rader
Posts: 1238
Joined: 9/13/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Heeward Now read it all, and the qualification statements... I have read your opponents' AAR and made one post. - so yours will be ahead Could you give us a strategic overview? I suggest you do a unit count of major allied units, and determine his reserves. What is your replacement ability of shattered land units - in the most favorable location on Honshu- including production of said replacements? As you own all the bases still, and control all the hex sides - his units can not retreat - verify this by the way. If you believe you have a stalemate - concentrate you reserves whatever they are, Pick one beach head with the fewest enemy units and destroy it. If you have more units then the enemy consider placing the excess troops in reserve, until the turn - they should not have significant disruption levels and be pretty fresh for the assault turn. On the assault turn you commit your entire air-force to ground support including strafing. Your goal here is to force a retreat, and destruction / surrender of his units. Last caveat - consider practicing this operation, especially the ground support operation. As far as Allied units, he's got ~6000 AV in Akita, ~6000 AV in Hachinohe, and ~1200 AV in Hirosaki. Based on previous invasions, I'd guess he can land around 6000-8000 AV per invasion, and he's got about that many troops in reserve at Hakkodate. So he's got about 1 more good invasion for now left (for now). I have about equal or slightly more troops than the allies at the invasion sites: ~6000-7000 at Akita & Hachinohe, ~2200 at Hirosaki. Enough to stop him, but not nearly enough to counterattack. So far he has landed only under allied land-based air, which seems practically uncontestable. I have the KB and a lot of LBA ready to respond to an invasion farther down the coast, or elsewhere on the map. Without most of his CVEs, I'd guess that I could mess up pretty well, if not stop, an invasion outside of his LBA cover (at the very least, make it very costly). I have about a total of 8000 AV in reserve not committed to the battle area, so about the same as the allies. These are distributed around beaches farther south, mostly at Sendai and Niggita (obvious secondary locations), but I've got at least a division in the bases closer to Hokkaido, and I've got anti-paradrop forces in all bases of importance. If I commited my reserve, I could get up to around 14000 AV at Akita/Hachinohe, or maybe 10000 AV at Hirosaki. This *might* be able to push the allies into the sea, but I actually sort of doubt it given their better firepower. I'd guess that I would need about 3.5:1 to actually win at Akita/Hachinohe, or more like 5:1 at Hirosaki (difficult terrain). If I did build up for a counterattack, he could rush reinforcements in, and of course would use massive air & bombardments. Moreover, if I commited my reserve and stripped my remaining beaches, while I might have some chance to attack, I would certainly open up an opportunity for him to invade somewhere else down the coast with his 6000-8000 AV reserve at Hakkodate. I don't know where he's prepping for, but I'm willing to bet it's somewhere down the coast, and if I totally stripped my reserves he could go pretty much anywhere, preparation or not. So basically, I can't afford to counterattack, beecause I need to keep my reserves ready to respond to his reserves. I've got a wolf by the ears - I don't like it, but I can't let it go. As far as replacements, the attrition is steady but actually fairly mild in terms of absolute losses. In terms of land attrition, this situation is probably preferable to the norm - uterly losing isolated garrisons one by one without hope of recovering any of the men or equipment. So far, I can keep up. But here the danger is much greater. If I lose an isolated island or two, who cares? But if I lose a portion of Honshu, it will be tea in the imperial palace for Admiral Nimitz.
< Message edited by rader -- 1/22/2012 11:49:02 PM >
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