Command: Modern Operations

Command: Modern Operations

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Suez Crisis "1956" How it should've gone!
   
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11 月 28 日 下午 4:01
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Suez Crisis "1956" How it should've gone!

描述
Mediterranean Sea, 0341 local, the 28th day of
October in the year of our LORD 1956
Position – ten miles and beyond north-east
of Port Said breakwater
The combined Task Force "Alpha" directly
commanded by Lord Mountbatten himself (By order of Queen and advice from
Churchill) was already at battle stations when the first pale band of dawn
touched the horizon.
At the point of the spear steamed the three
heavy hitters no intelligence officer in Moscow or Cairo had ever expected to
see in the same column:
Task Force 34 - (Naval Super Gunfire
Support)

HMS Vanguard (23) & HMS Jamaica (C44), White Ensign at the truck, with rifles trained fore and aft, under the direct command of Lord Mountbatten his Majesty's First Sea Lord, broad pennant snapping above Vanguard's bridge as he sips Her Majesty's Royal Navy Blend No. 1 (Pusser's Tea) "Stronger, the better".
Astern Starboard, the US 6th Fleet's "Big Guns" USS Des Moines (CA-134) and the detached USS New Jersey (BB-62) from 2nd Fleet operations, Stars and Stripes & US Navy Ensign "Don't Tread On Me" bright against the morning sky, Vice-Admiral Charles Randall "Cat" Brown, riding New Jersey's open bridge with a mug of fresh Hawaiian grown (Official Department of War Coffee Contract) USA coffee and a grin that said try me Commies.
Closing the triangle on the port quarter, the French Battleship Jean Bart & cruiser Georges Leygues, tricolour streaming, Contre-Amiral Pierre Ponchardier chain-smoking Gauloises Caporal (unfiltered) while directors tracked everything above the horizon.
Screening the entire formation newly commissioned USS Boston (CAG-1) riding shotgun with her Terrier missiles pointed skyward, daring any Beagle or Badger bomber crew to get close.

Behind them, in a formation that had been
scrapped together at Gibraltar only six days earlier, came the carrier striking
force that no war plan had ever been written for:
Task Force 30 (RN-French) & 60
(USN) (Carrier Strike Force)

Properly named USS Iwo Jima (CVA-42) (TF-60 Flagship) – turning into the light wind to launch its diverse wing of Individual Liberty.
Vice-Admiral Manley Power’s Commanding HMS Eagle (R05), HMS Albion (R07), & HMS Bulwark (R08) – With their Sea Hawks and Sea Venoms rolling to the steam cats.
MN Arromanches (R95) – last of the wartime lend-lease carriers, with x36 F4U-7N Corsairs still very capable and proven fighters like it was 1944.

Task Force 31 (Assault & CVS Carriers)

HMS Ocean & HMS Theseus (R64) – Whirlwinds and Sycamores already turning and burning.
MN La Fayette (R96) – decks black with French paras and H-34s borrowed from the U.S. Marine detachment at Naples.
USS Antietam (CVS-36) – S2F Trackers "Sub Hunters" & F4U-5N "CAP" overhead, keeping the Communist Soviet submarines hiding deep.

Task Force 32 (Amphibious) – call-sign
“Typhon”

24 RN LSTs (Striker, Anzio, Narvik, Salerno, Reggio, Messina)
USS Fremont (APA-44), USS Monticello (LSD-35), USS Randall (APA-224)
French L9011 Bougainville and L9012 Orage – Commandos Marine already climbing down the nets.

Screening the entire force, a destroyer line
that looked like a fleet review gone insane:
At 0600 the first wave crossed the beach. By
0630 the flags were going up the same staff in Port Said: Union Jack, Tricolour,
Stars and Stripes, in that order and no one arguing about it.
In the CIC of HMS Vanguard, the talker’s
voice was calm, almost bored: “Alfa Actual to all units: the canal is ours.
Execute Phase Line Green on my mark… mark.”
Somewhere in the Kremlin, a very worried man
poured himself a very large vodka and stared at a map that no longer made
sense.
The Free World had just drawn a new line in the
sand against Communist aggression, and this time it drew it together. drew it together.