That's right. I'm back and finally have the first installment of my story to give.
Here is a world map...was gonna use the game map, but this one portrays locations, etc. better (though somewhat more sloppy presentation).
Hope you enjoy.
The Cost of War - Part I
Prelude
His breath burned in his throat and roared in his ears. His legs screamed in agony as he clambered up the slippery surface that was the hillside below the enemy stronghold. Comrades, friends and vague acquaintances fell beside him, barely registering in a brain that shouted for him to flee. With a concerted effort, he pushed those thoughts aside and simply ordered his legs to take another step. And another. And another.
With automatic precision, he shot at enemies that made themselves seen. Bullets hummed through the air past his head but failed to make contact. He could see the crest now. With a sense of triumph he was the first to stand atop the hill that he and his countrymen had spent so long fighting for. For a split second, he was enraptured by the stunning vista of mountains, forests and plains spread out before him. Then his life erupted in pain as a volley of rounds from a second line of entrenched soldiers hit him in the chest. Then there was nothing. Only blackness.
This soldier requires no name. His willingness to fight for his country already made him a hero. His sacrifice on the battlefield made him a legend. He was a warrior of the English Empire.
Four years earlier...
London Palace, London
Prime Minister Winston Churchill massaged his temples where a headache was threatening to take camp. It had been a long day of negotiations with his fellow leaders and he feared the English Empire had come out the worst.
Situated on the Europa Continent and the English Isles, the English Empire shared borders with Russia, Rome, and Germany and none of those nations were willing to negotiate peacefully with England, not after the centuries of conflict that had plagued the continent.
England's only true ally was the only other occupants of the Europa Continent, the French and the Greeks. But Churchill could not rely on them for help anymore. The Thousand Year War between France and Germany had finally been brought to a close only a decade earlier and the French were now only a shadow of their former glory. Stunning military successes in the final decades of the war had seen the Germans nearly sweep France from the continent entirely, leaving them with only a couple of small cities. Paris was under German rule and looked to remain that way for a good deal longer. And the Greeks had never been a strong nation.
The French could possibly have survived on the Southern Isles had they been only fighting the Germans. However, and Churchill always winced at this, the Iroquios attacked from the Americana Continent and steamrolled through five French cities before meeting any resistance. The French gladly signed a peace agreement when Germany and the Iroquios Nation offered one.
Churchill found himself leading a country that was increasingly surrounded by enemies with fewer friends. America, a long time trading partner, was too occupied with its own growing tension with the Aztecs to offer assistance while the Quadrant Alliance of Russia, Rome, Germany and the Iroquios Nation were all arrayed against England should it so much as step out of line by a millimeter.
The recent negotiations had been two-fold in nature. The first was to try and de-esculate the tension building between the English Empire and the Quadrant Alliance. The second was to try and trade rubber from England's vast plantations in exchange for Russian oil. Churchill should have know it wasn't going to work. Russia, though the only country of the Europa Continent that England hadn't been a war with in the past, was extremely protective of its resources and what it gave out. Churchill wouldn't be surprised if Catherine wouldn't even trade with her closest allies.
Englands lack of oil was proving alarming. The ability to produce the destroyers and battleships needed to patrol the waters of the Empire had disappeared with England's one and only supply of oil nearly five years earlier. The English Army was one of the largest standing armies in the world, but it contained pitiful amounts of armour. The Quadrant Alliance had armour to spare.
Sighing a heartfelt sigh that had built up over the day, Churchill rose from his desk and walked out onto the balcony of the London Palace. Once home to the English Monarchy, the palace had become the equivalent to the American Whitehouse when England had overthrown the monarchy in exchange for a democracy.
The view before Churchill covered the expanses of the English capital plus the coastline that was the edge of the Europa Continent. He wondered just how long he would have that view with the barking dogs of war nipping at his heels.
Normadic Wastelands, Northern England
Sergeant Bill Reddie pulled his overcoat closer around him. Most Englishmen found the harsh winters in the north energy sapping and impossible. Bill Reddie thrived in them. Having been born and raised in the nearby city of Coventry, Bill felt uncomfortable in the relatively warmer climate of central England. Here, he was in his element.
“C’mon Sarge, you going to ante up?” Corporal Jack Smith called to him from across the table. Like Bill, Jack was also from Coventry and seemed even more comfortable in the cold than Bill did. Their two other companions did not.
“For chrissake, Bill, do something before my fingers freeze to the cards.” Sergeant Thomas Edmonton cursed. Also colourful with his language, he was from York, which was south of London and virtually on the equator. His teeth chattered and he could barely move under the clothing he wore.
Corporal Dennis Vincent simply sighed his resignation, releasing a large plume of visible breath as his did so. Dennis wasn’t much for words, but it was obvious the London lad wasn’t finding it too comfortable up north.
“The least the brass coulda done was build us some bloody huts.” Thomas observed. “These tents wouldn’t keep an Eskimo warm in the tropics.”
Smiling, Bill pulled a coin out from under his coat and dropped it into the pot with a satisfying clink. He looked at his cards after they were dealt and tried to suppress a grimace. Jack-high. He just hoped his second hand would be worth something.
The sound of sporadic gunfire interrupted the card game. Cold, card values and general fatigue were instantly forgotten as all four men exited the tent and ran towards the commotion. Bill Reddie ran straight to his platoon commander.
“What’s happening sir?” He enquired of Lieutenant John Marsh.
“Russians.” Lieutenant Marsh replied. “Nothing serious. They strayed too close to our lines and wouldn’t withdraw when we ordered them to. Looks like we persuaded them though.”
“Gunfire generally does sir.” Reddie agreed, but inside felt the first stirrings of trouble. Why would the Russians push their luck over a useless piece of land. Snowbound and without vegetation, it had provided a natural border between Russia and England since the dark days before literature and written records. Ancient drawings discovered on cave walls had shown that English people had moved this far north long ago but had found the land uninhabitable.
“From the reports I’ve received,” continued the Lieutenant, “we’ve had incursions all along the wastelands tonight, plus our northern fleet intercepted a Russian fleet inside our territorial waters near the English Isles.”
“It sounds like the Russians are begging for a war.” Bill observed.
“More like the Quadrant Alliance wants us off the continent and in the history books, Sergeant.” Lieutenant Marsh stated. “But it will cost them to do it.”
Russian Military Headquarters, Moscow
General Josef Stalin looked at the map. His probes along the wastelands and the North Sea had proven effective. In one maneouvre he had blind-sided the English to the movement of his troops to Germany as well as judged the responsiveness of the English.
The English saw Russia as the biggest threat. His spies had reported that the English had massed their pitiful amount of armour along the northern borders with Russia and Rome, leaving only foot soldiers and a small airforce to protect the southern border to Germany. Sheer weight of numbers meant that Germany could not effectively break the defences of England, but with the added might of Russian armour and troops, the English would be crushed.
An officer marched up to Stalin and saluted smartly.
“Comrade General, our forces have successfully reached the shores of Germany and are currently dispersing along the front.”
“Excellent.” Stalin replied. “Soon, the fertile fields of England shall lay alongside the mineral rich lands of mother Russia.”
“Also comrade,” continued the officer, “Catherine is preparing to sign a military pact with the English. Even so, she has not detected your troop movements, let along made any move to stop them.”
“Catherine is as stupid as she is weak.” Stalin said. “It matters not. We will be in control of Russia long before she has a chance to entertain the wishes of Churchill. And soon after that, Churchill will no longer need to be entertained.”
York Military Airbase, Southern England
Flight Lieutenant Charlie Gray laughed out loud as he rolled his Spitfire over and roared earthwards. The thrill of flying never left him. And the thrill of mock combat was even better. With flick of the wrist and push of the rudder pedals, Charlie pulled out of his dive and levelled out some 2000 feet closer to the ground.
A second Spitfire with Charlie’s squadron markings levelled out alongside him. Looking over, Charlie gave his Squadron Leader, Roger O’Sullivan a thumbs up. His radio crackled.
“Nice move Blue Two.” Roger said. “I had you until that. Over.”
“Cheers Blue One.” Charlie replied. “Do we have to go back just yet? Over.”
“Nah, I reckon we can just stooge around for a while. Out.”
Charlie relaxed back into his seat and enjoyed the sensation of flying. Occassionally he plotted his course, ensuring that they didn’t stray across the border into Germany. The last thing he wanted to do was be shot down by a bunch of trigger-happy jerries.
A glint of sunlight off polished metal caught his attention. Skillfully, he rolled his plane while still keeping it flying in its original direction. With one hand, he lifted his binoculars and looked through them. With a sharp intake of breath, he cursed. Righting his aircraft, he triggered the send button on his radio.
“Blue One, I think we have trouble.” He said, trying not to give anything away. “Suggest immediate return to aerodrome. Over.”
“Roger that Blue Two.” Roger replied. “What seems to be the problem? Over.”
“I seem to be having problems with my communication equipment with the ground. I’ll have to rely on visuals. Over.”
There was a pause. Roger obviously got Charlies code line. He had seen something and they couldn’t talk about it over the radio.
“Roger that Blue Two. I’ll lead you home. Bring her about to zero-two-zero and descend to four thousand.”
Charlie fell back from Roger’s Spitfire and followed him in. They flew in silence, with Charlie worrying all the while. Finally, after what seemed like eons, they finally touched down on the concrete of York Military Airbase. Both men clambered out of their aircraft at top speed.
“What was it?” Roger asked as he neared Charlie. Charlie looked shaken.
“Russian tanks sir.” He replied. “A whole wave of them positioned in no-mans land. You can’t see them unless you look directly at them, but they are there hidden in the forest.”
Roger swore fluently.
“You’re certain of this?” He asked, wishing it to be wrong.
“As sure as an iron bomb.” Charlie replied. “We spent four months having respective tank descriptions being drilled into us. I know what a T-34 looks like. And they look nothing like the Panzers they were parked alongside."
Roger swore again and even some of the ground crew looked shocked.
“The Germans and the Russians are massing secretly on our border with armour? Not good. Not good at all.” Roger said. “And all of our armour is in the north. I need to get this to command immediately. Don’t leave base until further notice Charlie.”
With that, Roger ran off leaving a queasy Charlie in his wake. And for the first time after a flight, Charlie felt like throwing up.
London Palace, London
Winston Churchill looked at the reports flooding in. Since the discovery of Russian and German tanks massing along the southern border, the English military had begun seeking out other possible hiding forces. So far a handful of Russian and German submarines had been found skulking around the English Isles. The Romans had their entire armour divisions lining the English-Roman border, though the Roman armour was numerically less than the English. The French ambassador had reported Iroquios troops moving towards Versaille and spies in Russia had observed mass troop movements south.
And England was effectively on its own. The Aztecs and Americans had officially declared war on each other only days earlier. The Greeks were being effectively strangled by the Romans and the Germans and the French were basically non-existant.
His overtures to Catherine had been making progress in an attempt to bring a long peace between them, but for some reason the Russian leader’s demeanour and tone had changed drastically in recent weeks. Now she was threatening that unless England capitulated to the Russians, it would be crushed mercilessly.
Conscription had gone into full motion when the threat of war had begun to surface. Now England had the largest standing army of any country in the world by far. But men were useless against tank divisions on the open battlefield. The English offensive capabilities had ground to a halt when England’s only oil supply had dried up.
A knock on the door brought Churchill out of his thoughts with a start. A page opened the door and let in General Montgomery. The General marched briskly up to the Prime Minister and saluted. Churchill smiled and extended a hand to his old friend.
“Welcome Bernard.” Churchill said as they shook hands. “I hope the trip from Coventry wasn’t too tiring?”
“Not at all Prime Minister.” Montgomery replied, maintaining Churchill’s respectful title. “Though I’d rather be here under less stressful times.”
Churchill chuckled wryly.
“My good friend, when have we known less stressful times?” Churchill asked.
Montgomery smiled slightly at the reply.
“But to business.” Continued Churchill, turning the large tactical map on the planning table. It showed a map of the world with England dead in the centre with markers showing force positions. Montgomery noted that the amount of German and Russian troops on the borders of England had grown significantly since he had last looked at it. “The Russians have moved a significant amount of armour to our weaker southern border in what looks like preperation for invasion. With our armour stationed in the north to protect against the Russian front there, it leaves the south grossly exposed.”
“Our airforce and foot soldiers could have taken on the Germans alone, but the Russian forces are another story.” Montgomery pointed out. “I will give Stalin one thing, he has marshalled the military production of Russia perfectly. He knew our weakness and he intends to squeeze.”
“Which brings me to my next point.” Churchill said. “Catherine’s demeanour to us has changed drastically recently. I have my ideas on what has happened, but I’d like your thoughts first.”
“She’s a puppet.” Montgomery said immediately. “Plain and simple. Stalin has the backing of the military and he has effectively taken control of Russia. And he intends to use that military.”
“So, what do we do?” Churchill asked his top general.
“Prime Minister, we do what is not expected of us.” Montgomery replied. “We develope tactics suited to our needs.”
Here is a world map...was gonna use the game map, but this one portrays locations, etc. better (though somewhat more sloppy presentation).
Hope you enjoy.
The Cost of War - Part I
Prelude
His breath burned in his throat and roared in his ears. His legs screamed in agony as he clambered up the slippery surface that was the hillside below the enemy stronghold. Comrades, friends and vague acquaintances fell beside him, barely registering in a brain that shouted for him to flee. With a concerted effort, he pushed those thoughts aside and simply ordered his legs to take another step. And another. And another.
With automatic precision, he shot at enemies that made themselves seen. Bullets hummed through the air past his head but failed to make contact. He could see the crest now. With a sense of triumph he was the first to stand atop the hill that he and his countrymen had spent so long fighting for. For a split second, he was enraptured by the stunning vista of mountains, forests and plains spread out before him. Then his life erupted in pain as a volley of rounds from a second line of entrenched soldiers hit him in the chest. Then there was nothing. Only blackness.
This soldier requires no name. His willingness to fight for his country already made him a hero. His sacrifice on the battlefield made him a legend. He was a warrior of the English Empire.
Four years earlier...
London Palace, London
Prime Minister Winston Churchill massaged his temples where a headache was threatening to take camp. It had been a long day of negotiations with his fellow leaders and he feared the English Empire had come out the worst.
Situated on the Europa Continent and the English Isles, the English Empire shared borders with Russia, Rome, and Germany and none of those nations were willing to negotiate peacefully with England, not after the centuries of conflict that had plagued the continent.
England's only true ally was the only other occupants of the Europa Continent, the French and the Greeks. But Churchill could not rely on them for help anymore. The Thousand Year War between France and Germany had finally been brought to a close only a decade earlier and the French were now only a shadow of their former glory. Stunning military successes in the final decades of the war had seen the Germans nearly sweep France from the continent entirely, leaving them with only a couple of small cities. Paris was under German rule and looked to remain that way for a good deal longer. And the Greeks had never been a strong nation.
The French could possibly have survived on the Southern Isles had they been only fighting the Germans. However, and Churchill always winced at this, the Iroquios attacked from the Americana Continent and steamrolled through five French cities before meeting any resistance. The French gladly signed a peace agreement when Germany and the Iroquios Nation offered one.
Churchill found himself leading a country that was increasingly surrounded by enemies with fewer friends. America, a long time trading partner, was too occupied with its own growing tension with the Aztecs to offer assistance while the Quadrant Alliance of Russia, Rome, Germany and the Iroquios Nation were all arrayed against England should it so much as step out of line by a millimeter.
The recent negotiations had been two-fold in nature. The first was to try and de-esculate the tension building between the English Empire and the Quadrant Alliance. The second was to try and trade rubber from England's vast plantations in exchange for Russian oil. Churchill should have know it wasn't going to work. Russia, though the only country of the Europa Continent that England hadn't been a war with in the past, was extremely protective of its resources and what it gave out. Churchill wouldn't be surprised if Catherine wouldn't even trade with her closest allies.
Englands lack of oil was proving alarming. The ability to produce the destroyers and battleships needed to patrol the waters of the Empire had disappeared with England's one and only supply of oil nearly five years earlier. The English Army was one of the largest standing armies in the world, but it contained pitiful amounts of armour. The Quadrant Alliance had armour to spare.
Sighing a heartfelt sigh that had built up over the day, Churchill rose from his desk and walked out onto the balcony of the London Palace. Once home to the English Monarchy, the palace had become the equivalent to the American Whitehouse when England had overthrown the monarchy in exchange for a democracy.
The view before Churchill covered the expanses of the English capital plus the coastline that was the edge of the Europa Continent. He wondered just how long he would have that view with the barking dogs of war nipping at his heels.
Normadic Wastelands, Northern England
Sergeant Bill Reddie pulled his overcoat closer around him. Most Englishmen found the harsh winters in the north energy sapping and impossible. Bill Reddie thrived in them. Having been born and raised in the nearby city of Coventry, Bill felt uncomfortable in the relatively warmer climate of central England. Here, he was in his element.
“C’mon Sarge, you going to ante up?” Corporal Jack Smith called to him from across the table. Like Bill, Jack was also from Coventry and seemed even more comfortable in the cold than Bill did. Their two other companions did not.
“For chrissake, Bill, do something before my fingers freeze to the cards.” Sergeant Thomas Edmonton cursed. Also colourful with his language, he was from York, which was south of London and virtually on the equator. His teeth chattered and he could barely move under the clothing he wore.
Corporal Dennis Vincent simply sighed his resignation, releasing a large plume of visible breath as his did so. Dennis wasn’t much for words, but it was obvious the London lad wasn’t finding it too comfortable up north.
“The least the brass coulda done was build us some bloody huts.” Thomas observed. “These tents wouldn’t keep an Eskimo warm in the tropics.”
Smiling, Bill pulled a coin out from under his coat and dropped it into the pot with a satisfying clink. He looked at his cards after they were dealt and tried to suppress a grimace. Jack-high. He just hoped his second hand would be worth something.
The sound of sporadic gunfire interrupted the card game. Cold, card values and general fatigue were instantly forgotten as all four men exited the tent and ran towards the commotion. Bill Reddie ran straight to his platoon commander.
“What’s happening sir?” He enquired of Lieutenant John Marsh.
“Russians.” Lieutenant Marsh replied. “Nothing serious. They strayed too close to our lines and wouldn’t withdraw when we ordered them to. Looks like we persuaded them though.”
“Gunfire generally does sir.” Reddie agreed, but inside felt the first stirrings of trouble. Why would the Russians push their luck over a useless piece of land. Snowbound and without vegetation, it had provided a natural border between Russia and England since the dark days before literature and written records. Ancient drawings discovered on cave walls had shown that English people had moved this far north long ago but had found the land uninhabitable.
“From the reports I’ve received,” continued the Lieutenant, “we’ve had incursions all along the wastelands tonight, plus our northern fleet intercepted a Russian fleet inside our territorial waters near the English Isles.”
“It sounds like the Russians are begging for a war.” Bill observed.
“More like the Quadrant Alliance wants us off the continent and in the history books, Sergeant.” Lieutenant Marsh stated. “But it will cost them to do it.”
Russian Military Headquarters, Moscow
General Josef Stalin looked at the map. His probes along the wastelands and the North Sea had proven effective. In one maneouvre he had blind-sided the English to the movement of his troops to Germany as well as judged the responsiveness of the English.
The English saw Russia as the biggest threat. His spies had reported that the English had massed their pitiful amount of armour along the northern borders with Russia and Rome, leaving only foot soldiers and a small airforce to protect the southern border to Germany. Sheer weight of numbers meant that Germany could not effectively break the defences of England, but with the added might of Russian armour and troops, the English would be crushed.
An officer marched up to Stalin and saluted smartly.
“Comrade General, our forces have successfully reached the shores of Germany and are currently dispersing along the front.”
“Excellent.” Stalin replied. “Soon, the fertile fields of England shall lay alongside the mineral rich lands of mother Russia.”
“Also comrade,” continued the officer, “Catherine is preparing to sign a military pact with the English. Even so, she has not detected your troop movements, let along made any move to stop them.”
“Catherine is as stupid as she is weak.” Stalin said. “It matters not. We will be in control of Russia long before she has a chance to entertain the wishes of Churchill. And soon after that, Churchill will no longer need to be entertained.”
York Military Airbase, Southern England
Flight Lieutenant Charlie Gray laughed out loud as he rolled his Spitfire over and roared earthwards. The thrill of flying never left him. And the thrill of mock combat was even better. With flick of the wrist and push of the rudder pedals, Charlie pulled out of his dive and levelled out some 2000 feet closer to the ground.
A second Spitfire with Charlie’s squadron markings levelled out alongside him. Looking over, Charlie gave his Squadron Leader, Roger O’Sullivan a thumbs up. His radio crackled.
“Nice move Blue Two.” Roger said. “I had you until that. Over.”
“Cheers Blue One.” Charlie replied. “Do we have to go back just yet? Over.”
“Nah, I reckon we can just stooge around for a while. Out.”
Charlie relaxed back into his seat and enjoyed the sensation of flying. Occassionally he plotted his course, ensuring that they didn’t stray across the border into Germany. The last thing he wanted to do was be shot down by a bunch of trigger-happy jerries.
A glint of sunlight off polished metal caught his attention. Skillfully, he rolled his plane while still keeping it flying in its original direction. With one hand, he lifted his binoculars and looked through them. With a sharp intake of breath, he cursed. Righting his aircraft, he triggered the send button on his radio.
“Blue One, I think we have trouble.” He said, trying not to give anything away. “Suggest immediate return to aerodrome. Over.”
“Roger that Blue Two.” Roger replied. “What seems to be the problem? Over.”
“I seem to be having problems with my communication equipment with the ground. I’ll have to rely on visuals. Over.”
There was a pause. Roger obviously got Charlies code line. He had seen something and they couldn’t talk about it over the radio.
“Roger that Blue Two. I’ll lead you home. Bring her about to zero-two-zero and descend to four thousand.”
Charlie fell back from Roger’s Spitfire and followed him in. They flew in silence, with Charlie worrying all the while. Finally, after what seemed like eons, they finally touched down on the concrete of York Military Airbase. Both men clambered out of their aircraft at top speed.
“What was it?” Roger asked as he neared Charlie. Charlie looked shaken.
“Russian tanks sir.” He replied. “A whole wave of them positioned in no-mans land. You can’t see them unless you look directly at them, but they are there hidden in the forest.”
Roger swore fluently.
“You’re certain of this?” He asked, wishing it to be wrong.
“As sure as an iron bomb.” Charlie replied. “We spent four months having respective tank descriptions being drilled into us. I know what a T-34 looks like. And they look nothing like the Panzers they were parked alongside."
Roger swore again and even some of the ground crew looked shocked.
“The Germans and the Russians are massing secretly on our border with armour? Not good. Not good at all.” Roger said. “And all of our armour is in the north. I need to get this to command immediately. Don’t leave base until further notice Charlie.”
With that, Roger ran off leaving a queasy Charlie in his wake. And for the first time after a flight, Charlie felt like throwing up.
London Palace, London
Winston Churchill looked at the reports flooding in. Since the discovery of Russian and German tanks massing along the southern border, the English military had begun seeking out other possible hiding forces. So far a handful of Russian and German submarines had been found skulking around the English Isles. The Romans had their entire armour divisions lining the English-Roman border, though the Roman armour was numerically less than the English. The French ambassador had reported Iroquios troops moving towards Versaille and spies in Russia had observed mass troop movements south.
And England was effectively on its own. The Aztecs and Americans had officially declared war on each other only days earlier. The Greeks were being effectively strangled by the Romans and the Germans and the French were basically non-existant.
His overtures to Catherine had been making progress in an attempt to bring a long peace between them, but for some reason the Russian leader’s demeanour and tone had changed drastically in recent weeks. Now she was threatening that unless England capitulated to the Russians, it would be crushed mercilessly.
Conscription had gone into full motion when the threat of war had begun to surface. Now England had the largest standing army of any country in the world by far. But men were useless against tank divisions on the open battlefield. The English offensive capabilities had ground to a halt when England’s only oil supply had dried up.
A knock on the door brought Churchill out of his thoughts with a start. A page opened the door and let in General Montgomery. The General marched briskly up to the Prime Minister and saluted. Churchill smiled and extended a hand to his old friend.
“Welcome Bernard.” Churchill said as they shook hands. “I hope the trip from Coventry wasn’t too tiring?”
“Not at all Prime Minister.” Montgomery replied, maintaining Churchill’s respectful title. “Though I’d rather be here under less stressful times.”
Churchill chuckled wryly.
“My good friend, when have we known less stressful times?” Churchill asked.
Montgomery smiled slightly at the reply.
“But to business.” Continued Churchill, turning the large tactical map on the planning table. It showed a map of the world with England dead in the centre with markers showing force positions. Montgomery noted that the amount of German and Russian troops on the borders of England had grown significantly since he had last looked at it. “The Russians have moved a significant amount of armour to our weaker southern border in what looks like preperation for invasion. With our armour stationed in the north to protect against the Russian front there, it leaves the south grossly exposed.”
“Our airforce and foot soldiers could have taken on the Germans alone, but the Russian forces are another story.” Montgomery pointed out. “I will give Stalin one thing, he has marshalled the military production of Russia perfectly. He knew our weakness and he intends to squeeze.”
“Which brings me to my next point.” Churchill said. “Catherine’s demeanour to us has changed drastically recently. I have my ideas on what has happened, but I’d like your thoughts first.”
“She’s a puppet.” Montgomery said immediately. “Plain and simple. Stalin has the backing of the military and he has effectively taken control of Russia. And he intends to use that military.”
“So, what do we do?” Churchill asked his top general.
“Prime Minister, we do what is not expected of us.” Montgomery replied. “We develope tactics suited to our needs.”
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