Working as a police officer in Mexico-Chapter 1842 - 801: Happy New Year!!!_6
Capรญtulo 1842: Chapter 801: Happy New Year!!!_6
โRPG-7, AT4, AK-74, communication jamming equipment,โ Graham listed one by one, โThese are not things you can get from an ordinary black market. There are countries supporting you. Mexico? Libya? Or that group of Madmen from the Phoenix Society?โ
โYou guess.โ ๐๐ซ๐๐ฒ๐จ๐๐๐๐๐ฏ๐๐น.๐๐จ๐บ
โI am negotiating seriously, Mr. Calum McDonald. If there is national support behind you, it changes everything. Itโs no longer an internal conflict, but an attack on UK sovereignty by foreign forces. We could invoke NATOโs Article 5 to involve the entire Alliance.โ
The threat was stark and blatant.
But Calum McDonald laughed, โThen you should go ahead and invoke it. Let the Americans come to Scotland to suppress the uprising, let the Germans and French see how you deal with people demanding independence. What a grand international image, right?โ
Grahamโs face darkened.
The negotiation was at an impasse.
Just then, Grahamโs phone vibrated. He glanced at it, his expression shifting slightly.
โI need to take a call.โ He got up and walked to the window, speaking in a low voice.
Two minutes later, Graham returned, his face extremely grim, โJust now, an army camp on the outskirts of Inverness was attacked. Rocket attack, two soldiers dead, seven injured. The attacker claimed to be the โSecond Battalion of the True Scottish Freedom Army.โ
Calum McDonald was stunned, โThose arenโt our men.โ
โArenโt they?โ
Graham stared at him, โWhat a coincidence. While weโre negotiating, another โTrue Scottish Freedom Armyโ is acting elsewhere. It seems youโre not unified internally, orโฆ have other factions usurped you?โ
Calum McDonaldโs mind raced.
Second Battalion? They only had one team, where did a second battalion come from?
Unlessโฆ
โSomeone is impersonating us,โ he realized, โThey want the negotiation to fail, and the war to escalate.โ
โWho?โ Graham pressed, โYour โalliesโ? Or do your โsponsorsโ think the negotiations are progressing too slowly and decided to fan the flames?โ
Calum McDonald didnโt answer. He realized he was caught in the middle: London wanted to calm the situation quickly, but the sponsors behind him wanted greater chaos.
And he and his brothers were just pawns on the chessboard.
โNegotiations are paused.โ Graham stood up, โOnce youโve unified internally, or once weโve eliminated all the rebels, we can talk again. But remember, from now on, every soldier that dies decreases the survival chances of your captives by one degree.โ
He walked towards the door, then turned back, โBy the way, Mr. Calum McDonald, please tell your McTavish behind-the-scenes: you might feel youโre fighting for Scotland, but in someโs eyes, youโre just a dispensable tool. Think of Duncan, think of Calum, think of the soldiers who died in Inverness today. Who truly profits? Is it you? Or those hiding in the shadows, never showing their faces?โ
The door closed.
โฆ
Same day, late night, Mexico City, National Security Council.
Victor clenched a cigarette between his teeth.
โWho carried out the Inverness attack?โ he asked.
Admiral Kitchener brought up the report, โNot our people. Reinhardt confirmed that all Hydra groups in Europe are on standby and received no action orders.โ
โPhoenix Society?โ
โPossible. Orโฆ it was the British themselves.โ
Everyone in the room looked at him.
Kitchener explained, โFalse flag operation. Itโs a tactic their intelligence agencies often use historically, pretending to be the enemy to launch attacks, creating excuses to escalate military actions. The timing of the Inverness attack was too coincidental, right during negotiations. Moreover, according to onsite reports, the attackers used the same weapons as the A9 Road, but the tactics were much cruder, more like a staged performance to leave evidence.โ
โThey want to prove that โrebels are untrustworthyโ, thus abandoning negotiations and going all out,โ Casare interjected, โThen they can legitimately suppress, even declare a state of emergency in Scotland, suspending the autonomous government.โ
Victor walked to the map, โIf the UK fully suppresses, how long can the Scottish rebels last?โ
โWith current equipment and manpower, at most two weeks,โ Kitchener stated matter-of-factly, โBut ifโฆ we offer more support?โ
โWhat level of support?โ
โAnti-air missiles, like Stingers. Anti-tank missiles, like Milans. Plus another batch of AKs and ammunition. With these, they can split into small units, fight guerrilla warfare, and drag the British army into prolonged attrition. Just like Afghanistan versus the Soviet Union.โ
Victor pondered.
โAnd the risk?โ Bramo asked, โIf the weapons are traced back to usโฆโ
โThrough a third country,โ Kitchener said, โThings are chaotic there now, arms depot management is virtually non-existent. Weโll fund it; the local warlords will supply and ship via civilian vessels to the West Coast of Scotland. Even if intercepted, the trail will lead only to Ukraine at most.โ
โThe British wonโt believe it.โ
โThey donโt need to believe, they just need to suspect,โ Victor finally spoke, โSuspicion is enough. Suspicion leads to overreaction; overreaction heightens tensions. The more festering Scotlandโs wound becomes, the weaker the UK gets.โ
He turned, โApprove the โHighland Assistanceโ second phase. Provide Stingers and Milans, donโt be stingy, proxy wars are built on foundations!โ
โWhat about McTavishโs side?โ Casare asked, โReinhardt reports the negotiations collapsed.โ
โTell him new weapons are on their way. But this time, there are conditions: they must publicly declare โall foreign powers to respect the self-determination rights of the Scottish people,โ particularly criticizing โthe UKโs colonial actions in North America and other regions.โ We must tie the Scottish issue to our international narrative.โ
โWill he agree?โ
โHe has no choice.โ
Either carry on fighting with the weapons we provide, or get wiped out by the British. Once revolutionaries pick up a gun, they can never put it down. This is Truth.โ
โAnd,โ Victor added one last thing, โNotify our contacts in the United Nations to prepare a report on โUK human rights violations in Scotland.โ No need for conclusive evidenceโa few photos and witness statements will suffice. Bring it up in the Security Council; even if vetoed, it can create public pressure.โ
โThis is a full-scale offensive,โ Bramo marveled.
โWar is never confined to the battlefield,โ
Victor sat down, โPublic opinion, diplomacy, economy, intelligenceโฆ every link is a battlefield. The UK used to excel at this game; now itโs our turn.โ
He looked at the world clock on the wall.
London Time, January 1, 1997, zero hour three minutes.
New Year had arrived.
โHappy New Year, gentlemen.โ Victor raised his glass, โHereโs to us in the new yearโฆ spilling more of the Old Empireโs blood.โ
In the room, glasses clinked softly.
Outside the window, the night sky over Mexico City lit up with fireworks.
And six thousand kilometers away in the Scottish Highlands, McTavish looked at the encrypted message just received on his satellite phone:
โNew Yearโs gift has shipped. Expected arrival within seven days. P.S.: True freedom costs, and the price is always blood. Good luck. โYour unnamed friend.โ
He deleted the message and stepped out of the cabin.
The snow had stopped; the night sky was clear, and the Milky Way stretched across the heavens.
In the distance, in the direction of Inverness, faint firelight lit up the horizon.
The war had just begun.
โฆ







