Bridge in Georgetown.
Judge Arthur Moore, the Director of Central Intelligence, or DCI, watched the exchange with amusement. Greer knew how to twist Ritter's tail, and somehow Bob never quite figured out how to defend against it. Maybe it was Greer's down-east accent. Texans like Bob Ritter (and Arthur Moore himself) deemed themselves superior to anyone who talked through his nose, certainly over a deck of playing cards or around a bottle of bourbon whiskey. The Judge figured he was above such things, though they were fun to watch.
“Okay, dinner at Snyder's.” Ritter extended his hand. And it was time for the DCI to resume control of the meeting.
“Now that we've settled that one, gentlemen, the President wants me to tell him what's going to happen in Poland.”
Ritter didn't leap at that. He had a good Station Chief in Warsaw, but the guy only had three proper field officers in his department, and one of them was a rookie. They did, however, have one very good source agent-in-place inside the Warsaw government's political hierarchy, and several good ones in their military.
“Arthur, they don't know. They're dancing around this Solidarity thing on a day-to-day basis,” the DDO told the others. “And the music keeps changing on them.”
“It's going to come down to what Moscow tells them to do, Arthur,” Greer agreed. “And Moscow doesn't know either.”
Moore took off his reading glasses and rubbed his eyes. “Yeah. They don't know what to do when someone openly defies them. Joe Stalin would have shot everyone in sight, but the current bunch doesn't have the gumption to do that, thank the Good Lord for that.”
“Collegial rule brings out the coward in everyone, and Brezhnev just doesn't have the ability to lead. From what I hear, they have to walk him to the men's room.” It was a slight exaggeration, but it appealed to Ritter that Soviet leadership was softening.
“What's CARDINAL telling us?” Moore referred to the Agency's premiere agent-in-place in the Kremlin, the personal assistant to Defense Minister Dmitriy Fedorovich Ustinov. His name was Mikhail Semyonovich Filitov, but to all but a bare handful of active CIA personnel, he was simply CARDINAL.
“He says that Ustinov despairs of anything useful coming out of the Politburo until they do have a leader who can actually lead. Leonid is slowing down. Everybody knows it, even the man on the street. You can't camouflage a TV picture, can you?”
“How long do you suppose he has left?”
A collection of shrugs, then Greer took the question: “The doctors I've talked to say he could drop over tomorrow, or he could dote along for another couple of years. They say they see mild Alzheimer's, but only mild. His general condition is progressive cardiovascular myopathy, they think, probably exacerbated by incipient alcoholism.”
“They all have that problem,” Ritter observed. “CARDINAL confirms the heart problem, by the way, along with the vodka.”
“And the liver is important, and his is probably suboptimum,” Greer went on, with a gross understatement. Then Moore finished the thought.
“But you can't tell a Russian to stop drinking any more than you can tell a grizzly bear not to shit in the woods. You know, if anything ever brings these guys down, it will be their inability to handle the orderly transition of power.”
“Well, gee, Your Honor.” Bob Ritter looked up with a wicked grin. “I guess they just don't have enough lawyers. Maybe we could ship them a hundred thousand of ours.”
“They're not that stupid. Better we shoot a few Poseidon missiles at them. Less net damage to their society,” the DDI said.
“Why do people disparage my honorable profession?” Moore asked the ceiling. “If anybody saves their system, it will have to be a lawyer, gentlemen.”
“You think so, Arthur?” Greer asked.
“You can't have a rational society without the rule of law, and you can't have the rule of law without lawyers to
R. C. Farrington, Jason Farrington