January 30, 1998
Following the Army's lead, Headquarters, Marine Corps, directs the formation of additional troop units from training and support staff at various installations. The 30th Marine Regiment is the first of these, raised from some of the final classes of trainees at Camp Lejeune and Parris Island and their drill instructors, troops withdrawn from Guantanamo and a detachment from FAST Company, Atlantic. Reflecting its unusual heritage, it is assigned a new regiment number rather than one from the Corps long history. It is equipped with whatever vehicles and armor is available, most of which are training vehicles that have seen considerable use.
The replica USS Constitution takes on a cargo in Capetown, South Africa in exchange for a resupply of food and spare parts.
The 101st Air Assault Division's aviation elements are withdrawn to Saudi Arabia for rest and refit. Few replacement aircraft are available, (unofficially) although the Saudis are generous in permitting American maintenance contractors (many of whom are military retirees) and their facilities (and, unknown to their hosts, spares) to work on the American aircraft.
Unofficially,
The Red Army has always operated on a much more austere logistic basis than NATO forces, and in the aftermath of the nuclear exchange Soviet units are largely left to their own devices for support. In the Balkans, many Soviet units simply disintegrate in the face of a hostile local population and lack of resupply from home, but in Central Europe they are able to remain cohesive. This is due, ironically, in part, to the use of captured NATO supply dumps, the support of the local population and the benefit of RGVK (the Soviet High Command)s prioritization of the Western TVD to the limited extent that central direction has any effect.
The US Navy tanker Platte, laden with fuel oil and diesel from merchantmen laid up in Stavanger to the south, arrives in the Vestfjord, where the carrier battle groups built around the USS Roosevelt and Eisenhower have been sheltering. While the nuclear-powered carriers require no conventional fuel, their escorts do and have nearly run dry, with only one ship operating, guarding the entrance through the minefields into the fjord. The Platte begins refilling those ships' tanks, the first resupply from the logistic system since December 20. (Some bartering and purchases of food from local villages had occurred since then, completely unauthorized by any higher command).
Following the Army's lead, Headquarters, Marine Corps, directs the formation of additional troop units from training and support staff at various installations. The 30th Marine Regiment is the first of these, raised from some of the final classes of trainees at Camp Lejeune and Parris Island and their drill instructors, troops withdrawn from Guantanamo and a detachment from FAST Company, Atlantic. Reflecting its unusual heritage, it is assigned a new regiment number rather than one from the Corps long history. It is equipped with whatever vehicles and armor is available, most of which are training vehicles that have seen considerable use.
The replica USS Constitution takes on a cargo in Capetown, South Africa in exchange for a resupply of food and spare parts.
The 101st Air Assault Division's aviation elements are withdrawn to Saudi Arabia for rest and refit. Few replacement aircraft are available, (unofficially) although the Saudis are generous in permitting American maintenance contractors (many of whom are military retirees) and their facilities (and, unknown to their hosts, spares) to work on the American aircraft.
Unofficially,
The Red Army has always operated on a much more austere logistic basis than NATO forces, and in the aftermath of the nuclear exchange Soviet units are largely left to their own devices for support. In the Balkans, many Soviet units simply disintegrate in the face of a hostile local population and lack of resupply from home, but in Central Europe they are able to remain cohesive. This is due, ironically, in part, to the use of captured NATO supply dumps, the support of the local population and the benefit of RGVK (the Soviet High Command)s prioritization of the Western TVD to the limited extent that central direction has any effect.
The US Navy tanker Platte, laden with fuel oil and diesel from merchantmen laid up in Stavanger to the south, arrives in the Vestfjord, where the carrier battle groups built around the USS Roosevelt and Eisenhower have been sheltering. While the nuclear-powered carriers require no conventional fuel, their escorts do and have nearly run dry, with only one ship operating, guarding the entrance through the minefields into the fjord. The Platte begins refilling those ships' tanks, the first resupply from the logistic system since December 20. (Some bartering and purchases of food from local villages had occurred since then, completely unauthorized by any higher command).
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