The very small Short Take Off, Vertical Landing (STOVL)
aircraft settled gently to the ground next to the house the target was
reportedly occupying. It was dark and
the aircraft’s stealth (including acoustic suppression) had been sufficient to
ensure an undetected landing. Double
checking before leaving the aircraft, the operator patted the bag containing
the package he was to deliver. This was
a non-lethal delivery intended only to send a message to the target. The mission was to be a quick in-and-out
operation with the package to be left for the target to find in the morning.
Lowering himself to the ground, he paused a moment to listen
and assure himself that he was still undetected. Satisfied, he spotted the small outcropping
on the roof that his pre-mission intel had identified and then unhooked a
specialized grappling hook from his MOLLE vest.
The vest was a recent addition to his standard outfit and he wondered
how he had gotten along without it before.
He gently tossed the hook up to the roof outcropping and felt it snag
securely. Hand over hand, he quickly
scaled the side of the house and pulled himself onto the roof. It would have been much easier to land the
aircraft directly on the roof, like in TV shows, but the reality was that
unless a building was specifically constructed to take the weight, even a very
light aircraft like his was just too much for a roof to hold.
With cat-like balance born of endless training repetitions,
he made his way to the chimney. It might
seem clichéd but one of the easiest and least secured entry points to a building
or house was the chimney, assuming it was large enough to accommodate a
person. The top of the chimney extended
about four feet above the roof and had a simple locked grate over the
opening. His eyebrow arched up
momentarily as he considered this. The
target was clearly no ordinary person as no ordinary person would have a locked
grate over a chimney. The operator
smirked slightly. No simple lock was
going to stop him. He had been trained
to open any conceivable lock.
Sure enough, a moment’s effort was all it took to open the
lock and quietly swing open the grate.
Reaching up with both hands to the edge of the chimney, he gave a slight
jump, pulling himself up and twisting so that he landed, sitting, on the edge. Swinging his legs over the edge, he dropped
silently down the chimney only to abruptly stop short barely four feet
down. Pulling out his palm sized
tactical flashlight, he looked down to see that he was standing on yet another
grate, this one thick and embedded into the brick masonry.
“Damn!”, he thought to himself, “This guy is taking security
beyond reasonable and into paranoid.”
Still, he wasn’t worried.
There were plenty of other ways into any structure and he had been
trained to find and use all of them.
Hoisting himself up and out of the chimney opening, he ghosted back
across the roof and slid down the grappling line to the ground.
Moving to a window sheltered in deep darkness, he began to
examine the window. He was taking no
chances this time. Removing a hand held
multi-spectral sensor from a pouch on his vest, he carefully scanned the
window. His caution proved wise as he
quickly detected criss-crossing laser beams.
Presumably, they were part of a motion detection system and connected to
an alarm. He would have to find another
way in. This was turning out to be more
of a challenge than the pre-mission brief had led him to expect. Time was also becoming a factor. His mission schedule had some delay variance
built in but there was a limit. He had
to find an entry point quickly.
Backing slowly away from the window, he reached across his
chest and tapped a padded button on his shoulder. The button activated his suit’s
pizo-electric, adaptive camouflage capability.
The suit’s small optical sensor noted the ambient light and surrounding
color wavelengths and the nano-threads of the suit’s fabric received a minute
electrical charge from the sensor’s battery which had the effect of changing
the color of the threads. He was now
completely blended in with the surroundings and virtually invisible. Given the target’s demonstrated security
fixation, the operator was taking no chance of being visually spotted by a
hidden security camera.
Reaching into yet another pouch (love that MOLLE vest, he
thought) he removed a pair of glasses and put them on. He quickly blinked several times, activating
the smart glasses head up display (HUD) and scrolled his way to the building
schematics. A quick moment of study and
found what he was looking for. The house
was built on a crawl space with a service access door on the side of the
building.
He began cautiously walking around the house to the
side. He was in full tactical mode now,
stepping slowly and silently, feeling with his unweighted toe before placing
his full weight on his extended foot and then repeating the process with each
step. It was an ungainly looking way to
walk, toe-then-heel rather than the normal heel-then-toe, but it was silent and
safe and he had long since mastered the movement to point that it was second
nature.
A step away from the crawl space door, he paused to shine
his shielded tactial flashlight at the door.
Out of the corner of his eye he caught the faintest glimmer of
light. Glancing down in the direction of
the light, he was barely able to see a monofilament tripwire stretched across
the door just a step in front of it. One
more slight movement and would have tripped it.
Backing off a step, he incredulously wondered, “Who is this
guy? No reasonable person has this kind
of security at a house!”
The operator acknowledged to himself that he probably should
have paid more attention to the mission briefing but his mind had wandered a
bit. That’s what happens when operations
become too routine for too long.
Stepping carefully over the tripwire, he examined the
door. Finding no additional alarms he
ever so slowly opened the simple lock and unlatched the door. Peering inside, he could see the usual
assortment of heating ducts, pipes, and wires that every crawl space
contains. Easing himself into the crawl
space, he slowly and silently moved to the nearest air duct and traced it up to
the house’s main floor, directly above his head. He quickly unscrewed the duct from the air
diffuser and set the diffuser gently off to one side. He now had a 4 inch by 10 inch opening into
the main floor of the house. Obviously,
he couldn’t fit through the opening but he didn’t need to.
Clipped to the back of his vest was a miniature remote
controlled wheeled drone, much like a child’s remote control car, only this one
had a tiny camera and a flatbed instead of a car body. Reaching into his bag, he pulled out the
package. Fortunately, it was only the
size of a man’s fist. Reaching up
through the exposed diffuser opening, he placed the drone on the floor and then
carefully placed the package on the flatbed of the drone.
Opening yet another pouch on his vest, he removed the remote
control unit for the drone, set the miniature display for low level light
enhancement, and began driving the drone forward. After a brief recon of the room above him, he
spotted a likely corner and directed the drone to the location. A touch of a switch and the drone’s tiny
flatbed tipped sideways allowing the package to gently slide off and down to the
floor.
Satisfied with the package placement, he quickly retrieved
the drone and retraced his steps out of the crawl space and back towards his
aircraft. Jumping lightly back aboard, he
let out a pent up breath and realized he had been sweating from exertion and
tension. It felt good to stretch his
shoulders and relax for a moment.
Mission accomplished, curiosity immediately overcame him and he scrolled
through his smart glasses to the mission briefing background to see who the
target was and way he was so paranoid about security. Seeing the name of the target, he let out a
muffled curse.
“Should have known”, he thought, “I hate delivering packages
to retired SEALS. Paranoid bastards, all
of them!”
With that, he deactivated his cammo suit and it immediately
returned to its normal brilliant red.
Glancing out of the sleigh to clear left, right, and above, he rose into
the air. No one was there to hear it but
as he rose out of sight he quietly muttered, “Ho, ho, ho, wise guy. I beat you.
Enjoy your present of a new tactical wristwatch. Merry f*ing Christmas!”
Note: There’s no messages in this story – just a
bit of Christmas entertainment. I love
SEALs.
Amusing enough, though i feel the tone and flow is a little monotonous.
ReplyDeleteBy any chance do you watch SEAL Team on CBS? Probably the best show on the senior enlisted SF life I've seen.
Not that paranoid. No guard dogs or worse geese.
ReplyDeleteFun! My sweetheart loved it, too.
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas ComNavOps!
I like it!
ReplyDeleteMerry Christmas to all!!!!
I've always thought the SEALS should focus on naval commando operations by attacking ships and subs, as this guy advocates. https://www.g2mil.com/commandos.htm
ReplyDeleteImagine them operating from islands in the Philippines and Indonesia knocking off ships.
If you read the article, you'll note that the author blithely describes the use of 400-500+ lb torpedoes but fails to address how these weapons would be handled prior to their use. He mentions floating the torpedoes in inflatable pontoons but, again, fails to describe how these would be placed in position to float. He also fails to describe how these floating torpedoes would be aimed. It's hard to believe that sophisticated shipboard fire control systems could be effectively replaced by a guy pointing the torpedo at a presumably moving target.
DeleteEven the author's suggestion of using Hellfires neglects to describe how bunches of these 100+ lb missiles would be transported into place.
The author seems to place a lot of faith in superhumanly strong soldiers!
In short, it would be a very unique set of circumstances where his ideas would be applicable. That said, using 'frogmen' to attack ships with limpet mines is certainly viable in constricted waters if a warship is stupid enough to stop and move very slowly through such obvious ambush waters.
Now, where I see more applicability for the author's idea is in attacking enemy ships in their ports. This would be a sub delivered SEAL who would place mines. Even here, Tomahawk attacks would be far simpler, safer, and more effective.
Excellent!! Loved it!!🎅
ReplyDeleteReally dying to dive into the news of the last few days... LCS planned decommissionings, Tico cruiser cuts, DDG and FFG build cuts, etc... Whats going on with all these new plans, along with the unmanned push?? Anticipation of shrinking future budget? Abandonment of 355 behind the scenes while supporting publically? Redirection of funds towards maintenance? Concern about sustainment of Columbia? I feel like its a shakeup of sorts but not sure whats driving it...