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Old 10-11-2022, 03:07 PM
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September 22, 1997

In an attempt to slow Warsaw Pact forces and cripple the road and communication networks, the British submarine HMS Victorious fires three of its 16 Trident II missiles at a variety of targets in Poland. One of the missiles is aimed at Warsaw - three at the city center, a fourth at Okecie airport, the fifth at the suburb of Wlochy to the west and the sixth at the southern spur of suburbs on the east bank of the Wisla. Two other warheads strike military units to the southeast of Warsaw, (unofficially: the two other missiles hit targets in and around the cities of Bialystok and Kielce. The Polish government had just begun the process of returning to the capital, reoccupying underground bomb shelters that survived the siege.)

Czech and Italian troops begin a renewed offensive in southern Germany.

Unofficially,

Soviet forces and their North Korean allies make another concerted effort to capture Hamhung, North Korea. They take heavy casualties from the American cruiser Des Moines and American carrier airpower.

Several Soviet warheads target at Tempelhof airport, Berlin, Germany, virtually destroying the US 10th Air Force's Headquarters (as well as much of what remained of the city after the Second Battle of Berlin).

The Czech-Italian offensive in Bavaria also includes the Soviet 21st Army's drive to secure Ingolstadt and the Danube crossings to the northeast. An American E-8 JSTARS radar aircraft detects the armor of the Soviet 15th Guards Tank Division massing for the attack on Neustadt an der Donau and within 45 minutes the Soviet division is on the receiving end of a hailstorm of NATO conventional and tactical nuclear bombardment. The disciplined Soviet tankers launch their assault despite the destruction of much of their supporting artillery and command structure, but the planned coup de main has become a slog.

Soviet railroad troops from around the USSR are rushed to the west to begin restoring the rail links severed by Operation Barnyard Tiger the week before as well as B-2 Stealth bomber attacks on the Trans-Siberian Railroad.

The commander of the PVO (Air Defense Force) 14th Air Army, responsible for defending the skies over eastern Siberia, is shot after another B-2 incursion over the Trans-Siberian.

The attack submarine USS Olympia hears a snorkeling Soviet boat in the Barents and diverts to investigate. Only at the last moment does it discover that the noise is a decoy in a minefield.

The Albanian Army's drive into Kosovo and Macedonia makes slow progress, more from lack of competence and leadership on the Albanian's part than from effective Jugoslav resistance. (The almost-overwhelmingly Serbian territorial defense forces fight savagely, but are poorly coordinated and their rear areas under attack from ethnic Albanian guerillas).

The Italian Army is likewise unable to take advantage of collapsing Jugoslav resistance in Croatia; logistic difficulties and poor coordination between Grupo Dalmatia and command in Rome hamper any concerted drive out of the newly captured city of Zagreb.

Soviet collective and state farms are exerting a maximum effort to bring in a bountiful harvest. The increase in private plots in the spring has boosted production, but the harvest is challenging due to shortages of fuel, trucks and labor (despite the diversion of tens of thousands of Allied POWs to the fields to augment the nation's school children and pensioners sent to long days of work in the fields).
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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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