“Excellent. I will inform our superiors. Well done, Mitomo.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“When you have finished your examination, burn the body, as you have all the others.”
“Of course.”
Ishi clapped Mitomo on the shoulder.
“Thanks to you, we shall yet win thiswar.”
1
Niger, Africa
Present Day
The long convoy of armed Toyota pickups loaded with Nigerian troops raced north in a line through the desert on a hardpacked road bracketed by thick stands of gnarled acacia trees. A howling wind clouded the air with fine powdery sand, red as rust in the late-afternoon sun.
The column was still three hours away from the village where the regional commander of the Islamic State faction was reportedly hiding. The Nigerian soldiers were far beyond the safety of their fortified base, but they were coming in force. The local fighters were armed with little more than AKs and rode air-cooled motorcycles. Their preferred targets were unarmed villagers and helpless farmers, not soldiers.
“C’est comme la surface de Mars,” said the driver, a first sergeant. He wore the scorpion patch of the 1st Expeditionary Force of Niger (EFoN). His American military surplus camouflaged uniform was covered in dust.
Lieutenant Wonkoye, the mission leader, grinned at the sergeant’s comment.
“So you have been to the Martian surface, Sergeant?”
The sergeant flashed a blindingly white smile beneath his oversized helmet and shook his head.
“It’s what the Americans used to say.”
“Americans used to say a lot of things.”
Wonkoye instantly regretted his comment. He actually liked the Americans, especially the operators he trained with. But American soldiers were mostly gone, thanks to the military junta that now ruled his nation. The only Yanks left occupied the massive American-built drone base in Agadez, but its personnel were forbidden to leave it.
The American Special Forces trainers were fearsome warriors with great knowledge and combat experience, yet they were humble, unlike the Frenchparaswho had fought alongside them over the years. Wonkoye remembered the big Americans training them hard, but still coming down to the Nigerian camp and playingle footballwith them—unlike the swaggering French who, despite their easy smiles and commonlangue, held the Nigerians in quiet contempt.
No matter, Wonkoye thought to himself. Those days are long past. The Americans and the French had been expelled on the orders of Niger’s new president, himself an Army general. Wonkoye, a fervent patriot, quite agreed with that decision, perilous as it was.
The Islamist plague was exploding across the region. Over the years, both the Americans and French had spent a great deal of money to fight the jihadis in Africa. Their efforts were nationalistic, not humanitarian. They fought the terrorists in Africa so that the war would not be brought to their own homelands.
Both Western countries had partnered with Niger, one of the poorest nations in the world, in the long, bloody struggle. It might have been better if the West had sent aid instead of guns, Wonkoye had often thought, but those were matters for his superiors. He was a warrior and his only duty was taking the fight to the Islamist enemy, whose numbers grew daily.
Rumors of a grand alliance between competing Al Qaeda and Islamic State factions swirled in the capital, Niamey. Guinea, Burkina Faso, and Gabon had all fallen to military juntas in recent years, all driven to act by the corrupt and incompetent governments supported by Western powers in the name of security. Other African governmentswere on the brink of toppling as well, including mighty Nigeria. The jihadists were poised to exploit the pending chaos.
So were the Russians.
Now the precarious future of all of Africa lay increasingly in the hands of Africans. Even Mali—now also led by military men—had expelled the fifteen thousand UN peacekeepers based there. Niger’s fate would be determined by Nigerians, and the EfoN was the tip of his nation’s spear in the war on jihadi terror. The proud young lieutenant well understood the risks. He was a professional soldier.
Wonkoye turned around and peered at the young faces on the other side of the pickup’s small rear window getting jostled around in the truck bed. Their eyes were shut tight against the choking dust, their bare faces raw from the sting of the whirling sand. The back of every other pickup was crowded the same way save for the one hauling spare tires and ammo. Each man clutched an AK-47 or RPG launcher. With their free hands they held on to whatever they could, including the bed-mounted Russian machine guns, as they bounced along.
“Do you hear that, Lieutenant?” the sergeant asked.
Wonkoye paused. Over the roar of the Toyota’s diesel four-cylinder engine he could barely make out the familiar sound of helicopter blades beating the air. He had put in a request for air cover, but it had been denied due to the shortage of aircraft.
Wonkoye stuck his head out the window. The stinging sand scoured his face and watered his eyes, but he could still make out the form of a helicopter in the distance to the east, high above the tree line. It was heading north, but circling back around.
“That’s a Black Hawk.”