EXCERPT FROM CLONE MAJOR GLIDER'S JOURNAL:
"I remember when the attack started, many of us scrambled to defend. As we moved in to defensive stations it was clear what was happening, a combined force of the Galactic Empire, the Imperial Japanese Navy, and the Martian Warhawks were attacking Pear Harbor. As one of only two Clone Trooper officers on site, I rallied as many clone troopers, rebel soldiers, and American forces to defend the harbor, as the Empire were sending in dropships to unload Stormtroopers and battle droids".
"In the middle of the fighting I noticed the battleship, the USS Arizona. It was being swarmed with Japanese fighter planes, TIE Fighters, and Vulture droids. Because the nearby airfield was also under attack, Rebel alliance and Republic Remnant starfighters were the only fightercraft that could provide air support. Even one of our light cruisers got involved in the fighting. But it was taken out by one of the Martian tripods".
"As the cruiser fell into the bay of Pearl Harbor, the USS Arizona aimed it's front cannons at the tripod, and started firing at the cyborg walker. While the shields held up for a bit, they quickly fell, with the help of a strafing run the tripod was destroyed".
"It was then I noticed a few Japanese fighter planes doing their own strafing run on the USS Arizona. I saw a few sailors, Clones, and Rebel soldiers giving it their all on the bow of the Arizona. None of them knew what was coming. One Torpedo. One torpedo was all it took to destroy the Arizona. It landed in the munitions bay before blowing up, which consumed the Arizona before it sank. I still remember seeing the sailors, clones, and rebels either being blown off the ship by the force of the explosion, or consumed in the explosion".
"We had to keep fighting. We had to push back the invading forces, less the souls that were just lost died in vain".
This scenario of the Earthverse is dedicated to the souls who lost their lives at Pearl Harbor 83 years ago, and the crew of the USS Arizona. May they rest in peace, and may we never forget them.