Debt Of Honor by Clancy, Tom

way: “We’ve cut back too much, sir. Our people are strung out very thin.”

“They are simply not as capable as we think they are. That is a thing of the

pnitl.” Raizo Yamata said. He was dressed in an elegant silk kimono, and sat

on Ihc floor at a traditional low table.

The others around the table looked discreetly at their watches. It was ap-

proaching three in the morning, and though this was one of the nicest geisha

houses in the city, the hour was late. Raizo Yamata was a captivating host,

however. A man of great wealth and sagacity, the others thought. Or most of

them.

“They’ve protected us for generations,” one man suggested.

“From what? Ourselves?” Yamata demanded coarsely. That was permit-

led now. Though all around the table were men of the most exquisite good

manners, they were all close acquaintances, if not all actually close friends,

and all had consumed their personal limit of alcohol. Under these circum-

ftlances, the rules of social intercourse altered somewhat. They could all

ftpcak bluntly. Words that would ordinarily be deadly insults would now be

accepted calmly, then rebutted harshly, and there would be no lingering ran-

cor about it. That, too, was a rule, but as with most rules, it was largely theo-

retical. Though friendships and relationships would not end because of

words here, neither would they be completely forgotten. “How many of

U»,” Yamata went on, “have been victims of these people?”

Yamata hadn’t said “barbarians,” the other Japanese citizens at the table

noted. The reason was the presence of the two other men. One of them, Vice

Admiral V. K. Chandraskatta, was a fleet commander of the Indian Navy,

currently on leave. The other, Zhang Han San-the name meant “Cold

Mountain” and had not been given by his parents-was a senior Chinese

diplomat, part of a trade mission to Tokyo. The latter individual was more

easily accepted than the former. With his swarthy skin and sharp features,

Chandraskatta was regarded by the others with polite contempt. Though an

educated and very bright potential ally, he was even more gaijin than the

Chinese guest, and the eight zaibatsu around the table each imagined that he

could smell the man, despite their previous intake of sake-, which usually

deadened the senses. For this reason, Chandraskatta occupied the place of

honor, at Yamata’s right hand, and the zaibatsu wondered if the Indian

grasped that this supposed honor was merely a sophisticated mark of con-

tempt. Probably not. He was a barbarian, after all, though perhaps a useful

one.

“They are not as formidable as they once were, I admit, Yamata-san, but

I assure you,” Chandraskatta said in his best Dartmouth English, “their

navy remains quite formidable. Their two carriers in my ocean are enough to

give my navy pause.”

Yamata turned his head.’ ‘You could not defeat them, even with your sub-

marines?”

“No,” the Admiral answered honestly, largely unaffected by the eve-

ning’s drink, and wondering where all this talk was leading. “You must un-

derstand that this question is largely a technical exercise-a science

experiment, shall we say?” Chandraskatta adjusted the kimono Yamata had

given him, to make him a real member of this group, he’d said. “To defeat

an enemy fleet, you must get close enough for your weapons to reach his

ships. With their surveillance assets, they can monitor our presence and our

movements from long distance. Thus they can maintain a covering presence

on us from a range of, oh, something like six hundred kilometers. Since we

are unable to maintain a corresponding coverage of their location and

course, we cannot maneuver them out of place very easily.”

“And that’s why you haven’t moved on Sri Lanka yet?” Tanzan Itagake

asked.

‘ ‘It is one of the considerations.” The Admiral nodded.

“How many carriers do they now have?” Itagake went on.

“In their Pacific Fleet? Four. Two in our ocean, two based in Hawaii.”

‘ ‘What of the other two?” Yamata inquired.

‘ ‘Kitty Hawk and Ranger are in extended overhaul status, and will not be

back at sea for one and three years, respectively. Seventh Fleet currently has

all the carriers. First Fleet has none. The U.S. Navy has five other carriers in

commission. These are assigned to the Second and Sixth fleets, with one

entering overhaul status in six weeks.” Chandraskatta smiled. His informa-

tion was completely up to date, and he wanted his hosts to know that. “I

must tell you that as depleted as the U.S. Navy may appear to be, compared

to only-what? five years ago? Compared to five years ago, then, they are

quite weak, but compared to any other navy in the world, they are still im-

mensely strong. One of their carriers is the equal of every other aircraft car-

rier in the world.”

“You agree, then, that their aircraft carriers are their most potent

weapon?” Yamata asked.

“Of course.” Chandraskatta rearranged the things on the table. In the

center he put an empty sake bottle. “Imagine that this is the carrier. Draw a

thousand-kilometer circle around it. Nothing exists in that circle without the

permission of the carrier air group. In fact, by increasing their operating

Icinpo, that radius extends to fifteen hundred kilometers. They can strike

somewhat farther than that if they need to, but even at the minimum distance

I demonstrated, they can control a vast area of ocean. Take those carriers

uway, and they are just another frigate navy. The difficult part of the exercise

is taking them away,” the Admiral concluded, using simple language for the

industrialists.

Chandraskatta was correct in assuming that these merchants knew little

uhout military affairs. However, he had underestimated their ability to learn.

The Admiral came from a country with a warrior tradition little known out-

side its own borders. Indians had stopped Alexander the Great, blunted his

army, wounded the Macedonian conqueror, perhaps fatally, and put an end

lo his expansion, an accomplishment the Persians and Egyptians had singu-

larly failed to do. Indian troops had fought alongside Montgomery in the

defeat of Rommel-and had crushed the Japanese Army at Imphal, a fact

that he had no intention of bringing up, since one of the people at the table

had been a private in that army. He wondered what they had in mind, but for

the moment was content to enjoy their hospitality and answer their ques-

tions, elementary as they were. The tall, handsome flag officer leaned back,

wishing for a proper chair and a proper drink. This sake these prissy little

merchants served was closer to water than gin, his usual drink of choice.

“But if you can?” Itagake asked.

“As I said,” the Admiral replied patiently, “then they are a frigate navy.

I grant you, with superb surface ships, but the ‘bubble’ each ship controls is

far smaller. You can protect with a frigate, you cannot project power with

one.” His choice of words, he saw, stopped the conversation for a moment.

One of the others handled the linguistic niceties, and Itagake leaned back

with a long “Ahhhh,” as though he’d just learned something profound.

Chandraskatta regarded the point as exceedingly simple-forgetting for a

moment that the profound often was. However, he recognized that some-

thing important had just taken place.

What are you thinking about? He would have shed blood, even his own,

to know the answer to that question. Whatever it was, with proper warning,

it might even be useful. He would have been surprised to learn that the others

around the table were churning over exactly the same thought.

“Sure are burning a lot of oil,” the group-operations officer noted as he

began his morning brief.

USS Dwight D. Elsenhower was on a course of zero-nine-eight degrees,

east by south, two hundred nautical miles southeast of Felidu Atoll. Fleet

speed was eighteen knots, and would increase for the commencement of

flight operations. The main tactical display in flag plot had been updated

forty minutes earlier from the radar of an E-3C Hawkeyc surveillance air-

craft, and, indeed, the Indian Navy was burning a good deal of Bunker-

Charlie, or whatever they used now to drive their ships through the water.

The display before him could easily have been that of a U.S. Navy Carrier

Battle Group. The two Indian carriers, Viraat and Vikrant, were in the center

of a circular formation, the pattern for which had been invented by an Amer-

ican named Nimitz almost eighty years earlier. Close-in escorts were Delhi

and Mysore, home-built missile destroyers armed with a SAM system about

which information was thin-always a worry to aviators. The second ring

was composed of the Indian version of the old Russian Kashin-class destroy-

ers, also SAM-equipped. Most interesting, however, were two other factors.

“Replenishment ships Rajaba Gan Palan and Shakti have rejoined the

battle group after a brief stay in Trivandrum-”

“How long were they in port?” Jackson asked.

“Less than twenty-four hours,” Commander Ed Harrison, the group-op-

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