Sunday, July 31, 2011

Soviet Marshal Belakof Smir



    Well, I was planning on making Smir the main antagonist, but decided to go a diffident way with my book, but here's a chapter I was going to use.  

    Soviet Marshal Belakof Smir was a legend in the soviet military. During the second Russian/Japanese war, the Imperial Army of Japan combine with the Imperial Colonial Militia of Japanese controlled China were set to strike down the new formed Union in its early days. From bases in Mongolia the Japanese make quick work of soviet forces, and have the Union tactically split. At that time, the current Soviet commander was given the option of execution by firing squad, or death by his own hand, he choose his own hand.
     Coronel Belakof Smir was promoted to General and was handed the near impossible task of stopping the seemingly near unstoppable Japanese forces, and sending them back into China. At 6’5” he was given the nickname, “The Wall of the Soviet Union” because of both his size and what he’ll do.
     Starting in early November of 1926 as the Japanese were getting ready for the final push to Moscow, and planning to do it fast, not to get stuck in the Russian winter. Smir allows the Japanese to take eastern kakistan in order to give time to entrench at the city of Kazan’.
     November 26, 6pm, Japanese infantry rush the first line of defenses. After an hour, the middle section of the line has fallen back to secondary positions, seeing that, the Japanese command orders all reserves to rush the line. Every Japanese infantry man and Calvary man rushes the hole in the line. To the Japanese’s commands surprise, the secondary line holds.
     To the west of the city a cloud of dust rises. 800 Russia Corrssaks rush from the west, the trap is sprung. The east flake of the Soviet line begins to move east, cutting off the Japanese on the east side. Just as that completes, the Corsaks cuts of the west and rear, completely surrounding the Japanese.
     The slaughter only took 30 min to complete before the remaining Japanese and Chinese forces surrendered. Following the rest of the winter, the Soviet’s forced the Japanese back to China. By the war’s end in March 1927, all land taken by Japanese forces where now back in soviet hands. Smir was promoted to Marshal for his actions.

1 comment: