Signup

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Insert from FreeLand Part 3 - Baron's Boy

Chapter 19
It was the darkest of the nights. We wanted it just like that. I remember. I remember as if it is happening to me right now.
They were all around me. The sixteen of hand-picked men that formed Force Recon Unit. Some ex-Navy Seals, some battle-hardened Marines, all mercilessly trained to successfully complete whatever job is asked from them to do.
The mountain range in Afghanistan. The bitter coldness of the night that nibbed on my nose.
The offensive on the nearby town held by the Taliban happened yesterday. The whole place was going to be overrun in the next few days by Afghan Government forces. Taliban will run. Their commanders will retreat. We had our info.
So, we got us placed along the only paved road curving itself through the mountain rocks and leading west toward more mountains and Pakistan. And waited.
The ambush point was picked perfectly. We studied the terrain and the roads with carts and videos, and after a long analysis, a few good options presented themselves. I suggested the one before the road leaving the town forked into two different paths, one paved and one unpaved. We could never be sure that they would not just take the unpaved road to get lost.


The spot was on a minor hill plateau. A steep curve up the front that would make the vehicles slow down. Then, an open space of about a hundred meters. One side of the road was slightly elevated but it was relatively flat.
Also, there was not a steep drop off on the other side of the road like in most other places along its treacherous winding. I really wanted not to have a stiff cliff dive. I did not want anyone to have a chance to jump down. Maybe the jump would have killed them and maybe it would not. I just did not want to take any chance since there is no way I would send any of my men to risk their lives unnecessarily. We lived with more than enough risk as it was.
My inscrutable crew hid so well I could not see them even as I knew exactly where each and every one of them was stationed at.
The idea was not to use high-power explosives or anything dramatic. This was an asset acquisition mission after all. But I agreed with my Captain when he said that no asset will be acquired if it meant taking unnecessary risks. In other words, let's not blow everything up - that could be done from the air any time of a day - but play it safe nevertheless.


The picture of the Afghan mountain range:



The vehicles were targeted to be blocked and stopped by our arm's gunfire. They were not supposed to pass us through. If for some miracle we all missed and they did get through, we had a safety-net solution. The backup was the twin of roadside mines positioned before the road curves itself to the left again. Those remotely activated explosives can take apart anything that comes their way, no matter how thick their vehicles might be reinforced. I knew it was overkill, but better be safe than sorry. An acceptable margin of error on a mission like this was zero.


Still, as I looked around, the set up was not making sense here. We were without close-by air support and I could not see clearly beyond the curve. We would not know what is coming our way before they get here.
I do not like this, Beamer,” I told my commanding officer, a guy only a year older than me but with enough experience and intelligence to know to listen to an opinion of a sergeant like myself.
"What you do not like about this? You yourself suggested for us to be here." He hated those last-minute changes. I do not blame him.
Yeah… Still, it just does not sit right.”
"There are plenty of big rocks to hide behind. We have enough power to take care of any problem that comes our way."
It’s not that. I feel blind. We won’t know what to expect.”
The info seemed solid.”
Yeah, until it isn’t.”
So… What then?”
I looked around for a moment and knew what had to be done.
They already left the town, Sergeant,” he tells me. “We can expect them any minute here. Whatever you want, do it fast.”
Sam and Butter,” I called two members of our team. “Head out beyond the curve, 2 miles up, and then climb the hill.”
Yes, Sir.”
Take a pair of AT4s with you,” I tell them, pointing to the two M136 AT4 shoulder-fired rocket launcher that lay with the rest of the equipment. “But use them only as a backup. And keep the com line open. Let us know what you see. And… if anything turns around, you get it. You understand?”
Yes, Serg.”
Nothing goes back.”
Yes, Serg. It will be done.”
Is that all?” Beam looked at me as I still had my doubts.
Ramsey?”
Yes, sir.”
Head the other way. Behind the rock there, on the other side of the road, before the other curve. You sniper them down if they try to hide behind the cars.”
Even back then, Ramsey did not like me very much, and a year later it proved that he had every right to feel like that. So, he looked at Beamer and only after our commanding officer nodded his head did he say, “Yes, Sir,” before he took his gear and headed down the straight stretch of the road.
You happy now?” Beamer asked me as I watched him go.
I’ll be happy when we have a few of those fellas inside our holding cells.”
Beamer chuckles. Good old Beamer. I wished I did not disappoint him so very much.


We took our spots then and the waiting game started. The game did not last that long. Even we could see them from far away.
They traveled heedlessly with the lights on their cars turned on. Not much they could have done on a night like this unless they wanted to us night-goggles. It was just too damn dark to navigate the treacherous mountain road with only a sparse light of the cloud-dimmed stars. We had info that they acquired night-vision through the black market. So, why not use it here and now?


What do you see?”
"There are… six vehicles there. I repeat - I confirm six vehicles there… Confirming their make. The first one is… White Toyota Tacoma."
Heavily armed in the back?”
No. See nothing in its back.”
How tight are they packed?” our Captain asked.
Can’t tell from here. But they drive close to each other. Speed, twenty miles per hour. You have a few minutes still.”
Okay, you keep on watching down that road. Let us know if you see anything coming behind them. You know the drill.”
Yes, sir. We’ll do that. Out.”
In a minute, they were back with new info, “The cars are packed, six, eight people per car,” came the info from our scouts. “Expected arrival, two minutes at present speed.”


"Waiting for your order, Commander," I said as I tried to take in a few deep, calming breaths.
Nobody moved, the noise of the slowly approaching cars the only noise interrupting the night. I pulled down my night-vision goggles and scouted the area again. I could see no heat signatures around except those in the cars. And there were plenty of them there.
We waited for the cars to come next to us.


We knew what we were doing. Six snipers, six drivers. Those were our primary targets. We were pretty certain that no high Taliban commander would be driving their own car. It was safe to take them all out. All six of our snipers, together with our commander, were positioned along the road, on elevated spots, about a hundred meters up.
I was in the assault part of the team. Six of us hiding behind the big rocks, trying to conceal our presence in case they used nigh-vision. We were the main firepower, the main assault, and the cleanup crew.
I hoped that if we get in a jam, Ramsey could cut them down from the left flank and if anyone tried to run down the slope away from the road, we could incapacitate him rather easily that way. It was as good plan as any.
The biggest threat was the friendly crossfire so the six of us next to the road were not supposed to get even close to the vehicles, not after the firing was all done.


Strange thing is, that what happens in those thirty or forty seconds you think about for years and years on, some would say, for the rest of your life.
"The first car is ready to make the curve," announced our spotters. All six of us had to be hidden behind and I did not dare even take a sneak peek at them.
Let them come, I thought. I’ll see them plenty really fast.
When the last car was announced to have made the curve, the first car had already passed my spot. I was in the middle so it was working out perfectly.
I counted my breaths, holding my MK18 retracted close-quarters assault weapon in both hands, my right index finger caressing the side part of the trigger. Soon, soon, I was going to press it and then the death was to come out of it.
The wheels of the third vehicle roam past me.
"Fire!" our CO suddenly announced and then the whole hell broke loose.