Designated Targets is a science fiction novel by Australian writer John Birmingham, the second volume of his alternate history Axis of Time trilogy.[1][2]

Designated Targets
First edition
AuthorJohn Birmingham
Cover artistBland Design
LanguageEnglish
SeriesAxis of Time
GenreAlternate history, Science fiction novel
PublisherPan Macmillan
Publication date
September 2005
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint (Hardcover, Paperback)
Pages384
ISBN0-345-45714-5
OCLC60671858
813/.6 22
LC ClassPR9619.3.B5136 D47 2005
Preceded byWeapons of Choice 
Followed byFinal Impact 

Plot summary

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The novel starts in September 1942, four months after the Transition. A cease-fire has been signed between Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin, and the dictators have re-established their June 1941 borders. Both nations are 'cooperating' in various areas of research (particularly rocketry) at the newly built Demidenko research facility in Ukraine. Thanks to the foreknowledge granted by the Transition, Hitler and Stalin have purged their military and party ranks of traitors (real and imagined) that have been revealed from our history but not without problems. The arrest of Field Marshal Rommel sparks off a mutiny of the Afrika Korps and it throws the entire North African front into chaos.

Most of the German war machine shifts to "Operation Sea Dragon": the invasion of Britain. Meanwhile, in the Pacific, the Japanese have conquered New Guinea and the nearby island chains and are battling Allied forces (reinforced with troops from the Multinational Force) along the Brisbane Line in Australia.

In the United States a "Special Administrative Zone" has been carved out within the San Fernando Valley of California. Within "the Zone", the laws of the United States as of 15 January 2021 apply and it becomes an enclave for the 21st Century personnel. Many of the Multinational Force members work in various technological areas and thousands of contemporary females and non-whites are clamoring to join their ranks.

Over the next month, the Japanese position in northern Australia unravels after a massive blitzkrieg of 21st Century ordinance is unleashed. Japanese soldiers massacre entire towns, prompting both outrage and a reluctance to divert 21st forces anywhere else. Under interrogation, General Homma reveals that Australia was nothing more than a diversion to make the Multinational Forces expend as much of their limited weaponry as possible. Japanese survivors are executed under Multinational Force Sanction Four.

The French stealth ship Dessaix, presumed lost, was found by the Germans off the Canary Islands a few weeks after the initial Transition, and it now spearheads the assault on Yamamoto's real target: Hawaii. The ship's cruise missiles lay waste to the islands' defenses (and one nearly obliterates the city of Honolulu) although a French crew member manages to sabotage several of them before being killed. With the American defense crippled, the Japanese easily take Oahu and send a message to Washington DC, stating that any attempt to retake the islands will result in the wholesale slaughter of the population.

In Britain, preparations are underway for a commando raid on Norway against the heavy water plant there (a la Heroes of Telemark). However, information from Wehrmacht Colonel Paul Brasch (whose physically disabled son is eligible for 'disposal' under the T4 program) reveals that Germany's true nuclear effort lies elsewhere, and the mission is placed on hold. Operation Sea Dragon commences the next day with an attempt to invade across the English Channel.

Hundreds of aircraft and warships, upgraded with new technology, duel in the waters and skies south of England; the 21st century ship HMS Trident, more valuable as a command-and-control centre than as a weapon, ensures that key German formations identified by Brasch are destroyed. Three missiles taken off the Dessaix are launched at British targets, but suspected sabotage causes two to crash harmlessly into the North Sea. The third does hit Biggin Hill airfield, but its primary warhead does not detonate. Despite heavy losses sustained by the RAF and the damage to Biggin Hill, the Germans lose most of their navy. Any airborne units that reach England are quickly isolated and crushed by the Allies.

In the United States, a series of German-instigated bombings and race riots takes place, targeting civilians for maximum effect. Wahabi and Baathist insurgents foment revolt across the Middle East and the Soviet Union, with enough time to train and equip its armies, has begun seizing the Afghan passes leading to India.

Unbeknownst to either the Allies or Axis, HMS Vanguard materialized on the Siberian ice pack, one day before the other ships, and is now providing the Soviets with invaluable resources and information. Stalin has also impounded the ships of Convoy PQ 17 and has his own atomic bomb program in place; it may take a decade of fighting, but Stalin sees nothing but global triumph for communism.

As the German forces retreat from the Channel, a group of SS commandos led by Otto Skorzeny attempts to assassinate Prime Minister Churchill (as in The Eagle Has Landed). They are thwarted by SAS Major Windsor, but Skorzeny escapes in the melee.

Drone coverage over Oahu reveals that the Japanese are slaughtering military prisoners in droves. With the supercarrier Hillary Clinton all but useless in a fight, the 21st-century Japanese cruiser Shiranui (crewed by survivors of the Leyte Gulf) prepares to lead the Allied forces in what will be a very bloody retaking of the Hawaiian Islands.

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British Commonwealth

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Germany

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Japan

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United States

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USSR

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References

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