Gone Tomorrow
States provide military aid anywhere in the world without also sending what they called military advisers?”
I didn’t answer.
She asked, “For instance, how many countries have you served in?”
I said nothing.
She asked, “When did you join the army?”
“In 1984,” I said.
“Then these events of 1982 and 1983 were all before your time.”
“Only just,” I said. “And there is such a thing as institutional memory.”
“Wrong,” she said. “Secrets were kept and institutional memories were conveniently erased. There’s a long history of illegal American military involvements all around the world. Especially during Mr. Reagan’s presidency.”
“You learn that in high school?”
“Yes, I did. And remember, the communists were gone long before I was in high school. Thanks, in part, to Mr. Reagan himself.”
I said, “Even if you’re right, why assume Americans were involved on that particular night? Presumably your mother didn’t see it happen. Why not assume your father and your uncle were captured directly by the mujahideen?”
“Because their rifle was never found. And my mother’s position was never fired on at night by a sniper. My father had twenty rounds in his magazine, and he was carrying twenty spare. If the mujahideen had captured him directly, then they would have used his rifle against us. They would have killed forty of our men, or tried to, and then they would have run out of ammunition and abandoned the gun. My mother’s company would have found it eventually. There was a lot of back-and-forth skirmishing. Our side overran their positions, and vice versa. It was like a crazy circular chase. The mujahideen were intelligent. They had a habit of doubling back to positions we had previously written off as abandoned. But over a period of time our people saw all their places. They would have found the VAL, empty and rusting, maybe in use as a fence post. They accounted for all their other captured weapons that way. But not that VAL. The only logical conclusion is that it was carried straight to America, by Americans.”
I said nothing.
Lila Hoth said, “I’m telling you the truth.”
I said, “I once saw a VAL Silent Sniper.”
“You told me that already.”
“I saw it in 1994,” I said. “We were told it had just been captured. Eleven whole years after you claim it was. There was a big urgent panic, because of its capabilities. The army wouldn’t wait eleven years to get in a panic.”
“Yes, it would,” she said. “To unveil the rifle immediately after its capture might have started World War Three. It would have been a direct admission that your soldiers were in direct face-to-face contact with ours, without any declaration of hostilities. Illegal at the very least, and completely disastrous in geopolitical terms. America would have lost the moral high ground. Support inside the Soviet Union would have been strengthened. The fall of communism would have been delayed, perhaps for years.”
I said nothing.
She said, “Tell me, what happened in your army, in 1994, after the big urgent panic?”
I paused, in the same way that Svetlana Hoth had. I recalled the historical details. They were surprising. I checked and rechecked. Then I said, “Not very much happened, actually.”
“No new body armor? No new camouflage? No tactical reaction of any kind?”
“No.”
“Is that logical, even for an army?”
“Not especially.”
“When was the last equipment upgrade before that?”
I paused again. Sought more historical details. Recalled the PASGT, introduced to much excitement and fanfare and acclaim during my early years in uniform. The Personal Armor System, Ground Troops. A brand-new Kevlar helmet, rated to withstand all manner of assault by small arms fire. A thick new body-armor vest, to be worn either over or under the battledress blouse, rated safe even against long guns. Specifically, as I recalled, rated safe against incoming nine-millimeter rounds. Plus new camouflage patterns, carefully designed to work better, and available in two flavors, woodland and desert. The Marines got a third option, blue and gray, for urban environments.
I said nothing.
Lila Hoth asked, “When was the upgrade?”
I said, “In the late eighties.”
“Even with a big urgent panic, how long does it take to design and manufacture an upgrade like that?”
I said, “A few years.”
“So let’s review what we know. In the late eighties you received upgraded
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