This is my new story. People have commented that my stories aren't long enough. I hope this suits them better. As always, your comments are welcomed, and I will respond to them.
Foxtrot Six.
Chapter 1 - Reconnaissance
Russian Enclave of Kaliningrad Oblast, Baltic Coast, Friday, 28 June 2024
'KIIITTTT!'
The word was shouted; drawn out, extended on the 'I' for a good two seconds and ended with emphasis on the 't'. Kit, the British military slang word for any equipment issued to soldiers.
Mike calls out the details.
'It's a column of nine... no... ten Russian Buk self-propelled air defence missile units.'
Basically the Buk's a tracked armoured vehicle which, depending on their role, are either radar Target Acquisition Radar vehicles or Transporter Erector Launcher vehicles equipped with surface-to-air missiles.
'Ten of the buggers,' I say quietly, 'that's a bloody battalion is that.'
'You're picking up a Manchester accent mate,' Mike snorts in a Lancashire accent so strong that can only be sliced with a chainsaw.
He keeps the digital night vision binoculars with the built in video camera firmly trained on the line of mechanised SAM launchers. I know that he's taking lots and lots of pictures. Even banter can't distract him.
'You're surprised?' I reply, 'hanging with you lot day in day out.'
I grab the Nikon Digital SLR with its unfeasibly long telephoto zoom lens and start making the most of this Kodak moment. The camera and night vision gear actually helps reinforce our cover story if we get bagged. We're a couple of natural history buffs who got lost. The border between Russia and Poland is notoriously porous round here. It's plausible that the border, marked only by red and green striped boundary markers could be crossed by accident. Well, maybe that should be almost plausible.
'Didn't you used to be a Brummie or something until you came up north?' he comments.
'No, I don't come from Birmingham, I come from Stoke,' I tell him. 'Geographically we're part of the West Midlands, but in reality we're the north's red headed stepchild.'
Mike Braithwaite snorts with amusement. He's a squat, powerfully built guy who sports a droopy Zapata moustache and ever-present yellow tinted aviator glasses.
The most important thing to know about Mike is that he's army barmy. Waiting for our flight over to Poland we'd had a couple of beers in the departure lounge. It was the first time in the twelve months since I started at the Institute that we've had the opportunity to have a meaningful conversation about anything other than work.
Over the beer he'd told me that he'd wanted to be a soldier since he was a little boy. He couldn't wait until his eleventh birthday when he was able to join the army cadets. His ambition had been to eventually join the paras.
At FE college he'd been on a uniformed services course. It wasn't quite military enough for Mike, however, so he joined the army reserves too. And that's when it happened.
While on a training weekend he'd been on an assault course when he fell and hit his head. The medics checked him over and realised that there was something wrong. Further tests revealed that he had a detached retina. And that was the end of his military career.
Now, in his spare time, he's an adult sergeant instructor in the army cadets. It's as close as he'll ever get to soldiering.
We both work for the Trans-Atlantic Institute for Strategic Studies. A think tank with a foot on each side of the Atlantic, having study centres attached to universities in Manchester in the UK and North Carolina in the States. I'm based at the Manchester centre, ostensibly as a project research assistant while I also work part-time on a PhD in history.
The Institute is, at least according to the website: 'an independent Non Government Organisation, produce evidence-based research, publications, conferences and custom briefings on defence and security, whose mission is to help build a stronger trans-Atlantic relationship. There is, However, more to the Institute than meets the eye.
So, where do you reckon they're going?'
'Obvious isn't it? They're heading for Chernyakhovsk Air Base,' I answer, 'We worked it out by looking of Google Earth during the pre-planning meeting back in Manchester. That track can only go there.'
This is the second Buk SAM battalion we've seen crossing the countryside in the night.
'The Russian High Command know they can't beat our surveillance satellites,' Mike said, 'but by conducting a nocturnal redeployment they hope to prevent prying eyes noticing what they're doing. That way they can prevent major intel leakage onto social media.'
'Ey, tovarishch general, kak ideya rabotayet?' I muttered in bad Russian.
'What's that mate?' Mike asked.
'I said; 'hey comrade general, how's that working out for you".'
'Not so good I reckon,' he chuckles.
The path they're on only goes to one place; they're redeploying back to the air base. But that's why we're here, as in a CROPS position, a Covert Rural Observation Post. It's a wooded hill in a nature reserve that's open to the public, but overlooks a fork in the road where two dirt tracks converge in the Kaliningrad Defensive Area.
We've got a Toyota Hilux hardtop SUV, it's parked up under a clump of trees. We've draped it with a camouflage net. It's not brilliant but it'll have to do.
From our position we've got an unobstructed view of traffic moving to the military air base. With the photographic evidence we've now got, it confirms what I began to suspect six weeks earlier.
I first became aware that something was going on when observed that social media users had noticed an up-tick in Russian military cargo flights, particularly An-124 and Il-76 military transport aircraft out of Kaliningrad. As the region shares land borders exclusively with NATO member states, flights from Kaliningrad back to Mother Russia cross the Baltic Sea and international airspace meaning that they have turn on their transponders, an electronic device that produces a response when it receives a radio-frequency interrogation. This means that their flights are logged on various websites, and it's easy to track them.
The Russians were beginning to withdraw their air defence systems from the Baltic enclave. The question is where?
I suspected that they were moving them to Rostov-on-Don. Recent Ukrainian strikes using long-distance missiles and drones had damaged Russian air defences in the occupied Luhansk region. Now all I needed was evidence to prove that the
Russians were on the move.
I reported this to Aaron Stone, the American boss of the Trans-Atlantic Institute for Strategic Studies. Reports originating from the Institute were marked as 'Foxtrot Six'. The letter 'F' is 'Foxtrot' in the NATO phonetic alphabet and the sixth letter in the alphabet.
He had been able to sell my theory to our clients; the Pentagon and Whitehall. But they wanted more intel before they acted on it. They wanted eyes on the ground to get evidence. Which is why Mike and I are here.
But right now I was beginning to think it was time we weren't here. I can hear the sound of helicopter rotor blades. Faint but getting louder.
'We've got company mate, a chopper,' I announce, and then start scanning round with my own digital binoculars. 'Yeah, it's a Mil 17 Hip, coming in from the east...'
'...All the better to have the rising sun behind it,' Mike says thoughtfully, 'sounds like the pilot knows what he's doing.'
'You reckon?' I mutter laconically. 'Any road, it's time we weren't here.'
'Ah, yeah, we'd better make like shepherds,' he says, 'and get the flock out of here.'
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Chapter 2 - Just a Blow Job