by Chris James
Page 212: ‘I took the…’ Graham, personal correspondence, 4 June 2063.
Page 212: ‘None of the…’ Elliot, interview in The Guardian, 4 June 2068.
Page 214: ‘…very positive. Obviously...’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 556, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 214: ‘Seriously? They propose…’ Webb, unpublished diary, 11 June 2063.
Page 215: ‘We’ve been having…’ Pte. Young, personal correspondence, 14 June 2063.
Page 215: ‘You didn’t need…’ M. Sgt. Hussain, interview with the author, 15 July 2096.
Page 215: ‘Of course you…’ Pte. Mathews, interview in The Mail, 16 June 2063.
Page 216: ‘Two hundred years…’ Pte. Brown, personal correspondence, 5 June 2063.
Page 216: ‘As the clock…’ Gen. Forster, An Army for Europe, p. 45, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2067.
Page 217: ‘We had super…’ Perkins, Are the Ghosts Real? p. 156, Collins & Gabriel, Oxford, 2073.
Page 217: ‘Does the Third…’ The Washington Post, 16 July 2063.
Page 218: ‘I really could…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 556, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 218: ‘We had a…’ Webb, unpublished diary, 18 July 2063.
Page 219: ‘The Field Marshall…’ Capt. Dixon, Sightseeing in Tazirbu, p. 46, Dunford, Trout and Haslam, London, 2069.
Operation Repulse: Execution
Page 221: ‘Updates flashed over…’ Hayes, interview with the author, 13 June 2096.
Page 222: ‘We didn’t sleep…’ Pte. O’Bryan, interview with the author, 2 July 2096.
Page 223: ‘Séverin saved my…’ Capt. Bélanger, interview with the author, 14 July 2096.
Page 224: ‘The X-9 rapidly…’ Pte. Bevan, personal correspondence, 2 August 2063.
Page 224: ‘It sure was…’ Sgt. Kepley, multiple media outlets, 2 August 2063.
Page 224: ‘The numbers are…’ Maj. Basel, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/2240059/C, 1 August 2063.
Page 225: ‘We’re clearing streets…’ Pte. Khan, multiple media outlets, 2 August 2063.
Page 226: ‘The whole port…’ Capt. Wood, multiple media outlets, 2 August 2063.
Page 227: ‘My Squitch lit…’ Pte. Davis, Squitch battlefield recording, 1 August 2063.
Page 228: ‘…the sheer spectacle…’ Cpl. Pletcher, interview with the author, 28 April 2096.
Page 229: ‘We landed in…’ Allen, English Parliamentary Select Committee hearing, 23 October 2066.
Page 230: ‘As data feeds…’ Maj. Basel, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/2240060/E, 1 August 2063.
Page 231: ‘Most of the…’ Pte. Davis, multiple media outlets, 2 August 2063.
Page 231: ‘The building itself…’ The Times, 4 August 2063.
Page 232: ‘How strange it…’ Seromba, The Rwanda New Times, p. 4, 6 August 2063.
Page 233: ‘We felt confident…’ Capt. Oberst, interview with the author, 24 April 2096.
Page 234: ‘…my Squitch told…’ Pte. Parker, personal correspondence, 5 August 2063.
Page 235: ‘After softening them…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, pp. 589-601, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 235: ‘The Air Chief…’ FM Tidbury, ibid.
Page 236: ‘I fancied the…’ Capt. Dixon, Sightseeing in Tazirbu, pp. 72-134, Dunford, Trout and Haslam, London, 2069.
Page 236: ‘On one hand…’ Capt. Dixon, ibid.
Page 237: ‘It was remarkable…’ Capt. Dixon, ibid.
Page 238: ‘It was when…’ ‘Soldier L’, English Parliamentary Select Committee hearings, 29-31 October 2066.
Page 238: ‘The resistance only…’ ‘Soldier L’, ibid.
Page 238: ‘…a series of…’ ‘Soldier L’, ibid.
Page 239: ‘We called a…’ ‘Soldier L’, ibid.
Page 239: ‘The enemy had…’ Hein, English Parliamentary Select Committee hearing, 3 November 2066.
Page 240: ‘That evening became…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 611, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 240: ‘It is important…’ Tasse, A History of Warfare in the 21st Century, p. 273, Lee and Lifeson, Paris, 2094.
Page 242: ‘By this stage…’ Cpl. Butler, multiple media outlets, 7 August 2063.
Page 243: ‘The SkyMasters began…’ Cpl. Butler, ibid.
Page 244: ‘This is one-dimensional…’ Pte. Reeves, Squitch battlefield recording, 6 August 2063.
Page 244: ‘The General didn’t…’ Pte. Sullivan, interview with the author, 27 May 2096.
Page 245: ‘Such had the…’ Tasse, A History of Warfare in the 21st Century, p. 289, Lee and Lifeson, Paris, 2094.
Page 245: ‘The ACA battle…’ Pte. Lowe, interview in The Times, 21 August 2063.
Page 246: ‘The forested areas…’ Pte. Lowe, ibid.
Page 246: ‘We’d spotted some…’ Capt. Harding, interview in The Guardian, 20 August 2063.
Page 248: ‘Perkins spoke sound…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 627, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 248: ‘We had to…’ Capt. Dixon, Sightseeing in Tazirbu, pp. 151-223, Dunford, Trout and Haslam, London, 2069.
Page 248: ‘The most important…’ Capt. Dixon, ibid.
Page 249: ‘Palmer whispered to…’ Capt. Dixon, ibid.
Page 250: ‘Abruptly there came…’ Capt. Dixon, ibid.
Page 251: ‘Both Palmer and…’ Capt. Dixon, ibid.
Page []: ‘You could cut…’ Webb, unpublished diary, 7 August 2063.
Page 252: ‘…consider whether God…’ Pedro, multiple media outlets, 8 August 2063.
Page 253: ‘Every autumn I…’ Petit, multiple media outlets, 15 August 2063.
Page 253: ‘The summer heat…’ Berger, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/2743360/A, 17 August 2063.
Page 254: ‘We wait for…’ Lieut. Selby, multiple media outlets, 18 August 2063.
Page 256: ‘I nearly lost…’ Trump, personal correspondence, 19 August 2063.
Page 256: ‘You won’t believe…’ intercepted correspondence, 20 August 2063.
Page 258: ‘We had to…’ Cpl. O’Bryan, interview with the author, 2 June 2096.
Page 259: ‘Signals’ emissions were…’ Green, interview in The Times, 21 August 2063.
Page 259: ‘Some of the…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 633, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 260: ‘…the Abrahams all…’ Pte. Selt, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/3541376/C, 3 September 2063.
Page 261: ‘…the “Hitler Option”…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 635, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 261: ‘Our “honeymoon” period…’ Gen. Fox Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/3653222/C, 9 September 2063.
Page 262: ‘The captain was…’ Pte. Behrend, interview with the author, 14 June 2096.
Page 263: ‘One: influential elements…’ Jones, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/3749978/B, 2 October 2063.
Page 264: ‘…believes contingency plans…’ English government memo ETG/045/IR/00230691, 2 October 2063.
Page 265: ‘Physicality was always…’ Chambers, interview with the author, 31 July 2096.
Page 266: ‘General Pakla understandably…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 627, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 267: ‘Before they got…’ Cpl. Breece, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/4175508/D, 14 October 2063.
Page 268: ‘We knew at…’ Cpl. Breece, ibid.
Page 268: ‘Our Squitches were…’ Pte. Collins, personal correspondence, 14 October 2063.
Page 270: ‘That third week…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 631, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 271: ‘The Omega really…’ Cpl. Breece, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/4499340/A, 3 November 2063.
Page 271: ‘There is a…’ Maj. Basel, Repulse progress repo
rt #NATO/WCD/4499477/A, 4 November 2063.
Page 272: ‘Nearly each ruined…’ Morrow, The Great European Disaster, Vol. 2, p. 429, Collins & Gabriel, Oxford, 2074.
Page 272: ‘So far it’s…’ Webb, unpublished diary, 8 November 2063.
Page 273: ‘Emotions ran high…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 643, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 275: ‘Conditions on the…’ Gen. Pakla, Repulse progress report #NATO/WCD/4869691/C, 29 November 2063.
Page 276: ‘All of the…’ Pte. Ornass, unpublished memoirs, 2 December 2063.
Page 277: ‘We were pissed…’ Pte. Stevenson, personal correspondence, 12 December 2063.
Page 277: ‘We were very…’ A.B. Higgins, personal correspondence, 12 January 2064.
Page 278: ‘They patrolled high…’ Jameson, multiple media outlets, 18 December 2063.
Page 281: ‘It was only…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 661, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 282: ‘The boss is…’ Webb, unpublished diary, 19 January 2064.
Page 282: ‘On the one…’ FM Tidbury, In the Eye of the Storm, p. 663, Banks and Rutherford, Cambridge, 2069.
Page 283: ‘When Turkey did…’ Tasse, A History of Warfare in the 21st Century, p. 298, Lee and Lifeson, Paris, 2094.
Operation Repulse: Aftermath
Page 285: ‘Suddenly faced with…’ Whittaker, Asian Conflagration, p. 78, Collins & Gabriel, Oxford, 2072.
Page 287: ‘…surveying the ruins…’ Morrow, The Great European Disaster, Vol. 3, p. 127, Collins & Gabriel, Oxford, 2074.
Page 288: ‘I have had…’ Kartal, unpublished journal, 25 August 2064.
Page 289: ‘After World War…’ Wojsik, Gazeta Wyborcza, 23 May 2067.
Page 289: ‘So why did…’ Arnold, multiple media outlets, 25 May 2067.