Canoerebel
Posts: 21100
Joined: 12/14/2002 From: Northwestern Georgia, USA Status: offline
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8/24/42 to 9/3/42 (Reply to DPStafford: We're playing one day turns) The Allies decided to evactuate Alice Springs out of concern the garrison would be cut off, then won the race to get those troops safely to the South Coast, but the Japs are moving on Southern Australia now and it looks like it will be a fight to the finish for the isolated, beleaugered Aussies. Australia: After handily defeating a Jap deliberate attack on the 24th (0:1 with forts 5, the Japs lost 1808/75/4 to 1061/1434) the Allies decided it was time to skedaddle and make for the coast, for fear that Jap troops might be moving east from Kalgoorlie to cut off their escape route. I was reluctant to give up Alice, because the Aussie's had created a strong road block and I think the Jap troops were going to become very fatigued, and perhaps low on supply, trying to take it. But I was also afraid I had waited too long to move - that the Japs could be close to Whyalla and Adelaide. John bombed the fleeing troops, but they moved quickly and are now reaching the junction with the Kalgoorlie/Adelaide road. It was a near thing, I believe. Jap paratroops dropped on Whyalla on the 31st, but the 6th Aussie Cavalry arrived the same day. The Japs were bloodied, but thus far have withstood counterattacks. Now Jap invasion TFs are nearing, and could hit Adelaide or Whyalla. Aussie units from both Perth and Alice Springs are in the area, so I may reinforce these two ports, or I may pull back to Melbourne. Allied bombers from Adelaide finally sortied on the 3rd, with Dutch B25s and TiVs joined by Aussie Liberators. Two strikes went in against a Mini-KB, scoring two hits on CVL Ryuho. A recon Liberator hit Ryuho earlier in the day, making three hits total. But no reports of flames, so it may be nothing worth getting excited over. The Allies have successfully extracted the troops from Perth and Alice, should be able to make strong stands at Melbourne, Brisbane, and Sydney (and perhaps elsewhere, depending upon how much John brings), and the Allied airforce will have plenty of bases to fly from. So I don't think Australia is a lost cause, but if John brings enough he can probably conquer the continent. NZ: Of the four scattered APs carrying 112th Cav Reg't from Panama City, a Mini-KB sighted the third and sent it to the bottom. Then another Mini-KB sighted the 1st, but somehow this AP eluded detection thereafter, sprinting north toward Suva and now SE making its way south of Noumea. There's a chance it could make it. Of the remaining two, one is near the south edge and perhaps five days from NZ, and the other is nearing the southern edge, well SE of the Society Islands. It's a good ten or twelve days from NZ. I'll be lucky if I don't lose most or all of these APs. CenPac: Jap recon probably sighted the US CVs at Pearl, so John should know where they are now. The minelaying force has moved to Christmas Island, which now has 2k mines. No sign of hostiles in this region. NoPac: Mining continues at Kodiak, but no sign of Jap combat ships in weeks. India/Burma: John sent in Tonys, which ambushed Allied bombers east of Mandalay. Both sides have launched many raids over the past ten days, with losses higher - but not markedly so - for the Allies. Reinforcements are moving toward Mandilay. I still have a goodly number of troops covering rear areas, but I don't think John can hit India with so much of his effort in Australia. China: The Chinese troops prepping for Changsha are now at 37-45. Thirty to 35 more days should be enough to justify moving forward. Situation: If John takes Australia, it will be a real knockout punch. I might be able to mount a comeback and perhaps even earn a draw, but it'll be slow going. If the Japs don't conquer Australia, then I think John hasn't delivered the knockout punch he needed to. The Japs have conquered vast regions of the map, and the Allies have taken greater ship losses, but nothing they can't recover from if they can hold on to part of Australia.
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