This is the eighth tournament in a series which explores the history of nuclear war. This tournament will focus on the Cold War. It is the Sunny counterpart to History of Nuclear War III. For more information on this series, visit the History of Nuclear War Series InfoCentre
Eligibility: To play in this tournament, you must be premium, have a turns-taken record of 97% or better, at least 100 completed games, and be at least a PFC on sign-up.
Procedure: In each tourney in this series, the first nine phases will consist of multiplayer Standard games. In each of these phases, only the first player eliminated from each game is eliminated from the tournament. All others will continue to the next phase. As soon as all games in a phase have had one player eliminated, I will begin the next phase with the survivors. Winning these games will not influence the course of the tournament; only that first elimination is significant.
In the Final phase, all remaining players will play simultaneously in nine multiplayer Terminator games. These games will be completed and winning them will count, as will the number of kills.
Settings: All games will be Casual, Automatic, Chained, No Fog and No Trench. Maps will vary widely from phase to phase. Needless to say, spoils in all games will be nuclear.
Phase 1
Phase 1
40 players in 5 groups will play 8-player games on the Soviet Union map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 2
In Asia, however, things were different. Here, a series of "proxy" wars were fought, where Asiatic armies aligned with one side or the other did most of the fighting, and there was no direct contact between Russian and American forces. In China, an indigenous Communist army led by Mao Tse-tung battered Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist army, and by 1949 had forced the Nationalists to retreat to the island of Taiwan, there to begin an exile still in place today. In Malaysia, Indonesia, and Indochina there were local independence movements with strong Communist ties. And in Korea, a Communist government formed in the Russian-occupied north squared off against a Republican government formed in the American-occupied south. By 1948 Korea had been de facto partitioned, and in 1950, when the North invaded the South, a full-scale war erupted.
Phase 2
35 players in 5 groups will play 7-player games on the Far East map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 3
Within a year, the Soviet Union tested its own thermonuclear device. The pace of nuclear proliferation was accelerating. By the end of 1955, the U.S. had over 3,000 nuclear weapons. The Soviets at the time had only 200, but were putting their production program into high gear. A full-scale arms race was under way.
Phase 3
30 players in 5 groups will play 6-player games on the Arms Race map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 4
Phase 4
25 players in 5 groups will play 5-player games on the Duck and Cover map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 5
Berlin was originally divided up between the various Allies in World War II, and the manner of its division was indicative of the stresses and tensions between the Allies, as the war against Germany drew to a close and the Allies secretly began thinking of war between each other. The Russians considered themselves to be one half of an East-West partnership. In their eyes all the Western allies were part of the same Capitalist club, joined at the hip, and Russia was the only truly independent Ally. They thus demanded a full half of Germany and Berlin. The Americans saw their interests as being very different from the British and refused to be lumped in together, and thus wanted a three-way split. The British, although heavily indebted to America, were just as mistrustful of the Americans as of the Russians. To avoid being outnumbered in a three-way split, they insisted that the French should be treated as an equal ally, and demanded a four-way split. In the eventual compromise reached, each point of view was partially represented. As was typical in those late-war conferences, the Russians got the best deal: a segment that was somewhat less than half, but considerably more than one-third. The Americans got almost, but not quite, the one-third they wanted, the British slightly less, and the French least of all.
All of Germany was similarly divided, but Berlin was completely encircled by the Russian zone of occupation, which eventually became East Germany. The military position of the Western Allies inside the city of Berlin was, despite air power nearby in West German bases, essentially untenable. It was therefore a test of the Allies resolve to not back down despite repeated Russian provocations.
The first major crisis was in 1949, when the Russians closed the border to rail traffic from the west, expecting to force the Allies out through starvation of the civilian population. The Allies responded with the Berln Airlift, successfully bringing as many supplies into Berlin by aircraft as had previously come by rail. This was a real shock to the Russians, whose had expected the Allies to utterly fail, as the Germans had failed with the attempted airlift to Stalingrad.
After the Airlift there was calm for a while, but in 1958 the Russians delivered an ultimatum demanding Allied withdrawal. Tensions rose, the ultimatum was refused, but war did not erupt.
By 1961 more than 2 million Germans had used Berlin as an avenue to escape to the West, and the East German government persuaded the Russians that the city needed to be sealed off. On August 13, 1961 the border was closed and construction rapidly began on the Berlin Wall. Barbed wire was rolled out along the entire 87 mile perimeter of West Berlin within a few days, but construction continued for decades, as the barbed wire gradually was uprgraded to a fully fortified concrete wall. Again, tensions increased, troops were mobilized on both sides, but war did not erupt.
On October 22nd, the American chief of mission was stopped while crossing into East Berlin, a violation of the Potsdam agreements. On October 27th, he again crossed into East Berlin, this time with tanks accompanying him to the checkpoint. The Russians brought up tanks of their own. For 18 hours, Russian and American tanks, both with orders to fire if fired up, faced each other at Checkpoint Charlie. It was the closest the two sides had come to actual combat since the beginning of the Cold War. After numerous conversations, Kennedy and Khruschev agreed to withdraw their tanks, and the Cold War thermometer dropped by a couple degrees.
Phase 5
20 players in 4 groups will play 5-player games on the Berlin map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 6
On October 14th, 1962, a spy plane brought back photographic proof that Soviet missiles were being deployed in Cuba. The American response was a naval blockade of the island. The next 13 days saw heavy deployments and mobilizations of air and naval forces by both sides. On October 27th, for the first time actual gunfire was exchanged between the two sides. On the morning of the 27th, a U2 spy plane was shot down over Cuba by Russian missiles, and later that day a Russian submarine was forced to surface by American depth charges. The submarine was equipped with nuclear torpedoes, and the captain ordered them to be fired. He could not complete the firing, however, without the agreement of his deputy, who refused. The deputy, named Vasili Arkhipov, has been called the "man who saved the world."
Brought back from the brink of war, Kennedy and Khruschev made a secret deal the next day, under which the Russian missiles were removed from Cuba, while American missiles were removed from Turkey. Kennedy also agreed to attempt no further invasions of Cuba. Both Kennedy and Khruschev have been criticized within their respective nations for giving up too much in the deal.
Phase 6
16 players in 2 groups will play 8-player games on the Cuban Missile Crisis map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 7
Phase 7
14 players in 2 groups will play 7-player games on the Eastern Hemisphere map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
phase 8
Nonetheless, American support was withdrawn from the South, while Russian and Chinese support for the North continued unabated. Only 22 months after the American withdrawal was the North confident enough to resume the war. Fully rested and re-equipped with brand-new Soviet military hardware, including 700 new tanks, the NVA was able to finally defeat the South.
Phase 8
12 players in 2 groups will play 6-player games on the Indochina map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 9
In 1979 the Soviets sent troops into Afghanistan to prop up their puppet regime there, and Jimmy Carter withdrew from the SALT II talks in protest. He immediately set in motion a large buildup of U.S. forces, including both a conventional buildup and the new MX nuclear missile. This buildup was continued by Ronald Reagan, who also began the Strategic Defense Initiative, revived the B-1 bomber program, and deployed Pershing II missiles in Germany. The years from 1979 to 1983 saw the largest peacetime military buildup in U.S. history, and coupled with the continuing buildup by the Soviets it constituted a new arms race.
Phase 9
10 players in 2 groups will play 5-player games on the Arms Race map. The first player eliminated in each game is out of the tournament. The remainder will go on to the next round.
Phase 10 - Finals - The nuclear cataclysm
In the final round, the eight remaining players will face off simultaneously on all nine maps used in the tournament thus far. (The Arms Race map, which was used in two phases thus far, will therefore be played twice.) These games will be Terminator, and players will score 1 point for each kill and two extra points for winning a game. The player who scores the most points in the Cataclysm phase will win the tournament.



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