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Old 02-24-2023, 04:12 PM
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chico20854 chico20854 is offline
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February 12, 1998

Another day with nothing in canon. (You'll be seeing a lot of this going forward!)

Teams from the California State Guard's 1st Medical Brigade are spread out all across the state, administering to the wounded from the nuclear attacks in the Bay Area and Los Angeles-Riverside area, trying to provide dayto-day health care in evacuation camps and administer to the increasing flow of Mexican refugees which continue to cross the border every day.

The USAF's 313th Tactical Fighter Squadron flies the first operational mission in a former Belgian F-16A. The aircraft takes off from the squadron's new base at Jever in northern Germany, flies a low-level path along the Baltic coast towards Szceczin, passsing over the FEBA (Forward Edge of the Battle Are) east of that Polish city before turning south, flying a course parallel to and 50 km east of the Oder River. The aircraft's photographic pod scours the area for Pact troop concentrations, artillery and missile batteries, logistic sites or headquarters, hoping that fatigue and the snow on the ground will help defeat some of those unit's camouflage. It turns west near Zielona Góra, Poland, dropping its ordnance load of four 500-pound bombs on a previously identified radio repeater site in 2nd Polish Army's rear before crossing the river and returning to its base. While seemingly routine, the flight is not without risk, between the aircraft's uncertain maintenance and prior flight history, the breakdown of air defense coordination between NATO units (the pilot sights some small arms fire headed skyward as he crossed over the German front line) and the (remote) possibility that the Poles or Soviets may have an interceptor airborne over the front lines or have obtained additional surface-to-air missiles.

The dreadfully supplied and equipped relief column from the 158th Motor-Rifle Division, led by the division commander himself, finally departs its base in Zenica, Jugoslavia as the first light of day brightens the horizon. The column of trucks is lead by a pair of PT-76 light tanks, with a handful of BTR-40 APCs and a WW II-vintage American M-16 anti-aircraft halftrack captured from the Turks scattered along the column as gun trucks. The convoy covers 15 km before it is stopped by a downed bridge. As the engineers are brought forward to emplace a temporary one the entire column comes under fire from enemy troops in the heights overlooking the valley. The engineers are unable to work under such fire, and the M-16, the column's most effective means of suppressing the dismounted enemy (with four .50-caliber machineguns), soon runs out of ammunition. The beleagured troops dig in, seeking shelter from hastily dug fighting positions and the nearby village's surviving structures (and even remnants of structures).

Communist Party officials in the remains of Vilnius, Lithuania are furious when they learn of Colonel Skrebys' statement. He is expelled from the Party while word is passed to Moscow of his betrayal, requesting military forces to deal with him.
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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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