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Old 10-12-2022, 03:52 PM
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September 25, 1997

As 40th Army attacks the Bandar Abbas perimeter, the cruiser USS Salem is key to holding it. (Unofficially, the troops of the 1st Marine Division, after having over a week to rest and recuperate, are thrown back into action alongside 4th Marine Division and their British and Iranian allies. With overland communications to the rest of Iran cut, local transportation is forced to rely on dhows and other small craft in the Persian Gulf while Allied command scrambles for troops to break the Soviet deadlock on the coastal road.)

The Freedom ship San Jose Freedom is delivered in Pascagoula, Mississippi and the Brooklyn Freedom in San Diego, California.

A late-night fire breaks out at the Joliet Army Ammunition Plant in Illinois. The fire soon detonates some warheads on the AT-4 production line, destroying the building and killing six workers; the design of the plant (with multiple buildings, partially buried and surrounded by berms, each handling a small portion of production) prevents a wider disaster from occurring.

The airbases at Sembach and Lahr, Germany are hit by Soviet nuclear strikes. The main headquarters of 17th US Air Force at Sembach is destroyed but operations continue from alternate and backup field headquarters.

West of Warsaw, Pact troops shake off the effects of the nuclear strikes and resume their attacks on the withdrawing NATO troops; the lead elements are composed the East German loyalists, now fighting as part of a single VOPO regiment. The East German communists, a strange mix of fanatics and reluctant students and workers unfortunate enough to be in other Warsaw Pact countries at the outbreak of war and drafted into the unit, are used as cannon fodder by their Soviet commanders, who question their loyalty while simultaneously afraid that they will call out the Soviet for not being "good enough communists".

Deployment of new large formation from the US has largely stopped as the war consumes men and materiel at a pace that exceeds America's ability to replace. The best that Training and Doctrine Command can manage is sending Cohort squads, platoons and, once or twice a week, companies. These units are formed at the onset of basic training, allowing unit cohesion to develop throughout the soldiers' training, and are led by experienced NCOs (often recalled retirees or the lightly wounded being returned to duty), often by freshly minted officers. These units can be "plugged into" formations that have been ravaged in combat, taking advantage of the new parent command's already existing command structure. Deployment of these units is almost entirely by air, as there are adequate numbers of requisitioned civilian airliners to fly the troops over; westbound return flights carry heavily guarded POWs or wounded

In northwestern Iran, Kurdish guerillas, guided by Green Berets of the 5th Special Forces Group, execute a well-orchestrated campaign to interdict Soviet supply lines. They launch multiple ambushes along the roads leading from Azerbaijan as well as guiding F-15Es of the 4th Tactical Fighter Wing and A-6F bombers from VA-155, the last strike aircraft remaining from the USS Independence's air wing.

Pakistani lines across the entire front begin to buckle under weeks of relentless Indian assault. The Indian Army, sensing an opportunity, throws its last heavily mechanized formation, the XXI Corps, into action at the bulge in the Pakistani lines south of Lahore, crashing into the armored forces of the Pakistani II Corps. A massive tank battle ensues.
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I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Someday this war's gonna end...
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