Imperial Overlord

: Four hundred and forty-eight recompression compression

Sir John Greerdeer has been really depressed lately. He really wants to quit his job and rest at home for a while.

Now he is standing in front of Prime Minister Churchill, listening indifferently to the various strange things that the other side scolded the army recently.

"I'm really convinced by the weird things your army has done recently! Don't you guys know how to do anything serious?" Churchill looked at Dill, slapped the table and roared.

Recently, Mr. Prime Minister seems to be in a very bad mood, so he patted the table and vented more and more to his subordinates. At first, he would apologize after his temper subsided, but now he is too lazy to use words to appease others.

"You have to distribute food on time under the circumstances of frequent martial law and preparations for war." Churchill used a skeptical tone when he said this.

His eyes, which were equally piercing, were fixed on Sir John Greerdeer, and he withdrew them until he made him uncomfortable.

"Sir! The Germans are frequently mobilizing. If we don't respond, the enemy may seize the opportunity of our slack to land." Sir John Greerdeer swallowed a mouthful of saliva and answered with difficulty.

During this time, it became increasingly difficult to communicate with the Prime Minister, and the pressure on the British Navy from the German Navy increased.

Lütjens went on his third Atlantic hunt in late November, sinking at least 100 British transports. Such losses have made the UK sleepless, even to the point of collapse.

The factories that were finally relocated to the northern mountainous areas began to slow down, and many industrial products were already in short supply. Many weapons in experimental state have been cancelled, and many more have been discontinued due to lack of raw materials.

"Every one of you used the excuse that the Germans landed to perfunctory me! But now I'm talking to you about the material saving system! It's the system!" Churchill seemed to be stimulated, and suddenly burst into a rage.

He shouted hysterically, and his voice echoed throughout the office: "The Army needs to save food consumption! How many times have I said it! You must reduce food consumption as much as possible! Try to reduce it!"

Now, the oil consumed by the United Kingdom can no longer be transported from oil producing areas in Myanmar and other regions. Even if there is, bypass Africa's Cape of Good Hope.

Therefore, in the past ten days, the oil inventory in the UK has begun to decrease seriously. has been reduced to 75% of the original reserve.

You must know that this is November when the Germans have just started to break through the war in the Atlantic Ocean. If the time extends to December, then the British oil reserves will fall to 30% of the original.

This figure seems to have a surplus, but it is the total amount of a country's strategic reserves! Such a low amount of reserves can already be said to be exhausted.

At the same time, because Norway was occupied by Germany, the iron ore needed by the United Kingdom itself was basically imported from the United States. Compared with the previous import route, the distance was farther and the cost was higher. The key is that the time is longer.

Therefore, steel is consumed faster than oil, and the remaining steel reserves in the UK are now only half of what they used to be.

The rare metal copper and other precious metals are also hardly produced in the UK. These things are now in short supply, and even the military industry share cannot be satisfied.

But you must know that these problems are not the most deadly, because they are all industrial resources. Without them, although the war cannot be supported, it will not cause too much trouble.

But seriously, the United Kingdom produces almost no food, and nearly 90% of the wheat it needs can only rely on imports. And more than 80% of meat products also rely on sea transportation.

It's a pity that these things are consumed every day. The British can have no fighter jets or tanks, but they can't leave the food for a moment.

There were not many pre-war food reserves, because no one would have thought that Britain's lifeline would be cut off so easily.

The food shortage directly led to the instability of the domestic situation, but also breeds anti-war sentiment. Many British people began to want to end the war, but their voices were suppressed by Germany's harsh demands for peace.

Before the start of World War II, in order to maintain the operation of the country, the United Kingdom had to rely on sea transport every year to transport about 70 million tons of materials to the mainland, but now this total has been significantly weakened.

There used to be thousands of British transport ships sailing in the Atlantic every day, but now with a large number of ships being sunk, this number has dropped to less than 700.

Churchill had to consider the possibility of losing the war. The quality of his breakfast had already declined significantly. Naturally, he knew how unsatisfactory the lowly people were.

What annoyed him even more was that the Germans blocked almost all channels for peace talks, and the other party seemed to really want to end the country with a complete victory.

"It was originally the navy's responsibility to maintain maritime transport, sir, but now the enemy's fleet is raging at sea, which has seriously affected the operations of our army and air force." Sir John Greerdeer put the responsibility on the navy.

The mention of this made Churchill even more upset. Britain's most powerful navy, and the most invested navy on weekdays, is now being pressed and beaten by the German navy with only a few broken ships. How can this not make him angry?

You must know that the military expenditure of the German Navy in the past few years is not enough for a fraction of the British Navy. Now, with just one aircraft carrier, the entire naval battle situation has been changed. How can this not be a headache.

"I don't care whose responsibility it is, find a way to reduce the total amount of food used by the Army!" Churchill knew that reasoning was not clear, so he took out a rogue trick as a matter of course.

There is an old saying in ancient China, that the emperor is not short of hungry soldiers. Although Sir John Greerdeer did not know this sentence, he still knew a simple truth: if you want a horse to run fast, you must feed it.

Now the Prime Minister Churchill has the idea of ​​military rations, which is obviously shaking the foundation of the army. So Sir John Greerdeer had to stand up and fight for his army.

I saw him approaching Churchill, leaning against his ear, and said, "Mr. Prime Minister, the army is already compressing. But if the soldiers run out of food, there will be trouble!"

The troops mobilized by the United Kingdom now, not counting Myanmar and India and the Middle East, but only the local defenders, there are as many as one million.

It sounds like a huge number, but there are only less than 500,000 who have really experienced war and have been well trained.

These troops were scattered over a long coastline, and some ports and major cities were fortified, and there was really not much left.

And the other so-called army of 500,000 was just assembled, and the existence of the emperor's grain was reluctantly supported. To expect these units to fight alone is completely whimsical.

Even such a unit was a unit that was recruited with great difficulty. If you let them mess up on their own, things are much more complicated.

On the one hand, the British Army does not have a "royal" title. This army is known for causing trouble and killing the emperor. It is not impossible to come up with some extremes at this moment.

On the other hand, without the assistance of these second-rate troops, the main force can only be deployed on the coastal defense line without much mobile force, which is a big taboo for the defense.

"Trouble! Troubled! That's the word again!" Churchill was obviously a little impatient, and he had had enough of the frequent threats of late.

Dowding wanted more pilots and more planes, and Churchill couldn't give them. As a result, Dao Ding said that if this continues, the Air Force will not be able to guarantee operations, and chaos will occur.

This sentence still lingered in Churchill's mind, and as a result, Sir John Greerdeer of the Army came again, and he was naturally furious.

"Breakfast remains the same as half, cut down the supply of meat and eggs, and replace it with more affordable brown bread." Churchill gave his opinion.

It was the second time he had cut the Army's food supply since November, so Sir Dill resisted: "Sir! Cutting the food supply twice a month would be offensive to soldiers."

"What can I do?" Churchill sighed helplessly, and said slowly: "You can arrange this in secret, and cut corners and delay as much as possible."

"Okay, in addition, the training ammunition for the newly added 3 infantry divisions, please urge the logistics department, sir." Taking a step back on the issue of food, Sir John Greerdeer is ready to recover the losses in other areas~ www.wuxiaspot.com~ Ammunition has become in short supply due to insufficient quantity. Sir Dill mustered great courage in order to arm three divisions with ammunition above.

As soon as he heard about the need for supplies again, Churchill felt that one head was about to become two big. He pointed to the shipping schedule on the table, gritted his teeth and said, "See for yourself, if you can find the ammunition to ship you, I'll approve it!"

The ammunition capacity of the United States is being released little by little, but despite the accumulation of ammunition materials on the east coast of the United States, the amount of ammunition that can be shipped to the United Kingdom has been reduced exponentially.

In June and July 1940, most of the materials shipped from the United States to the United Kingdom were ammunition and other ammunition materials. But then in August and September, the situation became dominated by steel.

In order to rush to build the battleship Prince of Wales, and to build more aircraft and anti-aircraft guns, Britain imported a large amount of steel and rare metals that were in short supply at that time.

Although it was already stretched at this time, the loss of the United Kingdom was generally the part of the capacity that was increased after the mobilization of the war, and did not touch the bottom line of the minimum total transportation volume. (.)

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