Authors: Steve Lewis
Three black vans roared through the open gates and down the driveway, screeching to a halt just metres from Webster's lair.
An elite team from the Australian Federal Police Specialist Response Group poured from the vehicles. Three heavily armed officers dressed in military-style uniforms and carrying assault rifles fanned out to the left, each dropping to one knee as he raised his weapon. Another trio covered the right of the entrance.
In the same instant, an agent wielding a black metal battering ram raced across the driveway and dashed up the steps. He reached the doorway and in one fluid movement launched the heavy steel weight at the lock of the double door. It splintered apart and a trailing officer quickly leaped through the shattered opening, followed by his colleagues.
Seconds later a blinding flash of light accompanied a loud bang as a stun grenade detonated in the state room. Screams
erupted within the mansion as officers barked, âOn the floor!' Then there was silence.
Watching from a safe distance, Martin Toohey turned to his astonished companions. He motioned to Dunkley.
âCamera ready?'
âYes boss.'
âGreat, then follow me. This will be priceless.'
Toohey led his rag-tag team to the verandah and pointed to a plum position. âThere.'
Dunkley was firing off a shot to check the camera's flash as the first two officers emerged. A buff naked man was being dragged between them, yelling protests at the indifferent agents.
A short while later two young women were escorted from the house, their modesty protected by blankets. The officers kept a light grip on them as they were led to the waiting vans. They stopped dead in their tracks as an enraged howl erupted from the doorway.
Handcuffed and clad only in a pair of tight leopard-skin briefs, Australia's military chief was threatening to end the careers of his captors.
As Dunkley's flash blazed, Jack Webster snarled and flailed in the policemen's grasp. Toohey waved: âSmile for the camera, Jack.'
The defence chief continued to wrestle with the officers as he issued a string of questions and demands.
âThis is private property. You have no right to be here. What am I being charged with?'
From beneath his balaclava an agent offered one word.
âTreason.'
Admiral Yu Heng paced the bridge of the
Liaoning
, moving anxiously from station to station as his crew battled to restore the carrier's eyes and ears.
For the past thirty minutes the pride of the Chinese navy had been sailing blind, its array of communications obliterated. The enemy had launched an attack across the entire electromagnetic spectrum, bringing down radio, radar and navigational equipment.
The admiral's worst fears had been realised: China's overzealous leaders had picked a fight they were not equipped to win. Yu had grounded the carrier's air wing, unwilling to risk the lives of pilots by ordering them into a black hole.
âAdmiral . . .' A technician beckoned him to a radar screen that was a mess of static.
âStill nothing?'
âNo sirâ'
The sailor's mouth froze and his face was twisted into a mask of horror as he was catapulted across the bridge. The admiral's head was slammed against an instrument panel as he tumbled to the floor, opening up a deep gash that rained red across his combat uniform.
The brutality of the blast was amplified in the confines of the bridge. As the air around him compressed, the oxygen was punched from Yu's lungs and pain screamed in his ears.
He staggered to his feet, slipping in his own blood, pressing the heel of his right hand into his head wound. He stood deafened and breathless as smoke clouded the room.
As the admiral's hearing returned, the screams of the wounded and dying reached his ears.
The
Liaoning
's first and only battle was over.
First Lieutenant Yang Gan flew over the crippled hulk, struggling to comprehend the scene below.
Thick black smoke bellowed from a massive hole blasted above the waterline in the carrier's hull.
The carrier had been hit amidships on its port side. Planes lay smashed and scattered along a torn and ruined flight deck. Crew were battling fires and tending the wounded. Others lay bloodied where they had fallen. Yang presumed they were dead.
As he flew close one of the aircrew waved him off, not that he'd had any intention of landing on the wreckage.
Yang checked his fuel gauge. He had to land soon or ditch in the sea. With his navigational equipment still disabled, he checked the sun and his watch, then turned towards the point on the horizon where he hoped salvation lay.
If it hadn't been for the smoke, Yang would never have found the tiny island.
From the air it resembled a sand-coloured arrowhead pointing south-west. Its highest feature rose just metres above the water. A channel had been cut into the broad northern end, terminating in a square-shaped port dug into the reef. On the eastern edge there was a cluster of buildings linked by two roads.
An airstrip flanked the entire western side of the atoll. Its runway was large enough to land a 747, but it would be a long while before it operated again. Yang counted at least eight craters along its length.
None of the reef's buildings had been touched and he couldn't see any bodies. He assumed the island's workers were holed up in shelters. He wondered at the grim lives of those who'd been sent to pile up dirt to turn this dot into a Chinese fortress.
He circled the tiny atoll, a pin-prick of land in the wide blue ocean. This is what had triggered a war. Mischief Reef hardly seemed worth the fight.
He checked his fuel again. Out of options, he lifted his altitude a touch and dropped his speed, then pulled a lever next to his
seat. The canopy blew off and he felt a jolt as rockets catapulted him from the cockpit.
As Yang glided beneath his opened parachute, he watched his plane arc into the sea.
At 8.16pm AEST the
Canberra Times
splashed the story of Jack Webster's arrest.
DEFENCE CHIEF CHARGED WITH TREASON
In a punchy five paragraphs on its website, the ninety-year-old broadsheet told how Webster had been marched from his Burra retreat by elite Australian Federal Police officers, shortly after 7pm. A slightly blurred photo of a scantily clad, handcuffed Webster being pushed into a black van accompanied the article.
It carried the byline:
Special Correspondent, Harry Dunkley.
The veteran journalist had dashed off the copy on a laptop borrowed from the technicians. Martin Toohey had phoned to reassure a sceptical editor.
âTrust me, it's rolled gold. Elizabeth Scott will confirm everything. She's expecting your call. Dunkley will send the copy soon.'
The journalist hit âsend' as the four-wheel drive rattled down the Old Cooma Road towards Canberra. The final words of the article held a tantalising promise: âMore to come.'
Rarely had the paper â as old as the national capital itself â landed such a scoop, and Dunkley's copy sent newsrooms around the country into a frenzy.
Editors, reporters and producers were dragged from their Friday night revelry as word of Webster's demise ricocheted around the web.
Just after 8.30pm, an alert was issued by the prime minister's office:
PM Press Conference. Blue Room. 9pm.
At the same time Elizabeth Scott's squad of spinners began calling senior gallery scribes to reinforce the story's grunt.
When pressed for detail they merely replied, âRead Dunkley.'
Four Australian flags stood each side of a lectern. A single microphone rose from the timber stand emblazoned with the nation's Coat of Arms.
Despite the late hour, the Blue Room was crammed with
journalists in various shades of Friday night fashion. The room hummed with anticipation and conspiratorial whispers.
The television networks had scrambled to fill the void and were engaged in speculation based entirely on five paragraphs of copy and a single photograph.
Elizabeth Scott swept into the press conference ten minutes late, accompanied by the attorney-general.
âLadies and gentlemen, thank you for coming. I'm sorry to have kept you waiting. I will make a short statement and won't be taking questions.'
She checked her watch.
âTwo hours ago, Australian Federal Police executed an arrest warrant at the rural residence of John Reginald Webster, the Chief of the Australian Defence Force.
âWebster will be charged with treason, misappropriation of public monies, improper use of telecommunications services and the wilful destruction of Commonwealth government property.'
Scott reached for a tumbler of water and drank a mouthful. She looked to the attorney who nodded gravely before she continued.
âCommonwealth security agencies and the AFP have shown me detailed and compelling evidence that supports each of these serious charges.'
The PM put aside her notes and looked into the lenses of the cameras at the rear of the room.
âOn a personal note, I counted Jack Webster as a friend and trusted adviser,' she said, her voice tinged with anger. âCan I say that I am shocked and saddened that a man charged with defending this nation has so wantonly betrayed its trust.'
She ignored a flurry of questions and silenced the room by holding up her hand.
âI have another serious matter to address. Just minutes ago I spoke with the President of the United States. Mikaela Asta informed me that earlier today there was an exchange of fire between American and Chinese warplanes in the South China Sea.
âThe planes came from the US carrier
George Washington
and the Chinese carrier
Liaoning.
âThe president tells me that the Chinese triggered the conflict by firing on a Philippine navy vessel that was being escorted through international waters by the US carrier. The Americans returned fire, damaging the Chinese carrier.'
Scott gazed at the shocked faces of the journalists who were trying to process this second bombshell.
âEarly reports suggest the Philippine navy suffered casualties. It appears there are Chinese casualties as well, although details are sketchy.
âThe
Liaoning
, I am informed, is sailing back to its home port and is being shadowed by the
George Washington
.
âThis is a serious and regrettable incident. It is vital that it is contained and that cool heads prevail. Australia urges these two great nations to peacefully resolve their dispute.
âI will be calling on the United Nations to urgently convene the Security Council. And I will be discussing this grave situation with the Japanese prime minister when he arrives in Canberra on Monday. Thank you and good evening.'