Chapter 273 - 273 267 Miracle
Chapter 273 - 273 267 Miracle
?Chapter 273: Chapter 267 Miracle Chapter 273: Chapter 267 Miracle Under siege, to launch a powerful counteroffensive would require one of two conditions, either being driven to a dead end with no choice but to break out, or possessing ample reserves, ready to engage the enemy in a decisive battle of attrition.
As for the current situation, it was the kind of scenario in the history of warfare that attackers tried desperately to avoid and defenders dreamed of: reinforcements cutting off the attackers’ rear.
All of a sudden, Gilgit plunged into a chaotic battle.
The Sanitation Worker soldiers on the western front finally reacted. Heavy artillery began shelling the urban area of Gilgit, while tanks, covered by infantry, repeatedly charged Gilgit’s defense lines.
India attempted to leverage the western offensive to salvage its defeat on the eastern front.
But by now, all parties involved in the conflict knew that the Sanitation Worker soldiers on the eastern front were doomed, utterly doomed.
No matter how fierce the offensive, the Sanitation Workers on the eastern front were mounting a desperate, final charge. Their plan was to break through Gilgit and rendezvous with their western allies, but as long as they couldn’t quickly penetrate the Pakistani defenses, India’s resurgence of courage would soon be exhausted.
The premise was that it was a must to repel the Sanitation Workers’ attack.
But oddly enough, those Indians, who seemed almost intellectually challenged under their command, became impressively fierce when attacking Pakistan.
Disregarding casualties and moving in an organized manner, their desperate charges, under the control of the Sanitation Workers, were impressively executed.
Gao Yuan witnessed over a dozen enemy soldiers, one after another, assault a Pakistani bunker with rocket launchers. And when these soldiers finally fell, the Pakistani bunker, hit by four rockets, also fell silent.
If only those enemies had shown half the courage they displayed now—no, not even half, just one-tenth of it—Gao Yuan and his men would never have made it this far.
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