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BOOK: Guerilla Warfare (2006)
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"Shit! This is a no-win situation."

"You've got permission to cut and run anytime you want to," Alfredo said. "Nobody is going to hold it against you." He reached for another beer. "We can have you out of here within twelve hours. What do you say?"

Brannigan gave the ex--Special Forces NCO the coldest stare he'd ever been given in his life.

"I thought not," Alfredo said, belching again.

Chapter 7

HEADQUARTERS, GRUPO DE BATALLA CAMPAMENTO ASTRAY

10 DECEMBER

1020 HOURS LOCAL

IGNACIO Perez sat on the chair in his small room in the far corner of the headquarters building, smoking nervously. The ashtray on the desk next to him was filled with cigarette butts. Beside it was a half-full bottle of cognac that had been opened less than an hour before. The little bald man was frightened out of his wits but not to the extent of trembling with fear or heavy, nervous sweating. His trepidation was the smothering type that weighed on his consciousness with a relentless pressure without bringing on noticeable physical reactions other than smoking and drinking too much.

One of the patrols sent out a couple of days before had gone missing, then was located earlier that morning. A reconnaissance party had radioed in that three men had been discovered dead, and a fourth was missing in action. This was the young subalterno named Enrico Melend had not be found anywhere in the vicinity. It was assumed he had been captured.

As far as Ignacio was concerned, this was a sign of things to come.

He was in an environment that was completely alien to his personality and temperament. The former accountant was the farthest thing from a soldier. He was not aggressive, brave nor physically robust. The little man had ended up in this frightening predicament after a conviction for embezzling money from the machine parts manufacturing firm where he was employed. And this trouble came about because of his wife Isabella.

She was a lot younger than he, and Ignacio had met her when she was a salesclerk in a small grocery he frequented in his Seville neighborhood. Isabella was pretty in a sort of cheap, second-rate way. Her hair was always arranged in a flamboyant manner, the blouses she chose emphasized the cleavage of her large breasts, and she wore miniskirts that showed off her well-shaped legs. She displayed a sort of tacky sensuality that drove Ignacio mad with lust and love.

She had a lot of boyfriends who were the types that worked irregularly, if at all, and were always in some sort of trouble with the police or creditors. When she began being friendly toward him, Ignacio knew it was because he had gainful employment with a regular paycheck. He certainly wasn't a handsome man. In fact, there was very little she found attractive in his appearance. It was ludicrous to think that a twenty-year-old girl found a bald, spindly yet potbellied middle-aged accountant good-looking. His inferiority complex made him tongue-tied in her presence, but eventually his romantic affections finally stifled his natural shyness. He had gasped with happiness when, after he finally got up the nerve to ask her out, she agreed to let him take her to a restaurant and the cinema one Saturday evening. After he escorted her home, she even agreed to go out with him again.

Thus began a courtship she dominated. He knew that Isabella was seeing other men from time to time, but he loved her so much he forgave her indiscretions. He fooled himself into thinking that if she became his wife and saw his pure, loving devotion, she would lose interest in her paramours. He was frightened out of his wits when he proposed, expecting to be laughed at and sent away. But she accepted.

When they married, Isabella was able to quit her job, and Ignacio was now convinced that between the affection, support and security he provided, she would indeed be a faithful, happy wife. But after only six months she began complaining about the size of the apartment, her spending allowance, their few evenings out and the fact that she couldn't buy the best clothes or visit the most expensive beauty salons.

She left him once, coming back only after he promised to raise their standard of living. Ignacio was so helplessly and hopelessly in love that he began to cook the books at work just a bit for the cash to satisfy his self-centered, demanding wife. He was able to easily pull in an extra 50 euros a week. This was fine for awhile, but her insatiable desires for expensive things grew until he was desperately sifting out amounts that climbed upwards to 250 euros several times a month.

Then an unannounced audit occurred at the factory.

Actually, Ignacio wasn't surprised, since he figured that somewhere down the line someone was noticing the growing discrepancies in his books. The miscreant accountant was arrested at work and taken out by a pair of large policemen while his coworkers looked on in horror and revulsion. The news of his crime was in all the newspapers and on television. Ignacio Perez was disgraced and humiliated. He knew the moment he was roughly shoved into the jail cell that he had lost everything: his dignity, reputation, and Isabella.

The trial was conveniently short, since he admitted everything and threw himself on the mercy of the court.

The judge noted the circumstances that drove him to the crime as well as the fact he had never been in trouble with the law before. But embezzling 200,000 euros was a serious offense, even if it was a first one, and called for a sentence of ten to fifteen years. However, because of his clean prior record, Ignacio was given the choice between the penitentiary or three years in the Spanish Foreign Legion. He chose the Legion.

He should have taken prison.

Ignacio Perez simply could not adapt to a brutal military environment. Punches, kicks from the cabos and sargentos, along with weeks as an arrestado in the labor units, did nothing to help him become a better soldier. No matter how much Ignacio applied himself, he couldn't fire his rifle accurately, fold his clothes properly to be placed in his locker, shine his boots bright enough, or properly carry out the myriad other maddening tasks demanded of him. But finally, after enduring six months of hell, somebody took note of the fact that he was a former accountant and could read, write, and even type. These were rare qualities in the Legion, and he was taken away from line companies and field soldiering to be transferred to headquarters as an administrative clerk.

Ignacio's expertise in paperwork was so good that he was even made a cabo to give him some authority in dealing with problems that arose in the staff bureaucracy. The poor little fellow felt better now, sure that he could finish out his three-year enlistment, then go to the Canary Islands, where no one knew him, and begin a new life.

But Coronel Jose Maria Castillo y Plato, the regimental commander, pulled him out of headquarters to work in his office typing up his fascist manifesto. Ignacio thought the man mad, and the more he worked on the fascist philosophy, the more nervous he became in the coronel's presence. When Castillo left the legion, Ignacio was not asked if he wanted to go with him to become embroiled in an international military coup. Nor were any inquiries regarding his opinion of fascism. Castillo simply appointed the diminutive clerk a personal adjutant, warranted him a suboficial, and dragged him off to South America. From that point on, he not only had a criminal record, he was a deserter from the Spanish Army.

Now Ignacio was alone and isolated in the wilds of the Gran Chaco, trying to figure out how to get out of this new trouble and find freedom and peace once again. The next time he saw a cheap slattern, he would know enough to avoid her like the boot of an angry sargento.

He downed the glass of brandy, refilled it and drank deeply again.

.

ABOVE THE LOZANO GRASSLANDS

PETROLEO COLMO AEROSPATIALE GAZELLE HELICOPTER

1100 HOURS LOCAL

THE small red aircraft flew slowly across the savannah's expanse at an altitude of 750 meters. In the passenger seats behind the pilot, the CIA operative Alfredo sat with Dr. Carl Joplin of the U. S. State Department. The two, wearing intercom headsets, gazed pensively down at the flat terrain below them.

Joplin turned his eyes toward his companion. "So you're disappointed in the intelligence you gleaned from the young Bolivian officer, are you?"

"Disappointed is not the exact word, Dr. Joplin," Alfredo said. "Dissatisfied more aptly describes my reaction. The drug-induced interrogation only produced what we had already figured out. The basic problem with our young EPW was that he didn't know a lot. He had fallen under the influence of older officers back in his home unit, and he made some unwise political choices."

"What will become of him?"

"He'll be put under arrest in quarters by the Bolivian Army," Alfredo explained. "When this Falangist revolution is broken up, he'll be allowed to resign his commission, provided he agrees to never divulge what he's done. The kid will more than likely go into the banking business with his father."

"Interesting," Joplin commented. "And how are the SEALs doing?"

"They located the Falangist headquarters a couple of weeks ago. They even made a brief raid on the place." "That's encouraging," Joplin stated.

"They weren't strong enough to wipe it out or force a surrender," Alfredo said. "But it's good information for an air strike. How about sending a carrier down here?"

"That will not happen," Joplin said. "Could you arrange for one of the South American air forces to do the job?"

"If we could do that, we wouldn't need the SEALs," Alfredo said. "At any rate, the Falangist force in this area, while small, will be reinforced substantially before too much more time goes by."

"Could you be a bit more specific?"

"Early in the new year, they should be strongly established here on the Gran Chaco," Alfredo said. "And there has been no concerted effort to defeat them except for the insertion of twenty-one SEALs into the OA. And one of them, an officer, has been wounded and medevaced. So there're twenty of them now. Next week they might be down by another. Or two. Or a half dozen. Who knows?"

"I agree we must increase the size of the detachment," Joplin said. "What about the armed forces of Chile, Bolivia and Argentina? Have their internal situations improved?"

"I've nothing but discouraging news in those quarters:' Alfredo said. "The lists of officers and noncommissioned officers going AWOL are growing on a daily basis. I realize some may be showing their support for the Falangists by staying away from their posts without actually joining in the fighting, but it is an indication of a problem that is becoming more threatening and complex."

"What are your chances of developing a mole in the Falangist movement?"

"You've heard of that proverbial snowball in hell, haven't you, Dr. Joplin?"

"I deal with it on an almost daily basis," Joplin said, smiling without humor. "In the meantime, what is the intrepid Wild Bill Brannigan planning on doing down there in the OA?"

"He's going into a hit-and-run fluid mode that depends heavily on resupply from Petroleo Colmo," Alfredo explained. "The SEALs are setting up caches around the area not only for normal resupply but to provide places to hunker down if they come under heavy attack."

"I hope we're not considering last stands."

"It could come to that if we leave them all by their lonesomes while their enemy grows stronger," Alfredo said glumly.

"Something must be done," Joplin said as much to himself as his companion.

"You mustn't forget that the loss of valuable people like a SEAL platoon would negatively affect morale within the special operations community," Alfredo said. "It wouldn't do a lot for confidence or trust in the State or Defense Departments:'

Joplin made no comment as he gazed down at the grasslands, deep in thought.

.

HEAQUARTERS, GRUPO DE BATALLA CAMPAMENTO ASTRAY

1600 HOURS LOCAL

SARGENT Antonio Muller led his three men through the defensive perimeter around the garrison into its interior. They had just completed a daylong reconnaissance patrol and showed the fatigue brought on by physical exertion combined with high temperatures and humidity.

Their boots were caked with mud, and their camouflage uniforms were sweat-soaked, but they marched smartly into the cantonment area.

Muller brought the small column to a halt. Two of them were sargentos and the other a cabo who had been broken down from sargento-mayor for beating up an insubordinate soldier while serving in the Argentine Army. That was his basic motivation for deserting and joining the Falangist insurgency.

"Good job today," Muller told them. "Your physical conditioning is now tops. When the new recruits arrive you will be ready to give them hell. After you're dismissed you're free to clean up and get ready for mess call. Rompan filas!"

The men made about-faces, then broke ranks and ambled toward their barracks. Muller walked across the parade ground to headquarters, going in to report to the intelligence officer. This was Capita Diego Tippelskirch, who had served in the same parachute infantry battalion in the Chilean Army with the sargento. He had been sent TDY from his battalion to a posting in a supersecret organization during President Antonio Penechet's notorious reign. Like many such officers, the law was closing in on Tippelskirch, and this was the basic reason why he opted for the Falange. Generalisimo Castillo was glad to welcome him into the movement because of his many valuable contacts in the military and naval intelligence services of several South American countries.

BOOK: Guerilla Warfare (2006)
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