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RE: Siberian Reinforcements

 
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RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/2/2007 10:42:47 PM   
IrishGuards


Posts: 542
Joined: 12/7/2006
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Playing against the computer is 1 thing .. Against a very capable human opponent ..
Is quite another ..

The comp is not able to counter any serious attack that has any kind of depth .. even on the best setting ..
And that is exactly what people are talking about here .. An ability to counter attacks by individuals who play strategy and counter strategies, and by wargamers who are able to not just judge odds .. but may attack in such a fashion to ensure success, in the European theater.

If a player is suffeciently limited in any number of categories .. units .. resources .. reinforcements .. especially of experienced troops .. and leaders for that matter.
Then any decent gamer can and will exploit these inherent weaknesses and wreak havoc .. not just on a limited tactical scale .. but on a game scale .. This is not SC ..

I seriously believe the russians need a better base than they have been given. I know at least 3 very competent gamers who I have played personally .. they speak the truth ..
And because of this my next post will be
Russian DoW .. Including OOB ..
IDG


(in reply to Hard Sarge)
Post #: 31
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 1:23:22 AM   
Fred98


Posts: 4430
Joined: 1/5/2001
From: Wollondilly, Sydney
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quote:


Probably I cant imagine how they missed the reinforcements



In beta testing, probably no game goes long enough for reinforcements to arrive.
-



_____________________________


(in reply to targul)
Post #: 32
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 4:50:49 AM   
Phatguy

 

Posts: 1348
Joined: 3/1/2006
From: Buffalo,ny
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Hard Sarge

way can't you just build the replacements like it is planned ? why do they need to give them to you ?

why don't we then give the GE all the SS Armor Divs they should get later on in the war, they are going to need them too, while we at it, what about the increase in the LW, they need that too





Well for one thing I don't believe the Soviets get enough supply points at the beginning. Sure manpower is nice but essentialy useless without supply to build things

(in reply to Hard Sarge)
Post #: 33
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 5:24:47 AM   
SMK-at-work

 

Posts: 3396
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From: New Zealand
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quote:

ORIGINAL: targul


The Siberian Transfer is not a myth. Those forces where much larger then a division. They where larger then a corps. There where 50,000 infantry combat veterans,


The Siberian forces almost certainly included few combat veterans - the war vs Japan was May-September 1939....Soviet conscription was for 2 years - the vast majority of troops who had fought in those battles had been released to reserves. when they were recalled to the colours it was not to their original divisions - it was as replacements.

quote:


1000 T34 new tanks


You're joking right??

the Soviets have barely BUILT 1000 T34's by Barbarossa, and NONE of these were in service in the Far East or Siberia in June 1941. they built another 1900 or so until the end of 1941 - again they all went west. (see http://rkkaww2.armchairgeneral.com/weapons.htm)

any tanks coming ffrom Siberia were the older models - probably mostly T-26's since hte far east forces had about 3500 tanks in June 41, of which about 2200 were T26's (see http://rkkaww2.armchairgeneral.com/weapons/tank_number_june01_41.htm)


quote:


with there support troops and 1000 fresh air with men transferred from Siberia again with there support. It was specifically these forces winter trained that attacked at Moscow and broke the siege in 41. Do you believe that 1000 tanks is not equivelent to at least a corps of armor? Do you think 1000 aircraft is less then a corps of fighters or bombers? How about 50000 troops is that merly a division?


50,000 men is barely a garrison unit in CEAW - there were over 1 million men per side at the battle for Moscow - probably 5-6 "Corps" each. 50,000 is a useful addition, but not a vast amount.


quote:


This was a deciding factor at Moscow according to Zurkof and these and more forces where used to defend throughout 42.


no they were not. According to Zhukov it was reserves that were the deciding factor, not specifically siberians. The majority of the Siberians had already been committed piecemeal, and the reserves used to attack outside Moscow were "standard" Soviet trops. sure they were equipped for winter warfare, and better trained than most of the troops hurriedly raised over hte previous 6 months.

But they were not freshly shipped in from Siberia.


quote:


No these men and equipment where not myths but real men who fought in some of the most horrendous battles of the war.


No they were not myths - but they were not Siberians either - THAT is the myth.


< Message edited by SMK-at-work -- 7/3/2007 5:42:26 AM >

(in reply to targul)
Post #: 34
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 9:05:42 AM   
Warfare1


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I think we should be careful about everything that Zhukov writes about in his memoirs.

Zhukov wrote his book in 1964 and published it in 1969. This, at a time when the USSR was still under the heavy dictatorship of the Communist Party, of which Zhukov was a prominent member.

As such, Zhukov's book was heavily censored by Soviet authorities on numerous occasions during its 10 printings. It was last printed in 1990.

Due to this heavy censorship we may never truly know the exact extent of true or fabricated information in this book. No doubt Zhukov would want to make himself look good; no doubt the Communist Party would want certain facts and information to be told the way it would like them to be told.

Here are just a few examples of why we should be more critical of Zhukov's book:

1) Zhukov professes great faith in communism: "I have forgotten many things, but I will remember the day I joined the Party as long as I live. Since then I have tried to suit all my thoughts, aspirations and actions to the demands made of a Party member."

Yet surely someone who had witnessed Stalin's purges of the 1930s, to which many of Zhukov's colleagues fell victim, or who had himself been prey to the petty machinations of the Party leadership after the war, would have a more nuanced view of the Soviet political system?

2) Until the 1990 edition was published, Zhukov's book was subject to myriad revisions by the Soviet censors, including one notorious passage where Zhukov was persuaded to write that he had "wanted to consult" with Leonid Brezhnev (who was the Soviet leader when the first edition of Zhukov's memoirs came out in 1969) during a visit to the North Caucasian Front in 1943, when Brezhnev was a lowly political officer.

3) Zhukov Misrepresents Information and Operations: Operation Mars was a costly failure which in his memoirs Zhukov misrepresented as a diversion to prevent German Army Group Center from assisting their comrades at Stalingrad rather than a major offensive in its own right.

In his recent book, Zhukov's Greatest Defeat, David Glantz exposes Zhukov's falsification and recounts in detail the Mars disaster, which had long been covered up by official Soviet sources.

According to John Erickson, the leading historian of Stalingrad, "the full significance of Stalingrad…cannot be grasped without understanding the role of Operation Mars," which was "deliberately misrepresented by Zhukov himself" and is now the subject of "Glantz's indispensable account."


SOURCES:

http://context.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2004/03/12/105.html

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/142

http://www.russiablog.org/2007/04/did_uncle_joe_win_the_war.php

http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-68952101.html

< Message edited by Warfare1 -- 7/4/2007 4:57:05 AM >

(in reply to SMK-at-work)
Post #: 35
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 9:23:16 AM   
Warfare1


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We should not forget that in addition to the 2,900 T-34s that were built up to late 1941, the Soviets also built 1,600 heavy KV1s and KV2s.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_armored_fighting_vehicle_production_during_World_War_II


Several tank factories had been re-located in the Ural Mountains after the Germans invaded the USSR. These were located near the western edges of Siberia, which produced a number of different tanks including the T-34.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Soviet_tank_factories

(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 36
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 10:26:39 AM   
targul


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"Stalin remembered the fierce fighting in Mongolia as well. Even as he summoned 1,000 tanks and 1,200 warplanes from Soviet Far Eastern forces to battle the German invaders who were making spectacular gains, 19 reserve divisions, 1,200 tanks and some 1,000 aircraft remained in Mongolia to confront the Japanese."  Military History Magazine from Historynet.com

No SMK I am quite serious 1000 tanks.  This was a serious military force.  Wiki also said these tanks where fresh T34's.  Now you may not like this but that is what the authors say.  This is also included in the The World at War AMC  TV documentary.

I know this myth was just designed to confuse wargamers and that you have found the truth.  But the above quotes from magazines, internet sources and TV documentaries and many different publications lead me to believe there is a possibilty you are wrong.  Otherwise every wargame I and many of us have played has placed those mythical reinforcements in there games.  And even though SPI always listed there sources for such troops they were wrong also because you are right.  You have found the great hoax pulled over the world.  It surprises me that Siberian transfer is recognized by every source I find and that when I click on your sources I find those sites are closed.

From 1939-43 34,780 T34 Tanks were produced.  So to get 1000 while coming through the Urals would not be that difficult since one of the major T34 Factories was located there and Stalin ordered it.


_____________________________

Jim

Cant we just get along.
Hell no I want to kill something!

1st Cav Div 66-69 5th Special Forces 70-73

(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 37
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 12:36:56 PM   
Dave Ferguson

 

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From: Kent, United Kingdom
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Warfare1

3) Zhukov Misrepresents Information and Operations: Operation Mars was a costly failure which in his memoirs Zhukov misrepresented as a diversion to prevent German Army Group Center from assisting their comrades at Stalingrad rather than a major offensive in its own right.

In his recent book, Zhukov's Greatest Defeat, David Glantz exposes Zhukov's falsification and recounts in detail the Mars disaster, which had long been covered up by official Soviet sources.



for those who don't know Operation Mars had more soviet tanks, guns, planes and men than the Uranus operation at Stalingrad, yet it was a costly disaster.

(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 38
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 4:35:32 PM   
IrishGuards


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All I can say is I am really glad that people are having this quaint little discussion ..
I will continue to send these tankies to the Allmighty .. no matter what type they are ..
IDG is massing the Rumanians and Hungarians, sending my Mech shock corps into the furious battles that rage ..
Oh and I especially like the fact that I don't have to get these freakin books out .. they are quite heavy, and at the bottom of the crawlspace ...
I remember the days when to get from 1 side of the room to another .. I couldn't see the floor .. Was just impossible not to step on a layer of books .. magazines .. games .. well you get the picture .. the big picture I hope ...
Besides I would rather concentrate on my pointy units ..
I usually find it best to read multiple accounts .. you wind up doing this anyway to give the big picture ...
IDG

(in reply to Dave Ferguson)
Post #: 39
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 6:48:09 PM   
Hard Sarge


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my hassle with this talk, is I think the game covers what they want to add, but nobody is talking about all the stuff that is wrong with the basic OOB for the start of the game

where is the English Airpower ? 1 fighter and 1 bomber ? (which to be fair, I think the bomber should not be there, BC at this time was pretty much the same as the LW Bombers, if the LW is stuck with Tac Bombers, so should the GB

where is the French Army ?

where is the Russian Army, where is the Russian Airforce (okay, most of it got knocked out in the first week, but it was still huge)

oh well, don't think it matters, think there are reasons for the size of the Armies in the game




_____________________________


(in reply to IrishGuards)
Post #: 40
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 6:59:46 PM   
MengCiao

 

Posts: 180
Joined: 7/7/2004
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quote:

ORIGINAL: targul

"Stalin remembered the fierce fighting in Mongolia as well. Even as he summoned 1,000 tanks and 1,200 warplanes from Soviet Far Eastern forces to battle the German invaders who were making spectacular gains, 19 reserve divisions, 1,200 tanks and some 1,000 aircraft remained in Mongolia to confront the Japanese."  Military History Magazine from Historynet.com

No SMK I am quite serious 1000 tanks.  This was a serious military force.  Wiki also said these tanks where fresh T34's.  Now you may not like this but that is what the authors say.  This is also included in the The World at War AMC  TV documentary.

I know this myth was just designed to confuse wargamers and that you have found the truth.  But the above quotes from magazines, internet sources and TV documentaries and many different publications lead me to believe there is a possibilty you are wrong.  Otherwise every wargame I and many of us have played has placed those mythical reinforcements in there games.  And even though SPI always listed there sources for such troops they were wrong also because you are right.  You have found the great hoax pulled over the world.  It surprises me that Siberian transfer is recognized by every source I find and that when I click on your sources I find those sites are closed.

From 1939-43 34,780 T34 Tanks were produced.  So to get 1000 while coming through the Urals would not be that difficult since one of the major T34 Factories was located there and Stalin ordered it.



I was thinking about how to simulate Siberians in game terms (where there are no individualized units). And there definitely were Siberian units and they were extra-effective for a number of reasons:

1) They were rifle divisions with the full pre-1941 organization and all the trimings like amphibious recon tanks, 3 rifle regiments, regimental field artillery and full divisional artillery up to 122mm and some organic motor transport
2) They had great morale and had not been part of any retreats
3) they arrived fresh and were committed from reserve status into fairly well-understood situations
4) they faced German units that were pretty worn out

At one point near Tula, a German mechanized corps surrounded a Siberian division as it was strung out while detraining. The division commander was killed and all the heavy equipment was destroyed. The Siberian division rallied and made a night attack that virtually annihilated a German motorized division and then the Siberians marched away to fight another day.

Anyway...to simulate that sort of thing what about:

1) a little burst of PP in Nov 1941
2) a commander labelled "Siberian Myth" that you can buy for relatively cheap?


_____________________________

The corpus of a thousand battles rises from the flood.

(in reply to targul)
Post #: 41
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 7:25:27 PM   
Dave Ferguson

 

Posts: 302
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From: Kent, United Kingdom
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A quick trawl of references suggests that:

The UK should have 2 additional battleship units
The UK should have the same number of fighters as Germany
The UK strategic bomber should stay in the OOB, it is really just a very poor TAC air?
There should be a UK TAC air in Egypt
There should be up to 8 French corps, the best armies were in the Maginot line, not garrisons
Italian units should be of low quality compared with UK
The UK should have a commander deployed in Egypt
The russians should have a commander deployed in Moscow.

the russian OOB and pp totals should be checked to see if they give a reasonable replacement rate. Basically the russians replaced everything lost and then added some more. Actually you can build up to 20 russian corps before a historical invasion time.

When the editor is released we can playtest these sorts of changes.

The performance of the Italian navy should be researched, just why did they perform so poorly when they had at least parity v the UK in the Med?

etc etc

(in reply to Hard Sarge)
Post #: 42
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 7:56:23 PM   
MengCiao

 

Posts: 180
Joined: 7/7/2004
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quote:



The performance of the Italian navy should be researched, just why did they perform so poorly when they had at least parity v the UK in the Med?

etc etc


The Italian Navy had lots of trouble for a number of reasons:

1) the British could read their codes and the Luftwaffe codes
2) many RN ships had good radar
3) the RN had carriers and made good use of them (for example the raid on Taranto in Oct 1940 and at Cape Matapan)
4) a shortage of fuel
5) the ability of Admiral Cunningham to fool the Japanese in Egypt about when he was going to play golf (perhaps the key to winning Cape Matapan).

And of course in the End it was the Luftwaffe who sank the Italian Battleship Roma with a guided missile...life was rough in the Med.




_____________________________

The corpus of a thousand battles rises from the flood.

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Post #: 43
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 8:05:26 PM   
targul


Posts: 449
Joined: 8/25/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hard Sarge

my hassle with this talk, is I think the game covers what they want to add, but nobody is talking about all the stuff that is wrong with the basic OOB for the start of the game

where is the English Airpower ? 1 fighter and 1 bomber ? (which to be fair, I think the bomber should not be there, BC at this time was pretty much the same as the LW Bombers, if the LW is stuck with Tac Bombers, so should the GB

where is the French Army ?

where is the Russian Army, where is the Russian Airforce (okay, most of it got knocked out in the first week, but it was still huge)

oh well, don't think it matters, think there are reasons for the size of the Armies in the game





I have mentioned those in other posts. The start up forces are way off in many areas. I mean 1 destryer for England.
No air in Africa. Inferior French troops on line. They should probably be corps with low effieciency instead. Many other things but I am glad to see people are finally starting to figure out they missed a bunch.

_____________________________

Jim

Cant we just get along.
Hell no I want to kill something!

1st Cav Div 66-69 5th Special Forces 70-73

(in reply to Hard Sarge)
Post #: 44
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 8:05:29 PM   
Warfare1


Posts: 658
Joined: 10/20/2004
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Dave Ferguson

A quick trawl of references suggests that:

The UK should have 2 additional battleship units
The UK should have the same number of fighters as Germany
The UK strategic bomber should stay in the OOB, it is really just a very poor TAC air?
There should be a UK TAC air in Egypt
There should be up to 8 French corps, the best armies were in the Maginot line, not garrisons
Italian units should be of low quality compared with UK
The UK should have a commander deployed in Egypt
The russians should have a commander deployed in Moscow.

the russian OOB and pp totals should be checked to see if they give a reasonable replacement rate. Basically the russians replaced everything lost and then added some more. Actually you can build up to 20 russian corps before a historical invasion time.

When the editor is released we can playtest these sorts of changes.

The performance of the Italian navy should be researched, just why did they perform so poorly when they had at least parity v the UK in the Med?

etc etc


Good ideas.

In many different wargames I have played Italian experience, morale and equipment usually plays a big role.

Since Italian ships had equal parity to the UK, then I think training and morale were the deciding factors. Especially morale. After Taranto, the Italians simply refused to leave port.



< Message edited by Warfare1 -- 7/3/2007 8:06:44 PM >

(in reply to Dave Ferguson)
Post #: 45
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 8:16:02 PM   
firepowerjohan


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Italians have Organisation Level 0 while UK has Lvl 2 and the Italian Commanders have less leadership so yes the UK units will in general have higher effectiveness than the Italians.

Yes, when the editor is ready you can make new alternative setups and it will be very exciting to see when someone makes for instance a historical 1939 scenario. However, our setups were a design decision rather than lack of historical realism because we want the game in 1939 to be playable, competetive and pretty even with chances for both sides.

Historically, the Allies and USSR would have a BIG economic lead while we instead chose to even it out abit. Another point is, we slightly reduced the unit density both by setup and with prices so that we get abit less units than historically. The danger else would be that for some ppl the game would simply become too big to handle and take too many hours to finish. But, I am sure there are players who would like to have a big bite into more hardcore realism variations. Editor will be available soon 


< Message edited by firepowerjohan -- 7/3/2007 8:17:10 PM >


_____________________________

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Lead developer of:
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(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 46
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 8:29:17 PM   
Warfare1


Posts: 658
Joined: 10/20/2004
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quote:

ORIGINAL: firepowerjohan

Italians have Organisation Level 0 while UK has Lvl 2 and the Italian Commanders have less leadership so yes the UK units will in general have higher effectiveness than the Italians.

Yes, when the editor is ready you can make new alternative setups and it will be very exciting to see when someone makes for instance a historical 1939 scenario. However, our setups were a design decision rather than lack of historical realism because we want the game in 1939 to be playable, competetive and pretty even with chances for both sides.

Historically, the Allies and USSR would have a BIG economic lead while we instead chose to even it out abit. Another point is, we slightly reduced the unit density both by setup and with prices so that we get abit less units than historically. The danger else would be that for some ppl the game would simply become too big to handle and take too many hours to finish. But, I am sure there are players who would like to have a big bite into more hardcore realism variations. Editor will be available soon



Good to know.

Most wargames I have played, it is the user created scenarios and campaigns that were always the main ones to provide the most challenge.

That editor will be very welcome....

(in reply to firepowerjohan)
Post #: 47
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/3/2007 9:04:30 PM   
targul


Posts: 449
Joined: 8/25/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: firepowerjohan

Italians have Organisation Level 0 while UK has Lvl 2 and the Italian Commanders have less leadership so yes the UK units will in general have higher effectiveness than the Italians.

Yes, when the editor is ready you can make new alternative setups and it will be very exciting to see when someone makes for instance a historical 1939 scenario. However, our setups were a design decision rather than lack of historical realism because we want the game in 1939 to be playable, competetive and pretty even with chances for both sides.

Historically, the Allies and USSR would have a BIG economic lead while we instead chose to even it out abit. Another point is, we slightly reduced the unit density both by setup and with prices so that we get abit less units than historically. The danger else would be that for some ppl the game would simply become too big to handle and take too many hours to finish. But, I am sure there are players who would like to have a big bite into more hardcore realism variations. Editor will be available soon 



Well, this was extremely obvious. The Axis was left with enough points to build all the tech they want so as the game proceeds the Axis maintains that lead you gave them over the real start. This leads to ahistorical results throughout the map and game. The lower production for the Allies keeps them behind the ball in tech and units.

When I play Axis against humans Africa falls 100% of the time. This leaves the English behind from then on. Russia takes a serious beating when they are out teched with 5-8 when they are still waiting to get a tech.

When I play Allies the Axis beats the crap out of me for the same reason.

Yes you balanced it in 39 but by 41 that balance has swung significantly to the Axis. This is a serious problem a should be fixed.

Best way to fix and keep that balance you want would be to lower the war effort of the axis to a reasonable number so that techs are as difficult if not slightly more difficult then Allies.

Even with that the Allies really need there troops. At least one air in Egypt to start. Add a tac bomber to Italy to keep the balance if you like. Give the Allies at least 3 destroyers. 1 is just crazy.

Give the Russians some production once the war starts. They are so far below historical they cant possibly hold verses the Axis hoard. Give them the Siberan reinforcements with seasoned troops.

First winter needs to seriously drop the effectiveness of the German Army in Russia. As it is now the winter comes so Germany attacks and takes Moscow. Moscow seems to fall the month winter arrives every game. Come on it should really help the Soviets hold Moscow not mean the small decrease you give them allows them go signal to continue the attack without any real change.

Winters after are fine.

Weather should be on the western front also. I really tire of the invasion of Netherlands in November, Belgium in Decemeber followed by 3 months in France and boom April France falls. This happens every game regardless of side.

I should inform you I am not talking about AI play I only play human vs human in this game since the AI is sleeping.




_____________________________

Jim

Cant we just get along.
Hell no I want to kill something!

1st Cav Div 66-69 5th Special Forces 70-73

(in reply to firepowerjohan)
Post #: 48
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 2:34:48 AM   
SMK-at-work

 

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From: New Zealand
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Wartime KV production: http://rkkaww2.armchairgeneral.com/weapons/afv_production.htm#KV
Wartime T34 production: http://rkkaww2.armchairgeneral.com/weapons/afv_production.htm#T34

There's a lot of myth and misinformation about the Soviet production - they only evacuated TWO tank factories - plant 183 from Kharkov (It made 220-260/month until only 40 in October 41, and came back into production with 25 in the Urals in December and 75 in January 1942) and 185 from Lenningrad (production started slowing in September 41 (180 down to 80, 30 in October), TchZK production in Chelyabinsk was 24-27/month until September then 62 in October, 156 in November)

Targul you said 100 T34's - not "just" 1000 tanks.  I said that 100 tanks from "Siberia" would likely be mostly T26's - I'm not arguing over hte numbers, just the type.

Zhukov's possibly personality flaws have little or no bearing on the accuracy of his memoirs.  Or would you also discount Patton as an arrogant jerk, and Montogommery as an officious twit?  Support for Communism is harly a surprise from a Marshal of the Soviet Union!!

However we are also now in the forunate position of have historians such as Glantz getting access to Soviet official records of the era, and confirming what he said about the "Siberians".  It is no longer tenable to repeat the "history" that was accepted in the 70's and 80's as correct and anyone interested i what actually happened really needs to get to amazon and improve their library!!

I recommend starting with:
Slaughterhouse: The Handbook of the Eastern Front

Zhukov's Greatest Defeat: The Red Army's Epic Disaster in Operation Mars, 1942
When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler
Before Stalingrad: Barbarossa, Hitler's Invasion of Russia 1941
Stumbling Colossus:  the Red Army on hte eve of WWII
Black Cross Red Star: The air war over the Eastern Front, Vol's 1, 2 and 3 are out, although vol 1 is as rare as hen's teeth & people are asking a fortune for it!!

don't get me wrong - I was bought up on Siberians and the Russian winter, and human waves, etc as the story of the Eastern front too, and it's only in the last couple of years I've come to realise that those were one-sided accounts - from the Germans.  Adding soviet accounts gives a much better picture.

So to summarise the "Siberians":

1/ There was no mass arrival of combat ready veterans to the Moscow front in December of 1941.
2/ Siberian troops were sent to the west, but as individual divisions spread out among various armies, and they weer not particularly more veteran than anyone else.
3/ The troops that attacked that winter were "normal" Soviet formations, albeit reasonably trained and equipped, that had been held in reserve by STAVKA
4/ The Germans were halted anyway - they had reached the end of their abilities due to only planning for a short war
5/ The perception of "new" troops by the Germans is quite correct - but only insofar as the Russians had kept reserves and trained and equipped them better than the rest of the army had been for 1941.  the appearance of reasonably well trained soviets in decent clothing was a hell of a shock to them because they had no intelligence information that the Soviets had such a reserve.

Of course CEAW still gets it wrong, as do other games of the type, but I look forward to better efforts in the future now there is better info available.

PS: Telumar using Wiki as a source is...um.....fraught with problems. It can be really useful, but I find it is best used as a starting point to look up better information. After all anyone can goin in and alter it - if I went there now and changed it to the above would you still quote it??!!


< Message edited by SMK-at-work -- 7/4/2007 2:54:04 AM >

(in reply to targul)
Post #: 49
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 3:05:14 AM   
Warfare1


Posts: 658
Joined: 10/20/2004
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: SMK-at-work
Zhukov's possibly personality flaws have little or no bearing on the accuracy of his memoirs. Or would you also discount Patton as an arrogant jerk, and Montogommery as an officious twit? Support for Communism is harly a surprise from a Marshal of the Soviet Union!!


HI :)

I am somewhat dismayed and surprised that you have said this. What I wrote has nothing to do with Zhukov's personality.

It has to do with his very tight allegiance with the Communist Party, whose censors altered his book on at least 10 occasions (on its 10 printings between 1969 and 1990).

Historians such as Glantz and others have clearly documented Zhukov's outright lies and gross exaggerations in his historical accounts of Operation Mars and other battles.

So I am very surprised that Zhukov's book is the ONLY source you mention.

Sorry, but it is fraught with distortions.

I would love to see some sources from well known historians who can back your claim about the Siberian troop levels and experience.

Thanks


< Message edited by Warfare1 -- 7/4/2007 3:16:11 AM >

(in reply to SMK-at-work)
Post #: 50
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 3:25:14 AM   
SMK-at-work

 

Posts: 3396
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Waht do you mean it is the only work I mention??  What about the other 5 titles I listed to support my contentions?? Sheesh!

Operation Mars is a well known case of his glossing over a significant failing - he is hardly the only person ever to have done that - there are similar criticisms of many western leaders such as Churchill, Patton, Montgomery, Eisenhower, "Bomber" Harris, etc.

The idea that his support of communism has nothign to do with his personality is indefensible.  political considerations of hte times and how he handles them are integral to his person, and I don't see how you can say his work was heavily censored and then lay the blame for all the errors (which we know about) solely at his door.

Reading any Soviet era work is the same - they are often great stories but require a fairly large grain of salt.

< Message edited by SMK-at-work -- 7/4/2007 3:26:46 AM >

(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 51
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 3:40:07 AM   
Warfare1


Posts: 658
Joined: 10/20/2004
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: SMK-at-work

Waht do you mean it is the only work I mention?? What about the other 5 titles I listed to support my contentions?? Sheesh!

Operation Mars is a well known case of his glossing over a significant failing - he is hardly the only person ever to have done that - there are similar criticisms of many western leaders such as Churchill, Patton, Montgomery, Eisenhower, "Bomber" Harris, etc.

The idea that his support of communism has nothign to do with his personality is indefensible. political considerations of hte times and how he handles them are integral to his person, and I don't see how you can say his work was heavily censored and then lay the blame for all the errors (which we know about) solely at his door.

Reading any Soviet era work is the same - they are often great stories but require a fairly large grain of salt.


Hi :)

You mention 5 sources but provide no page numbers or book quotes.

As for Zhukov: The Party he belonged to also heavily censored his book on numerous occasions. This is more than just inflated ego or historical errors. It has to do with deliberate distortions of the truth, and not with personality.

Personality is about how a person speaks and acts; it is not about his scholarship or lack of it.

If I'm doing research on a subject I will not use just one book as a source; especially a source which is questionable, especially when it comes to providing NEW information.

Thanks


< Message edited by Warfare1 -- 7/4/2007 3:41:42 AM >

(in reply to SMK-at-work)
Post #: 52
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 4:03:49 AM   
SMK-at-work

 

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From: New Zealand
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I didn't quote page or verse number for Zhukov either, but you had no problems getting onto me about using him as a source, and you were happy enough to mention Glantz's work "Zhukov's greatest defeat" without page number.  why do yuo apply a different standard to me?

I shall get you sources in a couple of weeks, as these works are on loan from me at het moment.

It is you who linked Zhukov's personality to the issue with "Zhukov professes faith in communism".  i'm happy that you seem to have decided that has nothign to do with it after all.

(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 53
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 4:26:42 AM   
Warfare1


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SMK-at-work

I didn't quote page or verse number for Zhukov either, but you had no problems getting onto me about using him as a source, and you were happy enough to mention Glantz's work "Zhukov's greatest defeat" without page number. why do yuo apply a different standard to me?


Hi :)

It is not my intention to place you on the spot.

However, you are the person who talked about the Siberian Reinforcements being a myth. Therefore, the burden to provide the information for this rests with you. I am eager to learn new things provided they are backed by adequate sources.

You brought up Zhukov as a primary source.

I merely indicated he is a "questionable" source. You have Glantz's book which I used, so the information about Zhukov's falsifications should have been known to you.


quote:

It is you who linked Zhukov's personality to the issue with "Zhukov professes faith in communism". i'm happy that you seem to have decided that has nothign to do with it after all.


I said nothing about personality.

You brought it up.

For some odd reason which continues to baffle me you have linked party affiliation as being a person's personality.

Personality has nothing to do with one's religious belief, political party affiliation, or the number of books one has written. Personality has to with one's actions, words, character.

I have never met Zhukov (he died years ago), so I do not know whether I would like his personality or not. However, he wrote a book which was heavily censored by the wonderful Communist Party to deliberately falsify, distort, and twist many historical facts.

I don't care about Zhukov's personality; but I do care about the deliberate distortions in his book; a book that is being used as a source for providing historical information.



(in reply to SMK-at-work)
Post #: 54
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 4:45:35 AM   
SMK-at-work

 

Posts: 3396
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From: New Zealand
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quote:

Here are just a few examples of why we should be more critical of Zhukov's book:

1) Zhukov professes great faith in communism:


So we should be critical of his book because he believed in Communism, and that's got nothign to do with his personality?? 

Do you even understand what you wrote??


(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 55
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 4:54:54 AM   
Warfare1


Posts: 658
Joined: 10/20/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: SMK-at-work

quote:

Here are just a few examples of why we should be more critical of Zhukov's book:

1) Zhukov professes great faith in communism:


So we should be critical of his book because he believed in Communism, and that's got nothign to do with his personality??

Do you even understand what you wrote??


Hi :)

Let's try this again....

Party affiliation has NOTHING to do with personality.

I mentioned Zhukov's great zeal for Communism BECAUSE he went along with the Communist censors in altering his book.

Historians aren't critical of Zhukov because he was a communist; they are critical of his book because it was heavily censored and contains well-documented falsehoods.

Again, this has nothing to do with personality; it has everything to do with obfuscating historical facts.

Thanks






(in reply to SMK-at-work)
Post #: 56
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 4:59:30 AM   
Warfare1


Posts: 658
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Definitions of personality

1. [n] - a person of considerable prominence

2. [n] - the complex of all the attributes--behavioral, temperamental, emotional and mental--that characterize a unique individual


(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 57
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 9:55:01 AM   
Zakhal


Posts: 2494
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From: Jyväskylä, Finland
Status: offline
I wouldnt be suprised if communists censerod teh part about siberians because they didnt want it look like som mongoloids from east saved the great soviet people in the holy patriotic war. 

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(in reply to Warfare1)
Post #: 58
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 11:01:47 AM   
Dave Ferguson

 

Posts: 302
Joined: 9/12/2000
From: Kent, United Kingdom
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: firepowerjohan

......Yes, when the editor is ready you can make new alternative setups and it will be very exciting to see when someone makes for instance a historical 1939 scenario. However, our setups were a design decision rather than lack of historical realism because we want the game in 1939 to be playable, competetive and pretty even with chances for both sides.
.......

The problem with developng LONG scenarios is playtesting, you might have just spent 20+ hours and got to 1943 and guess what, something does not look right and you have to go back all the way to 1939, adjust a value and start again. This problem applies to lots of games, as the war progresses the situation can move away from the reasonable toward the downright ridiculous.

What is needed is the ability to dip into the game and change some values and numbers DURING the game. Designers do not like this because they believe it will just result in cheating during play. Not so if you have a change log and warning message. Thinks - I was once playtesting a huge TOAW scenario and my opponent was exploiting every loophole to win, the problem was he was not reporting it because his competitive instinct was too large.

(in reply to firepowerjohan)
Post #: 59
RE: Siberian Reinforcements - 7/4/2007 8:05:03 PM   
IrishGuards


Posts: 542
Joined: 12/7/2006
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Well lots of reading material does not make up for some good old common sense.
The issues that are brought up here are, suppose to have some bearing on the game, how it functions and playability.
I think since the mechanics of the game, so far dictate certain structures that are basic parts of the whole.
The dynamics of CEaW have been given a baseline, whether this is ok in say 1939 and might not be Ok in 1941 is the matter of discussion.

As I try to play within the framework given, this is really what I think Wargaming is actually all about, fighting fires, plugging holes, basically problem solving 101.

Given a game and rules and the ability to accomplish what I think I need to in order to achieve success against an opponent.
As I look at these issues, which I must say are rapidly changing depending on Year, OOB and the overall scheme of things, my actions in the game are inherently tied to just what my pointy units are capable of ..
What my economy can support and the damage I can inflict for the resources used ..
and especially the gains achieved ..
In essence providing me a better position to continue the conflict.
These are all part of the overall Strategy and Tactics I employ in that aim ...
I think since playing the game more I have come to the conclusion that ..
It is not Siberian Reinforcements or Partisans that is the main issue at all.

I think it stems from the Organization of the actual game itself and what the pointy units can do or not ..
If as the Russian player or any other for that matter I have no ability to even mount any kind of limited offensive without any possibility other than complete and utter devestation to ones forces without inflicting any real degree of damage on my opponent .. or even alleviate the battlefield situation on a limited scale .. time and area .. why would I bother ... I am just contributing to the problem .. not solving it ..

If all your opponent has is a unit that can only defend and retreat .. I must disagree with this on basic principle ..
In real history .. all Nations had some Elite Units .. whose capabilities were far better than the average .. and they were usually reserved for use and not sent into battle unless desperately needed .. and when they were they made an impact ..

This is why production and reinforcement is VIP ... If I am limited in the extreme to change or even alter my overall situation .. that's not a test of my abilities ..

That usually means the framework I am trying to work within is not suffeciently capable of being altered to the degree neccessary to even achieve any resistance worth mention ..
That means I have to try and develop a strategy within the parameters in the game ..
I have no problem with this .. Where my concern lies is are the parameters of the game able to give me as a Wargamer the flexibility and adaptability to even remotely alter the outcome in any way, shape or form ... !!

I as a wargamer will attempt to use all the assets at my disposal to create an imbalance so my opponent will be forced to react to a situation that he might not want or even be able to, If my opponent does not have this ability also ... thats not balanced .. and I know there is a fine line .. depends on the caliber of player or players you are faced with ..
IDG

(in reply to Dave Ferguson)
Post #: 60
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