No. It would take at least half an hour to deploy his lead company for a hasty-very hasty-attack. By that time, those bastards might have finished their defensive preparations. In any case, time was too precious. Even slowing long enough to deploy his troops would give the South Africans a minor victory. Certainly, if Vega heard about it, he would have his ears.
“Pass control of Axe and Dagger flights to the scouts. Have them attack as soon as the Su-25s have finished one pass. And tell the Hinds to back them up. Clear?”
“Yes, Comrade Captain.” The radio operator nodded his understanding and ducked back inside.
Two minutes later, two Frogfoot attack jets screamed down the length of his column, headed for the reported enemy position, waggling their wings as they passed.
“Damn show-offs, ” Mares muttered. He could put up with a little aviator strutting, though, if they could blast the Afrikaners loose before they took root.
He scanned the horizon with his binoculars-eager to see signs that his advance units were going into action.
A prolonged, rattling boom filled the air, the sound rising above the growling roar made by his BTR’s noisy diesel engine. The Frogfoots were already at work plastering the enemy force. Rippling cracks and explosions echoed over the treeless veld.
“Scouts are attacking, sir. They report heavy resistance.”
Sure, Mares thought. When you’re in a tin can with only a small gun on top, three farmers on donkeys looks like heavy resistance.
Five minutes passed with maddening slowness. Come on. Mares was getting ready to joggle his scout commander’s elbow when the radio operator spoke again.
“Lieutenant Morales says the Boers are running. Our gunships are in pursuit. “
Mares smiled grimly at the thought. An Mi-24 Hind helicopter, armed to the teeth, made a good pursuer.
“Excellent. Tell the scouts I want prisoners if possible.”
Twentyfive minutes later, Mares and his armored personnel carriers rolled past the shattered South African roadblock-a pile of old railroad ties, rusting civilian cars, and farm machinery. Smoking bomb and shell craters dotted the ground and the road.
His vehicles had to stop briefly as soldiers pushed the last of the wreckage off the road. Mares made out the twisted remains of an antiquated antitank gun and a single light machine gun. Bullet-riddled bodies wearing South African uniforms were heaped among unfilled sandbags.
A young lieutenant, Morales, ran up to Mares’s BTR and
saluted.
“We took two prisoners, Captain, and killed more than ten others.” His smile faded.
“But I lost three men myself-one killed and two wounded.”
Mares nodded. Losing men in battle was never easy. But it was inevitable.
He kept his own voice dry, businesslike.
“A small price to keep the brigade moving, Lieutenant. Were the Frogfoots effective?”
Morales grinned, his good humor restored by the memory.
“They blew those bastards clear off the road, Comrade. After that it was all broom and shovel work.”
Mares chuckled inside. Right now the war was going their way. Let the boy have his fun. The tough going would start soon enough. He leaned forward.
“Very well, Miguel. Get this mess cleaned up as soon as you can, then join up. We’ll need you for the victory parade when we reach Pretoria.”
The lieutenant laughed and moved off at a run.
Mares spoke into his microphone.
“Second Platoon, take the point. All units, move out.”
He studied the wrecked South African roadblock with contempt.
It would take more than that to stop Cuba’s advancing armies.
SADF HEADQUARTERS, PRETORIA
Commandant Willem Metje stared back and forth from the reports he held in his hand to the strategic map showing the northeastern Transvaal.
Something was wrong. Horribly wrong.
He’d expected the Cubans to launch a series of carefully planned diversionary attacks. Militarily, that only made common sense. After all, raids and other feints would tie down South African troops needed in
Namibia. Vega’s planners might also have hoped they could conceal the real axis of their attack. A successful raid could even do real damage, forcing South Africa to spend valuable time and resources repairing a vital radar station or supply depot.
But the Cubans seemed to be putting a lot of effort into their diversionary attacks. More effort than seemed either reasonable or even possible.
Metje moved closer to the map, consumed by a growing sense of panic.
Enemy contacts were represented by color coded pins. Yellow meant a simple sighting. Orange indicated skirmish-level combat-small-arms fire, nothing more. And red meant a determined attack, with heavy weapons or rockets.
A small tag attached to each pin showed the time of the contact.