...Tactical penetration movements, Kong Jie has trained the commando members in the past two days.
The combat team quickly pulled out of formation and moved in under the cover of darkness. Kong Jie and Ye Min, members of the sniper team, were in charge of commanding the entire team.
As a sniper, the requirements for marksmanship are naturally strict. In this regard, Kong Jie once checked Ye Min's marksmanship attribute value. It was as high as 71 points, which was the highest in the entire team. Even compared with himself, it was almost the same.<
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If Kong Jie hadn't added two attributes to his marksmanship before, Ye Min's marksmanship attribute would have been one point higher than Kong Jie's.
The assault team followed Kong Jie, followed by the firepower team, the reconnaissance team and finally the demolition team.
According to convention, in fact, as a sniper, Kong Jie can stay at the rear of the team. However, this is the first time the assault team has performed a special operations mission. Kong Jie was worried, so he personally led the team.
According to the defensive deployment of the Japanese and puppet troops at the Changpo Stronghold detected by the reconnaissance team in the past two days, Kong Jie sketched out the attack route for the attack on the gun towers in advance before taking action.
The route is memorized in the minds of the team members in advance.
Although it was their first time to carry out a special operations mission, they were familiar with the journey. Under the leadership of Kong Jie, the team members quickly approached the barbed wire fence at the outermost edge of the Japanese stronghold.
In the distance, the searchlights on the Japanese gun tower flickered.
According to the reconnaissance team's advance night inspection, it would take about two minutes for the Japanese gun tower's searchlight to patrol the stronghold.
According to the time Kong Jie kept in mind, the Japanese searchlight was about to arrive.
Kong Jie quickly took action and made a downward movement.
These are some simple special operations sign languages that Kong Jie asked the team members to remember in the past two days.
The team members who had been paying attention to Kong Jie's orders reacted quickly, spreading out and crawling on the ground.
On the turret.
The Japanese sentry was on the third floor of the turret, using a high-wattage searchlight to detect the movement around the stronghold.
Of course, it's just as usual. After all, repeating such a boring thing every day will also make the kid numb.
The searchlight light passed over the area where Kong Jie and his group were prostrate, and the Japanese sentries did not notice any flaws. Like the surrounding dark ground that had been swept away from the shooting boundary, no light was reflected back from that area.
The distance is too far. In fact, the Japanese sentry on the turret uses a searchlight to look around. What can arouse his alertness is mostly an object that is different from the surrounding dark land and can reflect the light back.
For example, lenses, helmets, and even polished guns can reflect weak light, which will immediately alert the Japanese sentries.
The Japanese sentries who have been stationed in the gun tower for a long time have already known everything about the stronghold. Whenever a bright spot with reflected light appears, they will immediately adjust the shooting range that they have memorized. With their skilled marksmanship, they can almost point to where.
Where to hit.
This is extremely dangerous for those who want to sneak attack the Japanese artillery towers.
There was a similar situation in the Changpo stronghold. Some guerrillas just wanted to reconnoiter the blockhouse at night, but they were accidentally exposed. The Japanese shot in the dark. The next day, several Tubal Road corpses appeared outside the blockhouse.
The vigilance of the Japs in the turrets is evident.
This is also the reason why few conventional troops can attack the Japanese artillery towers even though they know they are there.
Kong Jie had naturally expected this, so before setting off, Kong Jie asked the team members to smear mud all over their bodies, even on their faces and necks.
The team members, who were almost the same color as the ground, were all crawling on the ground, with their potentially reflective guns tightly pressed under their bodies. Naturally, they were not aware of the Japanese searchlights passing by.
In the distance, seeing the Japanese lights passing by the area where regiment leader Kong Jie and his party were, the hearts of First Battalion Commander Wang Leihu and Second Battalion Commander Shen Quan almost rose to their throats.
Fortunately, there was no danger and no gunshots were fired.
After the Japanese's investigation, there was another two-minute pause. Kong Jie slowly stood up and ordered the team to move forward in sign language.
Soon approaching the Japanese barbed wire fence, Kong Jie stretched out his hand, and the team member behind him handed over the scissors prepared in advance.
Kong Jie lay on his side on the ground, carefully stuck the scissors' blade on the wire of the barbed wire, then slowly applied force without cutting, leaving the last trace, and then gently twisted it with both hands.
Quietly let the iron wire break from it.
This is to prevent the scissors from making a clicking sound when cutting the wire, alerting the Japanese in the turret.
In this dark night, the slightest sound can be heard far away.
After another round of Japanese searchlight inspections, it took Kong Jie three full minutes to cut a large hole in the barbed wire fence, away from the minefield, allowing an adult cat to pass at the waist.
But this is not enough. Just behind the barbed wire fence, there is a trench more than one meter wide, which is filled with water.
The little devil is cunning. This is to prevent the guerrillas from cutting the barbed wire and making a sneak attack, so they fill the trench with water in advance, so that once the guerrilla fighters fall in and make a splashing sound, the devil will immediately be alerted.
In some strongholds, the Japanese secretly hung some hidden bells on the barbed wire fence to alert them.
Fortunately, Kong Jie had already thought of ways to solve these problems one by one when he was reconnaissance for the gun tower intelligence.
The team member behind him quietly handed over a wooden board of sufficient length and width, and Kong Jie laid the entire board across the trench.
Then, while the Japanese were exploring, the cat bent over and walked through the trench with the help of wooden planks.
In this way, Kong Jie successfully passed through the barbed wire fence, and after crossing the trench, he turned back as a warning to cover other team members' passage.
Kong Jie also led the commando team members through the simulation exercise of breaking through the barbed wire fence and trench blockade of the Japanese stronghold, so the team members were familiar with it and passed smoothly one by one.
After all the team members successfully crossed the barbed wire fence and trench, Kong Jie temporarily hid the wooden planks, and then led the team to use the cover of the night to quickly avoid the minefield from the flanks and approach the Japanese artillery tower.
All the best.
Night, around 1:52.
Kong Jie used the tip of his bayonet to gently open the wooden door of the Japanese forthouse.
Immediately afterwards, the commando members filed in quietly.
Looking at the turret in front of them, the team members were all secretly excited. They had successfully entered such a heavily guarded turret.
The first thing to deal with next is naturally the Japanese sentries.
In the middle of the night, except for the sentries, most of the other Japanese and puppet troops were sleeping soundly. There were not many of them. There was only one squad of Japanese soldiers, plus some Imperial Army troops. As long as the Japanese sentry soldiers could be dealt with silently, they would be able to deal with the sleeping soldiers.
It would be easy for the Japanese and puppet troops to capture them.
Kong Jie's technique was well-trained. He covered his mouth and nose with his left hand and cut his throat with a bayonet in his right hand.
There are only two Japanese sentries, one on the second and third floors of the turret.
Just in case, Kong Jie took action personally and took the lead in removing the Japanese sentries on the second floor.
The last thing left was the Japanese sentry on the third floor who was looking around with a searchlight.
After using sign language to signal the commando members to leave half of the Japanese and puppet troops in charge of the main store on the second floor, Kong Jie led the others to quietly move to the third floor of the blockhouse...