704 Fourth British Government

At the same time that the French government was merged, the British government inexplicably continued to separate, and there was a new fourth British government in addition to the Belfast government in Ireland with Gott as prime minister, the London government in England with Moseley as prime minister, and Edinburgh in Scotland with Chamberlain as prime minister!

This government, similar to the previous Free French government-in-exile, was also a so-called "independent regime" based on the soil of another country. This is the new British government formed with the help of the U.S. government after Churchill's son, Randolph Churchill, fled to the United States.

However, compared to de Gaulle, Randolph's methods were too immature.

First of all, the so-called British government has no independence at all, and is just a puppet government of the Americans, a card in hand.

For the deep-pocketed U.S. government, spending some money to equip Randolph with a government building and arranging for an American to be an official of the British government is actually a very easy little matter.

Under the leadership of General Marshall, the chief of staff of the Army appointed by Roosevelt himself, the U.S. government easily drafted an agreement entirely in its favor, which was approved by the British government of Randolph.

According to this agreement, the British troops of the Randolph government belong to the foreign army in the American army, do not have their own national and independent nature, and only retain the name of the British government, giving the United States an excuse to send troops to Europe in the future.

Such an agreement, which completely disregarded the Randolph government but was a puppet, was easily signed. It must be said that Randolph is simply one of the best controlled British agents that the US government has ever encountered.

Of course, Marshall, who made this kind of agreement, can be regarded as a very evil existence. Relying on his hand, the role of Randolph Churchill, who has crossed the ocean, is used to the fullest, which can be said to squeeze the value of Randolph to the extreme.

To be able to make such an agreement is enough to prove Marshall's talent and cunning.

Speaking of which, Marshall is also a legend in the U.S. military.

He entered the Virginia Military Academy when he was not yet 17 years old. Unlike the prestigious United States Military Academy at West Point, graduates of the Virginia Military Academy are not guaranteed to become U.S. Army officers after graduation. In other words, Marshall is not actually from a prestigious school.

But through his own efforts, Marshall graduated with the 8th place in the school. Even the dean of his school sighed, "If Marshall can be appointed as an army officer, he will definitely rise to the top, far surpassing the average graduate of West Point, a super elite school in the United States." ”

In fact, what Marshall experienced in the first half of his life was completely a standard genius stream plot.

After graduating, he successfully attained the rank of second lieutenant, and when he was selected for the Fort Leavenworth Refresher in 1906, he was the only ensign. In later generations, this is enough to be experienced as a standard fantasy protagonist.

A year later, Marshall qualified for further study with a first-place finish.

Unfortunately, at that time, there were very few opportunities for promotion in the American army, so Marshall was only promoted from second lieutenant to lieutenant, and he held this rank until the age of 36.

During this time, he served as an officer for 14 years, served in 14 different U.S. units, went to the Philippines twice, and joined the National Guard twice, but he couldn't go any further.

In contrast to the road to promotion, Marshall was praised by his superiors no matter what unit he served in.

Therefore, his superiors praised Marshall as a genius who was willing to endure hardships, proficient in the art of war, and resourceful, but he was still a lieutenant in the end.

If this is not like the life experience that a fantasy protagonist should have, then the next plot is simply the best template for all the protagonists' experiences.

Marshall's superior, General Hagood, wrote in a 1916 report on the competence of officers: "Marshall deserves the post of brigadier general in the regular army, and if he postpones his appointment for one day, the army and the country will suffer a day's losses!" ”

That's right, he was gifted since he was a child, studied and tempered in a college that was not the most famous, and then graduated with excellent grades. He was surrounded by competitors who were higher in rank than him, but he outperformed them perfectly. After that, he was praised by his superiors in every way no matter where he went. And it has also received strong praise from the general, giving a super high evaluation.

But the fact is that the U.S. Committee for the Promotion of Officers only appointed Marshall to the rank of captain after seeing Hagood's super-high evaluation.

If God is a writer, Marshall is one of his protagonists. That's a very clever way to write.

Let everyone say that this person is very powerful, all kinds of reputations, all kinds of praise, but Marshall's level is not one step to the sky, but slowly promoted, and then after each promotion, he is all kinds of surprises in the new position.

And that's not all. During the First World War, Marshall was appointed as a staff officer with the rank of temporary lieutenant colonel, participated in a big drama, and put on a show, and was promoted to provisional colonel for his outstanding performance in the forward position.

But then, for the sake of plot development, God canceled his temporary lieutenant colonel and put him back in the position of captain.

But as if to make the officer happy, God gave Marshall a small promotion, making him a major, which was a kind of compensation for the abolition of the rank of temporary colonel.

Then, Marshall was arranged to be an instructor at a military academy in China, and he was awesome in front of a bunch of cadets, and then he was slowly promoted to lieutenant colonel.

Marshall's instructor career was not a simple plot transition, but a big foreshadowing for the future. During this time, Marshall built a cadet file and wrote down the names of young officers whom he considered talented.

Later, when Marshall became Army Chief of Staff, this file became an important killer feature, allowing him to often select good commanders from it.

However, it may be that this portrayal of Marshall's home is for the sake of water, and after Marshall was promoted to lieutenant colonel, he has been allowed to develop at this level. This plot is fifteen years of water!

It may be that there are too many plots of water, or it may be that it feels too unfair to Marshall, when Marshall was 55 years old, he was finally promoted by God from lieutenant colonel to brigadier general, which is the first time in his life that he was addicted to rapid promotion.

In contrast, during the period of Marshall's ascension, a German sergeant named Reinhardt had been promoted from non-commissioned officer to general.

By the time Marshall had managed to skip the ranks, Reinhardt had already gone from general to head of state.

This is really more human than human, and it is infuriating.

It is only now, after President Roosevelt appointed Marshall as Chief of Staff of the Army, he was officially awarded the rank of Major General.

As for his current rank of general, he is still temporarily receiving.

However, the bumpy promotion process and mismatched talent and talent did not overshadow Marshall's brilliance. To some extent, his life experience is richer and more meaningful than that of German Führer Reinhardt.

Even as a prototype of the protagonist, Marshall's life experience is more suitable for being written into a book.

Marshall, a late bloomer, finally had enough plans to show himself after the start of World War II.

As Roosevelt's personal chief of staff of the Army, he wisely first proposed that "the United States will inevitably be involved in the war, whether it wants it or not." Therefore, the United States must actively prepare for war before it encounters the flames of war. ”

And he was also one of the few people in the United States who strongly supported Roosevelt's strategy of aiding Britain during the early isolationist period.

From the outset, Marshall proposed that the British were fighting to gain time for the United States to prepare.

And now, even though the British battle is over, Marshall still uses Randolph as a spokesman to follow the big trend that the British government has emerged one after another, and has made a fourth British government.

The latest two chapters are actually 2,500-word chapters, because they had to be forcibly delayed. However, the good thing is that these two chapters only need to spend 2,000 words of starting coin subscription.