1968 Notes
January
- The tactical nuclear use at the end of 1967 was inadvertent rather than by design, so both the US and Soviets are interested in de-escalation
- The boy dragonslayer is both an example of a developing tendency and the seed for a future story
- The capture of VC plans at Pleiku is an OTL event
- Japanese SSNs are the culmination of a developing plot line starting in 1960’s From Sea to Shining Sea
- The missing subs in the Med were unconnected in @, but here are the work of a monstrous creature possessed of an enhanced intelligence and malign intent…
- Star Trek makes an earlier transition to the silver screen, with a different script. I’ll have to do a write up on DE Star Trek
- The two NATO/Western standing naval forces are fully fledged carrier strike groups rather than destroyer-frigate forces of @. They are based around the CVs and BBs of navies other than Britain, France and the USA
- Laos is a different, more open front in the broader Indochina war than @, with no treaty prohibition on open US intervention
- Dropping a battleship on Haiphong is an attempt to cause devastating damage without crossing the nuclear threshold. It serves to show that not every hairbrained plan turns out ti be a masterstroke
- Edward Rogers is an entirely original character and a sign that Australian politics will be different on both sides
- Barton’s Guildhall speech serves several purposes: it sends the message that Britain is very much still in the global superpower game EoS, albeit that having to say so out loud wouldn’t have been necessary even a generation ago; it is a statement of resolute intent for a variety of regional players and opponents; and it is a bit of an authorial hat tip to what Wilson was up to at this point, illustrating the divergence of strategy, which will drive force composition
- A very old Tesla emerges with the result of decades of research, which will play into satellite power transmission, as well as other areas. In his absence, his work had been better known for its ray gun applications
- Khe Sanh is bigger, more decisive and more direct a battle, akin to how it was portrayed in American propaganda flicks of the time
- The Orion/Kosmos race provided an interesting challenge by nature of physics, but does provide some degree of captivating the terrestrial audience
- Whilst the mere debut of the Ford Escort doesn’t seem much, it is what it is accompanied by that counts. There is more British competition and a fair whack more quality control to boot, as well as an absence of the restive labour union problems of @. The British car industry of 1968 is no more or less moribund or sickly than the French, German, Italian, Austrian-Hungarian or Japanese at the time and is holding its own. In the long term, Germany and Japan are both seemingly going to outproduce Britain, but differing patterns of international trade and protection mean that they won’t do so in the same manner, style and consequence as @
- The French troubles begin organically, but are then harnessed by elements in the military and their political backers to build up to something
- Time Life’s Foods of the World, a magnificent artefact of social history on its own in @, is larger, reflecting the more distinct regional cuisines of some areas. I actually have a list if anyone cares about food history
- Argentina has one new modern carrier and another on the way, one fully modern battleship plus another coming, new cruisers, heavy jet bombers, ballistic missile plans and their own tank under development. It is as if there is an arms race going on in South America
- Meat consumption is markedly higher, reflecting greater affluence
- The new Boeing spaceplane is the first designed for the full hop to Luna or Minerva; the others are more suited to the first half of it, or out to the big space stations in geostationary orbit
February
- The Soviet light carriers were the vestige of Stalin Sr's post WW2 naval expansion and have rapidly become obsolete; their air group in the early 60s was perhaps 18 older and smaller jets. There was some consideration to converting them to amphibious helicopter carriers, but their relative quality made conversion a non-economical proposition. There were some fears from Western intelligence that they would be transferred for that purpose to the GDR or Poland, but these turned out to be baseless; the WP are looking for amphibious assault ships, but larger ones that can deploy a decent number of rotodynes
- Different royal weddings are still being used as an arm of statecraft
- Sea monsters sinking merchant ships is an ongoing problem with expanding trade
- Popocatapetl erupting is not an OTL event and quite a dangerous one
- Khe Sanh comes to a head earlier, with Eagle being a much wider scale operation
- The Crusader is in the M1/Challenger 1 class of @, or a heavily armoured MBT for the European and Middle East battlefields. The Valiant, like the @ Vickers MBT Mk.4, is lighter and designed for export, with the largest expected markets being the Indian Army and the Royal Marines. The Ardent is a bit lighter still and is going for the South American and African markets
- The Suez Canal Zone lease has been extended under strong pressure, creating an ongoing problem for Anglo-Egyptian relations, to put it mildly
- The case of the Irish schoolboys is lifted directly from the charming 1994 Irish adaption of The War of the Buttons, but here the ingenuity and leadership of the boys gets them a slap on the wrist and then being marked for better things in a few years; being sent to Craggy Island is a fairly heavy punishment
- Mu Gia Pass gets hit with radiological weapons for area denial
- Heyerdahl's expedition for Atlantis will have some interesting results. The tech for deep ocean exploration is now present
- The candid Soviet economic confession is from @, although was in a Komsomol paper. The approximate levels of cars and radios have been boosted to account for Dark Earth changes
- The decision to eliminate the devil's brew put together at Porton Down is a smart one. Any relationship to modern viruses and development is purely coincidental...
- The Day of the Chacal is a little hat tip to the book, reflecting the ongoing Algerian kerfuffle
- Cronkite saying victory is in sight in Vietnam is a 180 degree difference from @ and there will be wide reaching and long lasting consequences
- Wiping out the megalodon is a decision taken somewhat in haste and fear, with potentially damaging consequences for the oceanic food chain, but has to be chosen nonetheless. They are too big and too dangerous to be allowed to live in the wild and naturally can't live in captivity
- This Exocet is a supersonic Mach 1.1 missile with a range of 54nm
March
- Lost in Space has a definitive ending
- Initial strategic arms limitations talks are starting to show some slow progress, but are somewhat constrained by the lack of the @ US freeze in ICBMs and in its overall stockpile, the complicating factor of British and French missiles and China being ahead of where it stood at this point. The Soviets haven’t had and won’t have the same opportunity to achieve parity and an advantage in land based missiles
- The flying car incident results in the arrest of a wicked baron, baroness and their wicked child catcher
- SPECTRE is foiled again
- The public assassination of the Emperor of Brazil horrifies the world and throws an already troubled country into chaos. Guevara is regarded as international Public Enemy #1 in the West
- George Brown was that tired and emotional after his Peru trip that he resigned. The @ story about the Archbishop of Lima is true here: “ Brown was said to have lumbered over to a tall, elegant vision in red, and requested the honour of the next dance, to be told, ‘I will not dance with you for three reasons. The first is that you are drunk. The second is that the band is not playing a waltz, but the Peruvian national anthem. The final reason is that I am the Cardinal Archbishop of Lima.’ “
- The aftermath of Eagle/Khe Sanh sees a rolling series of offensives that is deliberately reminiscent of the Hundred Days of fifty years previous
- Libya doesn’t experience a coup, keeping the Anglo- American presence
- Britain isn’t experiencing deindustrialisation, but growth of heavy and medium industry in some of the old heartlands
- Westmoreland wasn’t the right general for Vietnam in @, but could well be a decent fit for the more conventional SACEUR role
- The new Papal military order has a nickname of the Dawnguard
- George Best playing for England is a result of different international FIFA rules whereby a player born in one of the Home Nations and playing at a junior can be qualified for another as a senior, provided the application goes through before 21 and they fulfil residency rules for 6 years. Here, Best scrapes in through some clever paperwork and is enticed over by a very lucrative payment and the chance of playing for the world champions
- The North Vietnamese start to run into the no go area of Mu Gia Pass after it has been dusted
- The Mitsubishi LR fighter will get a familiar nickname
- Establishment of the FAE is different from the UAE, not least of which because of the continuing British presence
April
- The sale of London Bridge was a historical one, with the backward rationalisation that the American chap thought he was getting Tower Bridge, a proposition that does not seem to be supported. It is a longer bridge, reflecting the greater width of the Thames due to the larger world, with the extra ~100ft coming from localised adjustment. It will be a more ornate and rather grander bridge than the current one, which is rather pedestrian and modernist in its appearance for my tastes
- 2001 has a slightly different plot, reflecting the more advanced space situation, and a somewhat less surreal ending, given the lower popular acceptance of surrealism
- The Allen keys for the IKEA/SAAB flatpack car have to be purchased separately, typical of IKEA. Something like a 1960s version of this
www.carsguide.com.au/car-news/flatpack- ... hour-23472
- The Nova rocket is about 50% larger than an @ Saturn V, whilst the Solaris is a cutting edge spaceship with innovative new nuclear engines and secondary aetheric ion drives embedded with cavorite; long story short, it aims to cut the longest Venus travel time to 25 days and Mars to ~90 days. The experimental Rigel took 81 days to reach Mars in 1963 due to favourable positioning and a test of the Orion engine used for the exploration of Jupiter and Saturn, but it is not really ideally suited to the inner solar system due to its design
- Mike Kirby is John Wayne's character from The Green Berets, Michael Ransom is Reb Brown's character from Strike Commando and John Rambo should be familiar
- The 50th anniversary/birthday of the RAF is marked by greater festivities here, with the Hunters (and others) flying through and under Tower Bridge being officially scheduled
- The Charge of the Light Brigade is a very different movie tonally, given the different outcome of that particular charge
- France pulls out of Hainan, despite American displeasure, as it can neither afford it or defend it. This does serve as the final catalyst for the unrest of May and subsequent coup
- The War in Korea is something like Victory at Sea in its style and reveals the in-universe author of the Korean War history that I really need to get back to at some point
- New Soviet fighters up the ante over North Vietnam. The Su-21 is an improved version of the (cancelled in @) Su-19, with two 24000lbf turbofan engines, an ogival wing, look down/shoot down radar and a heavier armament of longer range missiles, whilst the MiG-23 is more of a bona fide challenger to the F-4. This provides more impetus to the fielding of the F-15
- The Fellowship of the Ring sweeps the Oscars and Christopher Lee, who has a very busy year, collects a Best Actor Oscar that he never got the opportunity to challenge for in @
- The FV525 Warrior is designed to overmatch the BMP-1, but does so at a markedly increased price
- The Kurchatov Institute acts to improve the safety performance of the RBMK reactor after the KGB apparently obtains top secret American and British analysis of it. In practice, the information derived from Lapcat ended up be transferred by the British via an agent who feeds the Soviets a variety of intelligence; the KGB think they have an excellent double cross/double agent who is in fact an unwitting triple agent. Wheels within wheels. Why? To prevent the chance of something like Chernobyl occurring in a much, much worse manner, with the associated potential for much wider effects; whilst preventing the enemy from making a mistake may be counterintuitive in most cases, it was viewed by PM Barton as a case of risk management for the wider world. There are many consequences to this, particularly after 3.5 years of Barton largely being able to achieve what he is trying to do without being struck by disaster, war or economic downturn. When we look at what happened historically to the British economy and its performance in this era, it sets things up for a very different experience of the 1970s. As for the Conservative leadership contest, Thorneycroft has the least votes as of the first round and Powell ends up winning; observers may note a more successful and sober Randolph Churchill still about as one of the Tory grandees
- Operation Turpentine sees the AH-56 Cheyenne debut, providing an earlier heavy attack helicopter for the US Army
- Rumblings in Malaya come from an internal return of Communist insurgency, but Britain is naturally concerned that Jakarta had something to do with it. Konfrontasi continues well and truly in DE 1968, with Borneo a steady but continuing commitment
- Something is going on in China...
- Bokassa's coup is apparently backed by rogue French elements as well as others
- ODESSA continue to stir up trouble, but in doing so, increase the political pressure to do something about them
- Jack Regan ends up quite cross that his car gets messed up
- Cassius Clay vs Vladimir Zheleznyy is a grand old Cold War bout
- F-111s launching Condor ASMs is just a small indicator of the more advanced air to ground capacity that has developed out of an extended Korea and the subsequent higher intensity Vietnam
May
- Matters kick off on May Day, with the French protests starting as a more Marxian revolutionist spasm compared to the New Left chienlit of @, exacerbated by magical intervention by other parties
- The French Army then puts its own contingency plans into action to reestablish order and quite coincidentally back the national unity government of the recently retired Marquis d'Ambreville. Absolutely nothing suspicious going on and no hint of manipulating the far left into creating the circumstance to clear house
- The Spaceman Rescue Agreement is the @ Astronaut RA
- Carlos is selected for special training…
- Dirty Harry shoots the Zodiac Killer
- North Vietnamese surface ships run into a battleship and battlecruiser and come off worse. What a shock
- Javelin is an all rounder missile, with some shades of the much later Exactor in some respects
- Civil defence remains a matter of very high importance, rather than being deprecated
- Shaw is a fictional character, but reflects the ongoing role of the amateur; professionalism militates against dual internationals, let alone triple
- The M165 is a powerful middleweight replacement for the 105mm in GP artillery; the 105 persists as an airborne Howitzer for now
- John Glenn gets his moment on Titan
- Emperor Sebastião is scared stiff of getting the same treatment as his father
- Billy Connolly sees action
- Boterbloem‘s abduction is eventually solved
- Sergeyev is a very different original leader
- Cavendish Foods is from To The Manor Born
June
- Ottoman Turkey finds the presence of stronger external forces rather non conducive to the more expansive of her ambitions
- The son of the Hungarian prince and former Doncaster grocer's boy keeps fetching his cloth for the time being out of affection for his uncle, although he now has a fair bit more time off
- The Spanish Inquisition continues its raids and actions against the more modernist and radical elements of Spanish society
- Plenty of European militaries are getting a bit more direct combat experience in Vietnam, but it is of comparatively less utility for the type of mechanised battlefield they generally face
- The British National Plan is where Stanley Barton and Labour delve a bit more into the socialist side of things, with a distinctly British flavour and a difference from anything really done in @. Broad national goals of production and growth are set and resource needs calculated, but unlike the Eastern Bloc, the overwhelming majority of the economic does remain in private ownership. Britain does have some fairly large conglomerates akin to Japanese zaibatsu/kereitsu. Goals and the optimal means of achieving them are determined through consultation with labour unions and big business. The overall approach has a strong influence of dirigisme, with use of advanced cybernetic computer systems to assist in calculations. However, there is the flipside of this, which is a preference for lower taxes and facilitating internal economic freedom. If it seems like a bit of a confused devil's brew, then you're on the right track
- Someone keeps trying to crack Yemen open, for the important reason that it is seen as a bit of a backdoor into Arabia and the Middle East and could be used to pressure the British out of Aden
- The Congolese deployment has its own story
- The replay of the UEFA European Cup final is not an influence on the introduction of penalty shootouts
- 1566 Icarus making a relatively close pass of Earth results not in a student project, but a test of new systems in space as part of the international Project Spaceguard
- Rail is treated as less of a redheaded stepchild in the USA
- Gary Gygax has his career and ideas kickstarted by a wandering wizard. D&D enthusiasts may recognise the reference to the pouch of 1d4 random valuable objects; they inspire Gygax to create a table for that. The man loved his tables
- The Tupamaros are getting support from outside, making for a troubled situation in Uruguay that flies beneath the radar of most world attention
- Switzerland, like the rest of Europe, continues on with capital punishment
- Historically, there was nothing to stop the accidental striking of two AIM-7s on HMAS Hobart off Vietnam. Here, Voyager, which survived her run-in with Melbourne does have a Legion Close Weapons System, which consists of a 37mm rotary autocannon on a mount similar to Phalanx in @. Gun based defences were never fully abandoned by the RN and USN here, but continued on as counters to threats other than those present in the @ 1950s/60s. This has a flow on effect for coming years. The larger surface ships with a lot of AAA are not quite the same as the WW2 era stuff that we'd be familiar with, as a lot of it is unmanned, externally controlled and has quite superior sky arcs
- Bob Hawke enters Parliament 15 years earlier
- The raid on Hanoi by American, British and French bombers is a sign of cooperation after the kerfuffle of May, and of the French change in policy post Hainan
- Biggles is quite enthusiastic about the new Sopwith Camel, and rightly so
- The French crackdown is quite brutal, with Dany le Rouge only the first of many to meet an unfortunate end
- Christopher Lee, freshly back in Venice from 2 weeks in the Congo, can't manage to stay out of trouble. The result will be a knighthood and some other goodies
- The Long Term Combat Aircraft Requirements Plan is ambitious, complex, detailed, expensive and a bit of a mouthful to boot
- 2739-920 is a rather decisive margin. If the Soviets go up, the Americans won't stand still; hence limitations talks are a bit difficult
- Ratification of the 26th Amendment/repeal of the 22nd scrapes in just in time for Kennedy, throwing the election into a tizzy
July
- Dad’s Army is less overtly comedic, given the differing culture and the Home Guard being an ongoing institution
- Armoured trains are being introduced for rather different purposes to those of old. They are to be used for patrol and strategic transport in the case of mobilisation
- JFK’s protestations that he would only reluctantly accept nomination are mainly for public consumption
- The RN gets into the battlecruiser business, with the type being markedly smaller than battleships and suited for a variety of missions - carrier escort, surface action, trade protection and strategic air defence
- Northrop and Grumman merge earlier, followed a pattern of partial consolidation of US aerospace companies into very big and powerful conglomerates
- Diversification of the Paladin follows the direction chosen earlier in the 1960s to increase options for land attack
- The Hong Kong flu fizzles in the face of new drugs and treatments. Butterflies abound
- Development on the Isle of Grain takes the form of a deep water port (@ Thamesport on steroids) and a large airport. Good for jobs and economic growth, not so good for marsh birds
- The Congo skirmish is extremely one sided; it is what the British wanted - a lopsided battle to use as a free fire zone for new weapons and tactics
- No one wants to take any risks with a beanstalk
- Intel, having been founded earlier, is rather more advanced
- Something is awry in Chiapas
- The W-G’s investigation into a baby named Charlie biting his brother’s finger is both a little joke at a news story and a sign that they are just a tad overzealous
- Mention of the Church of the United States is something with consequences if thoroughly thought through
- The SR-72 is a bloody paralyser of a strategic recon plane
- Theatre censorship, among other types, is still going strong in Britain, in quite marked contrast to the relaxation of @
- Swedish chefs always get up to hijinks.
- The Battle of London. Well. Quite a lot going on there and there are some large short, medium and long term consequences. I’d be interested in guesses as to what they are
August
- Argentine armament seems to be headed somewhere. Their young, vigorous Nationalist PM is a bit like Peron, but more realistic, ruthless, intelligent and active
- The healing at the carnival is a bit of a hat tip to Carnivale
- Australia continues its reaction to Konfrontasi and a Red Indonesia
- The Arab Legion is acting as a bit of a Praetorian Guard, with all that entails
- Mary Bell is nicked for only one murder, but still inspires a huge reaction and revulsion
- Rockefeller wins the Republican nomination, but it is a bit of a poisoned chalice with the late re-entry of Kennedy
- Something happened on Iapetus
- Dracula fighting in the night sky is never a good sign
- Over decades, the very climate, nature and culture of Southern Iraq is changing through the change to the land
- The geezers who pulled the Italian Job live happily ever after
- The US Army thought about naming the wrist mounted device a Pip Boy, but decided against it for copyright reasons
- In Dark Earth, the top Michelin level is 5 stars, rather than three
- Ireland is about to see a lot more investment and development
- ICBM class missiles being fielded by the US Army, USN and USAF is a sign of very high level rivalry
- The KGB is trying to get some sort of path "into" Central Europe, with Czech nationalists being one roundabout path
- A suspected Godzilla contact gets an ASTOR in the face, demonstrating how big a threat he is considered
- Lennon and McCartney, whilst living different and arguably happier lives, still manage to meet and become friends
- The Soviet Lead Zeppelin can't carry a tune
- Vietnam enters its next phase
- Rhodesia is shifting into a different phase; with only one really open front and both flanks a bit more secure through the Portuguese, there isn't the basis for an existential threat
- On top of previous royal unions, further ties are forged between Norway and Britain, as part of a general Anglo-Scandinavian policy
- ARPANET becomes operational much earlier
September
- Space fighter and spacecraft technology is advancing, albeit at a reduced rate compared to terrestrial planes due to the cost involved
- It seems as if Atlantis, or some vestige of it, has maybe been found
- Civil Defence is a very important issue in Britain, but the astroturfing campaign by Vault Tec is above and beyond that
- The Congolese coup was launched by an American backed faction and its failure is the harbinger of further trouble
- Nigerian princes and Scooby-Doo make for a glorious combination
- The Israeli heavy APC/AIFV built out of a Centurion is much earlier than @, but here is an experimental attempt at developing a clear overmatch. The threat of the Soviets rolling down through the Middle East remains a real one
- Steve McQueen gets to engage in his preferred job as well as acting
- The US Army combat beasts are noted for the deathly claws
- Laos is the big theatre in Indochina in the second half of the year
- Britain building and testing neutron bombs is a sign of some things to come when we consider the utility of such weapons
- Whilst the Boston Digital Arm is from @, the synthetic flesh and cyborg-y elements are not
- Soldier is one of the first military ‘fly on the wall’ series and showcases military equipment that is radically advanced compared to what is thought of as “the Army’s gear”. In popular culture understanding, the British Army is thought of as an amalgam of late WW2/Korea (Centurions, 25pdrs, Vickers GPMGs, Land Rovers, APCs and wartime camo uniforms) and some aspects of the 1950s (helicopters and Rotodynes, SLRs and self propelled guns); this comes through in children’s cartoons, Commando comics, children’s plastic and metal soldiers, dress up play kits, war films, comedy sketches and newspaper cartoons. The War Office and Army are trying to modernise that through television and MoI films
- Exercise Reforger begins in a slightly different context here, as there is no LBJ pullback of troops from (West) Germany, but rather a longer term plan put in place as a result of the lessons of 1960. Some of the initial process and ideas are discussed in From Sea to Shining Sea
- Sweden is in a very different place politically
- Sukarno starts to modify his position vis a vis Western New Guinea
- Saro are dabbling with something like an ekranoplan but a bit unique
- The Ashante Confederation isn’t a throwback Ashante kingdom, but rather a use of the older name in a similar manner to Ghana in @
- Superhero intervention prevents a Farnborough tragedy
- Bullit, Drebin and Callahan is a heck of a team
- Silly thieves trying to pinch the Queen Mary is a set up for a future potential story involving Sgt Joe Friday
- Willie Furman becomes but a brief footnote here
- The Arabian Union begins to react to some of the changing agricultural circumstances in the renewed Fertile Crescent
- The Orion-Kosmos link up is quite the feat, as they aren’t quite designed for the process in the same way as Apollo and Soyuz
- The CIA’s report on zombies in Haiti begets swift action. The Americans had been acting against outbreaks there for a number of years, but now there is a decision to crack down in a major way
October
- A very quick invasion of Haiti reflects that there were forces ready for the contingency
- The Leopard is more akin to the @ Leopard II
- The unfortunate attack of dysentery refers to one of the iconic deaths on The Oregon Trail
- The IRA gets dealt a very heavy blow in the SAS raid
- Reverend Presley can’t avoid trouble even when on holiday
- The attempted VC hit on the Embassy is decisively smashed by heavy security
- As said the decision to get rid of the meg is not uncontroversial but is darn popular
- SSTs are becoming the perceived way of the future
- The USN SSN class is a parallel to the 688s of @ with certain improvements
- Argentina gets the Olympics rather than Mexico
- The unified West Indies Olympic team is a nascent titan for it’s smaller size
- Duvalier is captured, with the stinger that there may be a voodoo curse at play. General Max Viers does look very much like the Star Wars character of similar name
- A more conservative US SC does yield some quite different results
- Different patterns to the world rich list
- Tanaka’s speech makes sense when viewed in the context of the year as a whole
- The T-Rex thieves nab some of the younger ones in order to wreak havoc
- After a long time, Britain gets a new ITV to join the BBC. It ends up being a bipartisan idea for different reasons and will be added to in a much more expedited fashion than @
- The Big Picture continues to be reasonably popular and it’s very ambitious future predictions here are very much on the money
- The Anglican Church hasn’t experienced the liberal shift of the @ 1950s and 60s
- The French tourist is Monsieur Hulot
- A Peter Pan-esque entity is more than benign
- Someone has an interest in using Halloween, as it is a powerful date
November
- The prelude to Hydra outlines what the Allies hope will be the endgame in South Vietnam
- RAF drones over the Congo are rather more advanced; through use of magical links with crystal ball operators, they are capable of a fair bit of manoeuvre and are armed with a cannon, rockets and bombs. At this point, they are fairly inaccurate and limited to general area attack, but are good for recon and photography. The colour shifting battle capes are a form of active camouflage and quite, quite capable
- The journos are right and there is something that is missing from the public account
- Morris gets sentenced to death, which would have been on the cards anyway without abolition in @, but the offhand mention of public execution does cast a lot of matters in a different light
- JFK wins comfortably, which is no surprise. This does set up 1972 as a very different and significant election
- Heavy industry being opened up in Stratford/Greater London is very much the opposite of the @ trend
- The Sergeyev Doctrine is very ambitious, but he is an ambitious man. His character is a mix of Gorby, Khrushchev, Kennedy and Putin, which makes him more dangerous than Stalin Jr or Sr
- Old stocks of Redstones are being used up for the bombardment of North Vietnam and, in the process, getting the enemy to show some of the radars and comms
- The founding of the ILFCA (or FLIAC in Spanish) is a precursor to trouble in the region far greater than @
- Italy has an agreement allowing it to test in Libya based on the French in Algeria
- Darkmoor is going to be the first of several big fusion power plants that will transform British energy and replace a lot of older capacity
- Monty Burns does not approve of female students. Whatever could be next?!
- India has been the leading force in Burma in the 1960s and, after over 20 years, the insurgencies are crumbling
- Right, here we go: The Ho Chi Minh Trail has been severed. The dusting of Mu Gia Pass was bad enough, but there is now an extended line going through Laos towards the Thai border. This would not be possible or viable without a shedload of troops and can’t be maintained ad infinitum; rather, it will be followed by a big push in Cambodia and ongoing sweep and clear ops in South Vietnam. Without supply, the Viet Cong are doomed
- The Crown Prince of Egypt does his block and ends up doing a very silly thing in shooting PM Hassan, albeit for all the right reasons; what wasn’t viable in 1956 is still not viable now. The callback to the Haiphong Battleship Drop is a way of showing it as an unintended consequence; some think of it as a fearsome precision attack rather than a bit of a crazy idea that went into action
- The VC winners may be familiar. Lalabala died at the Battle of Mirbat in Oman in 1972, single-handedly firing a 25pdr; Bodie is Lewis Collins’ character from The Professionals; Jackson commanded British forces in Kosovo; Skellen is Lewis Collins’ character from Who Dares Wins and Dempsey is Miles Anderson’s character from Ultimate Force.
- HMS Speedy is indeed a bit of a game changer, designed for very fast speeds and heavy firepower, a bit like the LCS of a different world, but a bit smaller and more focused in its role without so much mission creep. It is designed as a ‘Super FAC/FAC Killer’ for ops in the North Sea, Baltic and up in the Norwegian north as well as a QRF boat for operations around Gibraltar. One part that is different from any @ ship is that there is an intent that it can be deployed globally by skyship. I’ll put together something on Light/Coastal Forces in due course
- Princess Victoria of Ruritania is intended as a match for HRH Prince Charles. There is a general desire for him to get married and settle down as soon as possible, rather than the more extended bachelor years he had in the @ 1970s
- NYC will get the 1976 Summer Games for the US Bicentennial
- Persia is entering a very prosperous period without some of the ticking time bombs of @
- Dracula kills another Romanian communist leader, or does he?
- The Venusian flu isn’t an Andromeda Strain or anything like that, but when Earthly influenza is cured, what else can throw a spanner in the works?
December
- The Indianapolis UFO incident is the largest yet and can’t be covered up effectively
- The Benelux states move ever closer together, being the only European states that don’t have multiple issues holding them back from economic integration
- A cure for diabetes is another advanced bit of medical progress, reflecting the role of magic and the butterflies from a bit more ancient knowledge surviving (Alexandria, Constantinople and Baghdad’s House of Wisdom)
- Schooner results in some trouble. The carnival train is a bit of a thematic reference to the HBO series Carnivale, among other works, whilst the New Vegas Courier Company refers to Fallout New Vegas, where the player takes the role of a courier. One of the best games ever made in my view
- The advanced children is a reference to The Tomorrow People and Chocky, in addition to other shows of that vintage
- Kennedy’s cabinet includes some very big names. His brother has gone to the Senate to prepare for a 1972 run. On the other side of politics, Rockefeller has shot his bolt and the nomination is Governor Ronald Reagan’s to lose
- Filming begins on what will become Sailor. It will be somewhat different, involving a combat cruise on a younger carrier in the full prime of her service life and something more of her escorts, including the guided missile battleship Hood. In addition to the captain, officers young and old, fleet master at arms, chaplain, doctor, it’s television entertainment (including a cleaned up Wilf) and the matelots, there will also be a bit more on the nuclear engineers working on her reactors (with a fair bit of censorship), the large and capable carrier air wing and the various defences of a ship going into harm’s way. Ark Royal will be crossing the equator, providing emergency aid after an earthquake and tidal wave, going through the Suez Canal, calling in at various Middle Eastern and Indian ports then making her arrival at Singers before operations off Vietnam
- Soviet Military Power appears early and in substantial detail; this sends a message East
- Big Concord orders are a shot in the arm for the British aerospace industry just when it looked like the Americans were beginning to roll over them. There are some more twists and turns to come, some courtesy of Barnes Wallis
- Mary Bell is sentenced to death due to the absence of any other option, putting the cat among the pigeons at the Home Office. The recommendation for mercy is very likely to succeed, given her age, but in that event, she won’t be getting out in 11 years or even double that; the idea of life imprisonment hasn’t really come up much in British sentencing. The very act of getting the ultimate sentence really succeeds in getting a reaction from the girl, but also the press. More than a few voices start asking whether this was really the best course of action and what can be done to at least expand sentencing options. Prior to her case, no one had really given thought to what might happen if a child came up on a capital charge, as it just seemed so darned unlikely. Once she and her accomplice were bought to trial, there was some realisation that some laws had not been repealed from back in the 1700s, but the comparative swiftness of the trial got inside the “reaction loop” of Parliament. I guess this is a bit of a convoluted way of showing how some aspects of Dark Earth are behind their own times, coloured somewhat by my legal interest in the interplay of obsolete laws and modern cases. Therefore, she won’t be famous for getting out anytime soon, but for the legal question raised; shades of the West Lothian question in some ways
- Foyle and Burnside make for an interesting if very unlikely team. The former ascends to the top job in the 1950s and has a reputation as one of the top cops in Europe, if not the world
- Richard Nixon as Chief Justice of the United States. It works both in universe due to the political machinations involved and out of universe due to the sheer difference involved
- Healey’s announcement is likely to be a correct one. This has the potential to change many of the well established ideas and indeed tropes of British economic performance by freeing up the extra funds for investment, tax cuts and more defence spending; there are also calls from the party’s Left for social spending to be boosted. This then becomes the defining internal conflict of Barton’s second term
- The US POW rescue operation is a success on Christmas Eve, timed to perfection for propaganda purposes. John Rambo is involved, along with a range of similar characters from action flicks: Captain James Braddock (Chuck Norris from Missing in Action), his cousin Lieutenant Scott McCoy (Chuck Norris in The Delta Force) and Sergeant Michael Ransom (Reb Brown from Strike Commando). Meanwhile, Marshal Stepin Berkoff is based on Steven Berkoff’s character in First Blood Part II
- The new RAF ICBM project aims to develop the fastest missile possible given its operational requirements
- The Japanese then throw the cat amongst the pigeons on the last day of the year, as has become traditional