Part 7 (2/2)
”I said this was my next-to-last plan, XO. If this doesn't work, you won't believe what I'll do next.”
THIRTEEN.
”Ghost Hawk, this is Siren. Contact is now three minutes out, over.”
Major Stephanie Halverson, dressed like a praying mantis in her pressure suit and alien-like helmet with attached O2 line, took a deep breath and adjusted her grip on the stick. line, took a deep breath and adjusted her grip on the stick.
The F-35B Joint Strike Fighter's electro-optical targeting system (EOTS) continued to feed her up-to-the-nanosecond images and data on the approaching targets, and her helmet-mounted display system had some of the best head-tracking hardware and software she had ever fielded, along with all the usual requirements like a binocular-wide field of view, day/night capability with sensor fusion, and a digital image source for helmet-displayed symbology-all of which was engineer-speak for some wicked cool battlefield capability.
After an unusually long delay, her wingman, Captain Jake Boyd, finally replied with a curt ”Roger that,” his own F-35B streaking over the frozen tundra just off Halverson's right wing, its tail glowing faintly in the night.
”Ghost Hawk, do you have a problem, over?”
”Negative, Siren. Just shaking my head.”
They had nearly forty Russian Ka-29s on the AN/ APG-81 AESA radar, the helos on a bearing due south across the Northwest Territories, maintaining an alt.i.tude of just one thousand feet.
To say that Halverson and Boyd were surprised was an understatement.
Operating out of a small JSF training base located approximately two hundred miles north of Yellowknife, the capital of the NWT, she and Boyd were on their third scheduled night flight of the F-35B Short Take-Off and Vertical Landing (STOVL) fighter used primarily by the United States Marine Corps and the Royal Navy.
As JSF pilots and members of the Air Force, they were being cross-trained in the fighter so that its features could be exploited in non-carrier based operations located far inland and in more rugged terrain. The JSF had struck a deal with the commissioner of the NWT to use the largely unpopulated areas for tests.
Halverson and Boyd had both hoped that after the fourteen-day training mission, they'd get a chance to take their state-of-the-art killing machines into Russia and show those vodka-soaked wolves what they could do.
That the Russians would help by dropping in themselves was as exciting as it was troubling.
Halverson maintained a video blog, Femme Fatale Fighter Pilot, and she couldn't wait to share this with her readers, though she'd carefully dance around the cla.s.sified details, and her face was always hidden behind her helmet.
”All right, Ghost Hawk, two minutes now,” she reported. ”Let's. .h.i.t the gas and ascend before they spot us.”
”Roger that.”
”Igloo Base, this is Siren, we're climbing to fourteen thousand to hover and observe contact, over.”
”Roger that, Siren. Igloo Base standing by.”
She and Boyd climbed to fourteen thousand, then, with the targets about to pa.s.s below in thirty seconds, they prepared to hover.
All right, baby, show me what you got.
Instead of utilizing lift engines or rotating nozzles on the engine fan and exhaust like the old Harriers, Halverson's F-35B employed a s.h.i.+ft-driven lift fan, patented by Lockheed Martin and developed by Rolls-Royce.
The contra-rotating fan was like a turboprop set into the fuselage, just behind the c.o.c.kpit. Engine shaft power could be sent forward to it while bypa.s.s air from the cruise engine was sent to nozzles in the wings as the cruise nozzle at the tail vectored downward.
Thus, under her command, panels opened over the lift fan behind her, and a column of cool air providing 20,000 pounds of lifting power vented from the bottom of the aircraft, holding her steady, a fighter plane seemingly locked in the air by an invisible tractor beam.
Boyd was at Halverson's wing, hovering as well.
”Siren, this is Igloo Base.”
”Go ahead, Igloo.”
”We've received no response from your contact. You have authorization to fly by those helos, attempt once more to make contact yourselves. Instruct them to turn around-but do not engage unless fired upon, over.”
”Roger that, Igloo Base. If they fail to comply, we'd like authorization to engage, over.”
”Understood, Siren. Just let 'em know we're here first.”
”Roger that, Igloo Base, descending to intercept those helos. Ghost Hawk, you ready?”
”Oh, yeah, Siren.”
”Just follow me. This'll be . . . interesting.”
With that, she broke from her hover, jamming the stick forward and diving, the Pratt & Whitney engine thundering behind her with a force that crept into her gut, energized her, made her feel powerful beyond measure.
There was no darkness. Infrared peeled back the night to reveal the helicopters, flying in two cl.u.s.ters about three choppers abreast, spread far enough apart to be engaged individually.
Halverson took her bird straight down toward the lead three helos, diving directly in front of them, just fifty meters ahead.
She could only imagine the looks on those Russian pilots' faces as their radars went wild, their canopies lit up, and they were suddenly buffeted by her jet wash- Only to be hit again two seconds later by Boyd's exhaust.
Screaming toward the mottled carpet of snow and trees below, Halverson pulled up and banked right, while instructing Boyd to bank left. They both came up, then suddenly went back to hover mode, floating there at one thousand feet, on either side of the column of Ka-29s as they advanced.
”Russian helos, this is Joint Strike Force Fighter Siren, do you copy, over?
Halverson's pulse raced.
”Here they come,” said Boyd.
Tactical data links transmitted every reading from the instruments...o...b..ard their fighters back to Igloo Base and to every JSF tactical and strategic command post on the planet via the satellite links. At any time, any operations XO could tap in to her c.o.c.kpit to see what she was doing.
That Mr. Network-Centric Big Brother was always watching did unnerve Halverson, and there had been lots of talk among pilots of deliberately switching off certain systems at certain times. Since the war had broken out, the concept of network-centric operations (NCO) had proven a first step at dissipating some instances of the ”fog of war,” in which communication breakdowns and poor information handling resulted in heavy losses. However, when misinformation did did get into the system, it flowed like a virus and was hard to stop. get into the system, it flowed like a virus and was hard to stop.
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