Chapter 312: The Japanese Red Army

The second more

This was the first time that KGB agents had contact with Shigenobu, the leader of the Japanese Red Army. After the loss of his right-hand men Osamu Marutsuna and Hiroshi Izumizu in 1988, the Red Army movement led by Shigenobu House fell into a low ebb, especially after the Soviet Union shrank its front on a large scale in 1991, and the US Secretary of State asked the Arab world not to try to protect the Japanese Red Army.

Just when Shigenobu House was desperate and was about to secretly repatriate to Japan, KGB intelligence officers approached her and offered to provide Shigenobu House with new asylum. According to the Soviet side, your spiritual pillar has collapsed, and your material foundation has also disappeared, so is there any other option for the Japanese Red Army than to provide you with an olive branch?

In desperation, the house can only accept the handouts of this once hostile country, and at least the people are willing to support their own communist international cause. Instead of welcoming the USSR, Shigenobu House settled in North Korea, where KGB intelligence officers were waiting for her.

However, it was only after Shigenobu House actually contacted the KGB intelligence officer that she realized that the Soviet Union was willing to support the Japanese Red Army to continue to carry out terrorist attacks in the country in order to retaliate against Japan's participation in the Combined Fleet military exercises, and the North Korean side was responsible for providing firearms. This undoubtedly provided the most crucial guarantee for the revolutionary cause of the Mighty House, but the Soviet Union demanded that a successful bombing operation be carried out before it could be aided again.

Faced with a dazzling array of C-4 plastic-explosives, whirlwind-explosives, and various Kalashnikov rifles, a daring plan to assassinate the Japanese prime minister slowly took shape in Shigenobu's mind. It was at the time when the House of Espressobu used the influence of the Soviet Union to reshape the revolution. Unaware that the Soviet government was also taking advantage of it.

It's been a rough time in Japan lately. First, the Tu series of bombers made a flight around the island. It's like a guy with a heavy firearm hanging around your door every day. Every time the appearance of Tu series bombers was detected, the nerves of Japan had to be on high alert and send fighter jets to intercept them.

The swaying Soviet Bear raised its head and stared at the small flies around it with indifferent eyes, and then fell asleep carelessly, not caring at all about the level of insects and ants swaggering in front of him.

And every day, Prime Minister Hosokawa has to wake up from his fear, for fear that when he opens his eyes, the first call he receives is that the Soviet bombers are one step closer today than they were yesterday. He had no doubt that the other side would eventually conduct a nuclear bomb strike test on the border. I finally realized what it means to be overbearing that the five permanent members of the Security Council will never reason with you.

However, Hosokawa's fears soon became a reality, and the Soviet Union announced that it would fly a tactical nuclear bomb around the island. Taking off from the Vladivostok airbase and the Durinsk airbase on Sakhalin Island, they approached the territory of Japan from two directions.

The Tu-95 was a real Soviet red bear, and the bomber's huge body witnessed the magnificent treasures created by the entire country of heavy industrial giants. Even twenty or thirty years later, the Tu-95 bombers, which had been in service for half a century, showed that they could continue to carry out missions for the republic.

This time, the pilots were no longer satisfied with watching the clear blue sea, and began to approach the Japanese coastline under the cover of Su-27 fighters, and people could even see the huge body soaring above the sky from the beach. When the F15 fighter took off, the Su-27, hidden in the clouds behind him, suddenly flashed in front of the F15, fiddling with the wings in front of him to warn the other party not to act rashly.

The pilots of the F15 fighter really did not dare to act rashly. How dare Soviet warships shoot their fishermen crossing the border on the spot, and let Japanese fighters directly strafe Tu-95 strategic bombers? Su, who was in charge of escorting, taught them how to behave in 27 minutes.

Japan did not want to meet a war here. Not to mention that no one knows whether in the end the pilots of the Tu-95 bombers will drop nuclear bombs. After warning the Soviet planes that this was Japan's airspace, the Soviet planes, which were even bigger than the Japanese fighters, swaggered away slowly, completely with the look that you have the ability to hit me.

No one dared to engage in a head-on confrontation with the Soviet fighters, and the Japanese pilots were clearly not ready to crush the emperor by doing more daring acts than kamikazes at every turn.

Because the Soviet Tu-95 was a missile carrying a nuclear warhead strike this time, the "nuclear-phobic" mood of the Japanese non-governmental media was ignited in an instant, and the pain of the big explosion in 1945 is an untouchable memory for everyone, and the Soviet Union's move is to let the whole of Japan relive the nightmare of that year. There are people who protest the weakness and inaction of the government, but they do not know that it is not that the Japanese government does not want to manage, but that they simply do not dare to face this formidable adversary.

At this time, the United States, as a mediator, wanted to intervene in mediation, but Yanayev said it righteously. This is a private affair between the Soviet Union and the countries of East Asia, and it is far from the turn of the guys on the other side of the Pacific to teach us how to behave.

The Soviet Union continues to state that as long as Japan does not apologize, then the Soviet Union will continue to send an additional Tu-95 strategic bomber to circle Japan at low altitude every week to make sure that your coastline is within the explosion range of our nuclear bomb. If one day the plane was an accident, then the nuclear bomb explosion caused by it can only be said to be an accident.

Such an unexpected statement made Hosokawa Gohei not sleep well for several days, and as soon as he closed his eyes, he dreamed that Soviet bombers were hovering over his head, like a nightmare lingering.

At the same time, the Red Army's Iron Lady Shigenobu House, which had been deposited for nearly three years, was also unveiled for the first time, announcing that the Japanese Red Army would retaliate against Japan again after three years of revival. This time, he wants to make this Japan burn with the flames of revenge of the Red Army.

The Yasukuni Shrine, which enshrines the ashes of Japanese Class-A war criminals, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries' military aircraft production line, and the Japanese Emperor's Imperial Palace, are all targets of their attacks and retaliation.

Internal worries and external troubles are mixed together, which is enough for the Hosokawa Huxi government to drink a pot. The pressure exerted by Yanayev now is enough, and he is waiting for Prime Minister Hosokawa to obediently come to the door and ask for surrender. (To be continued.) )