IdahoNYer
Posts: 2616
Joined: 9/6/2009 From: NYer living in Boise, ID Status: offline
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12-13 Apr 44 Highlights – Good debut of the B-29 over Hong Kong; Tarakan DD raid goes well. Jpn ships sunk: DD: 1 (Yugumo) xAK: 1 ACM: 2 AMc: 1 Jpn ships un-sunk: DD: 2 (Natsushio, Arashi) TK: 1 - first time I’ve seen a TK “falsely reported as sunk” on Tracker. Allied ships sunk: None Air loss: Jpn: 21 Allied: 40 Subwar: Jpn: 0 Attacks, 0 ships hit Allies: 6 Attacks, 1 ship hit (xAK dam) Jpn Amph Inv: None Allied Amph Inv: None Bases lost: None Bases Liberated: None SIGINT/Intel: NSTR. West Coast/Admin: NSTR. In NOPAC, NSTR. In CENPAC, US CVs pull away from the Marianas without incident and head into SOPAC to support upcoming amphibious operations. Recon shows a number of ships in Tinian’s port, will send some Navy Heavies out of Ponape to hit the port at long range, supported by P-38 sweeps out of Woleai. In SOPAC, the Woleai Amphib TF completes offloading at Hansa Bay, and will head to Hollandia next turn to begin loading for the Sorong Amphib. Assault shipping is also routed to Kiriwina Island to embark troops earmarked for Moratai. One of the US CV TFs takes on fuel from the Repl TF and will rejoin the other two as they all head towards the Molaccas to support the upcoming landings. Will likely head into the Celebes Sea to raid the Tarakan area at some point during this sortie. CVE and CA TFs rearm and refuel at Hollandia, and will head back out to sea, joining the Repl TF north of New Guinea. CVs US Grant and RE Lee arrive at Manus and will configure air groups for a turn before heading out to join the fleet. As the Hellcat squadrons arrived “upgraded” to 40 planes instead of the previous 36, the two CVs will still take on 24 Corsairs but only 21 SBDs will replace the Helldivers; so 64F, 21D, 18T. Probably not a bad load out. In SWPAC, the two DD TFs (4DDea) raiding up to Tarakan was reasonably successful, but of course, could have been better if the US DDs pressed their attacks more. As it was, three IJN DDs, 2E, PC, TK and AV were all damaged to some degree in three separate engagements. One US DD suffered minor damage (7 sys). So not bad, but no torpedoes found targets, so all IJN ships are likely to survive. The main positive here is that L_S_T now knows Tarakan is now directly threatened by sea. Also at sea, the Obi, Bara and Ternate Amphib TFs will depart Australian waters next turn and stage at Kendari, linking up with CVE and CA TFs there. From Kendari, they will head to targets, joining upcoming SOPAC landings at Sorong and Moratai. All told, with 5 separate invasion sites, totaling about 3 divisions of troops, this will be the most complex series of landings undertaken so far. On the ground, troops bombard Makassar, but will wait until the last Aussie Bde and Engineer Regiment arrives overland from Watampone - probably enough combat power already at Makassar, but the troops marching in are the best prepared for the target. In the air, most bombers rest in preparation for the upcoming landings, while some SBDs are now moved to Watampone, now at AF level 2, able to interdict anything around Balikpapan a bit easier. All things considered, it was a pretty quiet turn; that quiet ends next turn. In China, quiet other than fighter sweeps and recon supporting the B-29s over Hong Kong. They met no CAP, and will be pulled back to Burma Theater. In Burma, a good, solid start to B-29 missions! All available twelve squadrons targeted Hong Kong, 8 to hit the city, 3 the port and 1 the AF. I figured the port might have some ships under repair in the level 51 shipyards, and there were. The raid was cohesive, with 66 B-29s bombing at 8000 feet the first day, and 57 the second. A good number of ships in port were hit repeatedly, including 2TK, 2AR, xAK, and some smaller vessels. Was hoping to catch a warship in the yards, but this will do. Industry was also damaged to a fair degree, with the repair shipyard taking the brunt, being reduced from 51 to 22, while both heavy and light industry also took damage. Of the B-29s, none were lost as no fighters were present and AA was light. About a dozen suffered damage, and will rest them while I think of the next target. I had planned to bring the B-29s to Sumatra to range the Borneo oilfields, and will likely strike at Miri/Brunei, but Balikpapan and Tarakan are both well within range of SWPAC B-24s. And with Balikpapan under single engine LBA range, I’m now thinking to take the base without gutting the oil/refineries. On land, stalemate. In the air other than the B-29s, a Brit night raid on Bangkok gets mauled by nightfighters and AA - 17 Wellingtons and 9 Libs out of three squadrons fail to return - and of course I forgot to shut down those squadrons, so they’ll likely get chewed up again next turn. Hoping for bad weather for a change! Bangkok will however have to be dealt with. It’s the primary fighter base in the area, with over 300 last reported. In the IO, will have another go at Palembang as the US and Aussie Divisions re-enter the target hex in good shape - well rested and supply is good. Throwing in the kitchen sink - 3 Div, 2 Bde, plus supporting armor and engineers - overstacked of course. Airpower continues to attrit the defenders, about 1000 casualties this last turn. Other than Palembang, its quiet.
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