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## About This Content
23 August 2016, Europe is reeling politically and economically from the
downstream effects of the UK deciding to leave the European Union – the
BREXIT. Both the British Pound and the Euro are near collapse and the global
stock markets have not yet recovered from the initial shock of the British
move. European based companies and stock markets are in disarray as they
attempt to negotiate their way out of the new reality which is settling upon
the continent after a very tumultuous summer.
Weeks after the British vote, France, Denmark and Italy initiated their own
referendums to proceed with an ‘Article 50’ departure from the EU. Greece,
still tottering economically and staggering under the pressure of hundreds of
thousands of refugees streaming in from across the Mediterranean has been
forced into yet another election campaign. Portugal and Spain have seen the
small economic gains they have made in the past few years washed away in the
monetary disaster which is hitting them very hard. Eastern European countries
are becoming more ‘hard line’ in response to refugees and asking the EU
government in Brussels some very tough questions vis-a-vis the costs and
benefits of the union.
Both the Scottish National party, which is in the process of organizing a 2nd
referendum to leave the UK, and the Basque Separatists in Spain are now
leading the few remaining Euro advocates. Even Turkey has stopped asking to be
part of the EU for the first time in decades.
Meanwhile the US is going through one of the most divisive and violent
election campaigns in history, with dozens if not hundreds of protesters
arrested at every political event and where the number of politically
motivated killings is shocking both the world and the domestic political
establishment.
Through this turmoil, NATO decision makers have struggled with a patchwork of
collective defence initiatives in the Baltic and Ukraine. As reinforcement to
the standing ‘Baltic Air Policing’ operation and training missions in the
Baltic countries and Ukraine; a multi-national Brigade, led by four nations
and consisting of troops from 5 others, spread across four countries (Latvia,
Lithuania, Estonia & Poland) is touted as the solution. Although judged anemic
by most experts, placing American, British, German and Canadian troops in the
Baltics displays a commitment to the region that if Russia were to attack is
would be attacking the whole alliance not just the local forces.
The turbulence is not missed by Russia. With NATO destabilized politically,
the whole idea of a cohesive command structure with an ability to react
rapidly is in question. The Baltic States (Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia)
have long been a thorn in the side of the Russian Federation: Ethnically they
have large Russian populations; strategically they isolate the key to Baltic
defence, Kaliningrad; politically they should never have been allowed to slip
into NATO’s sphere of influence. Perhaps now is an ideal opportunity to right
the wrongs of the past and exert newfound strength where and when NATO is at
its weakest. If the Baltic States can be taken in a short 1-2 day campaign
without tipping the world into another global conflict, NATO may never
recover. A short window of opportunity exists before the Multi-National
Brigade deploys, if only a few aircraft are engaged and no NATO ground troops,
it is much easier to de-escalate.
The second scenario is this set ‘No BREXIT, no Problem!’ will portray a
cohesive, non-destabilized NATO response.
Features
* Two scenarios simulating the graduated NATO response to a Russian invasion of the Baltic States under two distinct situations: 1) A delayed European response speculating on the political complications caused by BREXIT and follow on ramifications, and; 2) If BREXIT did not happen and/or Europe comes to grips rapidly with the new reality, how would NATO respond in a cohesive way to the crisis.
* Intense air and naval conflict in the constricted and shallow waters of the Baltic Sea.
* Implementation of Ship basing with withdraw criteria causing ships to abandon their mission and return to port for rearming or to repair damage.
* Extensive use of Lua scripting to add forces to the fight as the political situation evolves.
* Some of the most modern equipment in use; F-22 & Eurofighter Typhoon featured fighting side by side, the Russian SS-26 Iskander Short Range Ballistic Missile system, S-400 SAMs, SM-3 – Theater Ballistic Missile Defence missiles as well as some of the newest and most capable ships in NATO and the Russian Federation inventory.
The possibility of Finland and Sweden entering the fray if NATO is having
difficulties, but based on a random chance to allow for more replay
possibilities.
Minimum System Requirements | Recommended System Requirements | |
CPU | 1 GHz (Dual-core Pentium and above recommended) | INTEL 2.6 GHz Dual Core |
VRAM | 128 MB | 256 MB |
RAM | 1 GB RAM | 2 GB |
OS | Windows XP SP3 / Vista / 7 / 8/10 | Windows XP SP3/Vista/7/8/8.1/10 |
Graphics Card | DirectX 9.0c compatible video card with 16 MB RAM | |
Direct X | Version 9.0c | 9.0c |
SOUND CARD | DirectX Compatible | DirectX Compatible |
HDD Space | 10 GB free | 10 GB free |
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