And so here we are: the Irish have concentrated all their forces here (save for the decimated III Còr), the Yugoslavians are taking care of the rest of the front, and the Bulgarian partisans have disrupted the British as much as they could. The Zairians have supplied an enormous amount of artillery guns and ammo.
The enemy can read a map too, so the battlefield has been properly fortified by the enemy, with what we assume will be several layers of defenses and plenty of armored, motorized and mechanized units ready to counterattack any breakthrough. The British first line of defenses is located behind a river, but the frigid winter will help us by providing enough sites where the ice is thick enough to be walked over. Our forces are mostly foot infantry, but we can do this.
The I and II Còr Turais will be the primary offensive force; I plan on concentrating the II Còr in a couple narrow points and force a crossing, with the Engineers ready to build field bridges right behind the first wave. Losses will be high, but our concentrated artillery should help a lot. The tanks will exploit any breach.
The enemy’s forces suffered a significant setback during the last operation: a whole Armored Division was destroyed, and a Motorized Division suffered losses from the minefield planted by the Partizanski.



5/11/1943
The I Còr opens the battle with an attempted river crossing by the 84th Coisithe Division southwest of Hadzimovo, without artillery preparation. This is mostly a feint, with the real major attempt being launched further southeast by II Còr’s 86th Coisithe Division, this time with ample artillery support. At the end of the day I have four Airtléire Regiments and an Airtléire Trom Regiment ready to unleash hell on the British. Further north, the 100th Coisithe division is trying to cross in a mountainous area that seems unguarded.
The IV and V Còr Turais also launch their attack near Dobrinisthe: the 144th Coisithe Division is moving through the marches west of the town unopposed, but on the eastern side the 25th Meichnithe Division follows the artillery preparation with a determined assault, smashing the lines of the British 246th Infantry Division and engaging the Support Guns Regiment just behind.


6/11/1943
Following a long artillery barrage, the 84th Coisithe and the 15th Meichnithe Division force a crossing in front of the I Còr Turais. The II Còr is still fighting for its own penetration, but thanks to the artillery support the 86th Coisithe manages to gain a solid bridgehead by dusk.
The 100th Coisithe Division has been spotted and intercepted, forcing it to abandon the mountain crossing.
At Dobrinisthe, I unleash the 7th Armurtha against the British 247th Infantry Division, while the 25th Meichnithe further enlarges its own breakthrough at the expense of the 246th Infantry Division at Dunavtsi. I’m shifting both IV and V Còr Turais toward the breach.
The enemy Bombers hit the advancing mechanized units, but my ground AA inflicts serious losses, and the arrival of 10th, 11th and 12th Eitleog Wings spell doom for an enemy Bomber Wing. Another Wing is decimated, but British Fighters have been spotted and will probably arrive in time to rescue the surviving Avro bombers.


7/11/1943
With the help of 15th and 18th Meichnithe, the western flank manages to collapse the British positions and expand the bridgehead; the Engineers are building bridges to facilitate crossing the river. The concrete bridge fortified by the British will be ignored.
IV and V Còr are also slowly breaking through the enemy lines at Dunavtsi. The 22nd and 25th Meichnithe lead the way supported by the 7th Armurtha.
The Yugoslavian 35° and 36° Huszàr Brigades are advancing with my troops.


8/11/1943
The I and II Còr Turais have dispersed the British IX Infantry Corps guarding the front southwest of Hadzimovo. The IV and V Còr are surrounding the remaining units of the British XI Infantry Corps around Dunavtsi and Dobrinisthe. With the first line of enemy defenses broken, I expect the British combined arms Battlegroups to show up, so I’m bringing forward artillery and Sealgair units, as well as my HQs.

9/11/1943
The first enemy armored unit shows up on the western front: a single Regiment from the 9th Armored Division, equipped with the dreaded “Destroyer” heavy tanks. Fortunately, it’s alone and in range of numerous artillery units, so I pummel it for hours before attacking with several Meichnithe Regiments. The enemy suffers grievous losses, but I form a mechanized front backed up by the 80°, 81° and 83° Sealgair Brigades in case more tanks show up.
Meanwhile, I send the 40th Armurtha Division on my right flank to crush the British 202nd Motorized Division that was trying a flanking move. Without anti tank support, the enemy units are smashed by the Irish tanks and two decimated Regiments retreat immediately.
Up north, the 100th Coisithe is trying again to cross the river through the mountains. A single regiment from the British 240th Infantry Division is trying to contain the penetration.
At the Dunavtsi-Dobrinisthe line, almost all British resistance has been quelled. Only the 248th Infantry Division is blocking the road to Sandanski, but it’s well entrenched so I’ll wait for my artillery to get in range before staging a frontal assault with the 22nd and 25th Meichnithe Divisions.

