I got back onto Widow Seven One and explained exactly what we wanted to do and why. ‘Zulu Company are not ready. We are,’ I finished. ‘All we need you to do is sort out the fire plan from the artillery and fast air.’
‘Stand by.’
There was a thirty-second pause.
‘Ugly Five One, negative. Zulu Company are going to do the rescue.’
Wrong answer from the JTAC. Time to up the ante.
‘Put Charlie Oscar on.’
‘The CO?’
‘Affirm. The CO.’
It was time to talk to the organ grinder, Colonel Magowan.
‘Stand by.’
Another twenty-second pause.
‘Charlie Oscar speaking.’
‘Charlie Oscar, Ugly Five One. What is your immediate plan?’
‘Zulu Company will cross the river to recover Lance Corporal Ford.’
‘How long is it going to take them to get ready?’
He sighed loudly enough for me to hear. ‘They say they’ll be ready in ninety minutes.’
‘Confirm, NINE ZERO minutes?’
‘Yes, H-hour is at 1130 hours.’
There was obviously some sort of problem with Zulu Company. We didn’t have time to go into it.
‘Sir, we can be across and back in five minutes maximum, but need to move now.’
‘How?’
‘Give me four volunteers and we’ll be in and out with Ford in two minutes.’
‘But I don’t have any pilots.’
‘No sir,
‘We don’t have any straps.’
‘We have the straps; we will strap them on…’
It dawned on me that this was the first time Magowan had heard any of our plan. None of the messages had got back to him. I explained the whole thing as succinctly as I could.
‘Give me two minutes to think.’
‘Tell him we don’t have two minutes, Ed,’ Carl said quietly over our internal intercom. He was watching the fuel level and the delay was getting on his tits.
‘We don’t have two minutes, sir.’
‘Give me twenty seconds then.’
Utter silence. For the first time all day, the mission radio net went quiet. Half of Helmand province was listening in now, and everybody was waiting for Magowan’s answer. You could have heard a mouse fart. He only took ten.
‘Ugly Five One, this is Charlie Oscar. Your plan is approved.’
‘Roger. We will be with you in four minutes.’
‘Billy and Geordie, it’s a go.’
‘Copied. You sort the fire plan with the JTAC and we’ll lead you into the desert. You spoke to the CO so he’ll be expecting you to brief the volunteers.’
‘Okay, Billy. Just give me twenty more seconds on station.’
Widow Seven One was already briefing up the A10 on how to protect Mathew. I stepped on their conversation because we didn’t have a second to lose. I had some terminal controlling of my own I wanted to complete. If we were pulling off, I wanted Black Turban’s warren nailed first.
‘Break, break. This is Ugly Five One. Tusk, I’ve got a tunnel system I would like you to destroy.’
‘Copy that. Go ahead Ugly Five One, I’m ready.’
‘Tusk, from the fort’s southern wall go south thirty-five metres to where the canal and the river join. Can you see five black circles?’
‘Visual, sir.’
‘That’s the tunnel system I want destroying. Now, confirm that you can identify the MIA on the southern side of the wall, thirty-five metres away.’
‘I have a good visual on the prone friendly just west of the crater, sir.’
‘He is well within Danger Close but there is no ricochet risk, and the ground is soft. Are you sure you can make the shot without hitting the MIA?’
‘I’m sure. I’ll get it right on the nose sir, don’t worry.’
‘Copied. You’re cleared hot on the tunnels.’
The A10 climbed up to 15,000 feet to set up his run, then dived. At 5,000 feet he opened up with a giant, six-second burst from his GAU-8 Gatling gun. The GAU-8 is the largest, heaviest and most powerful aircraft cannon ever built. The A10 is literally two wings, two engines and a cockpit bolted onto it. It fires 30-mm Depleted Uranium armour-piercing shells at a rate of 4,200 rounds per minute, or seventy per second. It is also highly accurate, with the ability to place 80 per cent of its shots within a ten-metre circle from 4,000 feet up. When the gun fired, you could hear its trademark roar and echo five miles away.
It didn’t miss the tunnels, either. Some 420 DU shells spanked into the tunnel system in a double sweep up. The soil erupted in flame and dust. It looked like a mini earthquake, the ground doing a Mexican wave. The dust cloud around the tunnels began to clear as the A10 pulled up, throwing off precautionary flares. The DU rounds had exploded with such heat that the earth itself was burning. The rounds lodged up to fifteen metres deep, ploughing up everything in their path.
‘That’s a Delta Hotel, Tusk. Excellent shooting.’
‘My pleasure “mate”.’ He put on a poor British accent. Tusk had a sense of humour, too.
The tunnels wouldn’t have survived that, even if they were lined with concrete. Nobody was walking out of there for a while.
‘Okay, Billy, let’s go.’