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Chapter 83 The Sharpness of the Defender

21 mortars deployed on the ground gathered fire to attack a light warship flying in the sky in a preset ambush. Various complex combat factors together influence the progress of the battle... Before the arrival of the information age, no matter how precise the model design and manual calculations were, it was impossible to presumably the result of such a confrontation.

Do your best and leave your fate. Under Weiss' careful deployment, 21 mortar groups cast ammunition at the target desperately, and the dense explosion sound echoed in this mountain forest covered by fog. This momentum reminds people of this momentum, but the artillery preparations that often appear on the front battlefield, and a flaming storm filled with the breath of death!

The Norman soldiers in the forest, totaling only more than a hundred people, were the strongest weapons in their hands, namely light machine guns and pineapple bombs. This force was not afraid at all. Weiss focused all his energy on the enemy's flying warships. In order to prevent the enemy's firepower counter-attack, he did not concentrate the 21 mortars in one area, but grouped them, 3 mortars in one group, two or three groups were deployed on similar shooting positions, forming a crescent-shaped arc attack line. After the battle started, he first stood at the mortar position on the left wing. In the first half of a minute, the enemy ship had not had time to react in action. The continuous rapid fire of each mortar group was effective, the combat value of the enemy ship continued to decline, and red spots symbolizing slight damage appeared in many places on the hull, but it immediately turned right and began to climb upward...

Once the Norman warship climbed to a height of a thousand feet and exceeded the ballistic limit of the mortar, it would completely get rid of the opponent's threat and the battle form would be completely reversed. Therefore, before the group of mortars in front of him completed 6 consecutive shots, Weiss hurriedly shouted: "Direction angle-5, three rapid-fire!"

There were three mortar teams, some of which were clear-headed and immediately stopped fire and adjusted the fire. Some of them were a little slow to react and fired another shot before they could figure out that they wanted to adjust the horizontal firing angle. However, this did not have much impact on the overall situation. Weiss would never get angry with the gunners because he had already run to another group of mortars not far away, followed the movement of the enemy warships, and issued updated firing parameters to the gunners, and then ran to the next position.

At this moment, Weiss is racing against time and playing against fate. If he can damage the enemy ship's operation function in the next two or three minutes, he will have the chance to annihilate it. Otherwise, it depends on the courage and decision of the enemy ship commander. If he meets a powerful guy, it will be a problem whether the defender unit he led can escape unscathed.

Rising a chaotic bullet, Weiss ran from the left wing of the fire attack line to the right wing, and issued new firing instructions on all mortar groups. The morning mist in the mountains and forests and the smoke from the war between the two sides made the gunners' sight blurry. They could not see the outline of the enemy ship, and it was difficult to guess the accurate direction through the enemy ship's artillery fire. If Weiss had not provided accurate firing parameters, the ambush would have been impossible to fight, so the gunners would have executed his instructions without fail...

In Weiss' special vision, the Norman warship went into a strange S-shaped shape in the horizontal direction. Although it did not expose the propulsion and steering device of the stern, due to the crescent-shaped array of the mortar group and the particularity of the mortar ballistics, its damaged parts were basically evenly scattered in front, back, left and right places, and the thrusters and oar rudders were not spared. The equipment that provided the aerial power of the flying warships was located inside the hull, and was like the boiler bin and the electromechanical cabin.

With additional protection, ordinary skin trauma usually does not affect their floating and lifting, but the mortar shells that fell from high places not only damage the surface of the Norman Frigate. The shells smashed many pits on the deck, damaged many naval guns, and damaged the bridges and chimneys. At this time, if one or two mortar shells drilled into the chimney entrance and destroyed the engine machinery that provided power sources for the floating equipment and propulsion devices, it would be a perfect battle!

Weiss did not have the ability to change objective things with his intentions, and his expectations and urgent expectations have never become a miraculous reality. The Norman warship, whose damage has exceeded 20%, continued to climb and soon escaped the effective coverage of the mortar shells.

Before coming to this world, Weiss was a realist with pessimism. He never expected others to give himself selfless help, nor did he imagine that there would be good things that would fall from the sky. In this era of war, after experiencing countless blood and fire, life and death, his thinking consciousness was as hard as iron. The enemy ships left the fire circle, and he did not fall into pessimism and depression, but made a decision in a judgment: each mortar team stopped shooting at the original target, and instead shot at the enemy soldiers in the woods. The combatants turned from defense-blocking the enemy to attack-annihilation in teams!

From the time the mortar fired to the enemy ships escaping from the ambush range, it lasted for only three or four minutes. Most of the Norman soldiers who entered the woods to search for the enemy were scared by the fierce guns and could not move. When the ambushers adopted a passive defense strategy, lying still was the least likely response to casualties. However, when the opponent took the mortar fire as the leader and forced the way with light machine guns and pineapple bullets, these lying still became the "paving stones" for the opponent to win.

In this forest filled with mist and smoke, the soldiers on both sides quickly entered a state of close contact. Under Weis' command, the mortar group of the Federal Army's guerrilla advance team began to suppress the Norman soldiers in the depths, cutting off the connection between them. In just a few minutes, the Norman troops who were put into battle were defeated. Although the soldiers of the guerrilla advance team were inevitably injured, putting aside the uncertain factor of the enemy's flying warships, the battle was completely one-sided, and it was only a matter of time before the enemy's battle was completely annihilated. In this case, Weis kept looking up and observing. The Norman warship climbed to the ground.

It was about two thousand feet tall, and then circled around at a slower speed. It was beaten up with its head covering, and nearly half of the artillery was damaged, and the combat personnel were reduced by about 10%. To be honest, this warship did not hurt its foundation and had the ability to continue fighting. However, after breaking away from the firepower of the mortar, it did not explode like a wounded beast, but watched the fighters on the ground besieged by the enemy, and the naval guns were not exerted for a long time... Weiss knew that this guy was not fooled by the storm-like mortar shells before, but could not distinguish between the enemy and us in the fog and smoke. No matter how anxious it was, it would be useless!

The battle on the ground was destroyed. Within ten minutes, the sound of gunfire in the forest became sparse. Soon, the soldiers robbed a group of dejected prisoners of war from the front. In the early stages of the war, it was difficult for Norman soldiers who had not completely lost their combat effectiveness to be captured in such an encounter. They either fought to the death or protected the retreat alternately, and would not surrender easily without a way out.

Although the battle was still going on, the Norman warship hovering over the forest was still a threat that could not be ignored. Weiss still picked a younger officer from the enemy prisoners of war and interrogated him on the spot in Norman language. Surprisingly, the Norman officer did not have a strong resistance. After receiving the promise of the other party to ensure personal safety, he answered most questions in a brief language: the Norman patrol ship brought a land warfare company, and the mission was to search for his own survival.

The people and enemy combatants who might have hid in this forest; after landing, they met international servants led by Brother Hu, because he did not participate in the exchanges between the two sides, and they were uncertain what information the tribe revealed after reconnecting with the Norman army; most of the landing troops entered the woods, and a small number of people stayed on the wreckage of the transport ship to recover the Star Source Stone. They carried a marching radio station, which could not only contact the flying warships above, but also contact the command center of Warrens.

The Norman Frigate was equipped with a radio station, and the landing troops also carried a radio station. However, before the battle began, the radio technology team of the guerrilla advance team had measured their communication frequency. The battle used radio interference technology at the beginning, which made the Normans unable to contact the rear for a while. Not only that, Weiss also noticed that the bridge of the Norman warship was bombed, and it seemed that the communication equipment was damaged. The reason why it did not leave the radio interference area after climbing to a safe height was probably because they were still repairing the communication antenna and did not realize that their opponents were using technical means to interfere with the radio communication of the Norman army.

Through the actions of the enemy and the confessions of prisoners of war, Weiss made a detailed judgment on the situation on the battlefield and made a quick decision. He led a hundred-man reserve team and three mortars to launch a raid on the Norman troops who were left behind in the wreckage of the transport ship. On this battlefield filled with fog and smoke, there was undulating terrain and dense vegetation to provide additional cover. Weiss easily passed through the combat area with his "perspective eyes" and approached the wreckage of the transport ship with lightning speed. As he expected, dozens of Norman soldiers had already built temporary positions there, and they were in the wreckage of the wreckage of the transport ship. As he expected, dozens of Norman soldiers had already built temporary positions there, and they were in the wreckage of the wreckage. As he expected, dozens of Norman soldiers had already built temporary positions there, and they were in the wreckage.

Scattered pits were dug around and machine gun and machine cannon fire points were built in the wreckage, with a certain degree of defensive ability. In response to this conventional defense, mortars are undoubtedly a very ideal weapon with cost-effectiveness and energy efficiency. Three hundred feet away, Weiss' range measurement allowed the mortar team to fire three consecutive shots. After one round of suppression, a slight adjustment was made to proceed with the second round, which made the enemy dizzy, and then rushed out of the woods with a hundred-man reserve team. A strong rush down the enemy's temporary position. It was so fast and efficient that many Norman soldiers were shot dead before they could surrender...
Chapter completed!
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