Operation BlueHawk
Operation BlueHawk was a military operation carried out in North Vietnam in 1965. It involved the use of the Different BlueHawk as a military asset against Northern Vietnamese forces. It came to an abrupt end in November of 1965.
BlueHawk, who had earned the rank of sergeant in the U.S. Marines, was deployed in Vietnam in March of 1965. He quickly proved to be an incredibly effective military asset. BlueHawk was impervious to any conventional weaponry while his immense strength allowed him to penetrate and disable any Vietnamese fortress.
On May 17th, 1965, due to multiple existing media reports, the United States government confirmed the existence of Operation BlueHawk and the Different at the center of it. This confirmation had many consequences; it had the effect of confirming the existence of Different individuals and also revealed the existence of Defense Department Section 26 which was designed to cope with and utilize Differents. Government spokesmen hailed BlueHawk as the key to victory in Vietnam and promised a swift end to the conflict.
Then in November 1965, the Northern Vietnamese delivered a counter-attack. They deployed their own Different military asset, Russian born Mikhail Borshev. Borshev had been hired as a mercenary by the Northern Vietnamese army, although it was widely known that Borshev was acting in the interests of the Soviet Union.
There was a brief battle between Borshev and BlueHawk. The fight resulted in a series of shock waves which devastated both Vietnamese and American military forces. The shock waves created massive Tsunamis, which resulted in the deaths of nearly 100,000 people in Southeast Asia.
After their brief skirmish, BlueHawk and Borshev mutually agreed to leave Vietnam. They made a pact not to involve themselves in political struggles outside the borders of their own nations. Operation BlueHawk came to and end due to BlueHawk’s refusal to participate in the operation any further.