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Old 10-13-2022, 09:19 AM
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chico20854 chico20854 is offline
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September 26, 1997

Nothing in canon for today!

A detachment from the 1st Armored Brigade (Training) escorts the train that transports a large portion of the gold from the Fort Knox Bullion Depository to a secret, secure location.

The Soviet drive in Alaska is stalled by a poor (and deteriorating) supply situation and the increased resistance offered by X Corps, whose newly-arrived 197th Field Artillery Brigade is providing well-placed and timed heavy fire support to the front-line light infantry units facing the Soviets.

Naval gunfire support plays a key role in the defense of Allied positions in North Korea, with the USS Missouri alternating between supporting III MEF west of Pyongyang and the Chinese 31st Group Army and its American and British attacjhments holding the mouth of the Yalu. On Korea's east coast the heavy cruiser Des Moines is pulled south, off the gunline, its magazines depleted, fuel tanks running low and, most seriously, the liners of its eight-inch gun barrels in dire need of replacement. The ship heads to Pusan at top speed, its way cleared by an umbrella of American, Japanese and South Korean patrol aircraft.

With the supply of missiles becoming problematic, the 111th Air Defense Artillery Brigade consolidates into two battalions, 4th Battalion, 200th Air Defense Artillery with Patriots and 7th Battalion, 200th Air Defense Artillery with I-Hawks, with excess personnel transferred to other units. The brigade is assigned to XX Corps, facing the Italians in far southwestern Germany and is fortunate that the Italian Air Force in the sector is composed almost entirely of simple light attck aircraft and helicopters.

With continued NATO attacks on the rail lines into Eastern Europe, Pact logistics planners make greater use of the industry of Hungary and Czechoslovakia, taking the entire output from those nation's refineries and munitions plants and even depleting the national food reserves to feed Soviet soldiers at the front.

The NATO forces operating in southern Poland withdraw from Krakow after inflicting as much damage as possible on the industrial facilities of the nearby industrial center of Novy Huta. Their withdrawal is accompanied by streams of refugees, ordinary Poles who desperately seek a more comfortable life in the West as well as Free Polish Congress operatives and sympathisers who fear the reprisals that surely will accompany the returrn of Communist control.

The American carriers John F Kennedy and America are joined by the Royal Navy's last remaining carrier, HMS Illustrious, in the Mediterranean. The addition of the British ships's air wing (depleted as it is, consisting of 5 Sea Harriers (including two 2-seat trainers pressed into combat service) and 8 helicopters) provides additional anti-submarine and anti-surface screening, allowing longer-ranged American aircraft to range over the battlefields of Jugoslavia as the carriers remain on station at the mouth of the Adriatic.

The situation for NATO in the Balkans is grim. Both Belgrade and Bucharest are under attack by Pact troops and the Romanian and Jugoslav armies outside the capital cities are disintegrating under the weight of unrelenting Soviet nuclear attacks and increasing numbers of Soviet reservists flooding into the area, poorly trained and equipped as they are.

In Romania, the American 71st Airborne Brigade is joined by the 2nd Battalion, 6th Special Forces Group. Each airborne rifle company is paired with a Green Beret A-team and the brigade's service and support units (everythign from the air defense battery to the support battalion) is broken down, attached to individual companies as Soviet tank forces approach the 71st's positions in the Carpathians from all directions. The brigade's reserves of food, fuel and ammunition are placed in hidden caches as the final C-17 flight departs with as many of the wounded as can be crammed aboard.

Transcaucasian Front reels from the disruption to its supply lines in northwestern Iran; while doctrine calls for Soviet formations to carry 3-7 days of supplies aboard unit trucks the long distances and lack of functioning railroads mean that many units subsist only on daily supply deliveries. The KGB arrests Transcaucasian Front's deputy commander for the rear for deriliction of duty, despite his protests that the front was never provided the requisitie rear area protection division. More helpfully, the KGB dispatches several of its motor-rifle regiments to northwestern Iran to suppress the Kurdish uprising.

South of Lahore, Pakistan, a massive tank batle rages as Indian Vijayanta tanks of the 31st Armored Division clash with Pakistani Type 59s and M-48A5s. By noon the fighting has died down, as the remaining Pakistani tanks are hunted down by the numerically superior surviving Indian ones. Truckloads of Indian infantry arrive on the eastern edge of the battle area and begins streaming west.
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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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