Chapter 642: The Iron Armada
Chapter 642: The Iron Armada
The sun had barely begun its descent when the dark silhouette of the Kaiser Wilhelm der Große loomed into view.
Bruno stood at the edge of the carrier’s flight deck, coat whipping in the wind, boots planted firm against the steel beneath him.
The roar of turboprop engines echoed overhead as a formation of Focke-Wulf PTL-7 strike fighters screeched across the sky, banking hard over the Adriatic like hawks returning to the glove.
Below and around him stretched the heart of the German Reich’s naval supremacy: the High Seas Fleet.
Two fully equipped carrier strike groups, centered around the Wilhelm and her sister ship Ludwig der Eiserne, both nuclear-powered behemoths with three runways apiece, each capable of launching sustained strikes against any enemy airspace on Earth.
At their flanks cruised an escort line of retrofitted Admiral Hipper-class missile cruisers, their sleek steel hulls bristling with flak turrets, SAM batteries, and early phased-array radar arrays masked under dull gray cladding.
More modern vessels followed in their wake, guided missile frigates bearing the naval ensign of the Reich.
Their vertical launch cells preloaded with surface-to-air and anti-ship munitions, while Type XIX hunter-killer submarines slipped like shadows beneath the waves.
Somewhere even deeper, the slow-moving, silent monsters of the Reich glided: ballistic missile submarines carrying thermobaric payloads.
“She’s holding steady, Marshal,” said Admiral Falkenmeyer, his scarred face cracking into a rare smile as he handed Bruno a sealed dossier.
“Combat readiness at 96%. We could sustain three simultaneous regional naval conflicts without resupply. Six with coordinated logistics.”
Bruno didn’t even open the dossier. He already knew the figures.
“And the strike wings?”
“Two squadrons of PTL-7s per carrier. One of the torpedo bombers. And our new turbojet prototypes are nearly through field testing.”
Bruno nodded, gaze fixed on the sea. “Then she is ready. The world has grown too used to American fleets patrolling its oceans uncontested. It’s time they remembered what it means to fear the cross.”
Falkenmeyer said nothing.
Down on the deck, engineers guided truboprop torpedo bombers into position, ordnance teams loading smart torpedoes and cluster munitions into their bellies with a speed born of brutal routine.
These were not peacetime sailors. This was not a fleet made for parades or diplomatic flexing.
This was a war machine.
Bruno stepped back from the edge, turned toward the admiral, and spoke with quiet finality.
“Issue standing orders to all commanders. From the Pacific to the Atlantic, our navy now sails under total wartime posture. Full readiness. No further warnings. Any vessel impeding our sphere of control will be treated as hostile.”
He turned, coat swirling behind him like a banner.
“Tell the world the Reich is done playing by their rules. The Iron Armada has awoken.”
—
The announcement came at dawn.
As the first rays of sun broke over the North Sea, the High Seas Fleet began its maiden voyage from Wilhelmshaven.
The waters churned beneath the weight of Germany’s rebirth, not as a continental titan, but as a true maritime hegemon.
It was not simply a deployment. It was a demonstration.
Two carrier strike groups, each centered around a nuclear-powered supercarrier, cut through the surf, flanked by angular, retrofitted Admiral Hipper-class missile cruisers and newly commissioned guided missile destroyers.
These ships carried no towering naval guns or ornate flags.
They were built for war in the new age: flak turrets and early surface-to-air missile cells, flak stations, radar-absorbent plating, and integrated communication nodes that linked the entire fleet through encrypted, quantum-coded radio signals.
From above, Allied reconnaissance flights tried to make sense of the composition. But it was unlike anything they recognized.
Where were the battleships? The dreadnoughts? The bulky forms of traditional gun power?
Instead, the carriers launched squadrons of sleek Focke-Wulf PTL turboprops, fighter-bombers with retractable torpedo racks and variable pitch rotors, capable of STOL operations on water or land.
Aerial photography showed silhouettes that looked alien, some analysts mistook the deck configurations for experimental platforms or cargo transports.
But what truly concerned British and American intelligence were the shadows below the waves.
The submarines didn’t show up on any off their current means of detection. Not reliably.
Crafted in the sealed naval shipyards of Stettin and Kiel, these hunter-killers were derived from the ultra-secret Type XXIX prototypes: rounded, teardrop-shaped hulls designed for silent running and extended underwater deployment.
With advanced electric propulsion, magnetic field dampeners, and layered acoustic insulation, they were functionally invisible to most passive arrays.
French analysts dubbed them Les Silencieux. The Americans, with more grim humor, called them “the phantoms of Wilhelmshaven.”
As the fleet pushed into the Atlantic, neutral tankers and cargo ships reported sightings, but none could agree on what they saw.
A ship that looked like a cruiser without any deck guns. A destroyer that left no wake. A flash of light under the waves. And then nothing.
At the heart of the command bridge aboard Kaiser Friedrich, Bruno watched the tactical maps update in real-time. His voice was calm, deliberate.
“Let the world look. Let them try to understand what they see. In time, they will realize, there are no equals at sea.”
In Washington and London, the mood was tense.
Naval observers debated whether Germany had abandoned battleship doctrine entirely, or if these new carriers were hiding some unknown function.
One MI6 officer muttered aloud: “It’s not a navy. It’s a force-projection engine. A goddamned ghost armada.”
Back aboard the carrier, Bruno stood with Admiral Rehfeldt on the outer catwalk as one of the Focke-Wulf squadrons completed a flyby overhead.
The Reich no longer needed to dominate with numbers.
Only with certainty.
Bruno had engineered the ability to dominate the future of war on land, at sea, and in the air.
And now, he was only revealing his toys to the world in a way that led them to believe they were just prototypes.
Why was he doing this? Because he knew as the years passed and they grew closer to war. There was nothing anyone could do to match his advantage.
This, simply put, was psychological torture to those who knew already their nations were headed to war with the Reich.