Sunday, December 11, 2022

Pukul Habis - Total Wipeout: Prologue

11 March 2023 update: Books Kinokuniya in Singapore has stocked Pukul Habis. Please visit its main store in Ngee Ann City or Bugis Junction, or check the Kinokuniya online store here. The title should be available via Kinokuniya Malaysia soon. Please enquire with the KL store.

Because of the extensive front matter in Pukul Habis, the Look Inside function on Amazon shows you only part of the Prologue. Here's the full Prologue for those of you wondering what the rest of it looks like.

Of the four vignettes in the Prologue, two were inspired by real events. One was a contingency plan that was never implemented, as far as I can ascertain, and one is entirely imaginary. Click to the end of this post to see which Amazon pages show you other page samples.


Prologue

The Eve of War

Gong Kedak Air Base, MALAYSIA

Fighter pilots from 12 Skuadron Tentera Udara Diraja Malaysia (TUDM, Royal Malaysian Air Force) called their reconnaissance missions to Singapore the “flights to nowhere”.

At midnight, precisely 24 hours before Malaysia and Singapore went to war, 12 Skuadron launched a Sukhoi Su-30MKM Super Flanker, callsign Jengking 04, from Gong Kedak Air Base for one such mission.

The Russian-made fighter soared into the inky black sky after a deafening takeoff run. Cones of blue-orange flames from the jet exhausts of the twin-engine fighter pierced the night. A thunderous roar rattled zinc-roofed kampungs and shook the farmland for miles around as Jengking 04, the squadron’s final flight to nowhere, began its solo mission. The Sukhoi climbed to 10,000 feet at 400 knots from its base on the east coast of Peninsular Malaysia, its nose pointed southwest towards Kuala Lumpur, the capital of the Federation of Malaysia. The fighter would fly its 1,000-kilometre round trip at a slow, easy pace when it could hit more than twice the speed of sound and fly three times that distance.

Fast, capable and headed towards Singapore unannounced, Cik Su (Miss Su), which was the nickname Malaysians gave the Sukhoi fighter jet, was on the fifth night recon flight launched by the squadron in the past two weeks – a pace that Markas Angkatan Tentera Malaysia stepped up during the period of tension with neighbouring Singapore.

Kapten Sulaiman Taufiq Abdul Bakar, a 31-year-old BAE Systems Hawk 208 fighter pilot who recently transferred to the squadron, piloted the Sukhoi from the front seat with Leftenan Kolonel Jarod Jonep, Pegawai Staf (Gerak) (operations officer) at 12 Skuadron, in the back as the Weapon Systems Officer or whizzo.

Their target was the Republic of Singapore, a small city-state some 500 kilometres away at the southernmost tip of the Asian continent. With just 40 hours on the Su-30, Sulaiman was a squadron newbie. The 42-year-old whizzo from Sabah was more seasoned, with more than 420 hours on the Su-30MKM. Jarod was an exemplary mentor who gave the nugget his fullest attention. Cik Su was unarmed and travelled light. Her only external stores were wingtip pods for electronic intelligence gathering. Sukhois outfitted in this configuration were nicknamed the Growlerski.

Flying over Malaysian territory in peacetime inside an air corridor monitored by military and civilian ATC, Jengking 04 had several nearby Malaysian airports which the Su-30 could use in an emergency. The night recon flights were safe, routine and undemanding. There were no medals to be won. But pilots from 12 Skuadron enjoyed such missions as it was an easy way to clock flying hours.

Danger came from the risk of collisions with airliners from numerous red eye flights bound for Australia, Europe, North Asia or the Americas in the congested airways above Malaysia, their strobes twinkling silently in the distance like so many fireflies. A vigilant crew and excellent visibility from the cockpit lessened this danger.

When Jengking 04 reached Kuala Lumpur, Sulaiman banked the fighter south to follow waypoints on an electronic map. The Su-30 was on course and right on schedule. The fighter traced the Malacca Strait and aimed for the tip of the vase-shaped peninsula where the slender landform ended with the island of Singapore like a dot at the end of an exclamation mark.

Jengking 04 maintained strict radio silence though her crew tuned in to the business-like chatter between airliners and air traffic controllers. Cik Su had her strobes and wingtip lights switched on in accordance with peacetime safety regulations. There was no need for stealth as allowing the Singaporeans to see the approaching Su-30 was all part of the game. Singapore was not told beforehand of this flight. There was no need to. This was a Malaysian military flight operating within sovereign airspace. The Su-30 needed less than 30 minutes to reach Singapore from Kuala Lumpur. So her crew stayed alert. The goal was to probe Singapore’s defences, not trigger the Singapore Armed Forces into all-out retaliation.

Malaysia’s “flights to nowhere” tested how Singapore might react to unidentified aircraft that approached the city-state. All were launched without prior notification, giving tiny Singapore mere minutes to react.

Puzzlingly, previous sorties drew no apparent reaction from the Singaporeans although SAF ground-based air defence radars must have detected the inbound flights.

Jengking 04 experienced the same lack of response that night.

Now came Jarod’s favourite part of the routine flight when he could enjoy the night view of Peninsular Malaysia from the Sukhoi’s roomy cockpit. Much of the flying was done straight and level with no complicated manoeuvres. And with no need to monitor the threat warning receivers during the peacetime mission, Jarod had time to marvel at the splendid view around the Sukhoi. A blanket of stars crowned the black sky above the streamlined cockpit canopy. Looking beyond the rim of the cockpit, the night glow from the dazzling light show beneath the cruising fighter never failed to fascinate Jarod. There was little need for navigational aids as the Sukhoi pilots knew their way across the peninsula. And the best guide came from brightly lit landmarks. City lights from Kuala Lumpur and big towns like Malacca, Muar and Johor Bahru sparkled like prominent beacons, while traffic along the federation’s major expressways stretched like golden veins across the dark landscape, tracing the shape of the peninsula as the Su-30 closed in on Singapore.

The view from 10,000 feet may have been tranquil and stunning. But the serenity was deceptive as Malaysia and Singapore were then locked in their most serious period of tension. 

Approaching the Malaysia-Singapore border, the Su-30’s last waypoint lay seven nautical miles from Singapore – less than a minute’s flying time to the city-state at its current speed. When the Su-30 reached the waypoint, the fighter turned eastward to overfly the coast of Johor. Looking over to their right, the Su-30 crew saw a carpet of lights from the diamond-shaped island shimmering from one end of the horizon to the other. Sulaiman knew Singapore well as he studied at one of its universities where he met his future wife. He regarded the night reconnaissance as a homecoming of sorts as he had family on both sides of the border. At a personal level, the Sukhoi pilot was relieved that the flight was incident-free and he was happy to fly an easy mission.

Now came the time for the Growlerski to work its magic. From the whizzo’s station, Jarod activated the ELINT devices in the wingtip pods to scan the air for electronic emissions. Almost immediately, the Sukhoi detected Malaysian ATC radars at Senai International Airport and the surveillance radar from Skuadron 323, Malaysia’s southernmost air defence radar unit at Bukit Lunchu in Johor. The fighter also picked up radar signals from the Republic of Singapore Air Force radar aerostat tethered at Pasir Laba, an FPS-117 long-range air search radar at Bukit Gombak and the usual activity from Changi Airport’s ATC radars. Even with the ongoing period of tension, there were no signs of a heightened state of alert or unusual military activities from Singapore.

The Su-30 soared high over Johor Bahru, its flight barely noticed by the city’s night owls. The fighter followed the silvery ribbon that was the Johor Strait and flew towards the band of darkness at the eastern side of the peninsula where the coastal plain met the South China Sea. Staying over Johor, the Su-30 then turned north to follow the Malaysian coast back to Gong Kedak. The flight to nowhere was back to where it began. From wheels up to touchdown, Jengking 04 was airborne for less than two hours.

Intense activity inside Gong Kedak’s hardened aircraft shelters made up for the lack of drama in the air. The squadron’s ground crew did not sleep that night. They worked purposefully to prepare the Sukhois for flight. All 18 Su-30MKM Super Flankers were to fly and 12 Skuadron was proud of its (rarely achieved) ability to generate 100 per cent aircraft availability.

On paper, Singapore’s F-15 and F-16 fighter jets outnumbered Malaysian warplanes three to one.

Even with these odds, 12 Skuadron looked forward to sending its Super Flankers airborne. The fighter squadron had a trick up its sleeve because Markas TUDM was about to make the 25-tonne fighters disappear.

 

Sungai Petani, Kedah

Even by Malaysian standards, the town of Sungai Petani in Kedah was a sleepy backwater that most Malaysians would probably never visit. The riverside town, known fondly by its quarter million residents as SP, was not without its attractions. These included Malaysia’s second largest coastal mangrove reserve, picturesque rice fields and traditional cuisine found only in Malaysia’s northern states.

Ignored by domestic tourists, Kedah’s largest town was very much on the radar – literally and figuratively – of SAF units assigned the round-the-clock task of monitoring Angkatan Tentera Malaysia (ATM, Malaysian Armed Forces) as war clouds loomed.

Based in Sungai Petani, Rejimen ke-52 Artileri Diraja (52 RAD, 52nd Royal Artillery Regiment) was Tentera Darat’s (Malaysian Army) northernmost rocket artillery unit on the peninsula. Despite its distance from Singapore, Regiment 52 was high on the SAF’s watch list.

Out of reach of RSAF F-16 reconnaissance flights and unmanned aerial vehicles in peacetime, when the sanctity of international borders had to be respected, the SAF used its constellation of TeLEOS reconnaissance satellites to watch Regiment 52’s every move. Singapore’s eyes in the skies roamed high over Southeast Asia several times a day. TeLEOS satellites were overhead rain or shine. They operated unchallenged and untouchable, as Malaysia had nothing that could stop overflights by the reconnaissance satellites.

Regiment 52 was a high priority target for the TeLEOS constellation because the Avibras Astros II multiple launch rocket artillery system that armed this unit and her sister battalion, the Gemas-based Regiment 51, had the longest range among MLRS systems in Southeast Asia. Mounted on 6x6 cross-country trucks, the Brazilian-made MLRS was capable of deploying by road to any point in the peninsula within hours.

Astros rockets launched from the Thai border could hit targets some 90 kilometres inside the kingdom. But the presence of Astros rocket launchers on the Thai-Malaysian border hardly constituted a danger to Thailand’s national security as Bangkok, the kingdom’s capital, and high-value economic and military targets were well beyond the reach of the Astros.

It was a different story if Astros launchers faced Singapore. If these rockets were fired from Johor, Astros rockets had the range to soar across the mile-wide (1.6 kilometre) Johor Strait, cross the island’s 22-kilometre width and could reach Indonesia’s Riau islands at maximum range. If Singapore ever came within an Astros regiment’s range rings, the tactical rocket artillery weapon could exert a strategic influence over the entire island.

But as long as Regiment 52 stayed where it was, Malaysia’s Astros rockets threatened no one. Orders that sent Regiment 52 to Johor would change the delicate military balance in a matter of hours as Malaysia and Singapore stood on the brink of war.

Artillery, King of the Battlefield, was about to make its presence felt.

It was a nightmare scenario Singaporean defence planners had long dreaded – the presence of two Astros rocket artillery regiments within striking range of Singapore that threatened to overwhelm the republic’s defences before her citizen army could fully mobilise.

Malaysia knew it had the right to move its rockets anywhere within the federation. If Singapore viewed this as a provocation, then so be it.

Malaysia was prepared to test its smaller neighbour. Scenario planners from Markas ATM calculated that Malaysia’s robust military posture would not cross the threshold to war as Singapore did not have the will to fight, and Singaporeans would be rational enough to see the movement of the rocket regiment for what it was – nothing more than a diplomatic irritant, a political sideshow during the period of tension. 

Markas ATM would soon see results of this opening gambit.

 

Kem Lapangan Terbang, Kedah

It was time for the King’s gunners to prove their worth.

Determined to demonstrate strength and resolve during the period of tension, Regiment 52 had orders to drive to Johor overnight at best speed. Regiment 52’s rapid deployment was familiar to all gunners in the unit as they had practiced the 600-kilometre trans-peninsula movement many times during Eksesais Jengking Selatan (Exercise Southern Scorpion).

Confident of executing this show of force, the gunners were eager to get moving.

In Sungai Petani, deserted streets around the iconic clock tower in the town centre showed why the place was seen as a sleepy backwater. As the hands on the clock ticked towards midnight, Jengking Selatan swung into action.

At Block 16 Kem Lapangan Terbang, Koperal Adam Aziz, a 28-year-old driver with “A” Bateri Regiment 52, waited inside the Bateri Alpha garage in the armoured cab of his Astros rocket launcher after the gunners completed a group prayer for a safe deployment. He shared the cabin with his vehicle commander and two other gunners. A little tense yet excited, Adam clutched the steering wheel with both hands as he waited for the order to start the engine, and hoped that the reliable Mercedes-Benz truck would not let him down.

Follow orders and drive. Keep a safe distance from the vehicle in front. The vehicle commander will do the rest. It was that simple, thought Adam as he prepared himself for the long drive to Johor.

Adam’s parking bay at Block 16 was the first in the row of 18 covered bays assigned to Bateri Alpha. Behind the windowless red doors of the MT line lay the sharp end of Regiment 52: six Astros rocket launchers, the battery’s self-propelled command post, a fire control vehicle, a mobile workshop and ammunition resupply vehicles. The entire battery was manned, fuelled and ready to move.

Outside the MT line, blue strobes on the motorcycles of the military police escort from 6 Kompeni Kor Polis Tentera Diraja (Royal Military Police Corps) cast a pulsating light show on the beige garage walls as the MPs waited with bike engines purring.

The departure was coordinated so that doors to the MT lines for batteries A, B and C and Markas Bateri (Headquarters Battery) cranked open at the same time. Electric motors whirred, cables strained, and the heavy garage doors for the various batteries creaked as they were hoisted up simultaneously to reveal the regiment’s full vehicle strength.

Ordered to execute the Jengking Selatan deployment, gunners from Regiment 52 were eager to live up to their motto, Tangkas Gempur (Agile Strike).

The regiment expected an easy overnight drive to Johor. The weather was good. The gunners knew the way and did not need maps or GPS. They had MPs who would help clear the traffic. One thing that was different from practice runs was the issue of live ammunition for their M-4 carbines. But the battery commander said there was no cause for alarm. It was simply a precaution and orders were passed down to keep the bullets sealed in their cardboard boxes. No one admitted it, but the whole regiment from CO down suspected that the deployment was just political wayang (theatre). To the gunners, the period of tension with Singapore would soon go away. It always did in the past.

First out of camp were the MPs on their powerful Honda motorcycles. Bunched tightly like racers at the Sepang track, eight motorcycles roared out of the camp as pathfinders. The MPs made themselves seen and heard. Blue strobes on their white Hondas flashed with blinding intensity. As the MPs sped through Sungai Petani, wailing sirens woke up many residents as the artillery convoy rolled through the sleeping town.

The MPs stopped traffic for Regiment 52 to move unimpeded as the regiment had orders to reach Johor as soon as possible. The MPs did their job with gusto. Shrill blasts from whistles and waving light wands brought traffic to a standstill at junctions leading to the North-South Expressway, allowing the convoy to carry on without stopping.

Many Malaysian gunners recalled that the deployment felt like an exercise. Regiment 52 brimmed with confidence as the gunners had trained for this moment during numerous Jengking Selatan war games. The geographical reference was easy to understand with Johor’s location at the southern end of the peninsula. The Scorpion signified the link with Briged ke-Tujuh Infantri Tentera Darat (7 Briged), which was the army brigade closest to Singapore.

As the regiment whisked past the camp gates, two sergeants scribbled the time of departure in their notebooks. They watched silently as the tail lights of the convoy and the wails from the sirens faded in the distance. Regiment 52’s operations diary showed that this was the fastest ever exit by the gunners.

The sergeants were not gunners. They came from a secretive ATM unit called Bahagian Aplikasi Perisikan Pertahanan or BAPP – the department for defence intelligence applications. They were at the camp to verify that an additional task was carried out exactly as Markas ATM had ordered. Regiment 52 received specific instructions to keep the doors of the MT lines wide open. The gunners were puzzled, but did as they were told.

The Risik sergeants noted with quiet satisfaction that empty parking bays at Block 16 and the other MT lines remained exposed for Singaporean reconnaissance satellites passing overhead to see that the Astros regiment was no longer at Sungai Petani.

With Regiment 52 unleashed, the ATM’s drawer plans moved quickly into play.

 

The South China Sea

As Regiment 52 began its drive south, a Tentera Laut Diraja Malaysia (Royal Malaysian Navy) asset in the South China Sea also headed for its deployment area off Johor. Under a clear night studded with twinkling stars, the 42,000-tonne semi-submersible transport ship, MV Triumph, carried a Malaysian navy asset to Johor at 11 knots, which was the best speed the ship’s ageing diesel engine could sustain without overstraining itself. Triumph took a week to sail from Semporna, off the eastern coast of Sabah, to the South China Sea. Such was the urgency of the deployment that the mothership sailed non-stop. Her voyage was smooth and incident-free. The 65-strong crew of the TLDM asset who joined the rust-streaked heavy-lift ship as passengers saw the trip as an easy, routine voyage.

The TLDM asset, fleet pennant number 15, was a floating paradox. She came under the Malaysian navy order of battle. But she was not a warship and could not move on her own. Her war paint was the same shade of grey as Malaysian warships. But the floating structure might have passed as just another oil rig. The 4,500-tonne, 50-metre long oddball was what the Malaysians termed a Sea Base. In the Asia-Pacific, she was one of a kind.

Her full name was Pangkalan Laut Tun Sharifah Rodziah – Sea Base Tun Sharifah Rodziah – and she was named in honour of the consort to a former Malaysian prime minister. The floating sentinel sailed towards a grid codenamed Daerah Maritim ke-Tujuh or Delta Mike Seven, which was off the east coast of Johor.

Tun Sharifah Rodziah was part of a TLDM sensor-shooter combination. Her mission was to monitor the sea lanes that led from Singapore to the South China Sea. Contacts detected by the sea base would be passed to the shooter – a Malaysian navy Scorpène-class diesel-electric attack submarine – which would then persecute hostile contacts using torpedoes and Exocet anti-ship missiles.

You could not find a more fitting counterpart for Tun Sharifah Rodziah. The submarine, KD Tunku Abdul Rahman, was named after Malaysia’s first prime minister who was Tun Sharifah Rodziah’s husband. Befitting their namesakes, the TLDM assets would forge a powerful and productive partnership in the South China Sea – and supported one another admirably in the upcoming sea battles as Singaporean warships broke out of the Singapore Strait.

 

Confederate Estate PALM OIL plantation, Pahang

A typical work day at the Confederate Estate palm oil plantation began several hours before sunrise.

Some of the first staff to start work at the sprawling plantation in Pahang were the bakers. This morning was special as the plantation’s 86-year-old Chairman came tottering in with his walking stick to personally inspect the bakery. This was no ordinary bakery. It was a patisserie par excellence that was renowned for making the finest Danish pastries and best bread in Malaysia.

The Chairman was a Dane and a proud expatriate resident of Malaysia. He had spent his entire working life in the federation and dedicated his life to building up Malaysia’s palm oil industry. Along the way, the tall blond European decided to make Malaysia his home. He learned Malay and local dialects and spoke these fluently. The Dane raised a family with four children on the estate, lived like the locals and treated the estate’s workers as his extended family. The Chairman’s love for his workers was returned in kind. For many years, its dedicated workers helped the plantation achieve one of the highest yields among Malaysian palm oil estates.

The Chairman was up early as the estate had special guests that morning, with more on the way. An advance party of elite PASKAU (Pasukan Khas Udara, air force special forces) troopers from a TUDM air base security unit called Skuadron Kawalan Medan (Field Protection Squadron) arrived overnight. The PASKAU platoon was assigned to protect TUDM fighter aircraft that were due to land at the estate’s airstrip that morning.

The Chairman was a retired Lieutenant Colonel from the Royal Danish Army and he was always happy to welcome Malaysian military personnel to the estate.

Markas ATM activated Confederate Estate’s primitive crop duster airstrip as part of its Rancangan Kontinjensi (RANKON) contingency plan to disperse Malaysian fighter aircraft away from their usual air bases. The TUDM advance party would help transform the airstrip into a Forward Operating Base for supersonic fighter jets that were designed for rough field operations. The RANKON dispersal plan was a precaution. It was conceived to reduce the vulnerability of TUDM fighters in case the SAF launched pre-emptive air strikes or artillery attacks on Malaysian air bases.

Tucked away on a fertile coastal plain in Pahang, the plantation’s grass runway was strategically located between Singapore and TUDM fighter bases in the centre of the peninsula.

The old army officer sensed that the period of tension must be quite serious for TUDM to activate the plantation airstrip for use by its fighter aircraft.

The Chairman was right.

RANKON was not a measure that Malaysian defence planners initiated lightly because of the costs involved to move around the manpower, ATM assets and live ammunition. RANKON called for the activation of more than 60 specially designated airstrips for fixed wing assets and landing zones for helicopters in plantations and in the jungle. Because substantial resources were needed to prepare an austere strip for military operations, this RANKON was triggered only under imminent threat of a full-scale war with an aggressor.

A fierce political storm was brewing.


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