Central Intelligence Agency
Near East Division TO:12MF-3-57-8U
RESTRICTED DOS-01
SPEKTR — 12 GROUP OPERATION DOSSIER
PROJECT TO LOCATE AND ACQUIRE SPEKTR VEHICLE
TOP SECRET/SPEKTR GROUP EYES ONLY
WARNING! This is a TOP SECRET — SPEKTR GROUP EYES ONLY document containing compartmentalised information essential to the national security of the United States. EYES ONLY ACCESS to the material herein is strictly limited to personnel possessing SPEKTR — 12 CLEARANCE LEVEL. Examination or use by unauthorised personnel is strictly forbidden and is punishable by federal law.
SPEKTR — 12 GROUP Oct 2005
TOP SECRET SPECIAL HANDLING NO FORM
Central Intelligence Agency
Directorate of Operations, Near East Division
Doc ID:575JD1
Page 01/1
08/25/05
MEMORANDUM TO:Project Lead, D.Ops
SUBJECT:Spektr
Colonel,
We conducted a Predator overflight of the contamination zone at first light this morning, and I am forced to conclude that our attempts to contain the infection have failed.
Analysis of 11th Recon surveillance images confirm a fire-fight of considerable ferocity has taken place. Scorch marks and cratering suggest grenade detonations. Some of the ancient temple buildings have suffered significant blast damage. Both helicopters have been destroyed.
We have been unable to make contact with the incursion team for twenty-four hours. Their last transmission suggested exploration of the valley was proceeding as planned. We then received a series of unintelligible communications we attributed to damaged sat-com equipment.
We must conclude that the incursion team is lost. Any further attempts to retrieve the virus flask are beyond our current back-channel resources, and risk exposing agency involvement in the Spektr project.
I respectfully suggest we initiate CLEANSWEEP.
R. Koell Field Officer CA Special Proj, Baghdad
TOP SECRET SPECIAL HANDLING NO FORM
Central Intelligence Agency
Directorate of Operations, Near East Division
Doc ID:575JD10
Page 01/1
08/25/05
MEMORANDUM TO:Project Lead, D.Ops
SUBJECT:Spektr
Colonel,
Our pilot reports successful detonation of the Sentinel device over Valley 403 at 09:57.
Joint Special Operations Command has been informed that the explosion near the Syrian border was an operational matter and no further investigation is required.
The incursion team were mercenaries. A multinational squad of second tier special forces. They were not affiliated with any of the major security contractors currently operating in this sector. They had no agency connection and were unaware of the true purpose of their mission. We do not expect their disappearance to attract undue attention.
R. Koell Field Officer CA Special Proj, Baghdad Station
Central Intelligence Agency
Directorate of Operations, Near East Division
FLASH CABLE — READ AND DESTROY
TO:Project Lead, D.Ops
FROM:R. Koell
08/25/05
14:46 AST
Colonel,
I have just received a bulletin from Joint Special Operations Command, Qatar. They say they have detected movement within the contamination zone. They report a locomotive heading out of the blast area along an old mine track.
JSOC have personnel in the Western Desert as part of Delta operations targeting foreign mujahedeen along the Syrian border. They have re-routed an air patrol from 160th Special Ops to intercept the locomotive.
We have made Operational Command aware of our wish to debrief the occupants of the vehicle and we are assured of their cooperation. We are currently monitoring radio traffic to determine if a member of the incursion team has survived.
The Western Desert
The Contamination Zone
The locomotive roared headlong through a rippling, caramel sandscape. A dust-streaked behemoth jetting black diesel fumes. A plough welded to the forward buffer bar scoured the dune-choked rails in a series of sand-bursts, like a speedboat smacking through chop.
The engine looked like it tore out of hell. A shattered cyclopean nose lamp. Bodywork pitted, scarred, scorched black. Maintenance panels ripped away. Cables trailed and sparked.
The windshield was smashed. The cab was empty. The throttle was jammed at full power and lashed with rope. Rev needles at max. A tool box wedged the trip-brake pedal open. Every surface dusted in sand: the console, the driver’s bar-stool seat, the plate floor.
The track ahead was blocked by a high fence half submerged in sand. Rusted chain-link propped up by metal stakes. The barrier stretched to vanishing point north and south.
Corroded stencil signs. Alternate English/Arabic. A warning to coalition troops and camel-driving Bedouin:
DANGER
TOXIC HAZARD
KEEP OUT
USE OF DEADLY FORCE AUTHORISED
IN ACCORDANCE WITH PA DIRECTIVE 84–4643
The locomotive punched through the barrier. It wrenched fence stakes from the sand. The plough blade sheering through chain-link like it was paper.
The Blackhawk flew low over dunes, chasing its shadow. It drew parallel with the locomotive.
Captain Flores held the chopper steady. She lifted her visor and surveyed the cab. Smashed windows. An empty driver’s chair. She adjusted her helmet mike.
‘ The bridge at Anah is out. That thing is going to drop into the fucking ravine. ’
Sergeant Tate sat in the cargo compartment. He had a goatee, and a big tattoo on his forearm: the Pegasus insignia of the 160th SOAR. Night Stalkers Don’t Quit.
He tossed his rifle to Frost, the combat medic. He unbuckled his harness. He pulled on sand goggles and adjusted the earpiece of his radio.
‘ Put me down on the roof. ’
The Blackhawk banked and hovered over the five-hundred-ton juggernaut. Flores adjusted airspeed, lowered the collective and nudged the cyclic forward.
The starboard tyre of the chopper gently touched down on the locomotive roof. Tate stepped onto the blackened, wind-scoured metal and the chopper pulled back. He crouched, lashed by downwash.
Tate crawled on his hands and knees along the cambered cowling. He climbed over louvered intake grilles and belching exhaust stacks.
He reached the roof of the cab. He climbed down onto the nose, holding the smashed air horn for support. He spat sand, crouched and peered through the broken windshield.
‘ Anything? ’
‘ Ghost train. ’
He swung his legs through the windshield. He slid across the engineer console into the cab.
Suede desert boots crunched on broken glass. He crouched and inspected debris that littered the floor. He examined Glock pistol clips and US STANAG magazines. He scooped up a handful of brass cartridge cases and let them spill through gloved fingers.
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