You must be registered with this forum to download files. If
you are registered and getting this message,
then the Downloads section is experiencing heavy load volumes and has been
temporarily restricted to members
who are in the Subsim Navy (donors). Please try again later.
"NATO Tomahawk strikes, launched from subs off the Russian coast, attack vital repair depots. Soviet logistics support is primitive at best, and there are few high-tech repair centres. Only the vast stores of Soviet material, some of it dating back to the Second World War, ease the crisis. T-34s and JS-III tanks begin to appear on the battlefield.
Most of Russia's Category C, and even a few of the Category B units, missed the initial attack because of their poor readiness. Now, that flaw is working to the Soviets' unplanned advantage as they receive a steady stream of reinforcements. She has a vast pool of manpower, and is much closer to the battle than the US."
Act IV: Clash of Arms
"The American carriers operating off the Norwegian coast must pull back from strike operations periodically to replenish. While they do not do so in the same area each time, a pattern has developed, and by combining assets, the Soviets hope to sink an American aircraft carrier, inflicting not only a military defeat but a political one as well.
Kirov is the flagship for a Soviet surface group in Norwegian waters. They are going to attack an American aircraft carrier with cruise missiles launched from several ships and aircraft.
The U.S. carriers replenish in a 'sanctuary' formed by submarines on patrol and aircraft. The Russians have deduced the patrol sectors of the subs that screen the sanctuary and intend to blast through the barrier and create a gap wide enough for Kirov to approach and attack."
You must be registered with this forum to download files. If
you are registered and getting this message,
then the Downloads section is experiencing heavy load volumes and has been
temporarily restricted to members
who are in the Subsim Navy (donors). Please try again later.