other set of lenses was badly cracked and stained. With one eye closed, he could see his first mate, Mhusa, in the lead fast-attack vessel. The deceptively soft popping of gunfire, mild at this distance, told him that his men were already taking fire from the Filipino freighter.
The freighter was a large one, many times the size of his own craft. While it could have outrun the Penuh Belut, it had no chance to flee the motor craft. The captain of the Filipino vessel had opted to turn and fight rather than let Mhusa’s crew use the freighter for target practice.
Wijeya wore combat boots without laces on otherwise bare, callused feet. His cut-off jeans were bleached yellow-white from dirt, oil and the pitiless sun. The handle of a machete jutted from the MOLLE-equipped scabbard on his back, which also bore a pistol-grip shotgun. In the rhinestone-studded belt that barely held his pants above his hips, Wijeya carried two Indonesian kerambit knives. The ring-handled knives with their curved blades were the only reminder of his homeland, which was otherwise a place he was happy to leave behind. Also behind his belt was a pitted Soviet Bloc Makarov pistol. Wijeya had himself pried the pistol from the fingers of a dead man.
From the pouch tied to his belt, Wijeya took a khat leaf, telling himself he would permit himself no more this afternoon. The drug was a pleasant one, a stimulant that sharpened his senses, helped him keep his edge. He had, however, seen too many men fall under the spell of the leaves. He had no desire to hollow himself out, or worse, to become distracted and sick if the supply were to dry up. Khat, like every other luxury aboard the Penuh Belut, ebbed and flowed. There were days that they were rich and days that they were poor. Until very recently, the poor days had far outnumbered the rich ones.
But not so much now.
As if his benefactor could read his thoughts, the satellite phone in Wijeya’s pocket began to vibrate. Sighing, the pirate captain pulled the device out and pressed the glowing green key. The voice he heard was familiar. Its owner had never wasted time saying hello to him, or asking after the well-being of his crew.
“Are you on schedule?”
“We are doing it now,” Wijeya answered. He was not an uneducated man. He spoke English well; he had attended the National University of Singapore, a final gift from his once-affluent parents. His father had been a supremely arrogant man, unable to see the folly of his
ways even when a series of reckless investments had left the family destitute. The thought made Wijeya want to laugh. His benefactor reminded him often of his father. It was the haughty way both men spoke. Perhaps, one day, the invisible man on the satellite phone would swallow a gun barrel the way Wijeya’s father had.
The thought brought a smile to the pirate’s lips.
If only my father could see how far I’ve come, he thought. There was real bitterness in him, he knew. But a man was what he was. He remained as he had been made.
“We are taking the ship now,” Wijeya said. He pressed the working half of the binoculars closer to his eye and recited the registration number of the vessel. “This is the one you specified, yes?”
“Yes,” said the voice. “Are you in the correct position? The locations have been calculated for specific impact. It’s a pattern. I don’t want you to deviate from it.”
“This you say to me every time we speak. I waited until we reached the coordinates you specified. I was careful. I am always careful.”
“See that it remains that way,” the voice warned. “Your success in the region is thanks to the XM-Thorns I’ve been sending you.”
“Yes. This I know,” said Wijeya. “Very well. You promised us more. And more rifles. More ammunition for them.”
“You will have it,” the voice promised. “Put in to your usual port and I’ll make sure the provisions are waiting for you. I always do.”
“Yes,” said Wijeya. “This I know.”
“No prisoners this time,” said the voice. “Leave none alive.”
“But—” Wijeya began.
The line went dead. Wijeya took the phone from his ear and stared at it. Always, it was the owner of the voice who cut off the transmission. Never had the mysterious speaker bothered with parting sentiments. The pirate switched the phone to standby, noting the battery charge percentage, and tucked it back into his pocket.
He told himself that this invisible man, the voice, was a means to an end. He had first encountered emissaries of the voice while in one of the ports of call his crew frequented. Those had been lean days, scratching out a living taking whatever vessels they could, never daring to attack a ship much larger than their own. Controlling the crew, in those days, had likewise been difficult. It was back then that Wijeya had been forced to fall back on his Silat training; the martial art of the blade that, when he had learned it as a child of privilege, had been little more than theory to him.
Again he laughed to himself. When his father had agreed to pay for private lessons from a wizened old man from a nearby village—a man renowned for his Silat prowess—no doubt Wijeya’s parents had thought the move one to keep their rebellious son out of trouble. Give him the discipline of a martial art, they had thought. Give him something to fill his idle hours. Yet today Wijeya had killed no less than four men in personal hand-to-hand combat with his kerambit knives. Three of those had been crew members who sought to take the title of captain from Wijeya. One had been a drunken fool in a port town, who had been quicker with a switchblade than Wijeya would have thought the old drunk capable. The scar that now curled across Wijeya’s abdomen was proof of that.
He told himself to focus on the task at hand, to stop wool-gathering while his face grew slick with droplets of sea foam. Once more he pressed the working lens of the binoculars to his eye. Behind him, he could hear Lemat, the little Frenchman, bearing the walkie-talkie. Lemat’s approach was wreathed in static. Wijeya smiled at his own joke.
“Captain,” said Lemat. “The launches report they are ready.”
“Tell them to begin the attack,” Wijeya directed, never taking his eye from the motor craft circling the target freighter. Sporadic gunfire continued from the deck of the target ship. That was a surprise, honestly.
Shipping lines, despite the increased dangers to their freight from pirate crews like Wijeya’s, had felt the turn of the global economy just as had everyone else. They were always looking for ways to cut costs. One of the methods they employed was cutting back crews, which left little extra manpower for such things as guards. Wijeya knew that some of the ship captains had taken it on themselves to purchase, quite illegally, arms with which to equip their men. The idea was that in the event of pirate attack, the crew would take up weapons and fight off boarders. Every major shipping company had corporate policies forbidding this practice, but men had a way of ignoring rules that could get them slaughtered.
Still, it would not matter. Not in this case.
“Move us in,” Wijeya told Lemat. “Prepare to support our boarding crews.”
Lemat gave the order. The Penuh Belut began to vibrate beneath him as her diesel engines thrummed to life. Large quantities of black smoke began to spew from the aft section of the old boat. Wijeya knew every inch of the dhow’s deck plates, every streak of rust, every weld. He had spent more years aboard her now than he cared to think.
“Sir?” Lemat prompted. He held the walkie-talkie to his ear. “Mhusa asks if he may fire rockets.”
“Tell him above the water line only,” Wijeya said. He waited while Lemat relayed the order. Moments later streaks of smoke joined the motor launches and the upper decks of their target. The explosions that rang out scattered men from the deck of the larger ship. Soon, automatic gunfire from Wijeya’s attack boats carried across the water.
The automatic weapons were nothing special, but they were reasonably new and all in good working order. Kalashnikov rifles were plentiful in this part of the world. A man with enough cash could purchase a warehouse full of them for twenty dollars US each. But Wijeya’s benefactor saw to it that the flow of ammunition for the weapons, new and reliable magazines, and parts for repair was steady. The voice knew Wijeya’s major ports of call in the area and never failed to arrange for supply drops.
More important than the automatic weapons, however, were the XM-Thorns. The high-tech rocket launchers had given Wijeya the power to take on craft many times his size. The rockets and their launch tubes were made of a high-tech, carbon-fiber and alloy combination that resisted salt corrosion, making the weapons light and easy to store aboard ship. With the XM-Thorns, it was possible for Wijeya’s launches to attack even a cruise liner if they so chose.
Large craft had a number of weaponry that could be employed against pirate ships. The bigger the enemy craft, the greater the danger. Some of the weapons employed by captains in the region were approved by their corporate masters and some were not. While cowardly businessmen disapproved of giving crewmembers SKS rifles or handguns, they were happy with anything that was not a gun that could still drive away the likes of Wijeya. One of the most popular options, given the vast quantity of water available, was high-pressure hoses. Another, employed mostly by the affluent cruise liners, was a sound cannon. Wijeya, before his benefactor had found him, had once been on the receiving end of such a sound weapon. It had been…unpleasant.
But everything had changed one day in a seedy bar in Manila. Wijeya and what was left of his crew at the time—Mhusa, Lemat and two or three others—had been drinking away their latest failure, determined to use up the last of their coin. Staring into the bottom of a dirty glass full of rum, not sure what he would do next or how he would survive, Wijeya had thought perhaps he was destined to keep failing at life. Bitter recriminations had rolled through his mind, waves crashing on the breakers of his failed dreams.
But then a stranger had handed him a business card.
Wijeya remembered looking up at the stranger. The man had the look of a go-between, a messenger. Nothing about his features was remarkable. The stranger had nodded once at the card then disappeared into the smoky darkness of the bar.
On the card was written nothing but a phone number. It had taken a few more drinks before Wijeya’s curiosity got the better of him. Expecting some sort of scam, some kind of confidence routine, he had dialed the number, prepared to take out his frustrations on whoever answered. It would feel good to shout at someone. Perhaps then he would get into
a fight. With the cracked receiver of the bar’s pay phone to his lips, he listened to the ringing at the other end while sizing up the other patrons in the bar.
There, he thought. That one. The one with the fat face and the loud mouth. He looks like he might be Samoan. I will enjoy putting my fist through that face.
But then a voice had answered the telephone call.
Over the course of many telephone calls to come, Wijeya would come to know that voice, the voice of his benefactor, very well. The voice had told him that a very special man was being sought, a man who could take instructions exactly. The reward for following such instructions would be wealth and success, more than any pirate could ever want. The means through which this would be done were simple: all a good pirate needed to conquer even the largest vessels was the correct weaponry. Would the latest XM-Thorn rockets, capable of sinking even a cruise ship, not be sufficient to such a task?
Wijeya had told the voice he thought it might be.
And so Wijeya had entered into the service of the mysterious voice. He supposed he would never know how long the voice’s agents had spied on him, watched him and evaluated him before Wijeya was finally given the business card. It did not matter. He did not care. All he cared about was money. Thanks to his benefactor, thanks to the voice, there had been plenty of that.
Wijeya had often considered the possibility that his was not the only crew his benefactor had chosen to finance. This simply made sense. Whatever the voice might be trying to accomplish, the pirate attacks were clearly being coordinated across a large area. That explained why the coordinates were so precise, and it also explained the voice’s insistence on strict timetables. A single pirate ship that started attacking where it was not supposed to could easily run afoul of other crews funded by the voice, could it not? At least, that was how it seemed to Wijeya. Not for the first time, he pondered what it was his benefactor might be trying to do. And then…what would happen to Wijeya and his crew when the voice achieved its goal?
In the back of his mind Wijeya knew that there was great danger here. It might not be near. It might be many years yet in coming. But he was not stupid. He knew that his benefactor had something more in mind than simply advancing the lifestyles of pirate crews. Wijeya’s attacks were very specific, conducted at times and locations of the voice’s choosing. Sometimes the targets were also specified, and other times it was enough that he find any vessel within a given range of coordinates. Just what this was accomplishing for the voice, Wijeya did not and could not know. But he knew he was a pawn. He knew that when his usefulness to the voice ended, he would either be cut loose to make his own way or he would be killed.

Wild Card
Warrior's Edge
Blood Vortex
Lethal Vengeance
Killing Kings
Cold Fury
Righteous Fear
Cyberthreat
Stealth Assassin
Critical Exposure
Miami Massacre te-4
Terrible Tuesday
Dying Art
Jungle Hunt
Sicilian Slaughter
Throw Down
Miami Massacre
Sudden Death
Panic in Philly
Savage Fire
Nightmare in New York te-7
Omega Cult
Sabotage
Viral Siege
War Tactic
Thunder Down Under
Haitian Hit
The Hostaged Island at-2
Fireburst
The Killing Urge
Assault
Ashes To Ashes: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective
Flight 741
Eternal Triangle
Frontier Fury
Meltdown te-97
Chicago Wipeout
Command Strike
Nightmare Army
Ivory Wave
Combat Machines
Silent Threat
Resurrection Day
Perilous Cargo
Syrian Rescue
Arizona Ambush te-31
Siege
Line of Honor
Lethal Risk
Blood Testament te-100
Soviet Specter
Arizona Ambush
Fatal Prescription
Deep Recon
Border Sweep
Life to Life
Ballistic
Hellbinder
Time to Time: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective (Ashton Ford Series Book 6)
The Violent Streets te-41
The Libya Connection te-48
Cartel Clash
Whipsaw te-144
Blood Rites
Triangle of Terror
Betrayed
San Diego Siege
Death Minus Zero
Arctic Kill
Mind to Mind: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective
Blood Heat Zero te-90
Dead Man's Tale
Sunscream te-85
Ice Wolf
Deadly Contact
The Cartel Hit
Tower of Terror at-1
Conflict Zone
Patriot Strike
Point Blank
Rogue Force
Patriot Play
Cold Judgment
Contagion Option
Sicilian Slaughter te-16
Dragon Key
Terminal Velocity
Vegas Vendetta
Ashes To Ashes
Blood of the Lion
Ballistic Force
Desperate Cargo
Detroit Deathwatch te-19
Nightmare in New York
Killpath
Executioner 056 - Island Deathtrap
Battle Cry
Don Pendleton - Civil War II
Copp In The Dark, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)
China Crisis (Stony Man)
Code of Dishonor
Firebase Seattle
Hard Targets
Domination Bid
Kill Squad
Slayground
Poison Justice
Suicide Highway
Copp In Deep, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)
Prairie Fire
Ninja Assault
Death Metal
Blood Run
Doomsday Disciples te-49
Breakout
Caribbean Kill te-10
Fire Eaters
Hawaiian Hellground
Baltimore Trackdown te-88
Threat Factor
Don Pendleton's Science Fiction Collection, 3 Books Box Set, (The Guns of Terra 10; The Godmakers; The Olympians)
Satan’s Sabbath
Assault on Soho te-6
Copp In Shock, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)
California Hit te-11
Chicago Wipe-Out te-8
Copp For Hire, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)
Point Position
Friday’s Feast
Exit Code
Night's Reckoning
New Orleans Knockout
Washington I.O.U.
California Hit
Blood Vendetta
Day of Mourning te-62
Lethal Payload
Boston Blitz
Knockdown
Blood Sport te-46
Council of Kings te-79
Terrorist Dispatch (Executioner)
Silent Running
Death Squad
Deadly Salvage
Oceans of Fire
Teheran Wipeout
Border Offensive
Devil's Horn
Death Run
Continental Contract
Savage Deadlock
Eye to Eye: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective
Revolution Device
Heart to Heart: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective
Apocalypse Ark
Texas Storm
Maximum Chaos
Sensor Sweep
Colorado Kill-Zone
San Diego Siege te-14
Tennessee Smash
Desert Impact
Fire in the Sky
Wednesday’s Wrath
Super Bolan - 001 - Stony Man Doctrine
Chain Reaction
Pacific Creed
Death List
Rebel Force
Savannah Swingsaw te-74
Heart to Heart
Shadow Search
Thermal Thursday
Battle Mask te-3
Rogue Assault
Blind Justice
Cold Fusion
Nigeria Meltdown
Backlash
Moscow Massacre
St. Louis Showdown
Anvil of Hell
Life to Life: Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective
Amazon Impunity
Run to Ground te-106
Save the Children te-94
Detroit Deathwatch
Shadow Hunt
Terror Ballot
Stand Down
Dixie Convoy
Vendetta in Venice
War Against the Mafia
Assassin's Tripwire
Appointment in Kabul te-73
The Chameleon Factor
Pirate Offensive
Prison Code
Firebase Seattle te-21
Ground Zero
Assassin's Code
Perilous Skies (Stony Man)
Toxic Terrain
Canadian Crisis
Executioner 057 - Flesh Wounds
Uncut Terror
War Everlasting (Superbolan)
Nuclear Reaction
Capital Offensive (Stony Man)
Beirut Payback te-67
Monday’s Mob
Blood Dues te-71
Dead Easy
Texas Showdown at-3
Sold for Slaughter
Orbiting Omega
Copp On Ice, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp Private Eye Series)
Rebel Blast
Blowout
Killing Trade
Assault on Soho
Season of Slaughter
Collision Course
Shock Waves
Continental Contract te-5
Dead Reckoning
Enemies Within
Agent of Peril
Death Has a Name
Vegas Vendetta te-9
The Fiery Cross
Cleveland Pipeline
Armed Response
Mercy Mission
Tiger War te-61
Renegade Agent te-47
Damage Radius
Eye to Eye
Acapulco Rampage
Skysweeper
The Iranian Hit te-42
Death Gamble
Rebel Trade
Predator Paradise
Battle Mask
Pulse Point
Missouri Deathwatch
Blood Tide
Missile Intercept
Jersey Guns
Hostile Force
The Bone Yard te-75
Twisted Path te-121
Mind to Mind
Copp On Fire, A Joe Copp Thriller (Joe Copp, Private Eye Series)