If not for personal experience, who would have thought that the German special forces were swaggering all the way to look for British ammunition warehouses. They stopped the car, stopped the British soldiers on patrol, issued cigarettes to scold the Germans, and then casually set up some nearby military facilities on the pretext of getting lost. Soon these disguised German special forces left the ignited ammunition warehouse in their cars, then left blatantly in the sound of explosion and the panic of the British fire fighting forces, and also loudly reminded the fire fighting forces to be careful of the attack of German forces. About 10 special operations teams were placed behind the British line of defense. They robbed homes, robbed food, created panic, spread rumors and destroyed everything they saw. They bombed the railway, stopped the reinforcement of British troops, attacked the British transport forces, divided up food and ammunition, burned them, wore British uniforms and shot and killed the British garrison. In short, these soldiers caused more trouble for the British garrison than the German soldiers of a division. The actions of the German army brought the British to the brink of collapse. Lord Goth, the second British commander-in-chief, was intercepted on the way by German special forces when he was dismissed and rushed back to London. The old lord, who had been a British general since the time of Dunkirk's retreat, died in the woods with his staff and more than a dozen guards. Another thing is to make the new British front-line commander-in-chief Willis feel ashamed. In a speech on inspecting the front line, his assistant, who was only a few steps away from him, was shot by a sniper, and his blood splashed all over his face. It turned out that this inaccurate sniping was carried out at a terrible distance of 550 meters. Of course, the German special forces bombed a railway near Cambridge and scrapped a train bound for Cambridge. No one knows how much material Britain lost in this small attack - the train carried some parts of the four large caliber train guns deployed near Cambridge and almost all the large caliber shells of the four guns. There are also engineers responsible for the installation of train guns, and 240 officers and men responsible for protecting these equipment and materials. That night's operation brought a successful end to this operation of the German special forces. The special forces' attack mission code named Viper ended. 131 officers and soldiers of the special forces who had experienced the war safely returned to the German controlled area and brought back several cans of remains and ashes of other soldiers. The next day, German war reporters interviewed the commander-in-chief of the British city defense forces in Cambridge, general Koeman, and his wife, who was still in shock. A tabloid in London published this ironic news. The German army took advantage of the night to capture the commander of the British front-line forces. Eleven captains and five major were killed overnight. A colonel and a major general became prisoners of the German special forces. But the paper didn't say the end of the story. On the afternoon of the news, the British troops who had lost their commander were in a mess. The German army took the opportunity to launch a full-scale attack. It took only five hours, just after 7:15 after supper time, to capture Cambridge, which is famous for its university.