The Army group intelligence officer approached.
"Comrade General, we have a disturbing report from one of our reconnaissance aircraft." The officer related the sketchy radio message from a low-flying recce aircraft. NATO's control of the air had brought particularly grim losses to those all-important units. The pilot of this MiG-21 had seen and reported a massive column of allied armor on the E8 highway south of Osnabruck before disappearing. The General immediately lifted the radiophone to Stendal.
"Why were we not informed of this as soon as you received it?" Alekseyev demanded of his superior.
"It is an unconfirmed report," CINC-West replied.
"Dammit, we know the Americans landed reinforcements at Le Havre!"
"And they can't be at the front for at least another day. How soon will you have a bridgehead on the Weser?"
"We have units on the river now at Ruhle--"
"Then move your bridging units there and get them across!"
"Comrade, my right flank is still in disarray, and now we have this report of a possible enemy division forming up there!"
"You worry about crossing the Weser and let me worry about this phantom division! That's an order, Pavel Leonidovich!"
Alekseyev set the phone back in its place. He has a better overall picture of what's going on, Pasha told himself. After we bridge the Weser, we have no really serious obstacle in front of us for over a hundred kilometers. After the river Weser, we can race into the Ruhr, Germany's industrial heart. If we destroy that, or even threaten it, then perhaps the Germans will seek their political solution and the war is won. That is what he is telling me.
The General looked at his maps. Soon the lead regiment would try to force men across the river at Ruhle. A bridging regiment was already en route. And he had his orders.
"Start moving the OMG troops."
"But our right flank!" Beregovoy protested.
"Will have to look after itself."
BRUSSELS, BELGIUM
SACEUR was still worried about his supplies. He'd also been forced to gamble in giving highest transport priority to the armored division now approaching Springe. The container ships loaded with munitions, spare parts, and the millions of other specialty items were just now sending their cargoes to the front. His largest reserve formation, the tank force, was about to team up with two German brigades, and what was left of the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, once a brigade in all but name, now only two battalions of weary men.
His supply situation was still tenuous. Many of his line units were down to four days of consumable stores, and the resupply effort would take two days, even if things went perfectly: a thin margin that in a pre-war exercise might have seemed equitable enough, but not now, when men and nations were at stake. Yet what choice did he have?
"General, we have a report here of a regiment-sized attack on the Weser. It looks like Ivan's trying to put troops on the left bank."
"What do we have there?"
"One battalion of Landwehr, and they're pretty beat up. There are two companies of tanks on the way, ought to be there in a little over an hour. There are preliminary indications that Soviet reinforcements are heading that way. This might be the main axis of their attack, at least it seems that they're orienting in that direction."
SACEUR rocked back in his chair, looking up at the map display. He had one reserve regiment within three hours of Ruhle. The General was a man who loved to gamble. He was never happier than when sitting at a table with a deck of cards and a few hundred dollars' worth of chips. He usually won. If he attacked south from Springe and failed ... the Russians would put two or three divisions across the Weser, and he had precisely one regiment in reserve to stand in their way. If he moved his new tank division there, and by some miracle they got there in time, he would have frittered away his best chance for a counterattack by reacting to a Soviet move again. No, he couldn't just react anymore. He pointed to Springe.
"How long before they're ready to move?"
"The whole division--six hours at best. We can divert the units still on the road south to--"
"No."
"Then we go south from Springe with what's ready now?"
"No." SACEUR shook his head and outlined his plan ...
ICELAND
"I see one," Garcia called. Edwards and Nichols were beside him in a moment.
"Hello, Ivan," Nichols said quietly.
Even with binoculars, the distance was still a little over three miles. Edwards saw