The situation is deteriorating.
Rising tensions in the region have forced Chernarus Defense Forces (CDF) and allied units to mobilize. Intelligence reports indicate increasing instability across key regions — particularly along coastal cities and inland industrial zones.
The “Operation Iron Corridor” Tour places you in command of a military cargo aircraft, tasked with transporting troops, equipment, and supplies across the operational theater.
This mission draws from Arma 2 Chernarus lore, but is flown across real-world terrain in the Czech Republic and surrounding regions — the same landscapes that inspired the original map.
Your objectives are clear:
Move personnel
Deliver equipment
Maintain operational flow
Stay ahead of a developing crisis
This is not a tour.
This is a deployment.
C-130 Hercules • A400M • C-27J Spartan • An-26
Flying Style: Tactical / IFR / Low-altitude when required
Depart Prague under military clearance.
Orders come through before sunrise.
Chernarus has activated regional defense protocols following reports of insurgent activity near key infrastructure zones. Coalition advisors are being deployed to assist CDF units.
Your first task is simple — move personnel and light equipment to a forward staging base near Chomutov, a region that closely mirrors the western approaches of Chernarus.
Convoys are already moving on the ground.
You are the air bridge.
Short hop to an industrial corridor.
Ústí nad Labem — steep terrain, river access, and heavy industry.
This region reflects the Elektrozavodsk-style industrial zones of Chernarus.
Reports indicate potential sabotage risks targeting power facilities and rail networks.
You’re transporting engineering teams and equipment — generators, communications units, and defensive assets.
Without power —
the region goes dark.
Without logistics —
the mission fails.
Follow the river north.
The Elbe River valley mirrors key supply routes in northern Chernarus.
Command wants control of crossings — bridges, choke points, and observation positions.
Troops onboard are tasked with establishing forward observation posts along elevated terrain.
If movement begins…
they need to see it first.
Move inland.
Pardubice becomes your main rear logistics hub.
Fuel, ammunition, medical supplies — all begin flowing through this node.
This is where operations scale.
Aircraft rotate in.
Cargo moves out.
The corridor is forming.
Head east.
Ostrava represents the industrial backbone — similar to inland Chernarus manufacturing zones.
You’re now transporting heavier cargo:
vehicles, armored support equipment, and engineering assets.
The mission is evolving.
This is no longer stabilization —
this is preparation.
Cross into Poland.
Allied forces begin coordinating operations.
Katowice serves as a coalition staging area, bringing additional manpower and resources into the theater.
Airspace becomes busier.
Coordination becomes critical.
You’re no longer alone in the sky.
Return to command.
Prague becomes the operational command center.
Briefings intensify. Intelligence updates increase.
There are indications of organized resistance forming.
This is no longer just logistics —
this is positioning.
Deploy west.
Karlovy Vary represents the rural western zones — quiet, but vulnerable.
Troops are inserted to secure towns, monitor roads, and maintain stability.
These areas often become flashpoints unexpectedly.
Silence doesn’t mean safety.
Leg 9 — LKNA → EDDC
Cross into Germany.
Dresden becomes a forward NATO support node.
More aircraft. More personnel. More urgency.
The situation in Chernarus is escalating faster than anticipated.
You begin transporting medical evacuation equipment and rapid-response units.
The tone has changed.
Leg 10 — EDDC → LKUL
Return to the front.
Units previously deployed now require reinforcement.
Supplies run low. Positions need strengthening.
You’re now flying into active zones —
tight approaches, quick unloads, immediate departures.
Time on the ground is risk.
Leg 11 — LKUL → LKCV
Short tactical reposition.
Troops rotate out. Fresh units rotate in.
Fatigue sets in across the force.
Your aircraft becomes part of the rhythm —
inbound, outbound, repeat.
This is how operations sustain.
Leg 12 — LKCV → LKPR
Final return.
For now — the corridor holds.
Supplies are moving. Units are positioned. Infrastructure remains intact.
But the situation is unresolved.
And you know this isn’t the end.
It’s just the first phase.
BREAK
Final Reflection
Wars are not won by a single battle.
They are sustained by movement —
of people, of equipment, of information.
You didn’t fly passengers.
You carried a mission.
And in the skies above Chernarus…
that mission continues.