Ourumov meets with Russian Defense Minister Mishkin and reports that Siberian separatists were responsible for the attack, but Mishkin surprises him with news that two employees of the satellite control center survived the attack. Ourumov only knew of one survivor and realizes that he will have to hunt the other down quickly.
Q: First, your new car. BMW. Agile five-forward gears, all points radar. Self-destruct system. And naturally, all the usual refinements. Now this, I'm particularly proud of: behind the headlights--Stinger missiles.
BOND: Excellent. Just the thing for unwinding after a rough day at the office.
When Natalya contacts Boris online, he suggests meeting at Our Lady of Smolensk, a local church in St. Petersburg. Unfortunately, it's a trap. When Natalya reaches the church, she is promptly captured by Boris and Onatopp.
Wade agrees to take Bond to the hideout of Valentin Zukovsky, whom Bond had wounded and given a permanent limp years before. Given that Zukovsky is their only known connection to the leader of Janus, Bond is eager to meet him.
Janus is none other than Bond's former friend and fellow agent Alec Trevelyan, 006, who faked his death years ago in order to start a crime syndicate.
When Mishkin interrogates Bond and Natalya, they reveal that Ourumov stole GoldenEye and that there is a second satellite with the same weapon. Moments later, Ourumov bursts into the room, protesting that the Defense Minister is interfering with his investigation. Ourumov then seizes Bond's pistol and kills both the guard and Mishkin, planning to frame Bond for the murders.
Seeing Ourumov escape with Natalya in a car, Bond steals a Russian tank and chases after them, destroying most of St. Petersburg in the process.
Before Alec's train is destroyed, Natalya manages to narrow Boris' location to somewhere in Havana, Cuba.
When Bond and Natalya fly over the approximate location where she had traced Boris' computer signal, they find a seemingly idyllic lake--which hides the giant satellite dish.
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