1/ The Battle of Hancock Airfield (Pt2)
Back at Fort Knox the General paced. He stared at the drone feed of the far away battle and fretted. His unit would never reach the airfield in time on foot. He had not prepared for the patrol to fail, nor had he put together a backup plan
2/ Hurriedly, he started to grab every able body he could find. Putting together a mixed unit from the various allied soldiers there, he climbed into a vehicle and drove his makeshift relief force down the same road his Chinese troops had been fighting on for the last hour.
3/ The General grabbed a radio, and started to issue orders in Mandarin. He received replies in English. Cursing himself for this mistake in front of the others, he tried again in broken English. His allies did not speak Mandarin, and English was the only language they shared.
4/ The movement was chaotic. The mixed force had never trained together, and fewer still had any sort of mounted tactical training at all. The General yelled over the radio at the undisciplined and inexperienced drivers of the vehicles to keep up, or keep their spacing.
5/ But the invaders were not the only ones listening to The General. Had the Chinese Major from the first patrol been more experienced, he would have inventoried the equipment from the dead Iranians. He would have methodically checked for their sensitive items.
6/ Had he looked he would have noticed that while the Iranian’s rifles and ammunition were still with their recently departed former owners, their radios were not.
7/ The relief column slinkied down the road towards Hancock Field, but in the confusion of the moment missed a turn. Few of the General’s most trusted Chinese soldiers were accustomed to navigating on a paper map, and fewer knew the terrain.
8/ One of the Russian infiltrators had lived in this area for years, but the General wasn’t sure he could trust him. Nevertheless, time was his real enemy. The General put the Russian in his vehicle, and drove. He would lead the column personally. He could count on no one else.
9/ It turned out to be unnecessary. Once the column found the ambushed Iranian Patrol outside of Harned, they could simply follow the abandoned Chinese vehicles and corpses strewn on the rural highway.
Doctrinally this meant the path was cleared, so the General pressed ahead.
10/ But the Americans, still listening on the radios, knew they were coming and had filed back into their previous ambush positions. The mixed relief force was forced to refight every battle, and retake every mile of ground the first Chinese patrol had already bled to secure.
11/ But refight and retake it they did. Utilizing their drones to hunt down small American groups before they disappeared into the hills, the weight of the Chinese advance began to push the Americans back. But every fight meant more time... Time the General did not have
12/ The Americans blocked the road with trees, cars, and mounds of unreturned shopping carts: anything they could find in an attempt to slow the invading column. They threw makeshift bombs at the unarmored vehicles, and larger ones hid in the road.
13/ The General had tried to radio some units to go around some of the obstacles and get behind the Americans but somehow, the Americans were always waiting for them exactly where the General ordered his troops to move... it was taking too long.
14/ By the time the General reached what was left of his cut off first patrol, holed up in an elementary school only a mile from the airfield, his makeshift force was on its last legs.
15/ The first patrol’s Chinese major was dead. Shot through the eye by an unseen American while he was reconnoitering, by himself. The Russian guide and his last drone operator had been killed when a massive propane tank had exploded next to them, probably due to sabotage.
16/ Most of his trained medics were dead, so the majority of the wounded were left behind on the highway. Running low on ammunition, every last bullet was taken from them, so the General knew the occasional shots he heard behind him were not his own wounded defending themselves.
17/ The General’s forces weren’t the only ones taking casualties though. As the column had gotten closer to Hancock Airfield the American resistance had become more Hit than Run.
18/ The Americans had begun to get closer, to engage not just from the hills, but from the buildings and ditches that flanked the road, and American bodies were now joining the bodies of their enemies on the highway. Some uniformed, some not.
19/ One American wearing a Hawaiian shirt and tactical pants had even destroyed an entire fuel station as his position was being overrun by a North Korean squad, taking everyone with him. The fighting had been intense, but finally he stood less than a mile from the Airfield.
20/ He was winning… and then above him came a ghastly roar. Looking up he saw what his Russian troops had called The Devil’s Cross. Not one for religion, The General nevertheless felt a chill in his his spine as the flames from the engines lit up the twilight above the airfield.
21/ For a moment, the thought he saw what looked to be some sort of voodoo priest painted on the front, another silly American superstition.
It was now or never. Nothing else mattered. He needed to destroy those trucks or that plane before they could refuel and take off.
22/ The General knew the larger plan. He knew there would be precious few Chinese tanks to secure the vital brides over the Potomac, and despite the lies his intelligence chiefs had told him, these Americans were not going to go quietly into subjugation. China needed every tank.
23/ He grabbed every man he could find: healthy, wounded, it made no difference now. Nothing else mattered.
Looking at the handful of drones he had remaining The General sighed.
24/ This battle could have ended in one flight had his drone operator lived, or had his troops been cross-trained on other tasks. But they weren’t, and like the loss of his medics, it meant that more of his men would die.
25/ Setting up a machine gun underneath a Corporal, The General sent the last of his infantry forward, and into the last of the American guns. The General knew many, most even, might die. But it had to be done how his people had solved complex problems for generations: bodies.
26/ The remaining Americans had taken position on a hill overlooking Hancock Airfield along Lee-Henderson Road. As the wave of invaders swarmed up the low slope, the General knew he only had minutes left.
27/ The fuel trucks would need only minutes to refuel the deadly American attack plane. The Americans on the hill knew it too, and they knew there was no where to retreat. Their place was here, and here they stood.
28/ The fighting around Hancock Airfield quickly devolved into the close quarters brawl The General had so feared. He kept pushing his men, but the fear of the deadly Americans and their custom made guns combined with the day’s exhaustion caused many to cower under cover.
29/ Numbers were on their side, but time was not. The General ran to the front, grabbing his scared troops and pushing them forward. As they began to crest the hill, the America fire lessened, and then ceased entirely. The General could feel victory. He could taste it.
30/ Then the roar of the A-10's dual engines shattered the eerie post battle still as they screamed down the runway and into the fading sunlight. Exhausted, broken, and now defeated, the General did the only thing he could: stand and watch.
31/ As his failure and the future flashed in front of him, he didn’t even see the dying American laying at his feet. He didn't see the young American roll over and take out his pistol, and use his last breath to kill just one more of his homeland’s invaders.
1. If you haven't read #MongolMoon by @mnsibley , don't @ me with your "This could never happen"
2. Don't @ me with "the Americans aren't supermen, the American Army would never think of that"
-Here is me, an American Army Officer (former) thinking of it
3 Do some squats
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
First, tariffs are neither good nor bad in and of themselves. They are a tool. Like a hammer. You can use a hammer for too long, without a plan, and wrong. That isn't the hammer's fault. It is yours.
The two big arguments for/against tariffs are
1. They will raise prices. (they will)
2. It is undemocratic, let the free global market decide (ok Klaus Schwab, Milton Friedman, how did that work out for us?)
At a basic level a tariff is a tax imposed on an imported good.
If you want make the Chinese suffer, add a tariff to a product they import.... but then they pass that cost onto the consumer.
Adding tariffs without a strategy is dumb. We just end up paying more forever.
BUt uNTiL 1880 the government was funded by tarifs... don't care
Imagine America handing a majority Iroquois or Comanche the right to vote in 1800. Imagine an America where native tribes outnumbered European colonials. Americans forgets it got EXTREMELY lucky with its indigenous population.
Colonial powers who look to maintain long term success have one of three options:
1. Outnumber the locals 2. Integrate the locals 3. Dominate the locals
The US lucked out with #1, but it was an option not available to colonists in Southern Africa.
The European population of the US in 1770 was approximately 1.5 million. The native population across North America was higher, but already on the downslope from disease and low birth rates.
A great leader is nothing without great followers and great followers are likewise nothing without a great leader. It is the symbiosis of these two, fame soaked hero and honorable commoner, in which the greatest glory is made.
The Bastion of Castille
The Siege of Malta pt 3
1/ It is August 19th, 1565 and the Ottoman siege of Malta had entered it’s third month. It had been 56 days since the fall of St. Elmo had turned the full attention of Sultan’s army to the twin peninsulas of Birgu and Senglia.
2/ The last of the crucified bodies of the beheaded defenders of St Elmo had long ago washed up on the beach beneath the last Crusader strongholds in the world, and the siege had showed no signs of stopping.
Making the ultimate sacrifice for one's cause is often seen as the greatest testament of faith. Occasionally, in the direst of circumstances, fate demands that testament be delayed in order to exhaust ones enemy
Like at the battle of Fort St Elmo
The Siege of Malta, pt 2
1/ As the Ottoman forces began landing on the tiny, rock strewn island of Malta, they found a garrison of Knights Hospitaler ready for them. Grand Master Jean de Valette had used his time on Malta wisely, and had prepared three fortresses which guarded Malta’s Grand Harbor.
2/ Forts St Angelo and St Michael sat together across a wide creek guarding the fortified cities of Birgu and Senglea. Guarding the mouth of the harbor, isolated on a long isthmus was Fort St Elmo. St Elmo guarded the harbor, but would have fallen on its own without support.
Couple things 1. Body armor is > than “fitness” in a gunfight 2. Fitness is > than body armor for long term survival. 3. Buying good body armor is the single most important thing you can do today to increase survivability by tomorrow 4. Don’t listen to C/Is. Especially idiots
Body armor can save your life. Once a gunfight starts, it is chaos and random. Anyone telling you “body armor only covers 9% of your body”, “I can be a harder target to hit if I’m fast” or “I can only stop one round” have no idea what they are saying.
You absolutely can not dodge bullets, and you will absolutely never be “too quick” often enough. That is insane. Listen to yourself
“It doesn’t cover my head”…. You don’t have a brain anyway you’ll be fine