Operation Tar Heel had begun. By order of the President, the 4th Army began the offensive in line with their simulated wargames. Under the command of General Sigmund Blanchett, the collected army began their war on a cool evening, with small, single flights of recon planes across the front collecting puctures. These planes were careful not to cross the border, though they probed as far into it as they dared and were allowed to, quickly retreating if challenged. The mission of these recon planes was primarily to discover any defenses that could not be observed by ground observation, but also to judge whether a reserve force was needed.
In the end, Atlanta had decided the reserves were necessary. The 5th Infantry Corps was pulled from their bases in southern Alabama and sent to the SRA-Appalachian border there, just shy of Nashville. By the corps own estimation, it would take about four days for the entirety of the corps to arrive, by which point it would likely have to begin marching once more.
Regardless of the presence of a reserve force, the 4th Army undertook its mission. Spread out across the entirety of the SRA-Appalachian border, the 4th Army began the dawn of the next day by beginning an artillery barrage against confirmed enemy positions, preferring precise strikes over mass batteries of fire to destroy the enemy. After two hours of constant barrage had been concluded, the attack moved forward, pressing for key strategic cities in Chattanooga, Charlotte, Nashville, and Memphis. On the coast of the Carolinas, the 3rd Mechanized Corps, consisting of an armored division and two mechanized infantry divisions, drove as fast and far as possible, intent on driving for Norfolk as soon as possible.
In the air, meanwhile, the SRA'S Army Air Corps committed seven wings of fighters to the area, casting a broad and wide net to intercept and shoot down enemy aircraft, aiming to overwhelm the enemy where possible. One wing provided long-range escort for a wing of B-52 bombers, attacking confirmed naval bases in Norfolk and shipyards in Newport News to disrupt potential rebuilding and rearmament.
Out at sea, the SRA's navy seemed relatively quiet. The Second Fleet sailed out, not on an attack run, but to escort civilian shipping heading t Germany, hoping the presence of the battleship
Georgia would deter the Appalachian Navy - if it existed - from venturing out from port. Various submarines, acting under independent orders and commanders, sailed out to disrupt civilian shipping, lurking out at sea and preying on any ship that dared fly the flags of the Appalachian Navy or merchant marine.
For many soldiers of the SRA, this would be their first trial by fire.
OOC: References:
The 4th Army is made up of two infantry corps and one mechanized corps
Each infantry corps contains three infantry divisions
Each mechanized corps contains one armored division and two mechanized divisions
Each infantry division contains 10,000 soldiers, 24 M12 self-propelled howitzers, 24 M19 self-propelled anti-air guns, and 54 M59 towed howitzers
Each armored division contains 250 M46 tanks, 450 M5 half tracks carrying 4,500 soldiers, 54 M12 self-propelled howitzers, 24 M19 self-propelled anti-air guns, and 24 M59 towed howitzers
Each mechanized division contains 1,000 M5 halftracks carrying 10,000 soldiers, 54 M12 self-propelled howitzers, 24 M19 self-propelled anti-air guns, and 24 M59 towed howitzers
Each fighter wing consists of 60 F-86 Sabres
A bomber wing is made up of 15 B-52 bombers
All submarines referenced are Tench-class submarines.
List of actions taken:
- Two hour artillery bombardment on border positions
- General offensive across entire front
- Mechanized corps moving along coast toward Norfolk
- General air superiority missions
- Bombing of Norfolk naval base
- Strategic bombing of Newport News shipyards (attack on Industry)
- Show of force in Atlantic ocean intended to deter naval actions
- Submarine attacks on Appalachian shipping and military naval vessels
- Movement of two infantry divisions from southern Alabama to northern Alabama (non-combat movement)