1985: War in Europe:
(NOTE: This was "gamed" using
'NATO: The Next War in Europe' by victory games, copyright 1983.)
The summer of 1985 began as almost any other summer. The days were longer, the sun shone brightly and things seemed normal. They were anything but. The Politburo had decided to send arms and other war supplies to counter US influence in Central America, yet their shipments had been compromised. Covert action had failed, so the new Premier, the relatively unknown Mikhail Gorbachev, decided to put the hawks in the Kremlin at bay by acquiescing to their requests for a showdown with the Americans. They had reasoned that it would heighten tensions for the summer, taking international attention away from their ever-growing problems in Afghanistan. US reaction, they reasoned, would end up starving the Mujahedeen and allow their forces there to finally quash all resistance, for once and for all.
A Soviet naval force set sail from Murmansk late in June and was immediately shadowed by US and British submarines. Escorting a number of transport ships, all ostensibly loaded with humanitarian supplies for the war-weary Latin Americans was a formidable force of Cruisers and lesser ships. Also being tracked, but not reported in the media, were a number of attack submarines, which the Soviets had intended to use to track NATO submarines beneath the depths of the Atlantic. As soon as the force passed the Greenland-Iceland-UK Gap (GIUK Gap), the US quietly put it forces to Defence Condition 4. As well, NATO fleets formed up on both sides of the Atlantic and set sail, to shadow the Soviet force.
As the Soviet fleet passed Cuba, it kept sailing to the South of the island, between it and Hispaniola. It was here where the world came dangerously close to an accidental war. For the previous week, NATO planes had routinely entered to within just a few thousand yards of the Soviet fleet as a deterrent. On the 1st of July, a US F-15 Eagle, flying out of Florida, actually passed over the Soviet force at an altitude of just over 300 feet. This was not the pilot’s intent. His navigation system was in error, and he had thought that he was going to pass in front of the Soviet force. The weather was overcast with a low ceiling, and the pilot was flying on instruments. Keeping above the clouds, he flew to the point where he would drop below the cover and pass in front of the leading ships, at full afterburner.
As he dove into the clouds, he readied to level off, and he began to increase his speed to just under subsonic. Breaking out of the clouds at 1000 feet, he engaged his afterburners as he scanned off to his left. He was immediately confused at seeing an empty ocean. Had the Soviets changed course? He turned to his right and his heart leapt into his throat. There, in front of him was a large foreign ship. It was gray, and looked menacing. His eye was immediately drawn to the Red Ensign flying at its stern: Soviet!
Unknown to the pilot, he was heading directly for the Kiev, and its air defences were active. They had just tracked a plane on a perfect intercept course flying steady at 5000 feet, when it dove right at them, with increasing speed! The captain wasted no time and ordered all defences ready and cleared them to fire. A battery of anti-aircraft guns tracked the F-15 and opened fire. The F-15 appeared to attempt to evade by pulling back up into the clouds, but it was too late. Anti-Aircraft fire tore into the plane’s wings and it immediately spun wildly out of control, crashing into the sea. There were no parachutes.
US naval forces in the area had picked up a short SOS call that ended abruptly. A search and rescue mission was launched immediately, but it was to no avail. No wreckage or any sign of the mysterious SOS call was found.
In Washington, the Soviet Ambassador appeared un-announced at the White House. He requested, no, demanded to speak to President Reagan about the unprovoked attack on Soviet warships in international waters! By this time, the US had pieced together the evidence and concluded that their overdue pilot had somehow strayed over the Soviet fleet in what must have appeared to be an attack. President Reagan talked with the ambassador, but he chose his words carefully. Instead of acknowledging the actions of the previous hours, he only repeated his demands that the Soviet Fleet’s presence in waters so close to the US was unacceptable and that it must return to the Atlantic Ocean immediately.
Following the meeting, the President met with his Joint Chiefs of Staff, who had already prepared options for him.
“Mr President. We have only a few options right now. First of all, I recommend that we put our forces on DEFCON 3 immediately. The Soviets will see this as a show of strength on our part. And if nothing comes of this, we can stand back down to DEFCON 4 as a show of good faith.”
The President agreed, and after a few instructions to an aide, who left the room in a hurry, the briefing went on. The first option was simple: plead ignorance and keep insisting that the Soviet force return to the Ocean. The next two options were anything but simple. The first complex option was to put US forces between the Soviets and their intended port, and force the Soviets to either fight or flee. The second complex option, and perhaps the most dangerous, was to sink the accompanying Soviet submarines. The Soviets would know about this; however, this event could be kept from the press, which was even now reporting that the US was missing a fighter and that there were reports of battle in the ocean. A message would be sent to the Kremlin that would be loud and clear, and it would give them the option to flee with apparent honour.
“Gentlemen, I will have an answer for you in two hours. For the time being, we will maintain the status quo. And if anyone in here even hints anything to CNN, I’ll personally see to it that I send him to Siberia – strapped to an MX Missile!”
President Reagan discussed the events with Prime Minister Thatcher of England. The Royal Navy provided the bulk of non-American ships in the NATO fleet, and one of their submarines was covertly tracking the Soviet subs that were escorting the Soviet surface fleet. Together with the US submarines, all escorting subs could be sunk in one fell swoop. The president wanted her opinion of his possible plan to eliminate the Soviet subs.
“Ronald, this is a very serious decision we have to make. We found that with the Argentineans we had to be bold and show them that we would not stand for their aggression. It worked, Ronald, it worked. If we can neuter their force without anyone noticing but us and them, we have them on the ropes. The ball will be in their court, and we can leave it to them to find a way out of this whole rotten mess. I say sink them.”
The president and the prime minister passed on their orders to their respective militaries, and operation “MEDUSA” was put into action later that evening. The American and British subs had received their orders during their routine surfacing that afternoon, and by midnight, they were all in attack position. All five Soviet submarines were being successfully tracked, and the synchronised attack caught all Soviet crews unawares.
The Soviet fleet was only a few hours away from putting into port when the Commander of the Fleet was informed of several simultaneous and powerful underwater explosions, all coinciding with the projected locations of the Soviet submarines. The Commander went pale and ordered all forces to search for survivors. He knew that something horrible had happened and the order of the day was for the subs to be located. Without them, his fleet was naked and vulnerable, and could be sunk with nary a warning.
Wreckage from the destroyed submarines was located across the Caribbean, but there were no survivors. The fleet had stopped its progress towards the port, and the world press, lead by CNN, was reporting its absence from all ports in Central America. PRAVDA later reported that the Soviets had decided to abandon its efforts to deliver aid to Central America, as it was apparent that the US and UK forces were manoeuvring into blocking positions. Theirs was a mission of peace, and the forces of capitalism, bent on making money from waging war, had stood in their way. The deaths of the innocents would be on the hands of the West, specifically Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. Demands were made of the west at the United Nations in New York, loudest coming from member states of the Warsaw Pact. The German Democratic Republic submitted a resolution proposal that the US and the UK be sanctioned with a worldwide boycott as punishment for their war-like actions of the previous weeks. It failed to pass.