Tom Clancy's Op-Center: Sting of the Wasp: A Novel
By Jeff Rovin, Tom Clancy and Steve Pieczenik
3/5
()
International Relations
Military Operations
Military
Secrecy
Espionage
Chase
Reluctant Hero
Mole
Ticking Clock
Government Conspiracy
Hero's Journey
Chessmaster
Moral Dilemma
Race Against Time
Mentor
Middle Eastern Politics
Teamwork
Surveillance
Leadership
Smuggling
About this ebook
After an intelligence failure at Op-Center results in a major terrorist attack, director Chase Williams radically transforms the agency into a ground-breaking mobile strike force.
It’s a beautiful day in Manhattan as excited tourists board the floating Air & Space Museum on the USS Intrepid—until a horrible explosion rips across the flight deck, showering the body parts of innocent people everywhere. The perpetrator is none other than Captain Ahmed Salehi, an Iranian mastermind whose last terrorism plot was foiled at the last minute by Op-Center.
Back in Washington, the White House orders Op-Center disbanded—or so it seems. Unbeknownst to America’s enemies, director Chase Williams has been put in charge of a brand-new, top-secret covert attack team known only as BLACK WASP. Its members, each chosen for their unique set of specialized black-ops skills—martial arts expert Lieutenant Grace Lee, sharpshooter Lance Corporal Jaz Rivette, and JAG attorney and criminologist Major Hamilton Breen—have been assigned to seek out Salehi and finally bring him to justice.
But Salehi is part of an even more frightening conspiracy, led by a renegade Iranian tycoon determined to establish a new Islamic State that will dwarf the horrors of ISIS. From the heart of Manhattan, to the swamps of Trinidad, to the sunbaked mud villages of Yemen, this new Op-Center is America’s only line of defense against a bloody Middle Eastern tyrant.
Jeff Rovin
JEFF ROVIN is the author of more than 150 books, fiction and nonfiction, both under his own name, under various pseudonyms, or as a ghostwriter, including numerous New York Times bestsellers and over a dozen of the original Tom Clancy’s Op-Center novels.
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Reviews for Tom Clancy's Op-Center
9 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This is what happens when a name is franchised. Tom Clancy plays no part in this book. Two strangers try to imitate Clncy's style with the result of an empty shell. To make matters worse, it is written in a time frame just before Mr. Putin's invasion of the Ukraine with an entirely different result than the fiction proposes. The characters are mere shadows of true Clancy characters. Yes, I did not like it and consider the time spent reading as wasted.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Crimea has become one of the most dangerous places on the planet as it could spark a war that no one really wants, but for some that is exactly what they’re counting on. Dark Zone is the fourth book of the Op-Center reboot as original series author Jeff Rovin joins George Galdorisi as Op-Center is faced with rogue elements in Ukraine looking to start a war with Russia that will force NATO to join.
A female Ukrainian agent meets with the former U.S. ambassador in New York to get information about Russian military movements and is murdered by a Russian assassin then her fellow agent apart of the Ukrainian embassy is also murdered by the same assassin. The U.S. ambassador learning of his friend’s murder gets in contact with Op-Center about his conversation with her and that her apparent murderer keeps calling him with her phone. Director Williams sends a two-man team to meet the ambassador only for them to save his life from the assassin and his accomplice. Meanwhile in Russia, Putin appoints an ambitious yet cautious general to command an enlarged military base to project so much power against Ukraine that they will simply be defeated mentally. Unbeknownst to Russia is that a famous Ukrainian tank commander has set a trap for them which included the appearance online of a VR program of their huge military base which led to the murders in New York. Williams and Op-Center after finding the VR program come to the conclusion that a rogue faction in the Ukrainian military is planning to start a war between Russian and NATO with an attack on the base that will cause Russia to attack Ukraine. The Special Forces team is sent to the region to observe but in route they find the team that is to attack the base and send the force to intercept them. The Ukrainian commander leads a large assembly of tanks—out of nowhere—towards the border and the Russian commander response by leading his tanks to the border, leaving the base open for attack through the Op-Center Special Forces team is able to stop them just outside the Russian base though the Ukrainian team leader is killed by a sniper which causes a grenade explosion. The Russian commander is ordered back to the base, already relieved of command due to failing to secure his base; the retreat of the Russians from the border is a victory for the Ukrainian commander even though the attack on the base didn’t happen as his goal was to embarrass the big bad bear. Williams and Op-Center are happy to prevent a war, but they decide to prevent the next Russian assassin to take up station in New York by outing him to the NYPD who threaten to leave or die as a terrorist.
This was a great military-political thriller for anything connected with Ukraine and Russia, but Op-Center and their Special Forces team are just around. Honestly if this book did not have anything connected with Op-Center written in it this would have been a great exciting read, but because of the Op-Center stuff in it this is a middling book. Everything connected with Op-Center just felt like it was put in there because this was an Op-Center book, not that anything was particularly bad but as I got further into the book I cared less about what was happening in and around Op-Center or what they were going to do and see if the Ukrainian plan would work in anyway. I guess Rovin and Galdorisi were showing that sometimes Op-Center is blind to the realities on the ground and can sometimes only do little things to protect U.S. interests but that would effectively undermine the organization from a reader’s viewpoint so, I’m just confused as to the structure of this book.
Dark Zone is a mishmash book with one great story element and one that was just meh, unfortunately it was the series titular organization and their personnel that were the meh story element not that they were bad but because they weren’t interesting. Jeff Rovin in his return to the Op-Center series and George Galdorisi is what appears to be his last effort created a Ukrainian-Russian mini-conflict but totally failed to be relevance to Op-Center existence in a book in its own series.
Book preview
Tom Clancy's Op-Center - Jeff Rovin
PROLOGUE
New York, New York
July 22, 9:15 a.m.
It did not feel like 2019.
Eighty-one-year-old Ernie Keene, retired corporal, United States Navy, stood on the misty flight deck of the USS Intrepid and looked out at New Jersey. Only it wasn’t the Garden State his squinting gray eyes saw in the filtered summer sun. He didn’t see the other tourists who had come early to beat the summer crowds.
It felt, to Keene, that the year was once again 1962, and the mid-afternoon sunlight had been sharper, the sky bluer, the sea endless off the coast of Puerto Rico. The smells? They were every American seaman’s constant companion, salt and fuel, a mix still present all these decades later, and welcome in Keene’s nostrils. Back then, after sixteen months, the sounds of the aircraft carrier had become white noise to Keene, but on that day, May 24, the heavy beat of the rotor of the HS-3 was different from before. That day, the Sikorsky helicopter was riding through a page in history.
Peering into yesterday, Keene’s wrinkled, sun-bronzed cheeks framed a proud smile, his eyes moist as he looked, breathed, heard, was in the past. His daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter were elsewhere on the decommissioned vessel, now a stately museum. They had flown him here for his birthday and he had wanted this moment alone with his old vessel … with the memory of the day Astronaut Scott Carpenter, the fourth American in space, was recovered from the sea following his orbital flight.
Keene had not spotted the three parachutes of the Aurora 7 bringing the capsule down. The space traveler had been off-target, too distant to see. But the seaman would never forget the black, red-nosed chopper soaring in and settling down among them. The beaming voyager hopping out, as if he hadn’t just spent hours in a weightless state, the entire crew applauding him—and the nation. Our nation cheering their latest hero. And he would never forget the late Scott Carpenter who, after his career in space, made it his life’s mission to explore the sea.
Fifty-seven years later, the vessel was once again under Keene’s feet, the shadows were vivid in his mind’s eye, and the lump was still thick in his throat.
My God, Keene thought, his chin quaking a little, his breath tremulous as he relived that singular moment. Not just a moment in his life but a moment in the life of America. What we had, then, he said to himself. A new frontier. A visionary young president. A prosperous nation, at peace.
He was privileged to have been a part of it, present for the recovery of an American who was just back from outer space. Keene was no longer in the Navy three years later when the Intrepid recovered Gus Grissom and John Young of Gemini 3, but he saw it on television and knew what every man onboard was experiencing. Keene still felt humbled, as he had then, just to be a cog in that grand effort, standing there with Petty Officer 2nd Class Dick Tallman as Commander Carpenter was deposited on the flight deck, this flight deck, right where Keene was standing now. Time, age, life, everything seemed to evaporate. He was youthful again, his wife alive, his daughter just a baby, the future long and deep and rich.
Where had it gone? Keene wondered. Not just a lifetime but that powerful, uplifting sense of unity he had felt with every man onboard this very ship.
Slowly, reluctantly, the Groton, Connecticut, resident returned to the present. The landscape of the intervening years returned. Here and now the choppers he heard were regular traffic along the Hudson River. The voices were not fellow seamen but tourists. The flight deck—well, it was not rolling and pitching and slippery with the sea but anchored emphatically in a river that seemed better-suited to pleasure boats and water taxis than to an 872-foot-long, 27,100-ton juggernaut.
His sagging shirt pocket chirped. Keene fished out his cell phone, held it at arm’s length so he could read the message. It was a text from his daughter.
YOU DOING OK?
He thumbed the microphone icon. He spoke in a quiet voice, mindful that there were others around him enjoying their own thoughts and emotions. He said softly:
FINE. BE THERE IN A MINUTE. LOVE POP.
Susan, her husband Jason, and their youngest daughter Lisa were waiting for him in the space shuttle pavilion. He had wanted to rekindle his personal connection with history before enriching it.
Keene poked send then, proud of his sudden inspiration, used the phone to take a picture of his feet on the deck. That was something he would want to look at again when he was back in his home, on his terrace overlooking the Long Island Sound. This vessel had taught him discipline, which, added to his inborn love of the sea, served him well in his career as a boatyard worker operating hydraulic trailers, lifts, learning maintenance, and finally managing a marina.
Well, he thought with an inner sigh, every man onboard that day made his own journey. I thank God for the many joys in mine and—
Ernie Keene did not get to finish his thought. It was cut short by a very loud and very powerful explosion not far behind him.
The operation had been worked out with military precision by a military officer.
The plan, conceived by Captain Ahmed Salehi and Dr. Hafiz Akif of the Professor Abdus Salam Centre for Physics in Islamabad, Pakistan, had been personally approved by Salehi’s sponsor, the powerful prosecutor Ali Younesi of the Special Court in Tehran. The plan had been operational for five days, since they had traveled from Washington, D.C., to New York. Iran shared diplomatic space with the embassy of their fellow nation; under Islamabad’s protecting power,
Iran enjoyed the same privileges as any foreign representative in America—despite the fact that formal relations between Washington and Tehran did not exist. A reciprocal arrangement existed between the United States and Iran via the U.S. Interests Section of the Swiss Embassy in Tehran.
With the patience of a veteran seaman, Salehi had waited for exactly the right atmospheric conditions: mist rolling in from the harbor, lingering over the Hudson River, enough to dampen the air but not the plans of tourists. The meteorological records of the Atmospheric Science Department at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, were most thorough and helpful when it came to pinpointing humidity in specific regions of Manhattan and its environs. Dr. Akif had personally approved the conditions from the foot of 46th Street and 12th Avenue, right on the river.
Salehi was a fearless, sixty-one-year-old former officer with the Navy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard of Iran. Since retiring
from active service, he had sailed the Middle Eastern, Asian, and South American seas delivering and acquiring black market weapons for Tehran. Less than a month before, his efforts to obtain nuclear missiles for the state had been thwarted by American commandos off the coast of Russia. Their lawless action had also cost the officer his ship, the cargo vessel Nardis. It had cost him his reputation as a man who could be entrusted to carry out the most difficult and dangerous missions. It had steeled him with a hunger for swift, merciless revenge.
Salehi had arrived at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum with the chemist—the scientist wearing a Yankees baseball cap, pulled low—as well as with Akif’s daughter and granddaughter, Iram and Amna. The others remained on the street. The young mother had taken the nineteen-month-old from her stroller and was feeding her a bottle in a corner away from the water, against a gunmetal wall overlooking Pier 86 not far from the entrance. Pushing the collapsible pram—which was far from empty, despite being childless—Salehi had walked on like the eternally patient grandfather he was pretending to be.
He did not have to play the part of a man who was simply waiting. That was what he did at sea—waited to leave a port, arrive at a port, cross a sea, go wide around a storm. His life was mostly waiting.
And thinking. Right now he was doing both. He had been to the Intrepid a week before, wearing a Sikh turban, looking for the security cameras, picking a spot where he would be seen and where the event would be recorded from as many angles as possible. He had watched to see where tourists went first. Most arrived and took videos of the aircraft lined up side by side by side. Naturally, the security cameras were arrayed to cover those assets as well as the actions of those milling around them. It was a classic attempt at deterrent: a terrorist did not go there if he did not wish to be photographed.
But what if he did? Salehi thought, making sure he did not look at any of the devices. Not yet.
Salehi had padded his belly slightly with the turban, which he would need when he was finished here. There was a stuffed animal in the seat where Amna had been seated. It was a plush saber-toothed tiger he had bought at the American Museum of Natural History. He had taken pains that he and his family should show up on several video feeds so that facial recognition software would not show a known foreign advocate but someone who had a longer beard and a Jew’s head covering, someone who would get a pass on future automated profiling systems. To the NYPD, to the FBI, to Homeland Security and anyone else who was watching he was simply a Pakistani diplomat visiting several tourist spots over a period of days. A plastic beverage glass from Wicked had not only passed scrutiny, it barely got a first look from security personnel. It was a term he applied loosely since the man and woman he had encountered were openly bored and clearly expected no trouble. Had they opened the big container, they would have been the first to die when the specially fitted interior loaded with murky yellow chlorine trifluoride was exposed to the damp river air.
Salehi was glad it hadn’t happened that way. He was prepared to die both as an Iranian officer and as a soldier in the eternal Revolution. He was not a jihadist, just a proud Iranian who honored the proud and ancient history of his nation. But he wanted to survive. He wanted the Americans to know who had done this, and why, and to compound their shame and misery with the inability to prevent future attacks. Dr. Akif, who would be following him onboard within moments, would see to their hasty exit using his diplomatic credentials.
An elderly man was standing just in front of Salehi. He was looking out across the river. The American stood like a seaman: his slightly bowed legs seemed to grow from the deck and his wisps of gray hair blew like they had danced before with the sea breeze. But mostly it was his breathing. He was as a man reborn, inhaling as if he had been removed from life support. Salehi knew because he had felt that way as soon as he set foot on this deck. It did not matter that the ship was American; it was a beast of the sea, a creature without politics, only nautical experiences.
It pained the Iranian to do what he was about to do. And yet, if he were to ask this man, if he were to commune with the metal hull below, this is the fate they would desire. As the proverb went, Choose not for others what you do not choose for yourself.
The fire emerged from the deck so abruptly, so forcefully, it was as if a rent had opened in the very roof of hell. The souvenir cup had attracted barely a glance but the self-igniting wall of flame turned every head on deck.
For many of those observers, it was the last thing they saw.
The fire caused the moisture in the air to transform into a deadly steam that melted the eyes and destroyed the throats and nasal passages of everyone it touched. At the same time, the chlorine trifluoride poured over the deck and under shoes and consumed everything and everyone it touched, beginning with Ernie Keene. One moment he was warmly embraced by the past, the next he was burning to death in the present. He fell to his knees, charred black; his flesh falling away in dead lumps. Other tourists shrieked in the few moments they had left, some, afire, attempted to hurl themselves into the river. But the burning deck overtook them, outraced them, the air sizzling incongruously as the chemical was carried toward the river.
Salehi paused to look directly at a security camera before turning and calling for the Pakistanis posing as his wife and daughter.
Here!
Dr. Akif shouted, motioning him over—as if Salehi were a victim and not the perpetrator.
The chemical engineer already had his diplomatic identity card in his hand as he ushered his daughter and granddaughter through the security checkpoint, just ahead of the mob that had managed to circle around the massive fire. Standing outside the museum, Dr. Akif actually got one of the guards to help him pull an older Jewish man through to safety. He had left the stroller behind, since it had mostly melted like candle wax in the conflagration; with a handkerchief over his mouth, all he took with him was the pungent smell of death inside his nostrils.
The four made their way down the stairs. As always on their homeland, Americans were reacting to an event, concerned with the victims rather than the perpetrator. They could not afford to seal the area while tourists were trying to escape.
The world of the Intrepid was comprised entirely of chaos and sobbing, of shouts and distant sirens, and the choking pall that had settled over the entire flight deck. Just breathing the vapors produced by the chemical was adding to the numbers of dead and their raw, dying screams. Security personnel who had raced in turned around just as quickly, realizing that they had no idea what they were dealing with and that, at the very least, gas masks were required.
Salehi looked around as they hastened from the pier, observed as recreational boats moved from the stricken titan, as air traffic swung wide, as lights and police took up positions on the opposite side of the river to keep onlookers from the deadly cloud. At least getting away from the museum was easy, as no vehicular traffic was moving other than ambulances along with fire and law enforcement vehicles.
The Iranian and the Pakistani scientist did not exchange looks. It was one thing to work in isolation, as he did, as Dr. Akif did at the Pakistan ordnance factories in Wah Cantt, Punjab. It was another to take a weapon of mass destruction into the field, helping to deploy it, and being forced to witness the results. However, the good life Akif and his family enjoyed—and Iram’s own future as a well-paid official at the Ministry of Industries & Production—demanded they cooperate. And they were not without their own hostility toward the United States. Father and daughter recalled the decades of abuse Pakistanis had suffered under American petrochemical companies before they were bought out by employees and local corporations. The educated elite in Pakistan resented the United States for violating its regional supremacy in the ongoing war against the Taliban and other terror groups. While few professional Pakistanis would have coveted this assignment, the tainted political climate had corrupted the moral environment as well. They would all be out of the country in a matter of hours. And for the Akifs, life would continue as before.
In that turbulent region, the price of stability was often high.
CHAPTER ONE
Op-Center Headquarters, Fort Belvoir North, Springfield, Virginia
July 22, 9:26 a.m.
Every device owned by Chase Williams came active at once—personal cell, office cell, tablet, and all three landlines. He had been reviewing intelligence reports from Asia when the symphony of tones and beeps told him that something terrible had gone down. The only question the director of Op-Center—formally, the National Crisis Management Center—had was who he wanted to hear it from.
Williams chose the secure landline on his desk. The caller ID was Matt Berry, deputy chief of staff to President Wyatt Midkiff. The team of intelligence advisors who worked or visited the White House regularly was known around town as the party planners
; among those, Berry was a bit of an outlier, a mystery. He did not have the respect of the heavy hitters but the president trusted him. Berry was a close friend of Op-Center’s Brian Dawson and he had become the team’s unofficial inside man at the White House. If Williams had to get bad news, the former Navy four-star combatant commander wanted it immediately contextualized. But he simultaneously flipped his desktop to CNN to see what he had missed. The crawl and live images gave him a quick, sickening synopsis. Nor was Berry’s information as comprehensive as Williams had hoped.
Matt?
Williams said. What—
Conference call with the president, in the Tank, now,
Berry said.
Berry hung up the phone just as Deputy Director Anne Sullivan swung through the door. The sixty-year-old Op-Center director rose, answered her concerned look with a shrug, and told her what Berry had said.
You know anything?
Williams asked as he grabbed his sports jacket from the hook behind the door.
I think we’re in shit,
she replied, nodding toward his desk.
He looked back at the tablet. There was a security camera photograph from the computer of Kathleen Hays, Op-Center’s visual analysis specialist. Beneath it was a name in black type.
Williams swore. Anne was correct, as always. He jabbed the name with a finger, waited a moment. The only data that came up was a tab for the file they had closed on July 3.
Find out why we did not know this,
Williams said vaguely as he hurried past Sullivan toward the electronic and scientific brain center of Op-Center.
Williams’s voice seldom reflected what he was feeling. Decades of service at Pacific Command and Central Command had taught him, as Kipling had written, that he had to keep his head while all around him were losing theirs. But his quiet order to Anne concealed rage that burned at an uncommon level. Captain Ahmed Salehi had been their target. His defeat had been their doing. Even though he had disappeared into the shrouded corridors of Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence, they should have seen him emerge.
Not just emerge, Williams thought. Emerge quickly and with a plan of counterattack. His team had underestimated the man and civilians had died, another black day marked on the American calendar.
It was a short walk, and Williams did not consciously avoid the looks of the employees he passed. But his thoughts were scattered, partly on what to do next and partly on what the president would do next. He could not even allow himself to dwell on the horror of what he had glimpsed a minute ago. That would come at night, when he tried to sleep.
The Geek Tank was Op-Center’s technological heart, the locus for all raw, incoming data. Williams looked out across the ring of fourteen young tech wizards, all bent toward their multiple screens. Most would be continuing to look for threats. Others would already be investigating his directive to Anne.
"Find out why we did not know this…"
His own words played over and over like a dirge. But he could not allow himself to mourn. Most of the twenty- and thirtysomething Op-Center team had never experienced a national disaster. They would have to be motivated, bootstrapped, made more vigilant, not allowed to wallow. Senior management would have to revisit every active individual, cell, warlord, anti-American movement both domestic and global, foreign radical—search for more than just threat analysis algorithms but use intuition and experience to identify potential threats.
Why did we not know about Salehi? Williams asked himself with anger that was now tinged with shame. The team had failed but, worse, the leader had failed the team. And people died as the world watched.
Williams’s index finger was scanned and the Tank door popped open. He pushed the sound-absorbing panel shut behind him, sat at the small conference table, and spoke his name plus a code word—Nedla,
his father’s name backwards. That activated the wall-mounted audiovisual system that only a handful of voices could turn on. Not only was that photonic band line secure, the room itself was sheathed in an electronic web that prevented any other signals from getting out. Anne had once described the Tank as a grand jury room where the fate of civilization was on trial. Williams felt that now, though when he saw the face of the president and the others he knew it was not the future of the world being decided. Also present on the split-screen view were National Security Advisor Trevor Harward, who was in the Oval Office with President Midkiff; January Dow, who headed the INR, the State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research; and FBI Deputy Director Allen Kim. The vice president was in China, planning for a post–Kim Jung-un unification of North and South Korea, and the president saw no reason to terminate that critical mission. The man who had told Williams about the meeting, Matt Berry, was not present. That told the director all he needed to know. Without an ally, and with Dow having actively and openly campaigned against the autonomy Op-Center had enjoyed, this wasn’t a meeting. It was an execution.
The African-American woman was speaking as Williams plugged-in.
… movements were not known until he wanted them to be known,
she was saying. As far as we can determine, someone matching Salehi’s general physical description arrived at the embassy on July 7 just before midnight. If he moved in and out he did so in Pakistani state vehicles.
The man who seems to have been traveling with him today?
Midkiff asked, consulting his own tablet.
We do not yet know that,
she said. He was wearing a baseball cap and seemed to take care not to appear on camera.
Any competent New York mugger knows how to avoid our goddam security cameras,
Harward complained.
The president finally looked at the screen. You have anything to contribute, Director Williams?
It was Director Williams,
not Chase.
That was the first salvo.
No, Mr. President,
Williams replied.
Nothing after July 3?
January asked Williams pointedly, referring to the file Op-Center had distributed among its fellow intelligence services. No red flags?
No, Ms. Dow.
Confirming nearly three weeks of inactivity. That was the second salvo.
Williams was watching the president carefully. Midkiff’s eyes shifted to the clock on the screen. The president’s mind was not, at the moment, on forensics. It was not on the past but on the future. That was the third salvo.
"Director Williams, effective fourteen minutes from now, at ten a.m., the charter for Op-Center will be revoked. The personnel has just been informed that they are to remain on-premises until notified, though all security access has already been terminated and research locked in place. The reassignment of said personnel will be turned over to Mr. Harward. In recognition of your service, Mr. Williams, the delictum organizational status will not require your resignation. You will, I trust, have no difficulty vacating by