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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility

 
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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/20/2008 10:36:00 PM   
Durbik


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From: Krakow, Poland
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heh, all my hypothesis are being discussed by the crew - so all of them are wrong I presume

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/20/2008 10:59:26 PM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cuttlefish


Orders: ?

---

It is evening. The day’s cruising has been uneventful, but there is tension throughout the ship. The task force has swiftly moved to within striking distance of Woleai, but that is a blade that cuts two ways. Radio intercepts indicate that not only is the atoll already firmly in enemy hands but that enemy carriers have just departed the waters around Palau after a destructive raid against Japanese airfields and shipping there.



Hmm, that didn't take long. If the US engineers can build an airfield big enough for Liberators, then the whole Japanese position in the Central Pacific starts to unravel. (Maybe this is why the Hibiki has made its last visit to Kwajalein.) I think I would focus on that more than on the mysterious arrival, but them I'm not a destroyer crewman.

Also, clever touch putting a question mark by "orders".


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Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/21/2008 12:16:26 AM   
AcePylut


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I bet the mysterious person is something really "lame".  Naturally, the crew scuttlebutt will build this guy up and up until it's finally President Roosevelt wanting to turn traitor or something... but then... usually the simplest explaination is the easiest... and my scuttlebutt is...  He's the pilot of a Glen that was in the air when his sub got attacked and sunk.  No survivors on the sub, just the pilot that was in the air. 

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/21/2008 2:56:18 AM   
princep01

 

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Yes, He may have indeed flown a Glen at some point in his illustrious career, but he is not normally the pilot of any flying machine.  No, no, my man, this is a personage of considerable importance.  He may ultimately play a huge role in the outcome of the war.  It will be, as usual, most interesting to see how our esteemed author weaves this man of destiny into his engrossing alterative history.

(in reply to AcePylut)
Post #: 2884
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/21/2008 2:20:22 PM   
gladiatt


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cuttlefish

January 8, 1944

Location: 100 miles southwest of Enitwetok
Course: Northwest
Attached to: TF 9
Mission: Surface Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 425

Orders: Escort Yamato back to Japan

---

Riku is preparing to sack out for the evening when Chief Petty Officer Shun appears in the doorway. He steps inside the narrow machine space and stands quietly, gazing at Riku.

Shiro, who is rigging his hammock, looks at Shun and then looks at Riku. He nudges Oizuma, who looks up and takes in the tableau. Yoshitaka and Shoji are seated on the floor playing cards, and they too look up.

“You know, I feel like having some tea,” says Shiro. “There might be some in the mess.”

“That’s a good idea,” says Yoshitake as he stands. “I will join you.” Oizuma and Shoji quickly decide they want some tea as well. One by one they file out, leaving Shun and Riku alone.

“We will talk,” Shun says. Riku swallows and nods. Shun walks forward until he is a few paces from Riku, then he stops and crosses his arms.

“I have given much thought these last few months to the matter of you and my daughter,” Shun continues. The Chief’s low voice is almost expressionless; Riku knows this means the man is tense and keeping himself under tight control. “Long ago you swore an oath not to speak her name or to try and contact her. This you have kept.”

Riku nods. “Yes, Chief Petty Officer,“ he says.

“When we set out from Mako more than two years ago you were a waste of space,” Shun says. “Yet since meeting my daughter you have worked hard, lived honorably, and served this ship well.” He pauses. “Perhaps she saw something in you that I did not,” he admits.

“I was a different person then,” Riku admits uncomfortably. “I have changed, I think.”

Shun grunts. “She loves you,” he says. “If I ordered her to marry someone else she would do so. She is a good daughter. But you love her as well and if you work as hard to care for her as you have to win her you will make a good husband.” He turns and paces a little. “I could wish it was someone other than a sailor. I was at sea when my wife became ill, and by the time I even heard about it she was gone.” Riku remains silent.

“But this war will not end soon,” continues Shun. “All men worthy of the name will be fighting in defense of Japan. And there is this, I do not know what will happen to her if I am killed. Her grandmother is old. Her uncle in Osaka is a good man, but he has problems and worries of his own.” Shun stops pacing and once again faces Riku.

“But I will stop going on like an old man and get to the point,” he says. “We will be in Japan soon. I release you from your oath. I wish for the two of you to meet and talk – properly supervised, of course. After that, well, we will see what happens.”

Emotion crashes through Riku like a wave and he fights to maintain his self-control. “Chief Shun,” he says, voice strained. “I…thank you. You will not regret this, I swear it.”

Shun looks down. “We will see,” he says. “Whatever happens, this has dragged on long enough. It is time to move on to whatever happens next.”

“Yes, Chief,” Riku says.

“We will speak more of this when we get to Japan,” states Shun. He turns abruptly and leaves. Riku wonders briefly what it cost a man like Shun to come in here and say those things to him. Then he tries to say her name.

At first he can’t do it. He has locked that name from passing his lips for almost twenty months and for a moment he actually can’t make himself say it out loud.

“Nanami,” he finally whispers. Speaking the name breaks down what is left of his self control. He staggers back against a bulkhead, then slides slowly down until he is seated on the floor.

“Nanami,” he says one more time, then he buries his head in his arms and weeps.




(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 2885
RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/21/2008 5:21:47 PM   
vettim89


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cuttlefish

February 22, 1944

Location: 180 miles west of Guam
Course: West
Attached to: TF 33
Mission: Surface Combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 439

Orders: ?

---

It is evening. The day’s cruising has been uneventful, but there is tension throughout the ship. The task force has swiftly moved to within striking distance of Woleai, but that is a blade that cuts two ways. Radio intercepts indicate that not only is the atoll already firmly in enemy hands but that enemy carriers have just departed the waters around Palau after a destructive raid against Japanese airfields and shipping there.

The forward crew’s mess is more crowded than usual, though there are few of the usual games going on. Most of the men are involved in yet another round of speculation about their current mission and the mysterious figure transferred from the submarine.

“I tell you, he has to be a spy,” says Chuyo. “I think our mission is to place him ashore at night at some enemy base.”

“I heard he looked American,” says Konno.

“Who said that?” asks Oizuma.

“I heard it from a guy in engineering who helped with the refueling,” Konno says. “He got it from someone at the dock.”

“That’s a neat trick, considering that I don’t think Isuzu refueled,” says Riku.

Konno shrugs. “It’s just what I heard,” he says.

“But a spy doesn’t make any sense,” says Oizuma. “Why wouldn’t the submarine put him ashore? They’d have a lot better chance of pulling off a secret mission like that than we would.”

“That’s right,” says Yoshitake. “That’s why it has to be an admiral or something, someone with secret orders.”

“But why meet us in mid-ocean? Why wouldn’t the sub have just taken him to Saipan and have him meet us there? Or why wouldn't he just fly there?” someone asks.

“Secrecy!” says Yoshitake. “It has to be someone high-up. They didn’t want to take a chance of an enemy spy on Saipan spotting him.”

“Maybe it was just a pilot who had to ditch,” says Shiro, “and we took him back to his unit.”

“That’s likely,” Riku tells him, “but probably too dull for this crowd.”

“Hey, I know!” says Kinsei. “They’re all true! It was a high-ranking officer with secret orders on a spy mission whose plane crashed at sea.” There is general laughter and agreement, and others add embellishments to the idea. Not everyone seems to think the speculation is completely outlandish, though.

The conversation continues for a while longer and then breaks up as the men head off to their hammocks. What is really going on is still anyone’s guess.



I wonder if it was a downed TBF pilot named George - nah that would be too predictable

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/21/2008 5:24:08 PM   
gladiatt


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cuttlefish


quote:

ORIGINAL: BigDuke66

Perfect END!

You may want to correct a word, grannys name is Rin Shun not Nin Shun or?


Typo corrected, thanks.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Onime No Kyo

Any backstory to the rifle?


Yes indeed. This same rifle has already appeared in the AAR, in fact. Does anyone remember where?


Rifle handed by young Ishi on a french steamer invaded by malay pirats, i think....

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Post #: 2887
RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/21/2008 6:07:10 PM   
Admiral DadMan


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quote:

ORIGINAL: vettim89

I wonder if it was a downed TBF pilot named George - nah that would be too predictable


About a year too early. Bush flew off my dad's carrier, CVL San Jacinto

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/21/2008 6:10:01 PM   
Admiral DadMan


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Interesting story about Bush being shot down. A lot of the crew on the carrier initially thought that Bush ran from a dogfight near the carrier because he was flying an Avenger and didn't want to tangle with more agile aircraft. They held that against him until the full story came out.

Damn, I've hijacked the thread. Sorry Cuttlefish.

< Message edited by Admiral DadMan -- 5/21/2008 6:13:21 PM >


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Scenario 127: "Scraps of Paper"
(\../)
(O.o)
(> <)

CVB Langley:

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Post #: 2889
RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/21/2008 8:29:01 PM   
vettim89


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Admiral DadMan


quote:

ORIGINAL: vettim89

I wonder if it was a downed TBF pilot named George - nah that would be too predictable


About a year too early. Bush flew off my dad's carrier, CVL San Jacinto


Amazing as this may seem, Nixon was in SoPac at this point organizing C-47 flights and Ford was on CVL Monterey

That is four future US Presidents in relative close proximity to one another. One wonders how history might have been changed by just a stray bullet or shell

_____________________________

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Post #: 2890
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/22/2008 2:11:05 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

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February 23, 1944

Location: 240 miles west of Guam
Course: West
Attached to: TF 33
Mission: Surface Combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 410

Orders: See below

---

“It’s an overly complex plan,” Ishii tells Lieutenant Miharu. “It requires that the enemy reacts as we expect and that our forces coordinate their actions perfectly when they do.” The two are meeting in the captain’s cabin. Ishii is not supposed to tell any of the crew about the battle plan, but he routinely makes an exception in such cases for his executive officer. He knows that the taciturn lieutenant can be trusted with any information that he himself possesses.

“Yet if it works we could do serious damage to the enemy’s carrier force,” says Lieutenant Miharu.

“And if it goes wrong we will lose a lot of ships, planes, and especially men for nothing,” grumbles Ishii. The plan he has just outlined calls for several Japanese escort carriers to allow themselves to be spotted coming down along the Marianas. The enemy will mistake these for the remnants of Kido Butai and pounce at the chance to finish them off. When they do the enemy carriers will be attacked and crippled by land-based air from the nearby islands. This will allow waiting Japanese surface forces and the real carrier force to converge and finish them off.

“Ah well,” Ishii says with a sigh. “It is out of our hands. We just need to keep the crew ready for action when it comes.”

“The crew is ready,” says the lieutenant. “Morale is good. Though there is a lot of gossip flying around about our mission and whoever Isuzu took aboard from that submarine.”

“Ah, him,” says Ishii. “I did not tell you about him yet, did I?”

“No sir,” says Lieutenant Miharu.

Captain Ishii rubs his chin. “That’s a strange business,” he says. “Tell me, Exec. I know you speak excellent English. How is your German?”

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Post #: 2891
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/22/2008 2:12:43 AM   
Terminus


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Ah, ze German, eh?

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/22/2008 3:12:06 AM   
Onime No Kyo


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

Ah, ze German, eh?


Now what the heck do you suppose a German is doing on a Japanese sub. Or was it, in fact a Japanese sub?

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/22/2008 3:13:06 AM   
Terminus


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Ze Plot Tzickens...

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/22/2008 4:02:23 AM   
Skipjack


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Perhaps that jap sub just got back from La Rochelle, and has brought back blueprints for the ME-262.  I've read about the jap subs that went to France to exchange info with the Germans - upon looking at the I-boats, one of the first things the Nazis did is replace the Jap 25mm anti-aircraft gun with a german made model - I am sure Cpt Ishii would approve 

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Post #: 2895
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/22/2008 10:31:24 PM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

The plan he has just outlined calls for several Japanese escort carriers to allow themselves to be spotted coming down along the Marianas. The enemy will mistake these for the remnants of Kido Butai and pounce at the chance to finish them off. When they do the enemy carriers will be attacked and crippled by land-based air from the nearby islands. This will allow waiting Japanese surface forces and the real carrier force to converge and finish them off.


Hmm. It was the failure of the land-based air to do any real damage to the American CV's that led to the "Marianas Turkey Shoot". On the other hand, a similar diversion almost led to success against the transports at Leyte Gulf. Much depends on USN Intelligence -- and the fact that the American CV's are now flying Hellcats if Wolffpack has been doing his upgrades properly.

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/22/2008 11:02:12 PM   
Durbik


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From: Krakow, Poland
Status: offline
what's the role of Shibuya's TF in all this? CVE escorts? If so, things may get ugly

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/23/2008 3:22:35 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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From: Oregon, USA
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February 24, 1944

Location: 240 miles west of Guam
Course: West
Attached to: TF 33
Mission: Surface Combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 382

Orders: See below

---

Kapitän Joachim F. Ehrlich of the Kriegsmarine looks out at the Pacific ocean from the bridge of Japanese light cruiser Isuzu. The task force has done nothing today but steam in circles, but the German officer is not complaining. Few of his fellow officers have had a chance to spend any time at sea these last couple of years with even such a force as this. The ten ships are a modest force by Japanese standards but by German standards they comprise an impressive armada.

Nearby Captain Shibuya issues a couple of orders in a low voice. Men spring instantly to obey. Captain Shibuya has done Ehrlich the courtesy of placing him technically in command, as befits his seniority, and Ehrlich has returned the favor by not attempting to issue any serious orders. He does admire the discipline and training of these Japanese crews, though. They know their business.

The German officer turns his attention for the moment to Sendai and the neat columns of destroyers trailing the two light cruisers. He cannot help feeling a little wistful. If only Germany had built a navy like this. It is not the Führer’s fault it did not happen. Ehrlich mostly blames that idiot Göring. Certainly he is the reason that Graf Zeppelin remains unfinished and her sister carriers were never built. He loses himself in a reverie of Scapa Flow devastated at the outset of the war by German carriers the same way that the Japanese clobbered Pearl Harbor. Then he pictures German battleships and battle cruisers dominating the Atlantic, utterly isolating England and compelling her surrender. How glorious!

He sighs. It was never to be, the Kriegsmarine was left snuffling for crumbs while the Wehrmacht Heer and Luftwaffe got all the resources. And Ehrlich knows in his heart that his current mission, to observe Japanese naval techniques and technology, is a joke. The proposals for a reborn Kriegsmarine are a fantasy borne of desperation. Even if the government could create new ships by waving a magic wand they would now be sunk as fast as they could be launched.

Then he brightens for a moment. Unless, of course, some of the rumored new super weapons become a reality. If Germany could regain control of the air then perhaps, just perhaps, they could regain control of the sea as well. In which case what he learns while in the Pacific might someday have value.

But whatever the reality of things it is pleasant to spend time on the bridge of a warship at sea, a warship seeking to engage the Americans and the British. If this Japanese plan works these ships may well see fighting as they seek to engage the enemy carrier forces. If the victory is as total as they hope the damage to the Allies might even be enough to divert forces from Germany, postponing the impending invasion of Europe that everyone fears.

The only problem is that the enemy carriers seem to have disappeared. It is uncomfortable to be trying to spring an ambush when for all you know your proposed quarry is stalking you instead. But Ehrlich has confidence in his hosts and is content to wait and see what happens. The German officer just wishes he had been able to bring more food along. He is already tired of rice.

---

Author’s note: this could have been even more interesting. I found a C. Grant in command of one of my patrol craft. My theory is that Cary Grant was in the Dutch East Indies doing location filming for the never-completed film “Krakatoa, North of Java” when war broke out and that he was captured and subsequently brainwashed by the Japanese, then placed in command of a minor warship as a propaganda ploy.

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/23/2008 9:11:49 AM   
Durbik


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(lol, Germans)

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/23/2008 9:36:08 AM   
bradfordkay

 

Posts: 8683
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CF, I have to say that Mandrake and you both have quite the ability to explain away the game's bugs...

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/23/2008 12:49:05 PM   
Terminus


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"Krakatoa, North of Java", eh? Well, the eruption was very powerful...

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/23/2008 3:39:01 PM   
rtrapasso


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

"Krakatoa, North of Java", eh? Well, the eruption was very powerful...

Well, that would be off by only 90 degrees as opposed to ... "Krakatoa East of Java" - (180 degrees off)




Attachment (1)

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Post #: 2902
RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/23/2008 8:10:18 PM   
mdiehl

 

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quote:

Author’s note: this could have been even more interesting. I found a C. Grant in command of one of my patrol craft. My theory is that Cary Grant was in the Dutch East Indies doing location filming for the never-completed film “Krakatoa, North of Java” when war broke out and that he was captured and subsequently brainwashed by the Japanese, then placed in command of a minor warship as a propaganda ploy.


That has some plot potential. Douglas Fairbanks Jr. wound up as a Naval Reserve officer on a USN warship in the Med during the invasion of Sicily and eventually rose to LtCdr. So I can see a version of reality where, after doing something notable in the Med, he gets promoted to command of a USN Destroyer Escort, and winds up sinking a Japanese PG commanded by the alt-universe turncoat Carey Grant.

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Didn't we have this conversation already?

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/23/2008 10:11:17 PM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

The only problem is that the enemy carriers seem to have disappeared. It is uncomfortable to be trying to spring an ambush when for all you know your proposed quarry is stalking you instead.


VERY interesting. Is the base on Wolei already capable of defending itself? If not, maybe the Americans have already got wind of the Japanese trap. It's highly unusual to bug out so soon after an invasion -- okay, they did it at Guadalcanal, and that was because of a very successful IJN raid.

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

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Post #: 2904
RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/23/2008 10:23:04 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: mdiehl

quote:

Author’s note: this could have been even more interesting. I found a C. Grant in command of one of my patrol craft. My theory is that Cary Grant was in the Dutch East Indies doing location filming for the never-completed film “Krakatoa, North of Java” when war broke out and that he was captured and subsequently brainwashed by the Japanese, then placed in command of a minor warship as a propaganda ploy.


That has some plot potential. Douglas Fairbanks Jr. wound up as a Naval Reserve officer on a USN warship in the Med during the invasion of Sicily and eventually rose to LtCdr. So I can see a version of reality where, after doing something notable in the Med, he gets promoted to command of a USN Destroyer Escort, and winds up sinking a Japanese PG commanded by the alt-universe turncoat Carey Grant.


Now that would be interesting. I think the swashbuckling Fairbanks would have an edge over the suave Grant.



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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/23/2008 10:26:17 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Capt. Harlock

quote:

The only problem is that the enemy carriers seem to have disappeared. It is uncomfortable to be trying to spring an ambush when for all you know your proposed quarry is stalking you instead.


VERY interesting. Is the base on Wolei already capable of defending itself? If not, maybe the Americans have already got wind of the Japanese trap. It's highly unusual to bug out so soon after an invasion -- okay, they did it at Guadalcanal, and that was because of a very successful IJN raid.


You have cut to the heart of the matter. I am not saying anything either way, but the question you pose will occupy a lot of our attention in the near future.

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/23/2008 10:29:29 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

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February 25, 1944

Location: 240 miles west of Guam
Course: West
Attached to: TF 33
Mission: Surface Combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 354

Orders: See below

---

Across the Central Pacific half a dozen Japanese task forces mark time, waiting to spring their trap. The Americans and their British friends have become arrogant and complacent in their new-found power, and it is time to teach them that the Imperial Japanese Navy still has teeth. Sharp teeth.

The only problem is that enemy ships seem to have disappeared from the region. Where are they, and what are they up to? Further carrier attacks against Japanese bases in the Carolines and the Marianas have been expected, but so far the enemy does not seem to be following the script prepared for them.

---

Warrant Flying Officer Toshio Ohta pilots his Type 0 small reconnaissance seaplane across the Solomon Sea. He is on the northern leg of his morning search pattern; his home base, submarine I-21, is already some 50 miles behind him. Behind him his observer, Petty Officer Fujita, is humming a popular tune as he looks out over the ocean.

Ohta does not blame him. The freedom of the skies they are currently enjoying is a sharp contrast to the cramped, stinking interior of the submarine. Ohta lives for the few hours a day he gets to spend in the air.

Ahead a squall casts a dark, rain-streaked shadow on the ocean below. Ohta steers around it. The sea beyond sparkles with sunlight. It is also covered with long gray shapes.

Fujita cries out in surprise. Ohta himself is too stunned to speak. Never has he beheld such a fleet. The ships seem to stretch from horizon to horizon. There are battleships, carriers, innumerable smaller ships, and the dark dots of airplanes cruising above it all. The ships are all moving in the same direction, to the southeast.

“Count them, Fujita!” Ohta says, finding his voice. “How many carriers are there?”

Suddenly his airplane shudders violently. A dark shape roars close by overhead. American F6F fighters! Ohta hurls his small, frail plane into a turn.

“Broadcast the sighting, Fujita!” says Ohta. “Quickly, we may not get another chance!” There is no response. Ohta takes a quick look back and sees that the canopy of the observer’s compartment is starred and splashed with blood. Fujita is collapsed in a shattered, motionless heap.

Ohta swears and pushes his plane to full speed, a pathetic 125 knots at this altitude. He makes for the nearby squall, jinking his plane to make it a more difficult target. The enemy fighter comes around and roars in from behind. Tracers zip past Ohta and his plane. Bullets tear through the fabric-covered left wing. Miraculously they do not hit any of the support struts but tracers set the wing on fire.

The plane’s Hitachi engine screeches in protest but Ohta reaches the squall before the enemy can make another pass. Ignoring the air currents buffeting his damaged plane Ohta broadcasts a terse report of what he has just seen, then repeats it. He glances at the wing. The flames are spreading, there is not much time. He set the controls and climbs back into the observer’s compartment, where he snags the camera and stuffs it quickly into a waterproof bag just in case Fujita had the presence of mind to take any pictures before he was killed.

“Farewell, Fujita,” Ohta tells him sadly. He ties the bag to his belt and then he checks his parachute and pushes back the canopy.

The battered seaplane emerges suddenly into the sunlight on the far side of the squall. Off to the left two F6F fighters are lurking. Ohta does not wait for them. He bails out, falling towards the blue ocean far below.

He counts as he has been taught, then pulls the cord. To his immense relief he suddenly feels yanked upwards as the chute deploys. He looks up and can see his little plane slanting away, trailing smoke, with the two enemy fighters in pursuit. He looks down at the approaching ocean and wonders if his submarine will be able to find him. He hopes the sharks aren’t hungry.

On the whole, Warrant Flying Officer Ohta reflects, he really has had better days.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 2907
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/23/2008 10:39:32 PM   
kaleun

 

Posts: 5145
Joined: 5/29/2002
From: Colorado
Status: offline
Wow. You had me on the edge of my seat there Cuttlefish.

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Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 2908
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 5/24/2008 5:44:55 AM   
Onime No Kyo


Posts: 16842
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If anyone caught wind of the Kapitän's dissatisfaction with the Fuhrer he would probably find himself somewhere in Kourland.

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"Mighty is the Thread! Great are its works and insane are its inhabitants!" -Brother Mynok

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 2909
RE: Small Ship, Big War - Poor visibility - 5/24/2008 5:46:38 AM   
Onime No Kyo


Posts: 16842
Joined: 4/28/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: mdiehl

quote:

Author’s note: this could have been even more interesting. I found a C. Grant in command of one of my patrol craft. My theory is that Cary Grant was in the Dutch East Indies doing location filming for the never-completed film “Krakatoa, North of Java” when war broke out and that he was captured and subsequently brainwashed by the Japanese, then placed in command of a minor warship as a propaganda ploy.


That has some plot potential. Douglas Fairbanks Jr. wound up as a Naval Reserve officer on a USN warship in the Med during the invasion of Sicily and eventually rose to LtCdr. So I can see a version of reality where, after doing something notable in the Med, he gets promoted to command of a USN Destroyer Escort, and winds up sinking a Japanese PG commanded by the alt-universe turncoat Carey Grant.

quote:

Kapitän


That sounds a bit more involved than a fist fight at the Brown Derby.

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"Mighty is the Thread! Great are its works and insane are its inhabitants!" -Brother Mynok

(in reply to mdiehl)
Post #: 2910
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