Cuttlefish
Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007 From: Oregon, USA Status: offline
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Charge, and give no foot of ground. - Shakespeare: King Henry VI, 1590 --- 2/5/1942 - 2/12/1942 The Japanese infantry has rested for five days while the artillery bombards Singapore. Now a shock attack has been ordered for the next turn. With any luck the gallant Japanese troops will win the day and Singapore will be mine. This brings up the important question of what happens next. I think the capture of Singapore is an important moment for the Japanese player in each game. A lot of the available troop strength is usually tied up in the Malaya campaign and the question is always what to do with them once Singapore has fallen. Some troops will be needed for the conquest of Sumatra, especially Palembang. The campaign in Burma continues to go very well, so there is no pressing need to rush troops there. I should have enough ships and troops available to mount a fresh campaign if I wish. But where? A landing in India does not seem like a wise move in AE. An invasion of Ceylon offers possibilities, perhaps. We will see. First Singapore must fall. The Road to Mandalay: I’m just about there, actually, as the screen shot below shows. British forces seem to be evacuating and moving north. The 33rd Division pushed the 10th Burma Rifles Battalion out of Magwe; a tank regiment in reserve pursued them to Meiktila and captured that base on the following turn. There is now plentiful air support at Rangoon and thus almost the entire Bay of Bengal is under the watchful eye of Japanese bombers. Philippines: the siege at Clark continues. Several new infantry regiments recently arrived at Shanghai and I had enough PPs to buy one, the 56th, and send it on waiting ships down to Davao. It’s moving up to join the assault on Cagayan in the hopes of bringing the Mindanao campaign to a conclusion. China: Japanese forces are now at Kanhsien and shelling the defenders for a while in preparation for an attack. In the meantime I have suffered my first reverse here; the Japanese 37th Division crossed the river west of Nanchang in hopes of descending on Kanhsien from the north and ran into much stronger units on the far bank than expected. It was thrown back across the river with heavy losses (see screen shot below). Pacific: The 53rd Division has landed at Port Moresby. While the Australian defenders (the 49th Australian Battalion, the Port Moresby Brigade, and the 15th RAAF Base Force) still hold the place after two days of fighting the issue does not seem to be in doubt. Japan will prevail, probably prompting another gleeful broadcast by Orphan Anne. I love those sound clips. Nukufetau has begun to be bombed by B-17s from an unknown location. The attacks are small and have done no damage so far. I have no air support there as yet so there is nothing to be done about it in any event. Under the Sea: on 12 February I-157 sank both xAKL Benkalis and TK Talang Akar off of Exmouth way down on the southwest corner of Australia. Allied submarines have launched quite a few attacks in the past week but none of the torpedoes have detonated. The two I-boats that hit mines at San Francisco have both survived and are now under repair in Japan. Supply and Demand: I have moved a shipping engineer regiment to Miri and sent some construction troops to Kushiro to expand the port there. Because I have been careful in expanding facilities in the Home Islands my supplies and HI have actually increased since the start of the war. I had 50, 039 HI on 7 December; now I have 143,983. Supply has grown from 3,078,765 to 4,387,979 in the same period. Fuel shows a similar increase. The problem is oil and resources. I started with 3,216,120 oil and 7,185,229 resources. These figures are now at 2,744,455 and 5,964,319. The rate of loss is decreasing but the trend shows that if I don’t increase the flow into Japan I am going to start running into trouble as early as June or July 1942. --- The situation in Burma:
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