Operation Rosebud

Warning Spoilers Operation Rosebud was the U.S. counterattack to Operation Coalscuttle duriing the Second Great War. Led by Brigadier General Irving Morrell, the operation drove the Confederates out of Pittsburgh and into southern Ohio. It began with Morrell's barrels attacking the Confederate forces around Pittsburgh. These lines were held by the Confederates' Mexican allies, due to the losses taken by Confederate soldiers. The Mexicans weren't as well supplied as their allies and so General Morrell's barrels were able to easily penetrate the Mexicans' defenses. U.S. forces were to able to completely encircle the city, trapping the C.S. soldiers inside. C.S. president Jake Featherston, who ordered the attack on Pittsburgh, refused to order his troops to immmediately retreat from the city, as he was convinced his forces could be supplied by air. However he did send a relief force to the city. Morrell then ordered his troops and other U.S troops in Indiana to attack the C.S. relief force. Both groups converged on the C.S. troops in northern Ohio and turned the C.S. troops back. The Confederates in Pittsburgh were forced to surrender and Operation Rosebud was an overwhelming success.