Barry Eisler - Inside out

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He blew out a long breath. It was going to be a long five days. Well, with a little luck, or a lot of luck, more likely, maybe this could be resolved more quickly.

He opened his office safe, removed an encrypted thumb drive, and popped it into his computer. He was like a home owner with a raging fire bearing down on his house. It made sense to take a fresh look at his insurance policy.

On the thumb drive were unredacted copies of the Office of Legal Counsel memos, the secret opinions the administration had made the Justice Department draw up to legalize enhanced interrogation techniques. Everyone involved understood that worst case, no matter what else happened, the memos would give them legal cover: Senator, we were just doing what the Justice Department told us was legal. The CIA certainly understood the game. They'd had it played on them not long before: Senator, we were just following the CIA's intelligence about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Hell, if you were in Washington and didn't know this was the way the game was played, it meant it was being played on you.

But Ulrich understood the memos would serve an additional purpose, one most people didn't recognize. Ulrich was familiar with the concept of "force drift," which was basically the notion that when you set a fifty-five-mile-per-hour speed limit, you did so knowing that in fact people would drive at seventy, instead. So when he had instructed the Justice Department to create the memos, he knew two things. First, that no matter what the memos authorized, looked at properly, the authorizations could be construed as limitations. Second, that no matter what the limitations were, men in the field would exceed them. And when they did, and should those excesses come to light, Ulrich could shape the narrative away from The administration authorized torture, toward Field personnel exceeded the administration's clear legal limits.

The plan had worked nicely to contain the damage from the Abu Ghraib photos. The question was, would it also work now, if the interrogation videos came to light?

He considered. There was an unwritten rule of American politics: the sacrifice had to be commensurate with the scandal. For Abu Ghraib, it had been enough to sacrifice a few enlisted personnel. Watergate, on the other hand, had required the resignation of a president. And the rule had an important corollary: the more the politician could invoke national security as a justification, the more the impact of the scandal could be blunted. That's why Clinton's blow job almost killed him, while war crimes accusations were so easy to deflect.

The question was, where along that continuum would the tapes land him? He could play the national security card, certainly. It wasn't as though he had much else. But the Caspers… it was hard to see how even national security was going to get him around that. Yeah, the tapes alone would be a God-almighty fire, but the Caspers… the Caspers would dump gasoline onto the blaze. Against a conflagration like that, a few enlisted personnel or some field agents would be a pretty puny firebreak. Something bigger would be required. And why not him? After all, his name would be at the center of the interrogation program. He would be a big enough sacrifice to sate the public, but not too big to cause undue discomfort. Certainly the public would prefer the sacrifice of a high-level facilitator to, say, the trial of a former president and vice president, and because they would prefer it, it would be easy for everyone who might otherwise be vulnerable to make it so.

Yeah, they would come after him. And he'd make an appealing villain, too, like Jack Abramoff in his black fedora. He could imagine the descriptions already, how he'd "traded on his government service" to become a "lobbyist fat cat"… and the way his enemies would ply the media with not-for-attribution tales about his periodic outbursts at idiots, his judgment… Yeah, he knew the way it would be played. He'd played it that way dozens of times himself. Of course, knowing how the game was played and being able to defend yourself when you had become the game's object were two different things.

He pulled the thumb drive and put it back in his safe. Well, he'd checked his insurance policy, only to discover a massive deductible. Only to realize he was the deductible.

But that was okay. He had the one other policy, the ultimate policy. The audiotapes that thank God he'd had the sense to make that morning at Arlington National-and other times, too.

But he'd play that card only if he had to. Only if he'd run out of every other option.

His secure line buzzed and he snatched up the phone. "Ulrich."

"Okay to talk?" It was Clements.

"Go."

"The photo you sent. His name is Ben Treven. He's an army guy."

"So not one of yours?"

"Definitely not."

Ulrich should have known the guy wasn't Agency. If he'd been Agency, he would have been bringing up the rear, not closing in on the target.

He stared at the photo on his screen. "You think he's one of Horton's?"

"Hard to say. His MOS is classified. Even just the photo took some doing to match. I could try to find out, but asking would reveal that we know."

"Well, it really doesn't matter what he is. He wasn't part of the original program, he's answering to I don't know whom, and it looks like he's already five steps ahead of you in finding whoever is trying to leverage those tapes. Now, listen. I've got other information to forward you. How fast can you get your Ground Branch team to San Jose, Costa Rica?"

There was a slight pause. "Four hours, if that. Where are you getting this information?"

"Don't worry about that-the information is solid, that's all you need to know."

"No, that's not-"

"I don't know what name Treven is traveling under, but now that you know what he's looking for, you should be able to anticipate him. Find out what he knows and who he's working for, get him out of the way, and find those fucking tapes."

There was another pause. Clements said, "Let me clarify something for you, Ulrich. You don't give me orders anymore. You're just a lobbyist now. The only reason I'm even talking to you is out of courtesy."

"Yeah?" Ulrich said, his voice rising, some dark part of his mind suddenly joyous at the prospect of having someone to bully, to dominate. "Well, let me clarify something for you. You're talking to me because you need me to run political interference for you, which I have. And because without the information I just gave you, you couldn't find your own ass with both hands and a flashlight. And because if someone smarter than you doesn't tell you what you need to do, you're going to be in newspaper headlines in less than five days and in a prison cell not long after that. You got it? Are we clarified now?"

Silence on the other end of the line. Ulrich slammed down the receiver, stood, and paced back and forth for a minute, concentrating on his breathing, trying to calm himself. He knew he shouldn't have snapped at Clements: it would chafe worse now than in the days when one of his tirades had been backed by the power of the office of the vice president, and so was apt to be counterproductive. But damn, it had felt good to be in charge again, giving orders and not suffering idiots, if only for a moment.

He went back to his desk and forwarded Clements the information he would need. He hoped he was making the right call. Treven was obviously cleverer than the CIA, and so logically stood a better chance of recovering the tapes. The question was, what would he do with them if he did? Ulrich decided he couldn't take that chance. He didn't trust the CIA, but at least he understood their motives.

JSOC just felt like a wild card. He'd deal with them accordingly.

13

The Sound Was Always the Same Larison shot bolt upright on the mattress, his body slicked with sweat, the awful screams still ringing in his ears. His heart was pounding combat hard and he was practically hyperventilating.

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