Lady & Azor
We need to drill down the supply chain and cut all non-essential steps—what's the minimum viable logistics plan for a hostile environment?
Keep it lean—just the core movers. 1) Secure a single, hardened supply node that’s within line of sight for air support. 2) Use rapid‑deployed, all‑terrain transport units that can shift on demand. 3) Drop the inventory into modular, protected containers that can be unloaded in minutes, no extra handling. 4) Set up a real‑time feed from drones to track each convoy and anticipate ambushes. 5) Assign a single logistics commander who coordinates every move, so there’s no overlap or redundant checks. 6) Keep only the essentials—fuel, ammo, medical kit, spare parts. Anything that can wait is delayed. That’s it: one node, quick transport, continuous surveillance, single‑point command, and only what you absolutely need.
Good. One node, rapid transport, real‑time drones, single commander, only essentials—efficient. Just build a fallback for that node in case it goes down.
Absolutely. Add a second hidden depot a few miles out—camouflaged, with its own small squad and drone cover, ready to switch in at a blink. That’s the only contingency we need.
Second depot noted. Keep it off‑grid, minimal footprint, enough ammo to feed the main node if the first one goes dark. No extra bureaucracy. Keep it tight.
Got it—two nodes, one main, one covert backup, all in the loop, no bureaucracy.