Crackdown

Background
During the earlier stages of the conflict, the Soviets invaded Greece and enstablished some Sarin Nerve Gas facilities in the country, to use it against the Allies. Allied Forces tracked down one of the most important Sarin gas convoys to a refuiling station. An MCV was quickly sent to the position, excorted by some riflemen, spies and a mine layer.

The Allies knew the Convoy trucks would have attempted to escape from the area. The convoy escape routes were kept in the Soviet radar dome, and if a spy was to infiltrate it, it could reveal all the escape routes to the Allies making it easier to prevent the convoy trucks from escaping.

The battle
The MCV quickly deployed into a construction yard and began building structures. The soviet base was not far from the position and was already well guarded by V2s and tesla coils. Once a War Factory was constructed the Allies began exploring the area to locate possible escape routes for the convoy trucks. Once the radar dome was located, a spy was sent into it revealing the escape routes which were mined to make sure no convoy trucks escaped.

The soviets however began attacking the Allied base and had to be pushed off. When the Commander constructed enough light tanks he sent them against Soviet tesla coils which while strong, could not resist to concentrated firepower. More ore trucks were built to speed up the construction of tanks and more forces arrived to back up the light tanks and the group of convoy trucks was located near some refuiling stations, which were destroyed along with the trucks.

Aftermath
With the largest part of the convoy neutralized the Allies finished off the Soviet presence in the area and tracked down the remaning convoy trucks to an underground facility that was suspected to be a hidden entrance to the main Sarin processing plant. For more information, see the page about Operation Down Under