Strongest Abandoned Son
Posted on February 28, 2025 ยท 0 mins read
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Chapter 581: Slaughter

Translator: Timothy_ Editor: GlobeGlotter

โ€œHahaha! Hm, are those captives? Are you surrendering? Iโ€™m warning you, if you donโ€™t surrender now, weโ€™ll launch a full-scale attack, you know?โ€ Huang Yinian laughed. Then, he waved his hand, and a missile shot out from the ship.

Sai watched from a close distance as the missile easily pierced a light guard ship, which disappeared from the sea with a spin.

Sai received a fresh report that all his ships had been locked on.

Sai could no longer endure the horror of desperation. He knew that if he didnโ€™t surrender, the enemyโ€™s missiles would strike soon. His fleet would disappear under the power of that unseen weapon.

If tens of thousands of soldiers died because of him, that would be a grave sin.

He surrendered and raised the white flag.

A lucky fighter jet saw Saiโ€™s surrendering flag and performed a ghost-like turn in the sky. It shot straight down toward the sea. Just as everyone was shouting in panic, it made another sudden turn and charged into the sky after barely scraping the sea surface.

Then, it immediately disappeared into the clouds, flying toward Ethiopia. At the same time, a missile struck where the plane had skimmed the water, causing a huge explosion.

Everyone was shocked by this scene. Ye Mo looked at the disappearing jet and sighed. This guyโ€™s piloting skills were top-notchโ€”he dodged a missile locked onto his plane purely with his own skill.

Ye Mo simply let the guy go.

Huang Yinian was very disappointed. He hadnโ€™t even gotten to properly open fire before the Union Army surrendered.

However, they captured four carriers this time, which made Huang Yinian rejoice. They also got 30 other ships of various kinds.

Half of the soldiers who fell into the water died; the rest were captured alive.

โ€ฆ

Compared to the easy fight the navy had, the ground troops had the hardest battle. The general was, as expected, Li Sandao, but the commander was a man called Liang Di from the Blue Ray Corporation.

He was a Chinese soldier and had survived many wars, but the alliance army was far superior to Luo Yueโ€™s in quality.

If it werenโ€™t for some geographical advantages, perhaps Luo Yue would have been defeated immediately upon contact. Even though that wasnโ€™t the case, after two clashes, Luo Yueโ€™s casualties were still equal to the oppositionโ€™s.

The second battlefield was at Xitan Valley. The swing tactic involved the navy starting their bombardment first, then a few hundred planes dropping bombs. Luo Yueโ€™s barely 10,000 ground troops would then quickly be decimated. Afterward, the Union Army would pass through Xitan Valley and take the Luo Yue highlands.

Yet before the planes could even reach Luo Yue, they were all taken out. Hence, the commander of the Union Armyโ€™s ground forces could only order a forced advance on Xitan Valley. Although they had many soldiers, they couldnโ€™t spread their troops out in the narrow valley.

Due to these disadvantages, the Union Army had the same casualty count as Luo Yue. One could see that the quality of Luo Yueโ€™s soldiers was far inferior, though.

But luckily, after the first bloodbath-like phase of the war, Luo Yueโ€™s army might have decreased in numbers, but it increased in battle power.

It was certain that if the enemyโ€™s ground forces kept attacking like that, Luo Yue wouldnโ€™t be able to hold the valley for long, but watching their planes constantly fall from the sky, the enemy commanderโ€™s face was pale. He knew that their upper hand would only be temporary. Once their air force was completely eliminated, they would be finished.

What scared him most was Luo Yueโ€™s anti-air defense. The Union Armyโ€™s ferocious fleet of jets could muster no resistance whatsoever in the sky. Luo Yue hadnโ€™t even had to send out a single plane to decimate their air force with just its defensive system.

This was impossible. No country had such powerful air defense capabilities.

Yet the reality was right in front of his eyes: Luo Yue did.

โ€œR-Retreat!โ€ The commander saw the planes decreasing more and more. If their army stayed there, it would be nothing but suicide.

The soldiers didnโ€™t understand why they were ordered to retreat when they had the upper hand, but as soldiers, they had to comply with orders.

But even then, the retreat order came a bit too late. Before the troops could retreat, Luo Yueโ€™s fighter jets rose into the sky.

The commander realized then that their own anti-air system couldnโ€™t lock onto any of Luo Yueโ€™s planes. Their interference was too strong, rendering all their anti-air missiles useless. A missile without guidance wasnโ€™t a missile.

The Union Army could only use some simple anti-air cannons and machine guns to fight those jets, but those were mere tickles to the fighter jets.

As bombs were dropped from the air, they blew the armored vehicles and tanks to oblivion.

The commander looked on with a pale face. He knew they were done for, completely done for. The enemyโ€™s jets had crushed their soldiersโ€™ hopes.

Surrenderโ€”there was no other way out except surrendering.

When the air force had been completely decimated, the navy chose to surrender, and one hour later, the ground forces also surrendered.

This shocking โ€˜invasionโ€™ of Luo Yue took, as predicted by specialists, less than a day. A lightning battle amongst lightning battles.

The only difference was that everyone had gotten the sides wrong. The Union Army wasnโ€™t able to last even a day and was completely annihilated or had surrendered.

120,000 troops had come, and after a day of intense battle, 30,000 died at sea, while 13,000 died on the ground. Some escaped into the forests, and the remaining 70,000 were captured alive, including Head Commander Sai, Air Force Commander Peter, and the Ground Forces Commander.

Luo Yue also seized more than 600 tanks and armored vehicles and 130 planes and helicopters.

Luo Yue lost 1,600 soldiers, one plane, and 12 tanks. From their navyโ€”no one had died.

This was a complete victory, bound to become the most famous battle in modern warfare.

After the results of the battle spread, the whole world trembled. A certain defeat had been turned into a complete victory. No one could have expected this outcome.

The famous military theoretical specialist Jack Longher immediately came up with a new theory of modern warfare, predicting that it would from then on mostly be based on interference and anti-interference.

He said in his theory that, โ€œIf you donโ€™t have a strong interference and radar system, and you wish to invade an advanced country, then I suggest you might as well put away your radar and missiles. Perhaps your best hope at victory is for your soldiers to carry swords and spears.โ€

Famous American military specialist Malone also pointed out that Luo Yueโ€™s electronic warfare had surpassed the current age. The nuclear warhead they had tested was also beyond the times. The fission element in it wasnโ€™t even uranium-235 or plutonium-239 but a completely new element.

But what made the world truly speechless was Luo Yueโ€™s spokesperson, Xu Yuehuaโ€™s, speech.


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