It was a normal day in Washington, DC, September 11, 2013. The sun was high and the birds were singing. People went about their normal daily activities and everything in the streets was calm. Then, suddenly, people started hearing sirens and the National Guard rushed to the White House. People turned their attention to television and saw on the news that parts of the United States had been bombed by planes. No one knew who would do such a terrible thing until Washington, D.C., started getting bombed as well. People went crazy and sought refuge in their homes, buildings and random areas of the streets. The Air Force sent 4 fighter planes against the planes that were bombing America. One of the planes shot down enemy planes and discovered that it was the African Kongo that caused the disaster. President Obama immediately told the US military to prepare for war. The United States wanted revenge for what Kongo had done to America and the American people. The government wondered why they would do this to us. They later received a message from the Kongo saying, "We want the entire United States to collapse and be destroyed." Two days after all this chaos occurred, the United States deployed soldiers to Africa to go to war with Kongo. About a week after all this, the US Army had set up bases in Africa and the soldiers were searching for the enemy. The soldiers asked people in Africa all about Kongo, but everyone seemed to be too afraid to tell them anything. Eventually they found 3 brave men who knew where they were. The 3 men said they also wanted to take revenge on the Kongo for what they had done to their village and their families. These men were taken to US Army bases set up nearby... middle of paper... enemy soldiers guarding the house. Next 5 men charged the building, while the one at the top of the building looked for the leader through the window. The men in the house killed one of the Kongo soldiers protecting the leader and then the American soldier at the top of the building saw the other soldier and the leader with him. That soldier shot and killed the Kongo soldier and the Kongo leader with a shot to the head. Moments after the Kongo leader was confirmed dead, the remaining US soldiers killed the remaining enemy soldiers and the war was over. The American soldiers thanked the men who helped them and assured the African people that they no longer had to fear the Kongo soldiers and returned to America. Immediately after the bombing, Americans cleaned up the affected areas in the United States and repaired things that had been destroyed.
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