Operation Sunburn

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Lolloh-Roul War
x300
Date16 June 2003 (2003-06-16) – 20 September 2014 (2014-09-20)
Location
Lolloh
Result Inyurstan victory; 2/3rd's of Lolloh's nuclear stockpile destroyed
Territorial
changes
Wessel, Keldom
Belligerents
 Inyursta
Template:Country data Lolloh
Commanders and leaders

Inyursta Colonel Carlotto Amandezado

Inyursta Major Pierre Ramires
N/A
Strength

x9 GGA Teams (~72 commandos, x9 UH-60 Helicopters)
x12 BM-144 Pythón Medium Bombers
Supported by:
x3 EA-20 Crotaléa Víbrandes EW

x6 AC-22M Mussurana Stealth Fighters

>600 soldiers

x3 {wp
Casualties and losses

 Inyursta KIA: x13
WIA: x28 UGA
POW: N/A
Two BM-144 shot down

Total: 43

Lolloh
KIA: >300
WIA: UNK
POW: N/A
>120 road-mobile launchers destroyed

Total: ~400

Background

Assualt

The operation took place at six different sites across northern & central Lolloh. Helicopters landed a total of six Groupe de Gréva Alfa (GGA) - also known as Strike Team Alpha in English - while the Aéroforça sent a bomber force over the ocean to bypass Lollohian air defenses concentrated in the south. The commandos used laser-targeting devices to guide in laser-guided bombs onto road-mobile launchers and the underground facilities which held them.

Lollohian forces counter-attacked the commandos to allow the trucks to escape - which forced the bombers to rely on their own less-reliable targeting systems. Three additional GGA teams were deployed via helicopter near the eastern roadways exiting the nuclear compounds and engaged a number of road-mobile launchers which had survived the bombings with small arms and man-deployed rockets.

Return Home

Five of the six initial UGA teams were forced to fall back under heavy fire, and the UH-60's were forced to chose landing zones from 300-2600m behind the primary insertion points. Because the helicopters were flying nap-of-the-earth, they were not subject to the harassment by Lollohian SAM's that the aircraft were.

Aftermath

In the immediate aftermath, both sides were quick to publicize the assault as a victory. The Inyurstans claim that destroying around two-thirds of Lolloh's nuclear stockpile was a major win, in addition to being capable of performing both insertions and air-raids deep into Lollohian territory. The Lollohians claimed that they had successfully managed to save enough nukes and that the Inyurstan attacks were a frivolous loss of life with no bearing on the direction of the conflict.

At the end of the war, Lolloh was pressured into surrendering its remaining nuclear stockpile under the Treaty of Quevril. Insiders claim the Lollohian transitional leadership briefly entertained the idea of threatening use of their nukes to scare the coalition into letting them keep their WMD stockpiles; however, this was quickly abandoned due to the risk of Semi-Mutually Assured Destruction (S-MAD).

A number of people, including defecting Lollohian scientists, Inyurstan and Mericki intelligence operatives, and even private military contractors claim that Lolloh did not surrender all of its nuclear material. It is also believed by some in the intelligence community that Lolloh later tried to solicit certain Shiite powers in the Middle East to obtain new warheads. These theories are corroborated by the fact that Lolloh did successfully obtain or retain a small number of Mass-Molten Copper (MMC) warheads in violation of the treaty - which they later attempted to use to cause massive Ruol civilian casualties.