Classified Report wrote:1400 China Standard Time, January 14th, 1958.
From: Gen. F. Messervy, CO, Force Wentai.
To: Gen. Tu Yu-ming, Acting Chief of the General Staff.
Guangzhou has fallen.
IV Corps Armour casualties severe with some formations exceeding 35% material loss. IV Corps moved to reserve and to maintain containment around Hong Kong pocket. XXXIII Corps continuing to advance into Kwangsi Province in expectation of further movements.
Classified Communique wrote:1730 China Standard Time, January 14th, 1958.
From: Gen. Tu Yu-ming, Acting Chief of the General Staff.
To: Gen. Sun Li-jen, Acting CinC.
Bandit resistance in Kwangtung Province has collapsed with greater rapidity than expected. Force Wentai attrition remains within acceptable levels. Given current situation, the General Staff advises advancing the schedule for phase two by 24 hours to maintain operational initiative.
Classified Orders wrote:1900 China Standard Time, January 14th, 1958.
From: Gen. Tu Yu-ming, Acting Chief of the General Staff.
To: MG A. Carton de Wiart, CO, Force Bofu. Gen. Wei Lih-huang, CO, Force Zhongmu.
ATTACK BY FIRE
0330 China Standard Time, January 15th, 1958
LCpl L. Wen, Special Detachment, 1 Commando, 3rd Commando Brigade.
Somewhere near the Yunnan/Guangxi Border.
It was desperately, painfully difficult for Wen Liyang to admit, but he was actually grateful for all the fetching and carrying he did as training over the past six months.
He was as strong as an ox now, and he'd have had to have been, to lug the immense burden on his back over the past ten kilometres of hills and gullies, and not just swiftly, but in near complete silence. Soon, however, he'd have a brief respite. His spotter had picked out the campfire of the bandit forces' garrison ahead. They were no more than three hundred yards away.
If Wen had still carried his old De Lisle Carbine, three hundred yards would have been a decent range to set up and start firing at. But that was only in daytime. It was still nearly pitch black, and any weapon would have been almost worse than useless, except for the gigantic rifle still slung across his back.
He could see the outline of what looked like a very likely set of bushes ahead, silhouetted by the faint glow of the distant fire. It'd be a risk, a sharp-eyed sentry might see them, even in this gloom. Still, given the firing position that it gave him, and given what was coming up no more than a few minutes behind him, it was worth a try.
Wen eased his new-issue automatic pistol out of its holster, just in case, and crept into the bushes, his spotter keeping careful watch with his Enfield carbine, Neither were suppressed, perhaps a bit of an oversight. Then again, if they were spotted out here, any consideration of stealth would have become purely optional for
that particular mission.
But they weren't. After a moment to make sure of it, Wen finally unslung the giant rifle from his back, and began to set up.
With the massive infrared flashlight turned on, Wen could see the entire enemy position as bright as day through his modified scope. He could pick out the sentries fidgeting nervously at the edges of the camp, the NCOs huddled around the fire, the prone forms of the men sleeping in long rows outside the long and earth pillbox which must have been their headquarters. Most importantly, he could see the firing step and obstacles of the primitive roadblock lying astride the road. He had no doubt that on first sight of an enemy, the garrison of this remote post would have scrambled in to those slit trenches and rifle pits. Even given the inferiority of their equipment and the paucity of their numbers, such a force could hold up the advance for an hour, or more, long enough for the next roadblock up the line to ready themselves for their own desperate defensive action.
Such delays were minor, taken individually, but everyone who had fought in Burma knew through hard experience that such actions added up. A hundred such roadblocks could bottle a force in a narrow valley like this one for days or weeks, with ninety-nine out of a hundred units doing nothing but wait for their turn to have a go at the next enemy strongpoint.
But that was only if the defenders saw the attack coming.
The Commando picked his target carefully, one of the man closest to the fire. The glare of the open flame was almost blinding through the scope, but Wen subtly turned his eye to the side, like he'd been taught in the weapons course. He checked his sights one last time and rested the crosshairs on the target.
Wen almost smiled. His target was entirely unawares. It was almost like shooting with a De Lisle.
Well, not quite. The De Lisle was a nearly silent weapon.
The Boys Anti-tank Rifle was...
not.
The valley echoed with the boom of thunder as the rifle's buttpad slammed hard into Wen's shoulder. Ahead, he did not need his scope to see his poor unfortunate target not so much fall but
explode. The Boys Rifle's powerful 14mm round had been designed to punch through tanks. It was enough to reduce human beings to ground pork.
No point in staying quiet now. Wen quickly chambered another round, and picked out his next man, this one screaming frantically as he tried to pick off bits of his comrade's brains and bones.
Thunder sounded through the valley again, its nooks and crevices making it echo from a hundred directions. The whole bandit garrison seemed to be screaming now. One of them was trying to restore order. An officer? or maybe just a veteran of the bad old days?
It didn't matter. He blew apart just as easily as the rest of them.
There was no question of resistance now. The remaining bandits were
running. Some into the woods, some down the road, some
up the road, which was either going to be a damn shame or a mercy, depending on how trigger-happy they proved to be. One even pelted past the bushes which Wen and his spotter were hidden in, not five yards away. The poor man didn't notice. He was too busy fleeing into the darkness, and screaming his head off about how the enemy had powerful sorcerers, and that all was lost.
Wen did smile now. For all of the potent force of the Boys Rifle's round, the night-vision system had given it a more powerful punch: fear. Those of the enemy who would reach the next roadblock would babble incoherently about thunder in the darkness, of men being torn apart as if by magic, of an enemy they could not kill, or fight, or even see.
As for Wen, he sat tight, watching north-westwards now, until he could see the headlights coming up the road, the advance guard of the more prosaic reality of the attacking force: the first of the seventy thousand men of Force Zhongmu.
OOC Summary wrote:Operation Red Cliffs, Phase Two: The main attack of the operation, carried out by Force Bofu and Force Zhongmu (army-strength battle-groups consisting of two corps-strength formations each) advancing into Guangxi Province (Territory 237) from Guizhou Province (Territory 443) and Yunnan Province (Territory 238) respectively. Primary objective is of taking the retreating Guangxi Clique forces from the rear in the middle of their retreat, shattering their higher-level cohesion, and forcing them into isolated inland pockets.
Force Bofu consists of the following:
2 pts infantry
5 pts mechanised
1 pt armour
2 pts artillery
Force Zhongmu consists of the following:
2 pts infantry
1 pts mechanised
1 pt armour
3 pts artillery