The Let's Play Archive

Ace Combat Zero: The Belkan War

by nine-gear crow

Part 3: Mission 3 - Operation Choker One, April 20th, 1995

“B7R”

Mission 3: Operation Choker One – April 20, 1995

Overview: Galm Team is dispatched into Belkan territory for the first time on a so-called reconnaissance mission into Belka’s priority one airspace designated B7R, known to pilots on either side of the conflict as “The Roundtable,” and encounter three one of Belka’s top ace squadrons.


Guest Commentator: Fellow White Knight Chronicles hater and Ace Combat super-fan Lunethex joins me for this first tripartite mission. Lune is the first in hopefully a sizable line of guest commentators for the Ace Combat series LP. His knowledge of the finer points of the series puts mine to shame by miles to say the least, so I couldn’t have asked for a better starting wingman.

Lunethex is currently in the home stretch of his own series-LP of the Siphon Filter trilogy along with Coolguye and TheLastRoboKy. He has also done LPs of Resident Evil 6, and Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City alongside fellow goons Heenato, Aces High, Drakenel, Kaboom Dragoon, and McTimmy.


A NOTE ON THE BOSS FIGHT(S): For the purposes of the LP “canon”, I will be treating all three ace squadron engagements as being true and having happened in the timeline. Because this is a fictional setting and I can get away with Schrödinger’s Cat’ing an entire aerial engagement if I want to

More on that coming up in the Analysis segment.




THE ROUNDTABLE
Okay, so if Roselein was the game being subtle about the whole “HEY GUYS DO YOU KNOW ABOUT KING ARTHUR?! ” meme that runs through this game, then the Roundtable is Project Aces coming out and swinging a big old 2x4 right at your head.

This one should be the easiest reference to gloss since it’s one of the ones that just about everyone knows the context of through simple cultural assimilation. The idea of the Roundtable was first described by the Norman poet Robert Wace (also known simply as Wace) in 1155. The idea behind it being that when King Arthur held court with his knights at Camelot, the order sat at a circular table with no head so that everyone, even Arthur himself, stood as an equal while seated at the table. It has been speculated by scholars that Wace actually based his accounts of Arthur’s fictional roundtable off of a table alleged to have been used by Charlemagne (King Charles I of France, or Francia at the time), which was decorated with a map of the Roman Empire. Charlemagne would of course later go on to become the first Holy Roman Emperor, and the first internationally recognized Emperor in Western Europe since the fall of Old Rome 300 years prior to his ascension.

In terms of its placement here in Ace Combat Zero, it’s probably one of the few appropriately used and more innocuous Arthurian references in the game. Like it’s stated in game, this stretch of airspace thanks to its electromagnetic interfering mineral deposits and unpredictable atmospheric conditions and its presence in effectively politically neutral territory make it very much a modern roundtable. Every pilot stands on ostensibly an equal footing, separated only by their skill at combat flying… and how good the plane they’re flying is, let’s not forget that one.

The easiest thing to assume here from an in-universe perspective is that Belka has a 1:1 parallel to the Arthurian Mythos in its own history with the same names and everything and that mythos is a fairly big part of its culture, at least militarily speaking because the pilots of the Belkan Air Force are all knight-crazy for the most part. But we’ll see more of that as the game progresses.


PERSPECTIVE

The conceit I’m using to justify the “every boss fight is canon” thing is that each of these engagements very well could have happened in the same timeline, just at different times or in different places in the Roundtable, or perhaps even concurrently. What’s to say that like two of the three squadrons in question were mixed in with the mook planes that Cipher and Pixy downed and whichever one shows up as the boss squadron is simply your preferred squad, rotating in order as necessary.

Because one of the central themes of Zero’s frame narrative is that of perspective vs. reality, exemplified by the “outside” perspectives of the aces you encounter vs. your own “inside” perspective as Cipher. Because, let’s face it; Knight, Solider, or Mercenary; Cipher does not give one wet shit about any of these people that he is shooting down. It’s only we, the audience, a further outside perspective, that comes to care about them after hearing their stories.

And, I also believe that Cipher, in-universe, is as much of a cipher to his rivals as his name implies that he could very well be seen to be flying all three Ace Styles at any given moment. It’s also worth noting that because Cipher is such an indefinable mystery, even to his “Buddy” Pixy, his rivals are then able to interpret him and his actions in accordance with their own worldviews, projecting themselves onto the blank slate that is Cipher like one is supposed to do with a proper cipher character, thus telling us more about them than they ever tell us about Cipher himself.

For example: Indigo 1 sees Cipher as a worthy opponent and fellow knight in combat because he was raised to act with and uphold honour in all aspects of his life and interprets his encounter with Cipher through the prism of this knightly upbringing. Grun 1 sees Cipher as something akin to a force of nature because he was unable to read his moves and devise a means of defeating him like every other enemy he’d encountered up till then. And Rot 1 looks down on Cipher with contempt, letting his knightly pride and patriotism fester into arrogance and resentment, unable to grasp, even years later, how someone he’d written off as a mere mercenary could have bested him.

All possibilities are valid and worth exploring and have a place in this LP.

In terms of Ace Combat lore, it’s a buyer’s market for the curious.

For now, though, let’s meet our mission bosses and our newest characters of interest in Zero.





INDIGO SQUADRON
Belkan Air Force 7th Air Division, 51st Tactical Fighter Squadron
Members:
Squadron Composition: JAS-39C Gripen (x4)

A flight of four Gripens led by prestigious Belkan combat veteran Lt. Col. Dimitri Heinreich. Prior to the outbreak of the Belkan War, only Col. Heinreich had seen active duty, but by the time of Indigo Team’s engagement with the Galm Team over the B7R Roundtable, Indigos 2 through 4 had become seasoned veterans in their own right. Primarily stationed on the eastern front of the war, Indigo squadron was involved in several aerial battles with the FATO and Gebet air forces, including the Battle of Model, which brought the Gebetan city under Belkan thrall. Within the first five minutes of the engagement, Indigo Team downed dozens of FATO Air Force fighters, including nine FAF F-14D Super Tomcats downed by Indigo 1 alone.

As the FATO and Gebet territories along the Belkan border fell under the control of the Belkan Army and Air Force, Indigo Team was routed to the southern front of the war, towards Ustio and Sapin territory. And on April 20th, 1995, while en route back to base, Indigo Team received a priority one emergency deployment order to the B7R Roundtable, where they encountered Galm Team’s Cipher and Pixy.

As our first Knight boss of this Knight-style LP, Indigo Team gets top billing for this update, and the pleasure of being featured in the full version of this mission. Grun and Rot teams only appear in the condensed supplementary versions which follow the full Knight version of Mission 3.

Indigo also kicks off of theme of Belkan ace squadron’s being named after colours. Indigo team is first out of the gate with the obvious one, the colour indigo itself, that indecisive little bastard nestled between blue and purple at the far end of the visible spectrum to the point where its sole defining feature is not being an actual colour so much as the point where blue ends and purple begins. …I’m sorry, it’s just that indigo is such a useless colour, it’s barely discernable on the spectrum. Hell, teal is more of a legitimate colour than indigo.

It’s a non-colour

Aaaaaanyway, the tradition of naming Ace Combat boss squadrons after colours goes back to Ace Combat 04 at the earliest (remember, I have no frame of reference for 2, 3, and Air Combat here), where the recurring mook and boss squadrons you would encounter were straight up called things like Red Squadron, Blue Squadron, and, more famously, Yellow Squadron. But that’s all coming in the “future”.

As for how Indigo Squadron fares in gameplay, Lunethex mentions that generally speaking Knight boss fights are the easier engagements compared to their Soldier and Mercenary counterparts. This is because Knight players forfeit the higher paychecks Soldier and Mercenary players rake in by choosing to spare yellow targets. Which in turn means they usually have fewer planes to work with because of their tighter budgets. Also which planes are unlocked per mission will vary between ace style as well.

Indigo team flies a quartet of JAS-39C Gripens, which are, coincidentally, the fighter Saab AB rolled out to replace the aging J35J Draken which we take up against them in this mission. No matter what plane you fly into this mission in a straight new game, you will be outclassed by every ace squadron in each ace style in terms of a material-to-material basis.



GRUN SQADRON
Belkan Air Force 10th Air Division, 8th Tactical Fighter Squadron
Members:
Squadron Composition: F/A-18C Hornet (x4)

A rapid-response multi-role squadron specializing in adaptability in combat situations. Grun Team flies a quartet of F-18s, the signature multi-role fighter craft of the Belkan Air Force. During the Belkan War, the Grun Team developed a reputation as a “bad boy” squadron due to its seemingly undisciplined and erratically fluid flying style, breaking long-held engagement rules and flying missions in ways designed to ensure their own survival over the accomplishing of mission objectives. When in combat, the Grun team flew without a set formation, as opposed to how other Belkan squadrons flew, allowing each individual pilot to adjust to the flow of combat and cover each other more effectively. To the chagrin of their compatriots and superiors, Grun’s “bad boy”, “rule breaker” tactics ultimately netted them many victories in the early war. Until they encountered the equally unpredictable Galm Team, that is…

As you can tell by their colour scheme, Grun’s theme colour is green. The name is derived from the German “grün” (also spelled gruen), meaning green.

Gameplay-wise, Grun Team is intended to be the middle of the road in terms of difficulty. Once again, their Hornets will outclass anything you can take into the Roundtable at that point in-game coming from a fresh save. Again, I have no real explanation for why I was able to make such short work of them compared to Indigo Team other I’d been out of practice when I fought Indigo.

Generally speaking, the F-18 is woefully underrepresented in Ace Combat games in general. It rarely appears as a boss squadron plane or out in the wild for that matter, and even as a player plane it tends to be overlooked because its window of effectiveness from the time it’s unlocked to the time you gain access to better planes like the F-16, Su-27/37, or F-22 is usually only a few missions.



ROT SQADRON
Belkan Air Force 2nd Air Division, 52nd Tactical Fighter Squadron
Members:
Squadron Composition: EF-2000 Typhoon (x4)

One of the newest squadrons in the Belkan Air Force, it has also posted one of the BAF’s best shot down records in recent history, thanks in large part to its Number 1 pilot and Belkan national hero, Detlef Fleisher. The Rot Team flies with a fierce nationalist pride for their homeland, spurred on by Fleisher’s seemingly arrogant disdain for those he considers his inferiors in combat.

And if you follow the naming pattern, then you should know that Rot is of course German for red. Their squadron emblem also features the word “Stolz”, which is Middle High German for “pride,” (or more to the point, “proud,” or “stiff;” this is where we get the English word “stout” from) quite fitting for our fatally arrogant misplaced Knight squad.

Lunethex and I had this discussion between videos and I was the one who stated it outright in the commentary, but Rot Squadron is essentially a misplaced Knight ace squad. In this case they are a Knight ace team appearing in a Mercenary mission. Generally speaking, this is the only mission that does this; send you up against a boss squadron that doesn’t mirror your Ace Style. The final Roundtable engagement near the endgame will sort of do something like this too, but by that point the boss squadrons you encounter fall clean off the Knight/Soldier/Mercenary slider, so it’s kinda moot anyway.

In theory, Rot is the hardest squadron in this mission to best. They have the better AI of all three groups, and the best planes too. Sadly, the Typhoon is also one of those also-ran planes likes the F-18 tends to be. While it does have the distinction of having a near-perfect appearance record across the Ace Combat franchise, it mostly appears either as an generic enemy plane or as a player plane. Rot Team is one of the few boss squadrons that field Typhoons, and of course like the Hornet its window of viability to the player is limited generally to the single digit mission counts.





INDIGO 1
Real Name: Dimitri Heinreich
Callsign(s): Indigo 1, Indigo Heron
Age: 31 (41, frame narrative)
Sex: Male
Nationality: Belka
Signature Plane: JAS-39C Gripen
Voice Actor: JD Blanc
On-Camera Actor: Uncredited

“A Man Who Upholds Honour”. The fourth son of a Belkan aristocratic family whose lineage can be traced back directly to a famous medieval knight who helped shape Belka’s political landscape in its early days. He enlisted in the Belkan Air Force at a young age to follow his family’s tradition of honorable service to their homeland, and quickly demonstrated an exemplary skill at aerial combat. By 24, he had reached the rank of Lt. Colonel, an almost unheard of feat for someone so young, leading to rumors that members of the Belkan aristocracy pulled favors with and exerted influence over the military to ease his ascension up the ranks. He never quite managed to emerge from the cloud of suspicion about his promotions, however, even as his skills became increasingly evident.

He was attached to the Belkan Air Force 7th Air Division, 51st Tactical Fighter “Indigo” Squadron as it’s flight lead, Indigo 1. Thanks to Heinreich’s knightly background and his squadron’s adherence to an almost chivalric combat style, Indigo Squadron has earned itself several knightly monikers from their fellow Belkan pilots, notably the “Indigo Order of Belka” or, more to the point, the “Indigo Knights.”

After being shot down by Cipher in the B7R Roundtable, he was recovered by a Belkan SAR team shortly after the battle and rushed to a combat hospital where he made a full recovery from his injuries, but not before spending three months in a coma. After the signing of the Belkan Armistice and his discharge from the hospital, Heinreich retired from the air force and returned to his hometown of Lichtenburg, Belka where he took up ownership of the family business. He has remained in Lichtenburg to this day.


GRUN 1
Real Name: Bernhard Schmidt
Callsign(s): Grun 1, Night Owl
Age: 30 (40, frame narrative)
Sex: Male
Nationality: Belka
Signature Plane: F/A-18C Hornet
Voice Actor: Liam O’Brien
On-Camera Actor: Uncredited

“The Strategist”. Born to a lower middle class family in the suburbs of Sudentor, Belka, Schmidt spent his youth rebelling against the “safe” suburban confines of the Belkan heartland, and then bouncing from one low-paying job to the next in his early teens. Following the nationalist appeals of Belka’s increasingly hardline government, he eventually he joined the Belkan Air Force and displayed an uncanny aptitude for quickly analyzing and adapting to active combat zones. He earned the nickname “Owl” from his cohorts for his piercing, seemingly all-seeing analytical gaze on the battlefield.

His legendary control over his surroundings seen was during a mission in early 1995, during the border scrums that preceded the formal outbreak of the Belkan War. Schmidt managed to outmaneuver and shoot down a hostile F-15C Eagle and return to base safely despite potentially catastrophic damage to his F/A-18C Hornet, incurred from the very Eagle he in turn shot down. Incidents like this and several others landed him in the number 1 position on the Belkan Air Force’s 10th Air Division, 8th Tactical Fighter “Grun” Squadron, a four-plane flight of F/A-18C Hornets.

Despite the entirety of Grun Squadron being shot down by the Galm Team, and the deaths of Gruns 3 and 4 in the B7R airspace, Schmidt quickly returned to the air after the incident, fighting the good soldier’s fight for Belka until the end of the war.

Upon the cessation of hostilities between Belka and the Allied Forces, Schmidt left the air force and returned home to Sudentor. He was interviewed by OBC’s Brett Thompson 10 years after the war, though no mention is made of his current occupation or living status, presumably out of a request for privacy on Schmidt’s part.


ROT 1
Real Name: Detlef Fleisher
Callsign(s): Rot 1, Red Swallow
Age: 28 (38, frame narrative)
Sex: Male
Nationality: Belka
Signature Plane: EF-2000 Typhoon
Voice Actor: Doug Erholtz
On-Camera Actor: Uncredited

“A Pilot That Lives By Pride”. A native of the Belkan capital of Dinsmark, Fleisher joined the BAF right out of high school, enrolling in the prestigious Shainder Military Academy. Upon graduation from the academy, he was headhunted by Lt. Gen. Reinhard Dahl, who viewed the intelligent, charismatic, and handsome Fleischer as the perfect poster boy for the Belkan Air Force’s recruitment effort.

In 1994, he single-handedly shot down three Ustian Su-27s over the B7R roundtable during a border skirmish, earning the title of Ace in the BAF on his first combat sortie ever. As he won more medals and gained prestige and fame amongst a Belkan populace hungry for good news after nearly a decade of despair, Fleisher become the propagandized poster boy Dahl always envisioned him to be. A Native Son of Belka from the heart of the empire who made good. A modern knight in a supersonic suit of armor.

By the outbreak of the Belkan War itself, he had in fact become so famous among his countrymen that he was receiving heavy pressure from both inside the military and out to transfer to more secure combat zones, or even into the Belkan military’s PR wing itself for the sake of his safety. But his pride and patriotism would not allow it.

It was that pride that got the better of him on April 20th, 1995, when he and the rest of his Rot Squadron were shot down over the B7R strategic airspace by the Galm Team, the mercenary pilots from Ustio sent in to harangue the Belkan Air Force into a diversionary engagement. His confidence crushed by his first and only aerial defeat—at the hands of honourless mercenaries, no less; Fleisher left active duty upon his recovery from B7R and took a posting as an airbase commander until the end of the war.

Following the end of the war, he was brought before the International Criminal Court on war crimes charges, along with many of his fellow countrymen, and while he was convicted, he somehow managed to escape a prison sentence. He returned to his hometown of Dinsmark and, after earning his Masters’ and a Doctorate in History, took a job at the University of Dinsmark as a History professor. He was interviewed in his office library at the university by OBC’s Brett Thompson on the 10 year anniversary of the outbreak of the Belkan War regarding his career-ending encounter with the “Demon Lord of the Roundtable”.




Aircraft featured in Mission 3: Operation Choker One


JAS-39C Gripen
Manufacturer: Saab AB
Role: Multi-role fighter interceptor
Manufactured: 1987–Present
Status: In Service
Primary Operators: Sweden, South Africa, Czech Republic, Hungary, Thailand, Brazil (pending)
Quick Facts:



Named after the griffon of legend, this aircraft boasts low cost and high maintainability. “Fighter,” “attacker,” or “recon,” this fighter preforms all these roles equally well. It is known for its mission adaptability and high efficiency in battle.

AMMO
Missiles: 68
RCL: 12
XLAA: 8
SOD: 14


F/A-18C Hornet
Manufacturer: McDonnell Douglas, Boeing, Northrop (joint venture)
Role: Multi-role fighter
Manufactured: 1978–Present
Status: In Service
Primary Operators: United States, Australia, Spain, Canada
Quick Facts:



Due to a limited number of planes a carrier can hold, the carrier based “Hornet” was designed as a multirole aircraft to handle both air-to-air and air-to-ground missions.

AMMO
Missiles: 64
LASM: 10
SAAM: 8
SOD: 12


EF-2000 Typhoon
Manufacturer: Eurofighter Jagdflugzeug GmbH (Airbus Defence and Space, BAE Systems Military Air & Information, Alenia Aermacchi)
Role: Multi-role fighter
Manufactured: 1994-Present
Status: In Service
Primary Operators: United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Spain, Saudi Arabia
Quick Facts:



An air superiority fighter developed by an international collaboration. Computer-controlled operation of its control surfaces gives it exceptional agility at both supersonic and subsonic speeds.

AMMO
Missiles: 78
XLAA: 14
SOD: 16
SFFS: 12

Repeat Offenders





010
Detlef Fleisher
"Rot 1"
28, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
EF-2000 Typhoon
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Mercenary

Shot down over Area B7R in 1995. He succeeded in landing his damaged fighter, and continued his career in the air force working his way up from officer to base commander. After the war, he became a professor of history at the University of Dinsmark, where he continues to apply himself diligently towards his teaching and research.


011
Jurgen Maier
"Rot 2"
29, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Killed In Action
EF-2000 Typhoon
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Mercenary

Enlisting in the air force soon after high school graduation, he completed the grueling training to be awarded a position in the 2nd Air Division 52nd Tactical Fighter Squadron. He was shot down and killed in action during the Ustio Choker One operation.


012
Helmut Schnellinger
"Rot 3"
31, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Killed In Action
EF-2000 Typhoon
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Mercenary

He was shot down during a mission over the Gebere Mountains. However, an investigation by bereaved family members into the recovery of his remains uncovered nothing more than the empty wreckage of his aircraft. His surviving family continues to press their dissatisfaction with the government's official report.


013
Karl-Heinz Sammer
"Rot 4"
28, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Killed In Action
EF-2000 Typhoon
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Mercenary

Shot down and killed during the Ustio Choker One operation. An investigation into the details regarding his death revealed that problems with the aircraft's ejection mechanism resulted in severe and fatal full-body contusions. His remains were miraculously recovered and delivered to surviving family.


014
Otto Haber
"Tausend"
32, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
X-29A
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Mercenary

At the war's conclusion, he was dismissed from the air force, and with fellow ex-soldiers went on to found a private research company. According to reports, the company's business is bona fine, thus it has been concluded that Otto Haber and his employees no longer present a threat to society.


015
Bernhard Schmidt
"Grun 1"
30, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
F/A-18C Hornet
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Soldier

His uncanny ability to read the tide of battle earned him the name of Green Owl. He was shot down over Area B7R during an encounter with mercenary Ustio pilots. After retirement, he later returned to his hometown where he continues to reside.


016
Fabian Rost
"Grun 2"
29, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
F/A-18C Hornet
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Soldier

His whereabouts became unknown after the conclusion of the Belkan War. Information has surfaced reporting that he is now acting as a volunteer soldier in an effort to free a small eastern country from its authoritarian government.


017
Wif Scholl
"Grun 3"
28, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Killed In Action
F/A-18C Hornet
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Soldier

He enlisted in the air force after graduating from the Belkan Air Force Academy top of his class. For his first actual war mission, he was reunited with his former unit of the 10th Air Division 8th Tactical Fighter Squadron, however he was shot down during his 23rd assault.


018
Fritz Forster
"Grun 4"
26, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Killed In Action
F/A-18C Hornet
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Soldier

Recruited as a test pilot by the Belkan Air Force where he gradually began to distinguish himself through his extraordinary flying skill. Shortly after the War's outbreak, he was officially assigned to the front lines, where he was Killed in action a few months later. His remains have yet to be recovered.


019
Arne Babbel
"Graufalk 1"
30, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Killed In Action
Tornado GR.4
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Soldier

The pilot of Graufalk Squadron's number one fighter, he tallied up an impressive flight record over Area B7R's southern quarter. In 1992, he was transferred from the 5th Air Division to the 3rd Air Division, where his records for air-to-ground assault distinguished him even among the Belkan Force's elite.


020
Mark Baumann
"Graufalk 2"
35, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Killed In Action
Tornado GR.4
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Soldier

As the pilot of Graufalk Squadron's number two fighter, he had been an acquisition for Arne Babbel from the time of his assignment to the 5th Air Division. He was a veteran pilot with a fantastic record over the southern quarter of Area B7R, however, he was shot down and killed in a skirmish with Galm Flight.


021
Dimitri Heinreich
"Indigo 1"
31, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
JAS-39C Gripen
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Knight

Shot down in an aerial encounter with mercenary pilots over Area B7R, he was rushed to the hospital unconscious where doctors succeeded in resuscitating him. He currently maintains a busy schedule running the family business.


022
Berti Backenbauer
"Indigo 2"
31, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
JAS-39C Gripen
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Knight

After the war, he successfully worked as a linguist and a thinker. His outspoken opinions even had him blacklisted by the Bureau of Public Security. He is known for many published works, including the masterpieces: "The Theory of Cognition and Linguistics", and "The Pacifist Soldier".


023
Mathias Overath
"Indigo 3"
29, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
JAS-39C Gripen
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Knight

After the war, he immigrated to Osea where he was headhunted by the Osean Space Agency and engaged in training to become an astronaut. The following year, he enrolled in the Liberty Seven Project where he established a new record for continuous space flight of 72hrs. 52min.


024
Franz Breitner
"Indigo 4"
32, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
JAS-39C Gripen
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Knight

Upon the war's conclusion, he traveled the world as an employee of the International Children's Charity Foundation. While visiting a village on a disaster relief assignment, he became involved in a shootout with National Liberation Army guerrillas and was shot and killed.


025
Elmar Hahn
"Amsel"
27, Male, Belka
04.20.95 Operation Choker One - Shot Down
F-16XL
Difficulty: Any
Ace Style: Knight

Thought to have joined the former Belkan soldier terrorist organization The Falcons of Dawn. A figure resembling him has been identified in a video released by the terrorists in which they claim responsibility for the assault on The Mueller Trust Company.





Tracks Featured In Mission 3