This content requires the base game Command: Modern Air / Naval Operations WOTY on Steam in order to play.
## About This Content
Summer 2017
Russia is in the 4th year of a 15 year project to install the ‘SHELF’
underwater Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS), a very modern equivalent to the
US Navy’s Cold War system of listening arrays in the Greenland-Iceland-UK
(GIUK) Gap. The difference this time, however, is that the Russians are
emplacing this high tech, nuclear-powered system in the Arctic, and that has
the United States quite concerned.
The Arctic
In recent years the increased access to Arctic waters due to receding polar
ice has allowed exponential growth into hydrocarbon (oil & gas) exploration
and extraction, as well as much improved capacity for mineral extraction in
the north of Russia, Canada, Greenland and Alaska.
Since the development of nuclear submarines able to travel under the polar ice
cap, the Arctic has been heavily used for both transit of SSNs and others
between oceans, and more importantly for stationing of Ballistic Missile
Submarines SSBNs. Both the US and Russia routinely position their SSBNs in
this region as it provides excellent hiding grounds for these strategic
assets; the US is not happy about a Russian detection system limiting their
nuclear deployment options.
Neither Russia nor the US wants their operations in the Arctic to become
public knowledge. Russia does not have its system fully operational and the US
has many other issues on its plate. There is a limited degree of plausible
deniability involved in all actions in the north, there are few who can detect
them and fewer yet who care to reveal what has been detected.
Environmental Impact
Environmentally the Arctic is one of the most fragile ecosystems on the
planet. The receding icepack is seen as forthright evidence of global warming,
compounded by enabling more resource exploration which increases both the
actual and risk of further deposits of toxic chemicals into Arctic waters,
where they take much longer to break down than in warmer climes. The Arctic in
summer is home to home to 17 different species of whales, many like the
Humpback and Grey whales migrate to the north in order to birth their young in
the cold waters. Many others such as the Narwhal, Beluga and Bowhead live in
the Arctic all year.
Increased development in the North has invited increased environmental
scrutiny by government-sponsored agencies such as the Arctic Council and the
less accepted but much more recognised groups such as Greenpeace and Sea
Shepherd.
Meanwhile, there is a major European-based environmental campaign ongoing
trying to expose nuclear activity in the Arctic. This is causing some
difficulty for Russia as it is in multi-lateral negotiations with European
countries to take advantage of its new economic position and Brexit based
opportunities. The US is adding its voice to this protest, conveniently
ignoring its use of the Arctic by nuclear submarines, by pointing out Russia’s
intent to use undersea nuclear generation extensively in Arctic development.
Expect your operations to be affected by significant biological and
environmental group activity!
Situation
The USN has been authorized to conduct a pre-emptive operation to destabilize
Russian construction activities and halt the development of the SHELF project.
A major constraint is that the operation must not be detected! Therefore only
Special Forces and submarine forces will be available for this operation and
it must be carried out without the public or Russia discovering whom is
responsible.
Russia knows that something is afoot. There have been mixed messages coming
out of Washington but it is clear that naval activity in the Arctic is
increasing. The priority for Moscow is to get the summer construction program
underway and protect its secrecy as much as possible.
FEATURES]
* Playable by US or Russia.
* Random start positions and events
* Limited resources but impressive capability.
* Multiple competing interests. Environmental Groups, sovereignty of Arctic neighbours.
* Cyber effects.
* Complex and very capable target set.
* Win without starting a war!
Assets:
US:
SSGN 726 USS Ohio (Ohio
o Echo Voyager (submersible)
SSN 21 USS Seawolf
SSN 23 USS Jimmy Carter
SSN 700 USS Dallas
SSN 782 USS Mississippi
SSN 786 USS Illinois
Russia:
BS-64 RFS Podmoskovye (Delta IV Stretch)
o Losharik (Submersible)
BS-136 RFS Orenburg (Delta III Stretch)
o Losharik (Submersible)
K-139 RFS Belgorod (Modified Oscar II)
K-157 RFS Vepr (Akula II)
K-295 RFS Samara (Akula II)
K-329 RFS Severodvinsk (Severodvinsk)
K-371 RFS Pantera (Akula I)
Minimum System Requirements | Recommended System Requirements | |
CPU | 1 GHz (Dual-core Pentium and above recommended) | INTEL Core 2 Duo 2.66 GHz |
VRAM | 1 GB | 2 GB |
RAM | 3 GB | 6 GB |
OS | Windows XP SP3 / Vista / 7 / 8/10 | Windows XP SP3/Vista/7/8/8.1/10 |
Graphics Card | 1 GB (2GB+ recommended) | |
Direct X | Version 9.0c | 9.0c |
SOUND CARD | Compatible sound card | DirectX Compatible |
HDD Space | 2 MB available space | 12 GB free |