RichardTheFirst
Posts: 466
Joined: 10/17/2001 From: Algés, Lisbon - Portugal Status: offline
|
Redleg, since you seemed interested in that fortress in Belgium I have a resumed story for you, this was extracted from "Blitzkrieg" - Pierre Dupuis:
< At 4:45 of May 10th, 1940, sinister pairs of metal birds roar in the pure dawn of a new day of spring.
Some belgian watchers saw astonished the "Junker 52" separate from the gliders they were dragging.
Nine shadows with huge wings made their way silently to the ground, heading for the Albert canal and the Fortress of Eben-Emael, the most impressive fortress of the belgian defense.
Inside each of these silent shadows were eight Airborne Sappers armed to the teeth, crouched over hundreds of kilograms of explosives... and these men wear german uniforms.
Inside the fortress, in one of the AA posts: "ALARM! PLANES ARE ARRIVING" "IT'S.... GLIDERS! GERMANS! FIRE! FIRE!"
Too late... This modern Troy horses had already land on the very roof of the fortress which the belgians had neglect against such a daring strike...
Coming out of its bellies, the sappers of Captain Koch, including the pilots, launch themselves running over their objectives... "Posts 3, 4 and 5 - over here!"; "Posts 6, 7 and 8 - follow me!"
In ten minutes, nine defense posts of the fortress were out of action... In the barracks, in the towers, defenders died without understanding...
For the Germans, on the contrary, there were pleasant surprises. "After all these two AA towers are fakes! They are made of tin!""Let's save the explosives then! We'll use it in another day"
The ground attack troops could then cross the canal in their inflatable rafts... The fortress was annihilated from the inside e three bridges were intact in the hands of the german airborne troops.
The 750 defenders of Eden-Emael, disarmed, surrendered quickly... except for 23 deaths... only 6 germans were shot down.
This fantastic success had also a comic element: The commando assistant-leader, Major Witzig, could not participate in the attack! The cable of his glider broke over Germany... the craft landed on a field. And he had to wait for three hour for a "Junker 52" to come and get him... "SCHWEINEREIN!" he shouted furiously. >
I hope you liked it. If you decide to include this or part of this in the scenario introduction please include my name
"Vini, vidi, vinci" - Iulius Cæsar
_____________________________
|