chanman
Posts: 84
Joined: 1/4/2001 From: Westminster, Colorado, U.S.A. Status: offline
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Hi Major Tom,
we seem to get into some pretty esoteric conversations about a wargame... I am not sure that Japan's involvement in China is the triggering factor. Japan was definitely the rising star (Sun?) in the Asiatic theatre, but didn't have the resources to conduct the expansion they wanted. If anything, PacWar seriously underrates the resources in the U.S. and I think that those of us who live here have a warped view of what the rest of the world is like and can do. Japan has virtually _none_ of the resources necessary for a wartime (or expansionist) economy in the home islands. If Japan is going to be the great power, they have to seize the resources. Oil, rubber, aluminum, steel, coal, copper, the stuff of life to a modern industrial base and with very few exceptions, none of it is obtainable in Japan (some poor coal and iron deposits are it, I think). China is a stepping stone, not causal, I think.
An additional point to ponder. The Japanese military performance in China in the 30's led the British and the U.S. to seriously underestimate the capability of Japan's army and air forces. The Japanese learned from many of their mistakes to the immense surprise of many of our commanders in 1941. PacWar seems to simulate this by almost paralyzing the Allied commands with a severe lack of PP's in 12/41.
An optional scenario starting in 1936 would have a completely different feel than the 1941. The U.S. Navy would be a shell of the force that it is in 1940, the U.S. Army would be extremely tiny, and the British would not be at war in Europe, but may be limited in what they send to Asia by the rise of Germany. I think that Roosevelt's decision not to go to war then despite more provocation than used for some of the U.S.'s other wars was a good one. All those nifty carriers, cruisers and destroyers we get to play with in PacWar are a result of the Navy building programs of the late 30s and especially 1940. Lets not even talk about aircraft.
[This message has been edited by chanman (edited February 16, 2001).]
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"As God is my witness, I thought that turkeys could fly"
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