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Endnote
There are various accounts of the experiences of Lieutenant-General Benjamin Faulkner, Lieutenant-Commander Miami Hodgson, Lieutenant Alexander Townsend and General Harry Miller. For example, some state that Miller's platoon was not part of the Federal Armed Forces, but were a band of former rebel mercenaries that were spared by the Government for unknown reasons. The same accounts imply that the mercenaries gained the trust of the Government and so were incorporated into the Army as a separate unit. Other biographies of Miller say that his platoon, instead of being executed, were exiled to an undisclosed location, and that Miller was retained for interrogation.

After what became known as the Liberation War, Benjamin Faulkner CV NLH ML HMPC MP went on to become a founding figure of Oasis Landing. He retired from the military, entering a career in politics. At 23, he married Miami Hodgson, and he became Oasis Landing's first Chancellor. After serving two four-year terms, Faulkner resigned from politics, joining the Oasis Landing Development Committee. He remained an active supporter of the town's development until his death aged 45. Officially, he died from radiation poisoning, but rumours indicate that he committed suicide as a result of the stresses from his experiences in the War.

Miami Hodgson CV NLH MP remained in the Liberation Army, eventually becoming an important commander. She married Benjamin Faulkner at the age of 23, and she became the Secretary for Defence under the government of Chancellor Hulirien. Hodgson began reforms of the military, helping it evolve into a peacekeeping force, reorganising her department into the Department for the Oversight of the National Demilitarisation Program. She remains in active service in the Oasis Landing Peacekeeper Corps. Hodgson is now a decorated commander, receiving the Cross of Valour, and the National Legion of Honour.

Directly after the war, Alexander Townsend NLH MP resigned from service in the Liberation Army and Chancellor Faulkner appointed him Secretary for Education. He organised a program to un-brainwash the populace, and began the establishment of a curriculum based on the values of mid-21st century humanity. After a ten-year tenure as Secretary for Education, Townsend resigned and retired to his home in the Mining District. He has so far declined to be interviewed about his personal wartime experiences.

General Harry Miller CV NLH GPC MP, like Hodgson, remained in the Liberation Army, becoming Supreme Commander. He assisted Hodgson in the transition to the OLPC, and became the Corps' Chief Peacekeeper. After his retirement from the OLPC aged 67, Miller stood for the Chancellorship of Oasis Landing. He became the fourth Chancellor, but died shortly after his inauguration.

These individuals were and are of infinite importance to the liberation and recovery of humanity. May their names forever live on in history.

END