mind_messing
Posts: 3393
Joined: 10/28/2013 Status: offline
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The Plan The time of unrivaled Japanese dominance is fast coming to an end. While I will still enjoy the balance of power until 1943, soon the weight of Allied material and manpower will start to press the empire back. My overall plan is as follows: The blue boundary marks buffer areas: the regions where I'll offer resistance with local forces, with the goal to delay the Allied advance. The red boundary indicates the areas that I want to keep the Allies out of at all costs. These will be the areas that the KB and the IJN will be commited to defend if the Allies attack, and the places where I'll do my best to counter-invade should the Allies get a foothold. Ideally, I hope for a solid line of well-developed and strongly garrisoned bases ranging from the Bonins, through the Marianas, to the West Papua to hold of the Allies in the Pacific. Timor and the Flores chain will be the line of defence for the Lower DEI, and work is already underway to turn Java and Sumatra into strong redoubts against amphibious invasion. I hope to have the Tokyo-Bonins-Marianas-Papua line ready for 1943. After that, engineers will be working towards building up the Philippines, Formosa and Okinawa. I'll fight an extended delaying action in Burma following the end of 1942, with the goal to hold Rangoon into 1944. If it appears that Lokasenna is close to taking Burma, I have few qualms about withdrawing to Thailand and forcing the Allies to slog through terrible terrain, provided I can keep Rangoon unusable as a operational port for the Allies. Review of Active Operations by Theater North Pacific I've been soundly beaten here. One battleship and one crusier, as well as a handfull of smaller ships lost for no real gain other than delaying the Allied buildup of the Kuriles for six months. Holding the Kuriles didn't prevent a carrier raid on Hokkaido either, and the time, units and supply spent in the Aleutians would have been far better used developing the Kuriles, Hokkadio and northern Honshu. The good news is that any future Allied operations will be running into a wall of pillboxes, big airbases and strike planes that grows more formidable by the day. Central Pacific I'm fairly satisfied with this theater. About 70% of the defences I'd like to have built are constructed, though there are still several frontline islands sorely needing garrisons and aviation support. The Gilberts are rather exposed at present, with only a handfull of bases with decent defensive, and there are several valuable islands that are still ungarrioned. The Marianas and Marshalls, however, are looking excellent. The Marianas are building up very nicely, though at present they're almost devoid of both combat and support troops, but this isn't a huge problem seeing as we don't see it becoming a problem any time soon. The Marshalls still need a few garrisons here and there, as well as some support troops, and I'm looking at getting some small AA units to defend the larger airbases. The Bonin's are still in need of token garrisons, as well as engineers to develop them, but they're on the hind teat at present until areas closer to the frontline are secured. South-West Pacific I'm starting to feel that I've over-commited in this theater, as despite a big American presence on Luganville, there's been little Allied activity. Defences here are about 80% complete, with Papau New Guinea strongly held, though there are a few more bases on the Rabual-Ndeni axis that I'd like to develop to add some depth to our defences. As work is completed here, I'll be withdrawing engineering assets to help build up Northern Papua, to complete the Tokyo-Bonins-Marianas-Papua defensive barrier. Austrailia Operations are progressing well here, and I hope to have destroyed the British and Austrailian troops by June, and have withdrawn most of the troops by July. While I'm overjoyed to be destroying British and Austrailian units so far forward, I'm disapointed that the Allies haven't made any serious commitment in terms of airpower. Nevertheless, the large buffer zone that Northern Austrailia offers is very welcome, and it's exceptionally handy that the bases I've developed to support the invasion are the same bases that I'll be using to defend the Lower DEI. Burma It's perhaps too early to tell how operations against Akyab are progressing, but on the whole, the situation is stable, but fragile. With the bulk of the IJA divisions moving against Akyab, there's nothing else to hold Burma together bar the Imperial Guards Division and the Thai divisions. Should the Chinese make a bid to break through into Burma, there's little and less that could stop them at present, though that will swiftly change once the troops from the Philippines arrive in a week or two and a division from Manchuria some time after that. As with my operations in Northern Austrailia, I'm disapointed by the refusal of the Allies to commit airframes to combat, and though the AVG took a bashing in the early months of 1942, Lokasenna has been content to hoard his British aircraft where I can't hit them. China The outlook is good. Chungking is bottled up and the forts falling every month or so, with the defenders out of supply. Kuming has been heavily bombed, but otherwise left alone, and as a result the Chinese are probably fairly well entrenched and with some supply. The tentative plan is that once Chungking is secured, we'll surround Kunming, but not bother taking the base, and try to move the bulk of troops to Burma. Elsewhere, nearly all of China is occupied, with the only fighting other than Chungking being the occasional anti-guerilla operation against Chinese remanants or a siege against a holdout mountain garrison.
< Message edited by mind_messing -- 5/3/2014 10:53:06 PM >
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