RolandRahn_MatrixForum
Posts: 588
Joined: 3/18/2001 From: Beloit, USA Status: offline
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quote:
Originally posted by Tombstone:
If war in europe re-erupts then america may decide to hold off on Olympic
Tomo
Just some thoughts:
- Olympic was sheduled to start on November 1st, 1945. It was not intended to capture all of Kyushu but only the southern part.
- Coronet was sheduled to start on March 1st, 1946. It was only intended to capture the Kanto plain.
- If the Japanese did not surrender at the start of the US/USSR war, they are extremely unlikely to surrender unconditionally after the outbreak of hostilities in europe (With a new enemy for the US they would see the chance for a negotiated peace)
Since this campaign is going to take place in 1946, we can assume that large US forces are on Kyushu and perhaps even on Honshu.
Another problem for the US was the way they demobilized after the German surrender. Since some US personal was drafted in 1940 and served now for more than four years, they adopted a point system for demobilizing. I think that each individual got one point for each month in service, one additional point for each month in service oversee, several points for each battle and for each wound, several points for each child (to reflect the difficult circumstances for men with family) e.t.c..
Once a special number was reached, the individual was eglible for a honorable discharge from service (with some exceptions for specialists like engineers).
This would resulted in the discharge of many veteran NCOs and other men with valuable combat experience, who would be replaced with green troops.
And one should concider that the most effective units would likely see service in Japan, while the troops in ETO would not have the same readiness (Who would get the important spare part X for weapon Y? The men fighting in the PTO or the men on garrison duty in ETO?).
Off course, the US would be able to fix most this problems (shipping Veteran troops back to ETO from CONUS and perhaps from PTO, perhaps drafting the discharged veterans back into service e.t.c.), but during the first weeks of a conflict in ETO in 1946 the US would face severve quality problems.
Kind regards,
Roland
BTW: I did not want to offend the US forces nor the men who served in Germany after the German surrender. I just wanted to point to some problems the US would have faced in such a conflict.
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