Talk:United States Navy/@comment-13740085-20150306002116

- Gulf of Mexico, USS Pennsylvania -

Admiral Guys fleet, all ships rigged for silent running, slips through the evening waters off the Texan coast. At the head of the fleet, the battleship Pennsylvania, followed by her sisters Texas and Georgia, leads the formation. Jammers, the most advanced in the fleet, hide the radar cross sections of the vessels. As the sun slips beneath the horizon, a radar technician on USS Retaliation, the veteran battleships' name now more relevant than ever, spots what Admiral Guy was sent for: a detachment of the IKN fleet blockading Galveston.

Guy had nothing against the IKN, in fact he quite admired them. The same couldn't be said for some other members of the coalition. It was just texas was chosen for this mission.

On Guys orders, the big guns of the veteran battleships swung towards the unsuspecting blockaders. At once, scores of heavy caliber shells rained towards the ships. Many of them never knew what hit them. Some, a testament to the IKNs training, returned fire. Several shells hit the American warships, but the 700 meter+ Ships absorbed them. Submarines under the blockading fleet jam communications, muffling any call for help.

As the guns fall silent, behemoth transports move up from behind, dropping thousands of troops and tanks into Texas. The main prong of this counter attack is aimed for Houston, looking to liberate Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Missouri.

For now, Admiral Guys fleet, now reinforced with the equally-veteran super warships Deaths Scythe, Freyrs Sword, and Odins Spear, continues its silent thrust, aiming for every blockading fleet in the Gulf. Within an hour of the attack, even the American forces landing in Texas can't track Guys fleet, and they know exactly what to look for.

But Guy knows the odds of an equally successful attack drops dramatically after each battle, but he likes a challenge.