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Old 05-01-2023, 12:34 PM
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chico20854 chico20854 is offline
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April 29, 1998

The 46th Infantry Division (Texas, New York and Puerto Rico National Guard) is ordered to move from Virginia, where it has been performing internal security and disaster relief duties since November, to Texas by road, where it will disperse throughout the eastern part of the state on anti-riot duties.

Unofficially,

The division is filled out with additional troops - sailors from the Hampton Roads area without ships or squadrons, airmen from Langley Air Force Base and freshly trained recruits from the training battalions at Forts Lee and Eustis (including an entire platoon of parachute riggers that have completed their training at Fort Lee but are unable to obtain transport to XVIII Airborne Corps in Iran). To conserve fuel and in recognition of its mission in Texas, it leaves nearly all of its remaining heavy weapons and armored vehicles behind. This move is a recognition of the significant military forces available in the Hampton Roads region from the cluster of bases there (the Army's Forts Eustis, Story and Monroe, Langley Air Force Base and the Norfolk Naval station complex, its ranks swelled by the crews of ships stuck in port and aircraft grounded for lack of fuel). It is also a reflection of the need for additional troops to secure the remaining petroleum production infrastructure of the Texas Gulf Coast.

The weather in Alaska remains snowy, windy and cloudy, delaying again the 2nd Battalion, 511th Infantry Regiment's parachute drop behind Soviet lines.

The commander of the 2nd Southwestern Front reaches out to his KGB counterparts in preparation for the release of tactical nuclear weapons in the upcoming offensive. The KGB officer demurs, citing a lack of orders from Moscow. The Army commander suspects the real reason is the KGB detachments' comfortable occupation of former Austrian and German garrisons, including Luftwaffe and US Army bases in southern Germany with highly secure nuclear weapons storage facilities; even with the electronic alarms and other sophisticated defenses disabled they provide admirable security and, more importantly to the KGB troops, more comfortable surroundings than any comparable base in the Warsaw Pact.

In eastern Siberia, the Hungarian 53rd Mechanized Brigade has reached the blockage in the Trans-Siberian Railroad caused by an American nuclear strike which obliterated the junction of the Trans-Siberian with the Baikal-Amur Mainline, the other railroad that crosses Siberia to the Pacific. The Hungarian rear guard reports sightings of the 27th (my 90th) Tank Division's advanced patrols as that unit continues its journey to the Western Front.
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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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