o pe n i n g s h ots
The destruction of the three Battle Stars will be planned for November 24,
2050, at 5 p.m. At this time on Thanksgiving Day most people in the
United States would be watching football and napping after digesting a
massive meal. Some people will be driving home. No one in Washington
will be expecting a problem. That is the moment that the Japanese will in
tend to strike. Final course corrections of the missiles targeting the Battle
Stars will begin to be executed at about noon, on the theory that even if they
were detected, getting hold of the Washington national security team would
eat up an hour or two, and that if the missiles were detected by 3 or 4 p.m.
it would be impossible to react in time. In order to do this, launches from
Japan’s lunar base will have to take place at various times on November 21,
depending on orbit. Hence, the November 20 alert will be Plan B cycling
up—the aforementioned shot from the hip.
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The launches from the moon will go unnoticed. Many of the missiles
will actually be detected by automated systems on board the Battle Stars,
but none will have trajectories that indicate impact with the stations or
represent a significant threat to earth. They will all be fired at different
times in eccentric orbits. The data will not be passed on to human moni
tors. One technician reading the daily summary on the second day will
note that there appears to be a large number of meteors in the area, with
several passing close to his station, but since this is not an extraordinary
event, he will ignore it.
On November 24 around noon, the rockets will reignite as planned,
shifting the missiles’ orbit. The collision- tracking radar on Battle Star–
Uganda will pick up a single warning at about 2 p.m. The computer will be
asked to reconfirm the trajectory. In the next hour all three stations will pick
up multiple projectiles on trajectory to strike each of them. The command
ing general of the three platforms, on board Battle Star–Peru, will recognize
at about 3:15 that his platforms are under organized attack. He will then
notify Space Command Headquarters in Colorado Springs, which in turn
will notify the Joint Chiefs and the National Security Council.
Meanwhile, the commanding general on Battle Star–Peru will, on his
own authority, begin firing lasers and kinetic missiles at the targets, hoping
to intercept them. But the number of incoming missiles will strain his ca
pacity to engage, as the system won’t be designed to cope with fifteen simul
taneous incoming missiles. He will quickly realize that there will be leakage,
and that some of the missiles will hit.
The president will be notified, but, it being Thanksgiving Day, he won’t
be able to immediately gather most of his advisors. The questions the presi
dent will ask are the crucial ones: Who launched the attack? Where was it
launched from? No one will be able to answer the questions immediately.
The assumption will be that it is the Turks, since they will have been en
gaged in the most recent crisis, but U.S. intelligence will be certain that they
won’t have the ability to launch such an attack. The Japanese will be quiet—
and no one would have expected such a strike by Japan. As more advisors
gather, two things will be apparent: no one knows who launched the attack,
and the Battle Stars are about to be destroyed.
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The Japanese will inform the Turks as to what has happened at approxi
mately 4:30 p.m. The Turks are Japan’s allies, but the Japanese are not going
to give them detailed information until the last moment, as they won’t want
the Turks to double- cross them. But the Turks will know that something is
coming—the entire charade of early November will revolve around this,
and they will be standing by to act as soon as the Japanese get around to
alerting them.
Less than thirty minutes before impact, the president will authorize the
evacuation of the Battle Stars. With so little time, the evacuation won’t be
able to be fully executed. Hundreds of people will be left behind. More im
portant, even though no one will know who ordered the attack, the presi
dent’s advisors will convince him to order a dispersal of all ground- based
hypersonic aircraft from their primary bases to scattered locations. That or
der will go out at the same time the evacuation order goes out. There will be
many glitches in the system. Controllers—skeleton staffs, really—will keep
asking for confirmation. Some of the aircraft will disperse over the next
hour. Most will not.
At 5 p.m., all three Battle Stars will explode, killing all of the remaining
crew members and knocking out the rest of the U.S. space force—sensors
and satellites that are mostly hooked into the Battle Star–Peru command
center. They will be left uselessly orbiting in space. The Japanese will have
launched satellites years earlier whose only job is to monitor the Battle Stars.
They will note the disruption of communication from the stations, and
Japanese radar will note the destruction of the stations themselves.
The Japanese will activate phase two as soon as destruction is confirmed.
They will launch thousands of unmanned hypersonic aircraft—small, fast,
and agile to evade interceptors—at the United States and its ships and bases
in the Pacific. The targets will be U.S. hypersonic aircraft, ground- based
anti- aircraft missiles, and command and control centers. They won’t go af
ter population centers. That would achieve nothing, plus the Japanese will
want to negotiate a settlement, which would be inconceivable after massive
civilian casualties. Nor will they want to destroy the president or his staff.
They will need someone with whom to negotiate.
At the same time, the Turks will launch their own attacks against targets
they will have been assigned in joint planning for war with the Japanese
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over the years. Joint contingency plans will already have been developed
between the two countries. Given that the Turks are aware something is
coming, and are in near- crisis mode already, they won’t need extensive
preparation to execute the war plan. The Japanese will communicate what
they have done—and Turkish sensors will observe the events in geosynchro
nous orbit. They will move to quickly take advantage of the situation. Many
targets will be in the United States, east of the Mississippi, but the Turks will
also launch a massive attack against the Polish bloc and against India, not a
major power but allied with the United States. The intention of the Coali
tion will be to leave the United States and its allies militarily helpless.
Within a few minutes, the missiles from the unmanned aircraft will be
gin to hit U.S. forces in Europe and Asia, but those targeted at the United
States proper will take nearly an hour to reach their targets. That hour will
bring the United States some valuable time. Most of its space- based sensors
will be off-line, but an old system, used to detect the heat of ICBM launches
and too old to be linked into the Battle Star system, will still be download
ing to Colorado Springs. It will pick up a vast array of launches out of Japan
and Turkey, but little additional information will be provided. There will be
no way to tell where the planes and missiles are going. But the fact that the
two countries lit up with launches minutes after the Battle Stars are killed
will be relayed to the president, who now, at least, will know where the at
tack is coming from.
The United States will maintain a database of military targets in Japan
and Turkey. The Japanese and Turkish aircraft will already have been
launched, and therefore hitting those targets will make no sense. But there
will be fixed targets in both countries, primarily command and control cen
ters, airfields, fuel bunkers, and so on, that could be attacked. Plus the pres
ident will want his hypersonic fleet in the air and not on the tarmac. He will
order a preset war plan to be activated. However, by the time the orders are
transmitted and flight controllers are in place, there will be less than fifteen
minutes until Japan and Turkey hit their targets. Some flights will take off
and strike those two countries, but much of the force will be destroyed on
the ground.
The devastation to the Polish bloc will be even more intense. The bloc
command center in Warsaw won’t be aware of the destruction of the Battle
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Stars, so it won’t have the warning the United States will have before missiles
start hitting its bases. In fact, hypersonic aircraft will be dropping precision-
guided munitions on bloc facilities with literally no warning at all. One mo
ment they will be there, and suddenly the bloc’s strike capability will be
gone.
By 7 p.m., the U.S. space and hypersonic force will be devastated. The
United States will have lost command of space and have only a few hundred
aircraft left. Its allies in Europe will have had their forces overwhelmed. U.S.
warships around the world will have been attacked and sunk. The Indians
will have lost their assets as well. The American coalition will be militarily
devastated.
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