In the second that followed, he could hear it clearly. It was unmistakable. There couldn’t be a soul on the planet who didn’t recognize it. Over the last two years, that voice had been heard every day, once at least, whether on the news or in a video that went viral, sometimes mocking an opponent or taunting a heckler at a rally, sometimes being impersonated by a TV comic or a precocious kid in a school playground. But no one had heard the voice like this, bellowing with rage – real, not confected. Get out of my way. I’m your Commander in fucking Chief and this is an order.
As he listened, Kassian grabbed a shirt and reached for the first suit his hand could find. ‘What the hell is going on there, lieutenant?’
‘It’s difficult to explain on the phone, sir.’
‘This is a secure line.’
‘I don’t think we have much time, sir.’ Her voice was trembling.
‘In a nutshell, lieutenant.’
She spoke quietly, as if fearful of being overheard. ‘North Korea, sir. The President wants to order a nuclear strike.’
‘Jesus fuck.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Has something happened? Is there an imminent attack on the United States?’
‘No, sir.’
‘So, what the—’
‘A statement, sir. From Pyongyang.’
‘A what?’
‘Please, sir. This is very urgent.’
‘A statement? You mean, this is because they said something?’
‘That’s right, sir.’
‘OK. OK. What’s he doing now?’
‘He’s demanding to be put through to the Pentagon War Room, sir.’
Kassian felt his stomach lurch. He’d had upwards of sixty handover meetings, briefings from every branch of the US government before the inauguration, cramming his head with more information than he had learned in all his previous fifty years. But only one session had struck the fear of God into him. It came when he, the soon-to-be President and the Defense Secretary were instructed in the procedure for launching a nuclear strike.
It was so simple, it was terrifying. The President had merely to call the War Room at the Department of Defense, state the secret codes that confirmed he was indeed the President and give the order. That was it. No process, no meetings, no discussion. And no one with any authority to say no. That was the whole point. The system had stayed that way since Truman, enabling the Commander in Chief to act within seconds of an all-out attack on the country.
But no one planned for this situation. Or this Commander in Chief.
‘What shall I do, sir?’ The woman sounded like she was quaking.
Kassian was now downstairs. His movements had stirred the security detail who guarded his house. The lead officer was standing, close to the front door. Kassian made a driving gesture with his right hand. They headed to the car.
‘Has he got the codes? Did the military aide give him the codes?’
‘He tried not to, sir. He delayed as long as he could.’
‘But he’s got them?’
‘The President put his hands around his neck and threatened to strangle him.’
‘OK. OK.’ Kassian looked out of the window, watching a sleeping Alexandria speed by. Even at this pace, he could make out the lawn signs that had sprouted all over this town and – in certain places – across the country. Not My President.
‘Have you called Jim? Secretary Bruton. Have you called him?’
‘He’s being spoken to now, sir.’
‘OK. In the meantime, you need to tell the President the procedure for such a decision requires the presence of Secretary Bruton and myself. There is a sequence we need to follow.’
‘But, that’s not—’
‘Just tell him.’
‘Shall I put you on the phone to him, sir?’
Kassian weighed it up. Instinct told him it would not work. The President would not take it, not from him. Military officers – neutral, anonymous – stood a better chance: there was a possibility he would hear their words as the response of a system, a machine, with no inherent hostility to him, no feelings either way. So far that had proved the best way to stop him.
‘No, I’ll talk to him when I get there.’
‘But you may not get here in time.’
Kassian remembered what the President’s daughter had said about her father in a TV interview during the campaign. ‘You never say “No.” You say, “Yes, but maybe not right now.”’The interviewer had laughed, joking that it was kind of like dealing with a toddler. The daughter had laughed back, saying, ‘Whatever works, right?’
‘All right. Tell him, you’ve spoken to us. We support him and want to be with him on this one. And the best way to ensure this decision goes well for him is if he waits for me and Secretary Bruton.’
There was a banging sound. It could have been a fist pounding the desk or a door being slammed, Kassian could not be sure. He hoped it was the latter. Maybe the President had stormed out of the Situation Room in frustration, his will thwarted. Perhaps he would just go to bed or watch TV. The man hardly ever slept.
But then the officer spoke again. ‘He’s been put through, sir. He’s talking to the War Room at the Pentagon right now.’
Kassian felt a heave in his guts. Good God, what was this man about to do?
He killed the call and moved to make another, dialling Jim Bruton’s cell. It was hard to press the buttons; his hands were trembling. And as he put the phone to his ear, all he could think of were the words from that briefing, perhaps three days before the President was sworn in. At your command, sir, will be thousands of weapons, each one ten or twenty times more lethal than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima … Retaliation by the enemy will be automatic, swift and devastating. The combination of an initial US strike and the enemy’s counter-strike will lead to the deaths of hundreds of millions of people within a matter of hours … Yes, sir, we have gamed that out: our most conservative scenario projects a global catastrophe that would end civilization itself, sir … On your command, eight hundred and fifty missile warheads will take flight within no more than fifteen minutes … No, sir. Once the order is given, there can be no stopping, no recall and no turning back.
Busy signal. He tried again. And then again. Until at last he heard that trademark, Louisiana drawl, the one voice in Washington he truly trusted, the voice he’d heard in countless moments of mortal danger – though none as terrifying as this.
‘Bob, is that you?’
‘Jim, thank God. Listen, you have to get hold of the War Room right now, before he does. You have to tell them—’
‘I already did. I told them they have to stall.’
‘How?’
‘They’re telling him there’s a malfunction in satellite comms. They can’t reach the subs.’