“I don’t like it, but…I guess there’s no choice,” Lommerde said. “The Social Service and the Job Centres can help finding people; we can always tell them that their rations depend on them, at least the young males, making themselves available for service. We don’t have the resources to track them down, however, if they refuse to take service…”
“Do what you can,” Langford said. “I may have to use the soldiers somewhere else, however; the emergency services may have to use their labour if the soldiers are needed to actually fight. Hamburg has fallen, and with that, the Russians are in a position to expand their control along the North Sea coastline.”
Lommerde’s eyes went wide. He was far from stupid, after all. “General…do you think that they could reach Britain?”
Langford hesitated. “It would be a formidable undertaking,” he said, soft-pedalling it as best as he could. The Russians would have to secure all of France before they even thought of trying to leap across the Channel, but with the French distracted in the North, they might well manage to secure France within a month. It all depended on just how much control they thought they needed; would they want every last problem terminated, or would they settle for holding the vital points and waiting? “I don’t think that we need to worry about that for a while.”
“But this is Britain,” Lommerde protested. “Such things don’t happen here…”
***
Langford thought about that as the helicopter carried him back towards London. No one had understood that the Russians were planning an invasion of Europe, even if there had been hints and signs of possible trouble. Europe had known about the capabilities of the Russian forces, Europe had known about Russian plans for the Cold War invasion that everyone had feared, but Europe hadn’t put all the tiny bits of information together. They had pushed at Russia, in the Ukraine, in Serbia, in even North Africa, without a thought as to the possibility of a violent Russian response. The FCO had considered that the Russians were just pontificating from time to time, and if their views were taken into consideration, they wouldn’t cause trouble.
He scowled. The American data made it clear what the Russians had been planning…and why they had even made friendly overtures of their own. The EUROFOR unit from Sweden, in the Ukraine, had been attacked brutally, just like the EUROFOR forces in Poland, and had been crushed without mercy. The survivors, he was sure, would have been shipped into a prison camp somewhere. The Irish unit had been luckier; they had scattered into the countryside, but how long could they survive without supplies? The Russians had plenty of allies in the Ukraine; already, they were handing over security duties to them and moving more units towards the west.
It was the same story in the Balkans. Serbian units had attacked the EUROFOR forces in the Balkans, and then moved on into Kosovo, where they had promptly started to remind the natives of why they had been chased out in the first place. The Balkans had been caught up in the war; aided by Russian aircraft, the remaining EUROFOR units fought a desperate battle to survive, some of them even surrendering to the Russians, rather than face the Serbs. Years of humiliation demanded blood; there were even reports that Turkish forces were considering a move into Greece. Thousands attempted to flee to Italy, only to discover that the Italians had their own problems; the Libyan forces that attempted to attack Italy discovered that the Italian military reputation was nonsense. The fighting raged on…
“Welcome back, General,” Sara said. Her eyes were lowered; she had to know that he hadn’t been happy about being sedated. “Was your trip successful?”
“Yes, and no,” Langford said shortly. He didn’t want to discuss it. “Are they in the briefing room?”
Sara nodded and led him to the room he was starting to slowly, but very surely detest. The CJHQ had never been designed for long-term occupancy and it showed; the work on establishing a proper seat of government was going slowly, even though it was obvious that something would be needed, if only to give the Russians something to shoot at. If they found the CJHQ, they would launch a missile at it…and the CJHQ was not designed to take a bombing. A single JDAM would put it out of use permanently.
“General,” Erica said. She looked tired; she hadn’t taken a sedative herself. Langford made a mental note to order her to take one after the meeting; she didn’t look as if she could remain on her feet for much longer. “I have the latest report from both Britain and Europe.”
Langford lifted an eyebrow. Had they at last managed to make contact with someone in authority? “The good news is that we managed to make contact with a French General, in the south of France, and warned him about the dangers of the Russian offensive,” she said. “The bad news is that he cannot disengage from the war against the Algerians; they’re not that competent, compared to the French forces, but there are a lot of them and Russian aircraft are providing a lot of support. The entire south of France is going to be devastated; the same, more or less, goes for Spain and Portugal. We had an emergency transmission up-linked from Gibraltar; the Governor doesn’t believe that they can hold out for much longer under the shelling. Everyone on the Rock is stuck.”
Langford could see it now; the Russians would let the Algerians and the Moroccans serve as cannon fodder while they finished off the Germans, and then turned on their allies. The Russians had no time for radical Islam; the Algerians would discover that the Russians had stuck a knife in their backs. A handful of Russian submarines could close their shipping lanes permanently…and the Algerians would never know who was really responsible.
“It gets worse,” Erica admitted. “The Russians have turned the German flank and have captured Hamburg; that suggests that they could push down into the Netherlands, and once they do that, we won’t be able to extract any more forces from Europe. I think we have to redouble our efforts to call them all out and extract as many Europeans as we can as well.”
She paused. “We have managed to make contact with our surviving units and ordered them to pull out,” she said. “Most of them will try to bring their allies along with them, others will have issues with abandoning their people, but I feel that we will be able to pull out around a thousand British servicemen and around twice that many Germans and Frenchmen. The main problem would be the equipment; it would be tricky to pull that out unless we get a secure harbour.”
“Dunkirk again,” Langford said. “Can we secure a harbour?”
“I believe that we could secure several places in Belgium,” Erica said. “The Russians will still need several days, perhaps even as long as a fortnight, before they reach the Belgium coast. Once we get some Royal Marines into the ports, some of which have been badly damaged, we should be able to start taking people out.” She paused. “There is a case that doing that is like declaring war on Belgium.”
“Ridiculous,” Langford snapped. The thought actually made him laugh dryly. “Do we have any contact with anyone in Belgium?”
“No one whom we recognise,” Erica said. “There are still thousands of garbled messages, but from the panic, there are no traces of the civil government at all. The real danger is that we might have to take thousands of refugees as well…hell, we should try and take as many as we can if we can use them to fight.”
Langford looked up at the map. “Can we spare the resources?”
“We won’t be committing anything more than a large Marine force,” Erica said. “Seven hundred men won’t make much difference to the situation inside Britain, which may have taken on a darker tone.” She scowled. “Sergeant Roach found a large cache of weapons in London, during the clear-out operation. The interesting thing is that none of the survivors from the area knew that it was there.”
The implications were obvious. “We have Russians underground somewhere,” Langford concluded. “Do we have any idea as to who?”
“We knew that they had commandos on our soil,” Erica said. “The point is…there were enough weapons there to make taking and holding a medium-sized city possible, for a while. The question is�
�how many more of them are there out there?”
Chapter Thirty-Three: The End of the European Dream
Do not confuse "duty" with what other people expect of you; they are utterly different. Duty is a debt you owe to yourself to fulfil obligations you have assumed voluntarily. Paying that debt can entail anything from years of patient work to instant willingness to die. Difficult it may be, but the reward is self-respect. But there is no reward at all for doing what other people expect of you, and to do so is not merely difficult, but impossible.
Robert A. Heinlein
Near Madgeburg, Germany
“Let me get this straight,” Generalmajor Günter Mühlenkampf snapped. His voice was understandably annoyed. “You are basically heading to the English Channel, whatever else happens, and I am invited to take my men and come with you? Right?”
Captain Stuart Robinson nodded once, briefly. The retreat from Poland had been nightmarish, even with the addition of a handful of other stragglers from Germany, France and even Spain. Mathews’ brief low-powered radar sweeps had revealed an enemy aerial presence that dwarfed anything they'd seen on exercises, or even when the Americans had moved into Iran. There had been thousands of aircraft in the sky, from fighters on patrol to transports moving Russian soldiers forward to the battlezone. They’d kept their heads down and inched west.
It hadn’t been easy. They had had to shoot down a Russian bomber that had located them and that had brought more attention to their general location; the ‘Devil’s Cross’ aircraft, the Russian copy of the A-10 Warthog, had hunted for them with deadly determination. Luck had been with them; the Russians had missed them, that time. A day later, they had stumbled into a Russian patrol; the Russians had been just as surprised and both sides had broken off the contact after a brief exchange of fire. They had reached a German military camp only to discover that it was in ruins; they had decided to avoid the cities and keep moving. Along a deserted autobahn, they had encountered German Military Police, who had escorted them to Mühlenkampf’s camp; Robinson had taken a deep breath of relief before realising that the Germans were in worse condition than his men.
Mühlenkampf had explained it, on their first meeting; the Germans had received the main brunt of Russian malice. Robinson, who had been in Poland, had his doubts about that, but it hardly mattered. The Bundeswehr had been battered right from day one; a combination of riots and insurgencies in the cities, mixed with air and missile attacks. Mühlenkampf himself had been lucky; as far as he knew, he was the only surviving German General Officer…and the seven hundred men under his command, all from scattered units, the largest surviving German body. He had been bitter; he’d managed to pull together a larger force, but some of his units had caught the attention of Russian bombers and been pounded into scrap.
Robinson had held out hope…until he had seen Mathews’ success, linking to a civilian satellite that had been able to provide directions for linking into an American military communications satellite that had been loaned to Britain. The laser-link had been established and a great deal of information had been downloaded, more than Robinson would normally have expected from anyone. The Russians were grinding their way into Germany from two directions at once…and unless his force moved now, they would be caught and destroyed.
“Yes, I suppose you could put it that way,” he said, turning back to Mühlenkampf. The German had an unfortunate name for many reasons; he didn’t deserve to be abandoned. He felt shame, mixed with an odd combination of impatience; the men under his command deserved better than to be thrown away in a fruitless last stand. They would fight like mad bastards if they were cornered, but he wanted to avoid a last stand if it was even remotely possible. “Orders are orders.”
Mühlenkampf glared at him. “The Fatherland is under attack,” he said. He didn’t seem anything like old enough to remember the long period of Soviet occupation and East German repression, but his father-in-law didn’t look that old either. He wondered briefly what had happened to Hazel and her father; the military link didn’t allow them any time for personal messages. He could only hope that she was safe. “I have a duty to defend it.”
Robinson stared around the camp. It didn’t look like a military camp, something that probably worked in its favour; the Russians had bombed, for no apparent reason, a German Boy Scout camp. It had probably looked like a military camp from the air or some reason like that; even the Russians wouldn’t have killed a few dozen children if they had known that that was what they were doing. Mühlenkampf’s camp had a handful of heavy tanks, all carefully camouflaged, a few dozen smaller vehicles, some of them without fuel, and the British CADS. The handful of soldiers from other countries brought even less to the coming confrontation.
On cue, a rumble of thunder split the air.
He had studied the downloaded information and passed all of it onto Mühlenkampf. His own experience with military matters had convinced him that the Russians were running the risk of friction – the effect of small failures acuminating to make operations delayed or impossible – but it looked intimidating on the map. The Russians would either cut Germany in half or they would seal the escaping British units off from retreat; if that happened, it would be time for a last stand. He had no illusions; the most his force could do would be to slow the Russians down for a few minutes.
“Answer me a question,” he said finally. “Can you defend it?”
Mühlenkampf’s face worked furiously. Robinson felt sorry for him; the admittance that the Germans couldn’t stop the Russians for long had to cost him badly. His force had no communication outside their local area; they might be able to slow the Russians, but in the absence of real air cover, they would get pounded and crushed. There were no supply lines, no reinforcements; he had requested that the Americans provide communications to other German units, but there were only a handful of organised units left. The jamming made it impossible to even call up the reserves, or even offer an amnesty to deserters who returned to duty.
“I have my duty,” he said finally. “My men are all volunteers; they decided to stay with me and fight.”
“Come with us,” Robinson insisted. The Russians would notice them leaving, but they had the CADS for air cover; they might even pick up other anti-aircraft units if they looked organised. “We can get to Britain and use it as a springboard to regain Europe…”
“Don’t be foolish,” Mühlenkampf said, dryly. Robinson was reminded helplessly of Captain Jacob Anastazy; the Pole had left them when they had encountered a scratch force of Polish infantry, preparing to head underground to continue the struggle at a later date. “Unless the Americans get involved…and thanks to our lords and masters, that’s not likely to happen…Germany is lost.”
“We don’t know if that is what will happen,” Robinson urged. “There’s a Frenchman trying to pull together a defence line in France. You could add your forces to that…”
“If we get that far,” Mühlenkampf said. He shook his head. “Do you remember the Iraq War, or Iran?”
“I was barely teething at the time,” Robinson said. “I thought German units weren’t involved in the fighting…”
“There was a small mission sent to observe the Yanks at work,” Mühlenkampf said. “They dominated the skies” – he nodded upwards – “rather like the Russians are dominating our skies, and had weapons that could pick off a single tank from high attitude. The tanks I have here, as far as I know, are the last tanks in Germany…and if I try to move them to England, we will be seen moving and destroyed.”
He nodded towards the east. “That information you brought has the Russians coming down the nearby autobahn,” he said. “We don’t have enough explosives to take down any of the bridges and I don’t want to waste tank shells, but we can ambush the Russians, slow them down, keep hitting them until we run out of fuel, abandon the tanks, and then go underground. It won’t be long before we can set Europe ablaze with resistance to the Russians.”
Robinson hoped that he was r
ight. Aldershot had bashed some military history into his head and he could remember that resistance had been a hit-or-miss affair in the Second World War. The history books had argued backwards and forwards about how important the role of the various resistance groups had been, but it would be a long time before Mühlenkampf could build up the resources needed for an underground war. Unlike Iraq, Europe had no massive stockpiles of basic weapons, left around for just anyone to take; Mühlenkampf would find gathering weapons difficult, at least until the Russians got careless.
“I wish you the best of luck,” Robinson said finally. “I have my orders.”
“Yes,” Mühlenkampf said slowly. “Do you think that you can get the CADS back to Britain?”
Robinson had wondered about that. “You want me to leave them here,” he said. “Can your people operate them?”
“They’re EUROFOR-standard vehicles,” Mühlenkampf said dryly. “There will be soldiers who know how to use them in my force.”
“I’ll just see,” Robinson said. He saluted and wandered towards one of the groups of soldiers, mainly British and French; they stood up and saluted as he approached. They looked tired, battered, and shocked; none of them had really anticipated a weeklong nightmare that wasn’t over yet, if it was ever over. “At ease…”
The Fall of Night Page 33