Ref. MDG-8437016958728 - Fecha de lanzamiento: 30/09/2022 ?Was this face that launch?d a thousand ships into war? Touch me and you?ll burn.? Helen of Troy, paraphrasing certain verses composed about her. Temporary cease-fire negotiations during the siege of the town of Grünerfluss. Norstralia. Paradiso Third Offensive. Helen of Troy (Ancient Greek: ?????, Heléne) is a well-known character from Greek mythology, daughter of Zeus and Queen Leda, famed for her stunning beauty, which was said to have no equal among mortal women. She was wife to Menelaus, king of Sparta, and her elopement with young prince Paris brought about the Trojan War. Even an assault force devoted to action and violence recognizes the value of diplomacy in certain (albeit limited) circumstances. Nonetheless, when it?s necessary to resort to dialogue and negotiation, the Phalanx always prefers to proceed on its own rather than relying on the experts of the Administration for Institutional Image. The negotiators of this OperationS division are renowned for their mellifluous speech, their trickery, and their readiness to agree to ?lose the battle but win the war? compromises, which is unthinkable for the aggressive and ruthless warriors of the Phalanx. The men and women of the Assault Subsection always mistrust these OperationS specialists and view them as sly backstabbers. The Phalanx believes when entering negotiations that they should be carried out on its own terms, which naturally also means in its own unique, signature style The Theoroi, the Phalanx ambassadors, epitomize this certain style, and none more so than Helen of Troy, the most notorious of them all. Helen of Troy is a Recreation of the mythological character she is named after, and she was created specifically to represent the Phalanx in any negotiation. It speaks volumes about the Assault Subsection that it chose as its ambassador a character who is widely known for triggering one of the longest and bloodiest wars of Antiquity. And Helen of Troy lives up to her reputation: her beauty is even greater than anyone could even conceive, but she is much tougher than anyone would expect. This is because in order to be accepted and respected among the hardened warriors of the Phalanx, one must possess a particular spirit and an adamantine will. Helen?s steely gaze can put any veteran Phalanx officer in their place, and the strength of her character allows her to deal on equal terms with anyone she has to negotiate with, regardless of their rank, their power, or how much leverage her interlocutor has. Helen of Troy embodies the temper and ethos of the Phalanx, for she does not believe in soft power or empty promises. She knows deceit, for it wrought her city?s downfall, and she saw its ravaged towers burn against the dark night sky. A woman like Helen knows firsthand the perils of war and the risks of trusting the word of your enemy. Just like the Phalanx she is part of, she only trusts power and strength. For Helen of Troy, a negotiation is just another phase of their attack plan, a clash of wills in which she is determined to never fail, for that is the kind of attitude that is always expected of any warrior of the Steel Phalanx.