Chapter 1234 1235 Sentencing

After reading the report, which had passed through several modes of transmission along the way, Accardo sneered, and then threw the paper to Luftwaffe Field Marshal Catherine, who was accompanying him. As a direct use of the atomic bomb, Catherine had to personally observe the actual power of this weapon in order to use it more intuitively in actual combat.

Catherine took the report handed to him by the Führer, and after only a few lines, she raised her head and looked at Accardo. His eyes were full of shock and anger, and there were three points of puzzlement and doubt—had this Japanese had a brain in the water, and he was playing such a dangerous provocation at the time when Germany was at its strongest?

If it had been a month earlier, Catherine would have only suggested retaliating by bombing northern Japan, and even using military bases in the Far Eastern Republic would have guaranteed only minor retaliatory bombing of some unimportant military areas of Japan. But now that Germany has mastered the superweapon that only the devil can possess, the Japanese are simply giving the Third Reich a legitimate opportunity to carry out the most inhumane nuclear retaliation.

Just when Germany was about to find an unlucky country and engage in nuclear blackmail to end the war faster, Japan, a lovely country, raised its little hand in the crowd and voluntarily signed up...... Catherine didn't know whether to say that Japan was fearless or that the country was stupid.

Without waiting for Catherine to say anything, Accardo had already turned to Anna on the side and instructed, "Arrange a car and return to Egypt immediately...... I'm going to fly back to Italy and fly straight back to Berlin from there. In 10 hours, I will speak at the Führer's residence, and I will make them pay for this provocation by Japan!"

After saying this, Accardo turned around and walked in front of the Chen couple, and said to the two of them with a grim face: "Unfortunately, I can't talk to you in detail because of Japan's provocative behavior, and I have to hurry back to Berlin...... This time, Japan used chemical weapons against Japan in violation of international conventions, and I would like to condemn this disregard for humanity before retaliating and retaliating. ”

Provocation? Provocation? Provocation against Germany? Are the Japanese stupid? Diplomat Chen felt that his brain was a little out of his way -- just like when we in this time and space suddenly heard that the **** slapped ******, and then scolded and scolded the United States while beating it. The smoke of the atomic bomb in the distance has not yet cleared, okay? Ladies and gentlemen of Japan, do you want to rush to death?

With an order, the SS soldiers hurriedly left the semi-underground observation bunker with the Führer, and the officers on one side shouted the slogan "Long live the Führer" while Accardo was going out. Everyone talked about it, and soon all the guests who came here knew about the Japanese dropping chemical weapons in the Far East.

Then there was a common conversation about the not-so-close friendship between them, and everyone felt sorrow for Japan, and on the topic of "poor Japanese", Italy, France, England, Siberia, and even China soon became close friends.

The only ones who didn't say anything were two American newspaper reporters who had been specially invited from Israel, and they stood awkwardly in the corner with their cameras, as if they were two clowns forgotten by the world. Before they came, they were worried that they would not be able to get any decent news back from the Axis powers, but now they were worried about whether the beautiful city of their hometown would disappear from the face of the earth forever one night.

When they returned, they had to write a true report based on what they had seen, but this was the most troublesome thing for them: What were they going to say? Did they say that the enemy had a weapon that could destroy an entire city at once? After the huge bomb exploded, the mushroom cloud could be clearly seen ten kilometers away?

The United States is still fighting against Germany, does this war need to be won or lost in the end? And in the face of a country like Germany, which has nuclear weapons, will victory really belong to the United States in the end? So many questions filled the minds of the two people, so that they could no longer mourn for distant Japan with the guest envoys in front of them.

As Accardo's convoy left the observation base, several old trucks were parked at the door, and beside them, black men prostrate on the ground dressed in Wehrmacht men bowed to Accardo's motorcade as they sped away. Among these black men, the one who took the lead was a general Fercumman who was calling for wind and rain in Africa.

Until Acardo's death of illness much later, Africa was under the de facto control of the Third Reich, and even after General Vercumman's grandson took over the reins, he did not have the courage to give birth to the slightest rebellion, which can also be said to be the shadow left in the hearts of the Vercummen family after the nuclear test in 1939.

Without a pause, Accardo hurried back to his home base of Berlin as fast as he could, where he stepped off the plane to see the German propaganda minister waiting at the airport, Fanny with her hair in a bun. The latter did not say much, but after a wink that both men understood, handed the Führer a prepared speech: "All ready, my Führer! ”

Walking into the live broadcast room of the Führer's mansion, looking at the huge German flag set up behind the desk and the eagle emblem on the height, Accardo sat on the chair that only he could sit on. He didn't open the speech in front of him, he just stared at the camera lens in front of him, staring at it with a pair of fierce eyes.

Then, instead of reading the prepared speech, he threw it aside. He spoke slowly, and spoke into the microphone in a deep voice: "Not long ago, I got an astonishing news that in the far east, the country of Japan actually used chemical weapons against our volunteers on the conventional battlefield!"

"I've heard of people being injured and people dying as a result...... This makes me very sad and deplorable! I, the German Führer, Accardo Rudolf, struggled to survive under poison gas during the First World War...... Everyone should still remember that this was my experience on the battlefield back then! To this day, I still have the scars of being burned by the poisonous gas on my hands, and I still remember the stinging sensation!"

"Then, Germany was defeated, leaving me with not only pain, humiliation and boundless darkness...... In order not to let my people experience this kind of suffering again, I have embarked on the path of today, and I have led you all the way to the present!"

"Now, a group of despicable people have gone so far as to massacre my people with the inhumane and unrecognized power of chemical weapons, in defiance of international law, and this makes me very angry! I won't say anything like protest, I'm very sorry, I'm not highly educated, and I've long forgotten how to spell the word protest......"

"But I have my own way of dealing with the enemy, and where are all those who once inflicted their misery on the German people today? Stalin, Churchill, where are they? I can only regret telling the Japanese that I will settle accounts with them, and make clear the blood debt they owe us today!"

"I, the head of the Third Reich, hereby solemnly pronounce the verdict: The Axis powers have sentenced 1,700 Japanese military personnel, including Hideki Tojo and Seishiro Itagaki to death, for violating international law, using chemical weapons without authorization, and violating humanitarianism...... Now, soldiers of the Third Reich of the Greater Germany, go and carry out my sentence!"

In the Far Eastern Republic, the field hospital near Nomenkan was full of wounded people who had been seriously injured by Japanese poison gas. These people were lying on their hospital beds, moaning in pain. Even with the protection of gas masks, a large number of soldiers were injured by the sudden disaster, and the Japanese army took advantage of the victory to counterattack and even pushed the position back to the vicinity of Nomenkan.

At this moment, the surging voice of the Führer sounded on the radio: "I, the Führer of the Third Reich, hereby solemnly pronounce the verdict: The Axis powers have sentenced 1,700 people, including Hideki Tojo and Seishiro Itagaki to death for violating international law, using chemical weapons without authorization, and violating humanitarianism...... Now, soldiers of the Third Reich of the Greater Germany, go and carry out my sentence!"

Accompanied by the interference of electricity, the intermittent sound echoed throughout the field hospital, and a strong emotion filled the quiet hospital, as if waiting, waiting for a momentary burst.

"Long live the great Führer Accardo, Rudolph!" a lightly wounded man with bandages on his hands suddenly burst into tears, waving his arms and shouting excitedly: "For the Führer! for Germany!

"Fight for the Führer!fight!" all the lightly wounded shouted excitedly, their Führer had been gassed as much as they were, but he still led the German people to their feet, led them to their feet! and, for the wounded, the chariots of the Third Reich would start again...... What a great encouragement, what a thoughtful care!

"For the Führer! we will carry out the death sentences of those men!" A radio echoed Accardo's voice in a covered bunker on a smoke-filled Far Eastern position. On the battlefield, the German grenadiers, holding their weapons tightly, also let out a roar that resounded through the sky: "For the Führer!