Attack #2
☆ Be the first to review + Add to your collection — Join freeAttack #2 is a war anthology containing at least two stories. "Here Come the Tanks" follows a U.N. tank crew led by Captain Malone who went missing in the Grim Mountains of Korea; when they return after six days with an incredible explanation, a board of inquiry questions whether their fantastic story is believable. "Operation Bullion" depicts a January 1942 operation in which U.S. officials attempt to transport millions of dollars in gold and silver stored in Manila to safety before the Japanese can seize it, with the treasure eventually being destroyed to prevent enemy acquisition. A third story, "Fly-Boy," involves a military pilot and a combat mission scheduled for the following morning, with tensions arising among officers regarding his competence.
Lost in the Korean mountains near Heartbreak Ridge, Sgt. Malone and his crew stumble upon a hidden enemy ammunition dump—but convincing headquarters of their discovery proves just as challenging as the dangerous mission itself. With their tank and wits as their only weapons, Malone devises a desperate plan to destroy the supply cache before the enemy can reinforce it. This 1952 war story delivers the kind of audacious, nail-biting action that makes you believe a soldier's outrageous tale might actually be true.
When Captain Dawson arrives to command a B-17 crew over war-torn Europe, his crew writes him off as an arrogant brass who got his rank through connections—until a bombing run to Berlin goes catastrophically wrong. Stranded in the freezing North Sea with wounded crew members, Dawson's true character surfaces in a desperate test of sacrifice and leadership that redefines what courage really means.
ComicBooks.com Value
Show all 7 grades ▾
Find on ebay
Sell my copy
Have this issue — or a whole collection? Get a fair offer from us, skip the marketplace fees and the hassle.
We Buy Collections ▸Full credits
Reprints
Reprinted in Atomic Attack! #11 (1954)
Reviews
Reader reviews
No reader reviews yet.