Chapter 1035: Chapter 414 Air Compression Chapter 1035: Chapter 414 Air Compression From the sudden appearance of a meteor shower to the destruction of all 20 Japanese combat aircraft in the sky by missiles, the entire process was incredibly brief, lasting less than thirty seconds.

Witnessing the deadly blossoms continuously blooming in the sky, the soldiers below were stunned with wide eyes and gaping mouths. They couldn't understand why there were so many missiles, and why they had launched a simultaneous attack on their fighter jets. After all, this was Tokyo, the place with the strongest air defense in Japan. Their planes had been attacked here–could it be that the sky was now filled with enemy combat aircraft, and that Japan was about to face another horrific bombing?

As these soldiers, who had grown up in peacetime, were recalling the fear of the Japanese skies being dominated by the Allied forces during World War II, the commander of the Japanese forces was the first to snap out of it. He shouted hoarsely, “Attack, attack now… deploy the air defense positions, intercept the incoming missiles, find the enemy planes that ambushed our fighters…”

The Japanese commanders had realized the danger and issued the correct commands. Unfortunately, due to the army's long peacetime, the soldiers were slow to respond out of fear and failed to enter combat mode immediately upon hearing the orders; naturally, they could not take action as instructed.

Almost simultaneously with the complete destruction of the Japanese fighter jets at high altitude, the remaining missiles began to enter a high-speed dive. The second wave of the missile rain targeted the eight Apache armed helicopters at low altitude.

After hearing the frantic alarm from the onboard radar, the Apache armed helicopter pilots finally knew what to do. But their response was too slow, and they only managed to release the decoy flares before being struck by the incoming high-speed missiles, which exploded them in mid-air. The decoy flares they released were of no use.

In just an instant, the eight formidable Apache armed helicopters were all blown up, and not a single pilot escaped. The wreckage of the burning helicopters plummeted to the ground, and their extensive ammunition underwent explosive disintegration upon impact, causing a second violent explosion on the bridge below, engulfing the whole bridge in flames. Amid the sea of fire, Japanese soldiers could be vaguely seen desperately struggling.

Upon receiving the attack command from the Japanese military commander, the Destroyer, seated cross-legged on the obstructive rocks, was targeted by the front armored vehicles. But just as the Japanese soldiers were about to open fire, they experienced a moment of dizziness. When they regained their sight, they found that the Destroyer on the rocks had disappeared, and their barrage of bullets had shattered the empty boulders…

The ground anti-aircraft combat platforms rapidly deployed, the anti-aircraft radar scanned swiftly, locked onto the incoming missiles, and launched an anti-aircraft missile. However, before this anti-aircraft missile could hit its target, the air defense position was struck by two large missiles from above, causing a violent explosion that killed all nearby operators.

Just then, the remaining rain of missiles descended to the ground, striking armored vehicles, combat tanks, and troop transport vehicles below. These targets, vulnerable in defense, burst into violent explosions upon hit, causing heavy casualties among the Japanese soldiers.

The missile rain conducted a wide area group attack, first wiping out the fighter jets at high altitude, then taking out the armed helicopters at low altitude, which, upon crashing to the ground, inflicted massive casualties on the Japanese soldiers. As the armored targets on the ground were also destroyed in large numbers, the soldiers lucky enough to be alive were completely panic-stricken, having forgotten all their training manuals and clueless about what to do.

These Japanese soldiers were nothing like their World War II predecessors–they lacked any real combat experience, and having lived comfortably for too long, had become especially fearful of death. While they might achieve a great victory in an easy battle relying on their sophisticated weapons, once they faced adversity, they would become disoriented and collapse quickly.

After the Japanese army's armored vehicles were totally annihilated, the remaining groups of missiles turned their targets to the ground, hitting the scattered fleeing Japanese soldiers. The missiles almost simultaneously struck targets on the bridge; by the time the explosions ceased, the bridge was in ruins, with no more sounds from the frantically running and shouting Japanese soldiers.

From the discovery of the Destroyer on the rocks blocking the bridge to the inexplicable annihilation of the main Japanese forces, the whole process took less than three minutes. In these three minutes, the Japanese army failed to hit any target, while they themselves were completely destroyed. The entire combat scene blazed with fire, but curiously, the bulletproof car in the middle of the convoy was unscathed, seemingly untouched even as the surrounding area was engulfed in a sea of fire.

Inside the bulletproof car, Haruji Harada, who had witnessed the entire attack, had lapsed into a daze. He couldn't believe what he had just seen–this was the immensely powerful Japanese military, equipped with the world's most advanced weapons, yet wiped out instantly. And where had the Destroyer gone? Why had his car not been attacked?

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