âSir, itâll be difficult to hold on any further.â (defense minister)
âItâll be difficult?â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Suâs face hardened at the defense ministerâs report.
âBut why?â (Song Jeong-Su)
ââŠThe cumulative damage is far too extensive, sir.â (defense minister)
âWhich section is the worst hit, then?â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su asked with an annoyed face.
Normally, one could criticise the prime minister for getting annoyed by his subordinate making a reasonable report, but it wasnât possible to do that at the moment.
No one would be able to criticise him after taking one look at his face. Maybe all the continuous stream of heavy workload was to blame, but whatever the case might be, Song Jeong-Suâs current state couldnât be described as a normal personâs.
âGodd*mmit.â (Song Jeong-Su)
He thought that the words werenât registering properly in his head, so he abruptly stood up from his chair.
âHang on for a minute.â (Song Jeong-Su)
âSir.â (defense minister)
âWait for me first.â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su headed to the bathroom attached to the conference room. He turned the water on and washed his face.
âI might collapse if Iâm not careful.â (Song Jeong-Su)
He couldnât exert much strength with his body.
Song Jeong-Su had acquired the level of endurance incomparably mightier than regular people all thanks to his experiences in the other world, but even then, the unending stream of heavy workload kept shaving away at his stamina until very little remained.
âAt this rate, others wonât be able to hold on, either.â
As he understood the differences in the level of endurance, he was able to somehow manage the workload among themselves. Yun Yeong-Minâs workload was probably not even a quarter of what Song Jeong-Su had taken on, yet the formerâs state was almost at the doorstep of a cripple by now.
âJust when was the last time I slept properly?â (Song Jeong-Su)
He did take a short nap whenever chances presented themselves, but when combining all the hours he slept for the past week or so, the figure wouldnât even reach ten hours in total. Or at least thatâs what it felt like. Song Jeong-Su might be able to endure that somehow, but for the others, well, the accumulated fatigue had basically turned them into quasi-zombies.
But the biggest issue at hand was that when oneâs stamina fell, their judgement would suffer alongside, as well.
âSomething bad might happen at this rate.â
One decision could have a major impact in the current climate. The current situation called for the leaders to instantly make the best decision available among countless choices branching out like a huge tree. So, having a muddled head could have the absolute worst consequences for everyone in the world.
Song Jeong-Su wiped away the water dripping off his face with a towel and shook his head, before exiting the bathroom.
âMy apologies.â (Song Jeong-Su)
âNo, sir. Itâs fine.â (defense minister)
âAlright, letâs continue from where we left off. You say itâll be difficult to endure any further?â (Song Jeong-Su)
âYes, sir.â (defense minister)
Song Jeong-Su lit his cigarette up and asked back with some difficulty.
âWhat exactly is our issue?â (Song Jeong-Su)
âSir, it feels like finding out what isnât an issue should be our priority at this stage.â (defense minister)
The defense minister sighed at length.
âThe issues with supplies, problems with combat personnel, dilemmas with our positioning⊠If this was normal warfare, Iâd have the army retreated immediately. Sir, itâs now time to make the decision. Either we retreat from the current defensive line, or all of our men will perish in that location.â (defense minister)
âIf we do retreat, what is our alternative?â (Song Jeong-Su)
âSir, we create a new defensive position by Daejeon.â (defense minister)
âLook here.â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su was about to rebuke the defense minister, but instead sighed deeply after noticing the dark circles below the latterâs eyes.
âIâm still your superior officer, arenât I?â (Song Jeong-Su)
âSir? Yes, of course.â (defense minister)
âIn that case, please go.â (Song Jeong-Su)
âSir?â (defense minister)
âGo, and get some sleep. Three hours should suffice.â (Song Jeong-Su)
ââŠBut, Mister Prime Minister?â (defense minister)
âIâm sure you wonât feel happy to hear this coming from me, but my man, you are currently not in a state to make normal decisions.â (Song Jeong-Su)
âBut sir, Iâm perfectly fine.â (defense minister)
âIâm sure you are. Iâm not saying youâve developed abnormalities, but simply that youâre overworked right now. Go and sleep for three hours or so. There is a sleeping quarter next to the conference room. Weâre already wasting precious time like this, so go and take a nap this instant.â (Song Jeong-Su)
âBut, sir. If Iâm not present, the command structure might become chaotic.â (defense minister)
âDirect them all to me.â (Song Jeong-Su)
âBut, sir!â (defense minister)
âEnough.â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su stopped the defense minister.
âIâm not questioning your ability. However, you seriously need to get some sleep. Do you understand what Iâm saying?â (Song Jeong-Su)
The defense minister slowly nodded his head (defense minister).
âBut, how can I fall asleep in our current circumstance, sir?â (defense minister)
âThe moment you lay your head down, sleep will come to you. Because, youâre at your limit already. Whether we die from getting defeated or the lack of sleep will kill us first, itâll still be death either way, so Iâm telling you to and get some sleep. Youâre wasting too much precious time by standing around arguing like this. Weâll finish our discussion in three hoursâ time. Understood?â (Song Jeong-Su)
ââŠYes sir.â (defense minister)
âThen, go get some rest.â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su watched the defense minister stagger back up to his feet and exit from the room, then spat out a long groan.
âEveryoneâs at their limitâŠâ (Song Jeong-Su)
He could only say that itâs a miracle for them to endure for this long. Korea was still standing and fighting back well beyond the Americansâ predictions. Of course, that didnât change the fact that the situation at the frontlines was still rushing headlong towards the absolute worst outcome.
âCanât be helped, since weâre all human.â (Song Jeong-Su)
It wasnât just him and the fellow higher-ups fighting without a break. The combatants at the frontlines were fighting tooth and nail for the past two months without a proper break, either.
Their endurance was indeed a serious problem, but another issue at hand was the fact that they had been exposed to a two month-long merciless slaughterfest without a safety net in place. The higher-ups tried hard to provide as much counselling as possible, but there was not much point in âpsychological healing processâ when the combatants had to pick up their weapons again as soon as the counselling sessions came to an end and start fighting right away.
Incidents of fragging and friendly fire were occurring frequently already.
Not only the incidents of soldiers giving themselves in to despair and firing their weapons indiscriminately occurred every other day, some even madly rushed at the monsters with nothing but their own bodies, as well.
âThatâs why itâs not entirely wrong to suggest that we pull back our defensive line.â (Song Jeong-Su)
It wasnât about searching for a more advantageous positioning, but to give the combatants psychological assurance of safety by escaping from that hellish location. The soldiers should all be shouldering the twin burdens of âif this place is overrun, we will all dieâ and âeveryone behind us will die, tooâ while fighting back, after all.
âIt seems that the losses to the KSF are getting worse by the minute.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âYouâve come, sir?â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su raised his head to look and found Yun Yeong-Min stepping inside the conference room.
âThe office of the General Chief of Staff called earlier to let me know that the losses to the ability users are too extensive to maintain the battle line any further.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
ââŠIâve also heard about that as well.â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su groaned helplessly.
He told the others not to call the president if they could help it, but it seemed that some punks decided to use the presidential hotline nevertheless. Although, Yun Yeong-Min did say that people should utilise the hotline as much as possibleâŠ
âBut, the president is still a human being.â (Song Jeong-Su)
One person might be making only one report at a time, but if all those âsingleâ reports arrived from everywhere and gradually piled up, then Yun Yeong-Min would have to deal with hundreds of calls coming through the hotline every day. Reports that continued to flow in day and night didnât seem to understand the concept of taking a breather at all.
Song Jeong-Su had recently stopped answering the hotline, but some still insisted on calling through it. He was the type to stick to his guns rigorously, but as Yun Yeong-Min was known to allow some leeway, others began avoiding Song Jeong-Su altogether now.
âWe need to come up with a response.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âI know that, sir. ButâŠâ (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su sighed grandly.
If one could think up of a âresponseâ simply by agonising over it the whole day, then none of them would be suffering this badly.
âI never expected the term limited resources would weigh this heavily on us.â (Song Jeong-Su)
The rather obvious-sounding assertion that there was a limit to natural resources and commodities was driving itself home hard in his head.
If one suffered from the shortages of combat personnel, then youâd have to replenish them. Unfortunately, there was no spare manpower available.
This wasnât some video game. You couldnât just start manufacturing more soldiers just because you didnât have enough. Sure, if it was the regular combat personnel, then you could potentially do something as crazy as training the civilians a little in the military basics and shoving them in the frontlines to fill up the shortage in the numbers, but the ability users could not be created by training regular people.
Korea had already reached the limits of its combat personnel supply and had to receive support from both Japan and the United States of America. In such a situation, where would they find extra ability users?â
Whatâs even more absurd was the fact that a portion of Chinese ability users had already been deployed to the Han river frontline. Other countries understood the significance of the Korean battlefront and they somehow managed to squeeze out some spare manpower to send them over.
The self-governing province of Shandong in China had been sending what little ability users they could spare in order to maintain the Korean battlefront.
But now, more was needed?
Just what was he supposed to do about that?
Song Jeong-Su hugged his face in frustration.
âGodd*mmit, just when are they coming back home?!â (Song Jeong-Su)
Now that his anxiety had reached an extreme level, the arrow of criticism had turned towards Yi Ji-Hyuk next.
âWe must not blame them, Mister Prime Minister.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âSir, I know. I know, butâŠâ (Song Jeong-Su)
âEven right now, they should be struggling hard while bearing the heavy burden of the fate of the world on their shoulders. So how can we dare to criticise them?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
âBloody hell, we ainât even some upright sages or something, so whyâŠâ (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su spat out a lengthy groan.
He knew already. But despite knowing, it was also true that he wanted to blame somebody.
âWhile he was leaving, he didnât request us to take care of his family members. He mustâve predicted what might happen to Korea during his absence yet he left without saying anything about his family. You must have understood what that signifies.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
ââŠYes, sir. That I did.â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Su leaned his back on the sofa.
âHowever, we donât have any other method left to us.â (Song Jeong-Su)
They had been enduring, and had to endure some more.
They tried everything they could, and even forcibly appropriated the civilians to manufacture necessary supplies. South Koreaâ current situation was that it had transformed all of its industrial complexes into manufacturing combat supplies in order to support the all-out war efforts.
âAt this rate, itâll be a problem even if we win.â (Song Jeong-Su)
Indeed, the various industries were as good as completely wrecked by now. Even if the war came to an end today, itâd still be hard to predict just how many decades humanity might need to regain the prosperity of the past.
The thing was, itâd be nice if they could get that far.
âWe really need a response. A responseâŠâ (Song Jeong-Su)
Yun Yeong-Min groaned deeply.
âInstead of continuously whining like this, weâŠâ (Yun Yeong-Min)
It was then, someone began knocking on the conference roomâs door.
âEnter.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
The secretary hurriedly strode in and spoke up.
âSirs, itâs a call from the Americans.â
âConnect it through.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Even before the secretary had a chance to leave, Christopher McLarenâs face filled up the giant screen.
â âGood day to you, although I have to say, you all look like crap.â (Christopher McLaren)
âRight back at you.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Yun Yeong-Min studied Christopher McLarenâs face and chuckled hollowly.
The Korean higher-ups somehow were managing to keep some semblance to living humans, but Christopher McLaren looked like he had been fermented for many years or some such.
âWhich isnât surprising, really.â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Considering the amount of information he had to deal with, he wouldnât even have enough to time blink his eyes.
Someone like Yun Yeong-Min would never pull something like that off. Indeed, only someone on the calibre of Christopher McLaren could continue to hold on.
âWhat can we do for you?â (Yun Yeong-Min)
Too bad, pity had to wait as work was work. They even had to decrease the period of time that could be spent on useless thoughts.
â âI called you today because Iâd like to get your permission regarding something.â (Christopher McLaren)
âYou say⊠our permission?â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Suâs face rapidly hardened.
There shouldnât be an American matter that required the Korean leadersâ permission, other than one thing â withdrawing the American forces currently deployed in Korea. But if they did that, the battle line set up in the Korean peninsula would crumble down in an instant.
The frontline was barely being maintained with the assistance from America and Japan. If it werenât for the fighter planes launched from the aircraft carriers out in the oceans as well as the bombers from the Korea-America military airport set up at the rear providing bombardment, the defensive line wouldâve been lost one month ago.
âWe wonât be able to spare you combat personnel.â (Song Jeong-Su)
â âNo, thatâs not it. Itâs unfortunate, but our situation wouldnât improve even if they come here. Sure, it might help a little if we were in a position to quickly transport them through the air, but we just donât have the necessary wherewithal to do that.â (Christopher McLaren)
âIn that case, what do you need our permission for? Is there a matter requiring something like that in our current situation?â (Song Jeong-Su)
Christopher McLaren sucked in a deep breath for a bit, then as his eyes began burning dangerously, he chewed out his next words.
â âWeâd like to deploy a nuclear arsenal on the Korean peninsula.â (Christopher McLaren)
âWhat the f*ck?!â (Song Jeong-Su)
Song Jeong-Suâs eyes quaked powerfully.
< 462. With something powerful and unmissable -2 > Fin.