OK DIS ONE MIGHT SUCK A LIL cuz I put lil effort on it /.... b/c im pressurized by heavy Homework (... so don't expect much..

-Back from some transporting of ammo stock...

About myself a bit, everyone calls me hostile brain around here, they made it up for me because I'm the only one here who is smart enough to be in the HQ but fighting in the front. That's all you have to know about me now.

About my beginning, yesterday we were on a land battle with the IEA in Volgograd, formerly known about 3000 years ago, Stalingrad. A little bit of history, Stalingrad is the main victory of the Russians but costing them 3 times more than the German's casualties in WWII. Ironically 3000 years later, we fought another one. Almost everything happened exactly the same, we were about to disembark to turkey and begin operation Monsoon, an assault toward the IEA outposts. Then the IEA cowards saw our rotation of troops, and then attacked Volgograd.

The men at Volgograd got caught by surprise; they were just preparing to move up a line after we start our invasion. However, thousands of IEA troops massed towards them. Our 144 mm arterially were going to get transported to turkey, so it was packed. Only a couple of our Chronic VI medium tanks were deployed and mobilized, the dozen of machinegun couldn't stop thousands of men behind their heavy Churchill Special X3. Their tanks rammed through our bunkers and deflected our 12mm armor piercing machine gun bullets. Although we were able to destroy a couple of their tanks, but the men at Volgograd were forced to retreat. The arterially and the vehicles were retreated successfully, but about 80 of the men either got killed or captured.

Enough about the event I didn't see. Since our intelligent calculated the IEA forces in Volgograd. We have these new weight/heat sensor devices underground in our base, it weighs everything that releases heat, the information is passed to our computers so on. They have about, 5500 men held up in Volgograd and about 500 of them are from the armor division, which means they have over 50 tanks. We all know this is only an approximant; the percentage of accuracy is only 30. There's always going to be more than expected.

The Hq decided to send the 88th ranger division and us, the 204th marine division to crush the enemy. Supposedly one division should be enough to take Volgograd back. But we had a failure once in Belgium; we're not going to let it happen again. The rangers will be the primary force, we are the reserves.

The battle of Volgograd started at 5:12 AM, we sent in 50 of our amphibious transport vehicle and 40 of our amphibious Chronic tanks. That is approximately 6000 men including the tanks. The rangers were assigned a special armor; it's called A2 Limbered armor. It is a lot different than our heavy soft metal armor, the A2 uses a space mutated plant that's extremely flexible but very firm and joined together. Then they used the military sewer to sew it to microscopic spacing between each cloth. These A2's could stop an 8mm AA gun fired continuously on it for about 10 minutes and can also stop the normal machine gun 10 mm bullets.

Anyway, it is spring in Europe; it was still dark at 5:12 am. The engines of the transport vehicle started, the rangers got intense. We the marines had absolute no stress over it, everyone but me. I'm scared, I'm nervous. I don't know why, it's not like I'm going to go land Volgograd. The rangers were already loaded, many kissed their lucky charms, others prayed for safe return. The generals think this is going to be an easy fight since the IEA in Volgograd has one day to set up their defense, it won't be strong. It was 5:15 the vehicles took off. The tanks went in front of the vehicles, the day was foggy they were impossible to be seen. Our computers calculated the sun will rise exactly at 5:24. so that is our cue to fire our arterially to smash those IEA bastards. We the marines were in charge of that, but I'm not a part of it. Colonel Valishga wanted me to observe the battle for future battle experience. About 5:22, the vehicles were in the middle of the Volga River. The tanks started to level their barrels for a barrage with the arterially. 5:24, we were in luck, the sun showed up.

"FIRE!!!" yelled the sergeant in charge. 15 of our heavy 144mm arterially fired. 15 huge bangs made our ears writhe. When the shells reached the overhead of the tanks, they fired 50 more huge sounds. The IEA alarm sounded, lights lit up. The IEA men came out of their bunker and ran to their battle station. Unfortunately they came out at the wrong time. As soon as they came out, our shells impacted the ground. From my point, it looked like as if flowers jutted out of the ground when the shells exploded. The IEA men are flying, a couple of explosion from their tank occurred too.

"FIRE!" yelled the sergeant again. The Arterially fired again, so did the tanks more noises. However there are more now, the IEA began to fire too. The water started to jut out, in a weird way it looked beautiful. However it is lethal, one of our chronic tanks exploded into fragments. After... aw crap Lt. Song calling again.... More later-