Santiago had granted herself the luxury of a quick shower and four
hours of sleep, and while she knew her body needed yet more rest, at
least she felt able to think as she conferred with her remaining
front-line generals – Lockhart, Cassaroni, St-James and Honshu. Mel
Cassaroni, in fact, looked more worse for the wear than even Santiago;
although the Lightning Strike commander had evacuated with the drop units,
she hadn't been conscious at the time. A glancing hit from one of the
alien mechanicals had destroyed the forward right wheel of Cassaroni's
command rover on an attack run, and she'd been slammed forward as the
rover had careened into the rubble at nearly a hundred kilometers per
hour, breaking her collarbone, cheekbone, and nose and knocking her
unconscious. Despite that, she was one of the few officers who could
claim to have been actually hit by one of the aliens' god-awful
weapons and survived the experience, and now all of Lightning Strike
had come to hold her in the sort of superstitious awe that soldiers
throughout the ages had held for a lucky commander. Despite the surgical
braces and painkillers, Mel was exhilarating in her good fortune, and
had been trying unsuccessfully to lure Lockhart into a game of poker
when Santiago entered. All four generals stood and saluted as one.
"At ease, people." Santiago sat down at the table with the others,
and with her characteristic aversion to wasting time, turned immediately
to the senior officer, Field-Marshall Salvadore St-James.
"Salvadore. Please summarize the status of our remaining forces."
"Ma'am. Aside from local base garrison units, our remaining offensive
units are as follows. As we had planned, General Honshu's Militia and the
469th Infantry were evacuated before contact with the
aliens, to preserve the core of an intact counter-strike force. Lightning
Strike has lost two divisions, but by combining the survivors and
with replacements in training, can still field two divisions. Rolling
Thunder's artillery is intact, as is the Chaos anti-air detachment and the
majority of the second Shard division. All of the pens and interceptors
are gone, however. And of course, General Wang and the entirety of the
2nd Armour were wiped out at Sparta Command. Other forces
in the miscellaneous category include armoured counter-espionage teams
One and Two, and Jeneba's mindworms; but they don't significantly add
to our combat power – at least in the conventional sense," St-James said.
"How long until we can field our replacements? Not new units, but
to repair the damaged divisions up to full strength?" Santiago asked.
"Spreading the trainees out with the veterans, we can repair what
we've got left within three months," Cassaroni answered. "As for new
units, we'll be lucky to deploy two or three new divisions by the end
of the year. With Morgan's energy donations, the factories have been
running at 113% continuously. But that's long-term, and the aliens will
also have reinforced at least their infantry by then."
"Maybe," Lockhart spoke up. "We know that they have some sort of
cloning facility. But from what MilInt has been able to ascertain – in
truth, from Morgan's analysts, not our own – these cloning vats that the
aliens have seem to be able to produce only members of their worker
caste, not their warrior caste. And they are just as limited by the
production of new equipment as we are – maybe even moreso; we don't know
what their energy production capacity is like. So they may be able to
boost their production, but it doesn't appear that they can create new
infantry divisions straight from the egg, so to speak."
"Well, what are the aliens' current force dispositions at
Sparta Command and the other occupied bases?" Santiago demanded, and
Honshu rose to address her.
"Madame President," Honshu began.
"Madame President?" St-James thought to himself. Interesting
that Honshu continues to use Corrie's civilian form of address. Yet
Honshu has never had much respect for civilian authority. Am I
the only one who has noticed this? Or am I just being paranoid – surely
there's no way Honshu could even think about unseating Corrie
anytime soon.
The Gecko quickly switched back to following Honshu's dialog,
although he was just as aware of the aliens' statistics as Honshu was,
since he'd arrived almost twenty-six hours ahead of Santiago.
"... and so the aliens do not appear to have brought in any additional
units, although they continue to slowly produce infantry garrisons. In
terms of their losses, I had concrete information all the way up to the
loss of the Tactical Planning Center and the death of General Bisset. In
increasing order of importance, they've lost about twenty percent of
their infantry, virtually all of their conventional interceptor airforce,
sixty percent of their mechanicals destroyed or heavily damaged, and
of course two of those aerial battleships. Call it an overall force
reduction of forty percent," Honshu summarized.
"I see," Santiago said, and steepled her fingers. Her dark, cold
eyes glanced around the table to each of her commanders in turn, and
no-one tried to interrupt her train of thought.
"What you are all saying, effectively, is that we're down to about
20% of peak, and the aliens to about 40%. And since they started
with an estimated force advantage of four to one, they now have an
effective force advantage of about eight to one."
Mel Cassaroni spoke while St-James was formulating his own response.
"Ma'am – I think we are neglecting the fact that, from any reasonable
perspective, we gave the aliens one hell of a fight, and hurt them
far more than anyone might've predicted. In absolute numbers, we forced
an exchange even when the odds were against us – and our soldiers fought
well and died bravely. I wouldn't like to say that their deaths were
in vain," Cassaroni spoke evenly but with an underlying edge of anger.
St-James understood Cassaroni's anger. Like himself, she'd lost
over half her soldiers at Sparta Command. Unlike himself with respect
to Rolling Thunder, Mel had built up Lightning Strike from scratch for
over thirty Planet years, and no-doubt had formed binding loyalties and
friendships with many of her officers and soldiers. Most of whom were now
dead. He could respect and even admire that bilateral loyalty; it made
Cassaroni an excellent tactical commander. Corazon, on the other hand,
had to think at the theater level; St-James doubted that the Spartan
leader thought of the Federation's soldiers as merely abstract numbers,
but she couldn't afford to get sentimental – not and allow herself
to think clinically and deliberately absorb the sort of losses that a
war like this was going to entail. Already had entailed.
"Mel, no-one's suggesting we didn't fight well at Sparta Command –
we asked for unbelievable sacrifices and performances from our soldiers,
and they delivered like Spartans. But that doesn't negate the fact that
we took one hell of a beating. That we're still here and in fighting
shape attests to our soldiers' characters and skill; no-one's suggesting
that we curl up and whimper like a whipped Peacekeeper," St-James said,
and there were a few half-smiles at the old joke.
"So what are we suggesting, Salvadore?" Cassaroni queried.
"Change in strategy," Santiago spoke up again. "Let's face it,
people. We've lost so many forces that another conventional engagement
would be suicide. But that doesn't mean the losses at Sparta Command were
in vain; far from it. For one, we've bloodied the aliens so badly that
they may think twice about proceeding further. Now I for one don't think
they will stop; it probably isn't in their psychology. But we have
given them reason to pause and proceed more carefully. If the Axis
war machine is better than the aliens, we might be able to out-produce
them now in the long run. That's a big 'if', but it is possible
that time really is on our side now. Again, I wouldn't bet energy on that,
especially given those cloning vats of theirs."
"But," Santiago continued, "we have taken a big bite out of
their forces. Look at the map of the free Federation bases, and then
the rest of the Axis. If the aliens tried to take every one of them,
they'd soon find themselves spread so thin that we would be able
to knock out their garrisons, and whittle them down. We give ground where
they concentrate, and hit them wherever they are weak. Guerilla warfare."
"And if they don't spread themselves out?" Lockhart asked.
"Then we have to wait until they do make a mistake. Given the
force disparity, the best we can do is be ready to take advantage of any
opportunity that arises. It may be a long time coming; in that case we
must be patient. But just because we got our asses kicked doesn't mean
we're going to give up, or get spooked into a bad engagement with our
remaining forces. We can't afford to," Santiago said with blunt finality.
"There is a strategy available to the aliens that would allow them
to take our bases without weakening themselves. Extermination," St-James
said quietly.
A brief silence fell over the Junta. What St-James was suggesting
was a brutally simple strategy: that the aliens could simply concentrate
their army and obliterate every single Spartan base in succession.
"The thought had entered my mind," Santiago spoke seriously. "I
don't have an easy answer for it, either. For what it's worth, that
would mobilize the PK's. Even with their current leadership, the
populace wouldn't stand for it. Now I'm not saying that the Peacekeepers
are our best hope, but there would be at least some hope from that
quarter. About the only answer I can formulate is our reading
of the alien xenopsychology. If they see humanity as an infestation
on Planet, they might simply start mass genocide. On the other hand,
if they see Sparta as part of their 'path to conquest', they might want
to take what is ours, rather than destroying it. I really don't
know; I'm afraid that we will have to see what their next step is and
go from there."
"I have an alternative strategy to offer," Honshu spoke slowly,
and all eyes turned towards him.
"We've seen that the aliens have an unstoppable ground contingent,
as well as a powerful air force. But no navy; it might not even be part
of their strategic doctrine. What I suggest is that we consider falling
back to sea bases. The aerial battleships and bombers will still
be a factor, but we will have already neutralized effectively two
thirds of the enemy. And we have a navy. Between the Fleet and
the infantry defense we could put into our sea bases, against only
their air force, the odds are much more in our favour."
General Lockhart at least looked thoughtful, but Santiago shook
her head.
"That's an interesting idea, Kenichi. But I see at least two
problems. The first being that I already sent out MacMillan a
month ago, and she's beyond contact now."
"What? Why?!" Honshu half rose out of his chair, a
frown forming on his face as anger began to overcome his public image,
and Santiago could feel a rising anger of her own at the repeated
insubordination.
"You're familiar with the psychology of Old Earth's street gangs,
aren't you, General Honshu?"
Honshu's anger turned to puzzlement at the sudden non-sequitor.
"I know the public explanation for those tattoos you're so proud
of," Santiago said cooly. "I also know that you were the scion of one
of the last great Yakuza clans that secretly controlled Japan's
government after the War of Crimson Succession. So you and I both know,
in our own way, how the mindset works."
"Ah, and that would be...?" Lockhart asked quickly, as much to try
to defuse the tension as to satisfy his curiosity.
St-James answered before Santiago could, hoping that his own
interjection could head off the confrontation long enough for both his
commander and his rival to rein in their tempers.
"It's all about possession and territoriality. When one gang gets
stronger, it looks to pick up territory from its neighbor. But the tribal
mentality is more attached to what it already views as its own,
than what it thinks it can take. Is that where you're headed,
Ma'am?"
"Exactly," Santiago answered, as if no confrontation had taken
place whatsoever. "I sent MacMillan out to bombard the aliens' home
continent. A risk, of course – neither of us were happy with the prospect
of such a deep raid into unknown territory. But Patricia agreed that
this was probably the best way to use the Fleet when the homeland was
under attack."
Cassaroni, ever observant, spoke up.
"That was one reason we couldn't follow Kenichi's suggestion,
Ma'am. You mentioned a second?"
"Yes," Santiago said, and she didn't bother to hold Honshu's gaze this
time. "The second reason is a matter of policy. If we retreat to sea,
we're effectively pulling ourselves out of the fight. And abandoning
the rest of the Axis."
Honshu had his temper under control again, but his gaze was deadly
nonetheless; only the Gecko and Santiago herself seemed to be immune to
the sudden chill in the air.
"Our responsibility, Madame President, is the survival of the
Spartan Federation. I don't think we should abandon any strategy that
helps ensure that goal."
"I was also elected Planetary Governor, General Honshu. We will not
abandon our allies. Or humanity," Santiago said, and her tone of voice
was unyielding. There were, of course, plenty of other tactical and
strategic reasons not to abandon the Axis; if nothing else, there was
the pragmatic realization that if the Spartans did run and hide,
the aliens would simply turn their attention on Morgan.
And then it would only be a short time later before they came
back hunting for us – and nothing would stop them, Santiago thought
of adding, but decided not to. She wasn't in the habit of justifying
herself to anyone. Not even Honshu. Especially not Honshu.
Honshu relaxed back in his chair, as if he accepted Santiago's stance
as the others apparently did. But inside, he was aghast.
My God, she really has sold out, Honshu thought
with shock. He's claimed that before, of course, when he'd made his
unsuccessful bid to take over the Junta. But that was just propaganda.
He'd never actually believed it. Until now. As far as Honshu
was concerned, the other factions weren't worth a the life of a single
Spartan soldier. But Santiago, evidently, had been "bought" – and the
rest of the Junta had backed her. As, reluctantly, had Honshu himself
– for the sake of loyalty to the Federation.
Not anymore. If the Junta had sold out, it was time for Honshu
to go it alone. He made himself speak and participate as the strategy
meeting continued. But inside, General Honshu began planning a strategy
of his own.
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