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“Well, that went well. Hopefully, he will do better at the Pentagon,” said MG Cooper.

Looking at General Cooper, General Black said, “Cooper, I need a frank assessment from you. How are things shaping up in sector one?”

Pulling some information up from his tablet, Cooper said, “Shaky, but as expected. Aside from the debacle at Eielson, everything is turning out about as good as we suspected and planned for. They hit us hard today; what we did not anticipate was how many Spetsnaz teams they would be able to infiltrate behind our lines. The same goes with Chinese SF units. The Chinese and Russians hit us with those new exoskeleton combat suits with their first and second wave of landings. We were not surprised by them, but they performed incredibly effectively. Most of our forces are fighting in their third lines of defense. Once they lose those lines, the next lines of defense are typically fifteen to twenty miles further back.”

“Do we know when they are going to make their main landings near Homer and Seward?” asked General Black.

“Probably in the next three to five days. We believe they want to fully secure their current gains before advancing again,” said MG Cooper.

General Black thought for a moment, trying to determine if they needed to adjust their strategy yet, or if they should continue to stick to the plan for the moment. “Gentlemen, I have a video call with the National Security Staff and the President in ten minutes. I would like you to sit in as well, in case I need you to provide some information. Please take a few minutes to get any new updates you need, and be prepared to brief it should I call on you,” Black directed before dismissing his inner circle to prepare for the Presidential briefing.

* * *

President Stein walked into the Situation Room and saw the entire staff was already there and ready. Henry signaled for one of his aides to bring him a fresh Red Bull (the President was beginning to live on these things with all the long hours he had been working since the start of the war). His doctor said he was going to have a heart attack if he did not cut back on the caffeine, but this was one vice he simply could not give up given the current state of affairs.

Stein took his seat at the head of the table and signaled for the briefing to begin.

General Branson stood up and walked over to one of the monitors and began his brief, “Mr. President, we are now 19 hours into the invasion of Alaska. The Russians have successfully landed around 38,000 troops in sector one; they have also parachuted around another twelve thousand paratroopers all across sector one. Right now they have several dozen or more Spetsnaz teams running around in central Alaska, causing all sorts of problems with our logistical networks. General Black sent a few dozen of our own SF teams to try and hunt them down.”

“Sector two has been hit hard, we have lost most of the Aleutian Island chain and the rest of the Peninsula. General Black does not expect to hold them for more than a few more days. We never really had any intentions of being able to stop them there; it was really only meant as a defensive and asymmetrical fight to tie down Chinese Forces. Unfortunately, it does look like they are going to capture Kodiak Island a lot sooner than we had hoped. Our goal was to hold the island for at least a month, tying down nearly a hundred thousand soldiers—”

The President interrupted to ask a question, “—What happened? Why are they not going to be able to hold the position for much longer?”

General Branson brought up some various drone feeds showing the fighting on the beach; images could be seen of hundreds of PLAN infantry moving from their landing vehicles and quickly sprinting across the shore right into a number of American defensive positions. “They move so fast,” commented Director Jorge Perez, the DHS Secretary.

“The PLAN infantry received priority status for their new exoskeleton combat suits. As we can see, these suits really provide their soldiers an advantage. They can advance and move quickly, making them harder to shoot. They closed the gap between their positions and ours fast. They were able to move through the first line of defense rather hastily. They slowed down a bit at the second line of defense, and have been stopped at the third for the time being.”

General Branson continued, “We’ve slowed them down by using sheer numbers. So far, they have not landed enough soldiers yet to be able to punch through our third line of defense. That will change in a day or so, once they start to land their light drone tanks and IFVs. I also have a piece of bad news to report.” Branson had some trepidation about this next part; he knew the President was going to be livid.

“A Spetsnaz team was able to penetrate the base perimeter at Eielson AFB and attacked the drone squadrons. Unfortunately, they destroyed all of the drone piloting pods and killed all the pilots. We also lost nearly two thirds of all the fighter and bomber drones at the base. We are sending new pilots and additional drones and piloting pods to Eielson. It’s going to be a couple of days until they are operational again. In the meantime, we are going to be focusing on our manned fighters for the time being to provide the bulk of the air cover over Alaska.”

The President put down his Red Bull in mid drink and said, “How in the world did they penetrate the base defense and wipe out eight squadrons of pilots and equipment? That’s a lot of critical people they killed in one swoop.” From his tone of voice and facial expressions, he was clearly beyond angry.

“The base Commander has been relieved of Command, Mr. President. It would appear they gained access to the designs (and thus the location of the site) through a cyber-attack that was conducted against the contracting company that build it. Once they had the blueprints, we suspect it wasn’t hard for them to build a replica of it somewhere in Russia and train for it like we would have,” Branson said hoping his answer might diffuse the President’s anger a bit.

“This is a colossal screw up General. How bad is this going to hurt our efforts in Alaska?” asked the President.

“It is going to stifle our efforts a lot. Right now, most of our airpower in Alaska has been taken offline. The runways have been repaired, and we have limited manned flight operations, but the loss of eight fighter drones-worth of pilots is going to hurt. We are moving drone pilots from all across the US to Alaska right now to fill the gap. It’s going to leave us short-changed in a lot of other places,” the General explained.

The President shot back, “Get this fixed General Branson and General Black. We need to do better in Alaska or we are going to have a serious problem on our hands.”

With that, the meeting ended.

Field of Blood

Day 181
01 June 2041
Kodiak, Alaska

General Jing Zhu stepped off the landing craft on the beach near the city of Kodiak, Alaska. What he saw made his stomach churn; the water around the beach was still red with blood and gore soaked the beach. Bodies could be seen floating in the water and strung all along the beach for as far as they eye could see in both directions. Clearly, the Americans had fought hard for this section of land, and the Chinese had paid dearly to capture this beach head. Off in the distance, General Zhu could hear the rumble of artillery fire and the continuous cacophony of machine gun fire as both sides tried relentlessly to kill each other.

Overhead, the screams of aircraft could be heard as Chinese drones and manned fighters continued to fight for dominance of the skies. General Zhu turned his head slightly and watched as a group of eight attack helicopters headed towards the frontlines. Then he saw a large landing craft drop its front ramp; a large main battle tank came to life and rumbled off of the landing craft and began to head towards the frontlines.