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Egypt in T2K

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  • #16
    I think that's a very valid assumption. I for one rarely so much as glance at the T2K wiki - maybe once every 6 months at best.
    What we have here seems to me at least to be quite definative.
    If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives.

    Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect"

    Mors ante pudorem

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    • #17
      I haven't looked at the T2K wiki in ages. Does it contain a link to us
      sigpic "It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli

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      • #18
        Originally posted by Targan View Post
        I haven't looked at the T2K wiki in ages. Does it contain a link to us
        Yeah it does. And we link back to them in the new users thread.

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        • #19
          I had some things on Egypt in my East African Sourcebook that I put up on the forum earlier - http://forum.juhlin.com/showthread.p...ht=east+africa

          had several Egyptian refineries getting nuked by the Russians that had the effect of closing the southern end of the Suez Canal and wrecking Cairo and Alexandria in the process - and then then Libyans taking out the Aswan Dam in the process to add to the fun

          i.e..

          Dec 6, 1997

          In Egypt, Cairo, Suez and Alexandria are left in
          ruins by multiple strikes against the major
          refineries in those cities. While the Suez Canal is
          not directly targeted in the attack, the nuclear
          strikes on the refineries at Suez effectively block
          the southern end of the Canal with the wrecks of
          several merchant ships and tankers. Over three
          million Egyptians die in the attacks and another
          two million are severely wounded.

          December 9, 1997

          Taking advantage of the chaos gripping Egypt,
          Libya launches an attack by 10 Tu-22 bombers
          against the Aswan Dam, hitting it repeatedly
          until the center of the dam collapses, sending a
          wall of water down the Nile, drowning over a
          hundred thousand Egyptians and displacing tens
          of thousands more. The attack destroys most of
          what electrical power was still being generated
          in Egypt after the nuclear attacks. Libyan tank
          formations cross into Egypt and head east
          against pitiful resistance.


          I had the last operational refinery in Northern Africa being the small one at Wadi Feiran in the Sinai.

          Used those attacks to explain the lack of Egyptian forces in the RDF or their being mentioned at all -i.e. basically the nuke attacks and the attack on Aswan has finished Egypt as a country along with most of their population.

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