RE: Anyone know... (Full Version)

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treespider -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 10:17:53 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Nemo121

quote:

I would consider the move gamey if in order to accomplish the mission you by-passed Pt. Moresby, Rabaul and the Solomons....IRL no non-lunatic commander would insert a substantial force a thosand miles behind the "front" with tno supporting base and the prospect of reinforcement being slim.


Seems like a valid strategem to me. Bypass the front-line strength and hit the weak but vital rear areas without which the front lines must wither and falter. Let's see which lunatic commander's did similar things in recent history --- the Germans in WW2,


Germany?

Why didn't the Germans just load eight divisions up on ships in 1942 and invade New York?

Where and when did the Germans take any number of divisions and plant them somewhere outside of support from a nearby base? Norway comes to mind but they invaded southern norway first then moved north up the coastline from there if I'm not mistaken...

quote:


the Soviets in WW2 ( and with the Operational Manoeuvre Group this was also their doctrine if the Cold War ever became hot),


likewise the Soviets never had the oppurtunity to pickup and drop several divisions a 1000 miles behind the front without a line of supply to the rear ...

quote:

Schwarzkopf during the first Gulf War --- Hmm, seems like a valid strategem to me and one which a lot of people would like to bitch about if they hadn't prepared for it.


And what were the Marines doing in Kuwait while the armor was running through the desert? I believe the phrase is "securing the flank".

quote:

If it wasn't a risk then the Allies wouldn't have tied down multiple divisions guarding rear area bases in real life. They committed these units to garrison duty precisely because in war ANYTHING is possible. If players don't take the same precautions then they deserve to be punished for their lassitude.


I agree. However the penalty should be commensurate with the crime...The sole occupation of Karachi without the rest of India being controlled should not stop British reinforcements from arriving in Theater. Likewise the sole occupation of Sydney should not stop Australian reinforcements.

quote:


The Japanese player capitalising on an Allied error isn't gamey. It is just good play. The Allied player making the error is simply poor judgement.


I never suggested it was poor play. It was a very good move considering the game mechanics afforded the players.

You can have Good Gamey Play and Poor Gamey Play....likewise you can have Good Realistic Play and Poor Realistic Play.

quote:


FWIW the same applies to the Allies landing several divisions at Tokyo in 42 or 43. If the Japanese player is stupid enough not to garrison his territories and the Allied player mounts a landing then fair dues to him. Banning things outright instead of forcing player's to take the necessary and historical countermeasures ( garrisons) simply acts to cover up for poor play.


I don't have a problem with the Japanese landing in Sydney or Karachi or the allies landing in Tokyo early...my problem is with the game mechanic that allows the player to do these operations without concern for the real life logistics involved with such an operation.

Do you actually believe the Britsish would have abandoned all of India if the Japanese had loaded all of their units into one TF and bypassed Calcutta and Sri Lanka and landed in Karachi? Do you believe the Japanese War Industry would have come to a screeching halt if Tokyo were occupied? I'm not suggesting there should be no penalty for the occupation of these cities by the enemy, of course there should be some...




pauk -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 10:43:34 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider


quote:

ORIGINAL: RevRick

quote:

ORIGINAL: Honda

No please, it's gamey...[:-]

If someone takes Tokio in '43, it that gamey?
Sorry, but I belive I outplayed my opponent in a fashion that is anything but gamey. I can't belive I'm defending myself, but here...I had 8(!) IJA divs preparing for Sydney 3 months doing nothing in the meantime. I invaded east India to conceal a major operation on the other side of the world. I lost 3 CVs (2 sunk) for the operation and went ahead anyway. I had to sail many days in hostile waters avoiding detection, and when i finally arrived my whole strategy could have been flawed by just 1 or 2 divs. C'mon man!!!



If the Allies take Tokyo in '43 by sinking the KB, wiping out the bases in the way, and hitting with enough SUSTAINABLE (as in, keeping it supplied) force to take it because there is nothing to interfere with the flow of supplies - yes. If it is an attack in which those conditions are not met (KB active and afloat, Truk, Tarawa,Kwajalein, the Marianas, New Guinea, the PI still in Japanese hands and not menaced by much more than holding forces at best) and there is no defense in the HI to speak of - yes that is gamey because no one who was in command of a real force for any nation would leave themselves that exposed to the loss of a landing force because they were cut of and unsupplied.



Echo....Echo

Hello....Hello

[;)]....[;)]




but guys, that is pretty much was happend in real WITP....and Allies still need a lot more time to defeat Japan...

(don't want to go into debate about Sydney, just think that above mentioned argument doesn't hold the water)




pauk -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 10:50:20 PM)

greetings...

quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider
Germany?

Where and when did the Germans take any number of divisions and plant them somewhere outside of support from a nearby base? Norway comes to mind but they invaded southern norway first then moved north up the coastline from there if I'm not mistaken...



Hm, didn't Germans sent some forces to the north while they didn't secure a southern part. Anyway, i belive that Honda took Noumea first. IMO, the Allied player should/must be aware of potential danger invading Australia when this happpend!

Anyway i agree with Char and this statement 100%




Terminus -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 10:59:54 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider

Where and when did the Germans take any number of divisions and plant them somewhere outside of support from a nearby base? Norway comes to mind but they invaded southern norway first then moved north up the coastline from there if I'm not mistaken...



You're mistaken. The Germans landed elements of a mountain division by way of 10 destroyers in Narvik. All of the destroyers were subsequently sunk, and the Allied forces came within a hair of actually destroying the German troops. The Royal Navy had complete control of the sea that far north, and no German vessels (other than U-Boats with their faulty torpedoes) came up there.




Dino -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:10:25 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: pauk

Anyway i agree with Char and this statement 100%


If you are talking about this statement...

quote:

These arguments about taking Sydney or Karachi being gamey are all relevant to the players involved and should not be label as being gamey is ALL cases.


...then I agree,too.

But if you are talking about this one...

quote:

Britian might have felt that their foothold in India was too unstable and may have even started withdrawing troop, let alone contiue reinforements. Same thing with Australia. If ANY base was taken in Australia, then they might have negotiated peace with the Japanese and withdrawn from the war.


...then, it warants a looooooooooong discussion.




Andrew Brown -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:15:19 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Charbroiled
Same thing with Australia. If ANY base was taken in Australia, then they might have negotiated peace with the Japanese and withdrawn from the war.


Definitely not.




Terminus -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:17:13 PM)

That's the sort of statement that would only be made by somebody who doesn't know any Aussies...[:D]




Charbroiled -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:17:26 PM)

Dino....I agree, it warrents a very long discussion, but any discussion would be completely hypothetical. Strange and unpredictable things happen in politics and war, so it would be hard to predict with any ABSOLUTE certainty what the political masterminds at the time would have done.




treespider -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:32:57 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus


quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider

Where and when did the Germans take any number of divisions and plant them somewhere outside of support from a nearby base? Norway comes to mind but they invaded southern norway first then moved north up the coastline from there if I'm not mistaken...



You're mistaken. The Germans landed elements of a mountain division by way of 10 destroyers in Narvik. All of the destroyers were subsequently sunk, and the Allied forces came within a hair of actually destroying the German troops. The Royal Navy had complete control of the sea that far north, and no German vessels (other than U-Boats with their faulty torpedoes) came up there.



Yes I was slightly off...but I did some checking...the Germans did not solely land elements of the Mountain division in Narvik and nowhere else...At the same time as the Narvik Op the Germans were also landing in Bergen, Trondheim, Stavanger, Kristiansund and other places.





Dino -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:45:19 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Charbroiled

Dino....I agree, it warrents a very long discussion, but any discussion would be completely hypothetical. Strange and unpredictable things happen in politics and war, so it would be hard to predict with any ABSOLUTE certainty what the political masterminds at the time would have done.


That's why I try to keep politics out of my games (I am the only "mastermind" [:D]).

So...would I surrender in these circumstances?...NO!!!

Hence my suggestion for increasing the requirements.




Charbroiled -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:45:28 PM)

Andrew, no slight intended towards Australians....everybody knows that given enough beer (or the threat of lossing their beer), the Austrailians will fight anybody/everybody.[;)][:D]




Monter_Trismegistos -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:45:33 PM)

...and with all those places except Oslo and Kristians?nd... they landed outside of support from any friendly base.




Monter_Trismegistos -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:47:12 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Charbroiled

Andrew, no slight intended towards Australians....everybody knows that given enough beer (or the threat of lossing their beer), the Austrailians will fight anybody/everybody.[;)][:D]


Poles are the opposite. If you give them not enough vodka they will start fighting each others. [:D]




Terminus -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:52:16 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider


quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus


quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider

Where and when did the Germans take any number of divisions and plant them somewhere outside of support from a nearby base? Norway comes to mind but they invaded southern norway first then moved north up the coastline from there if I'm not mistaken...



You're mistaken. The Germans landed elements of a mountain division by way of 10 destroyers in Narvik. All of the destroyers were subsequently sunk, and the Allied forces came within a hair of actually destroying the German troops. The Royal Navy had complete control of the sea that far north, and no German vessels (other than U-Boats with their faulty torpedoes) came up there.



Yes I was slightly off...but I did some checking...the Germans did not solely land elements of the Mountain division in Narvik and nowhere else...At the same time as the Narvik Op the Germans were also landing in Bergen, Trondheim, Stavanger, Kristiansund and other places.




Correct, but the troops in Narvik were at the end of a very long Sea Supply Line. There was no way in hell the Germans would be able to get supplies through overland when the Norwegians didn't just collapse but fought like madmen. When the Royal Navy closed off the ocean area around Narvik, the Germans were in effect out of supply.




Andrew Brown -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:53:36 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Charbroiled

Andrew, no slight intended towards Australians....everybody knows that given enough beer (or the threat of lossing their beer), the Austrailians will fight anybody/everybody.[;)][:D]


No slight perceived. I was just commenting that I don't think the Australians would have given up so easily. Far from it, I think.

I hate to let the stereotype down, but I can't stand beer myself...




Terminus -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:54:09 PM)

Narvik came very close to being an early success for the Allies, at a time when they REALLY needed one. Dietl actually contemplated for a while to take his troops across the border into Sweden and be detained there, because he didn't like his two other options (die in place or surrender to the Allies).




Terminus -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:55:02 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Andrew Brown

quote:

ORIGINAL: Charbroiled

Andrew, no slight intended towards Australians....everybody knows that given enough beer (or the threat of lossing their beer), the Austrailians will fight anybody/everybody.[;)][:D]


No slight perceived. I was just commenting that I don't think the Australians would have given up so easily. Far from it, I think.

I hate to let the stereotype down, but I can't stand beer myself...


WHAT? You sure you're a real Aussie?

Next you'll be telling us you don't wear a floppy-brimmed hat with corks on strings on it...[:D]




Nemo121 -> RE: Anyone know... (12/5/2006 11:59:25 PM)

Treespider,

Read up on Barbarossa. The German armoured spearheads so far exceeded their supply echelons that they were operating off of captured Soviet fuel and paradropped ammunition etc.

Operational Manoeuvre Groups are not paraborne. They are armoured and mechanised units which drive through a hole in an enemy line for a target a minimum of 250 to 500km behind enemy lines. Since the range of land warfare is much "shorter" than naval warfare this equates quite well with the CONCEPT, if applied to naval warfare, obviously operating to a much greater operational depth of up to a few of thousand kms.

Also, Inchon, Gallipoli and a whole host of strategems from the Middle Ages featured the landing of significant land forces in the enemy's operational depth far behind the strength of the front.

As to the marines... Sure. BUT the key point is that it was an operation into the enemy's operational depth. One could easily argue that the IJN performed the task of securing the Sea Lines of Communication for this endeavour.


quote:

The sole occupation of Karachi without the rest of India being controlled should not stop British reinforcements from arriving in Theater.


Agreed. That's why I only play on maps which have Aden in play anymore.


quote:

Likewise the sole occupation of Sydney should not stop Australian reinforcements.

Hmm, well here facts get in the way of your argument. If Sydney falls Australian reinforcements will arrive in Melbourne and if Melbourne falls and they follow the same logic as other forces it is quite possible that they will arrive in other non-occupied bases. Unfortunately the manual which goes into some detail about China and the Home Islands doesn't give this same detail about other areas. Still, the point is that the fall of Sydney is not the end. Aussie reinforcements will then arrive in Melbourne. IF after Sydney falls the Allied player ALSO lets Melbourne fall.... well his incompetence dooms him long before any game mechanic does there.



Treespider,
Personally I do think that India, in early 42, was both militarily vulnerable and politically vulnerable and that cutting it off from naval reinforcements had the potential ( I can't be sure if it would or wouldn't have but I think the potential was there) to cause the collapse of the British government and the disintegration of much of the native Indian forces fighting with them.






pauk -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 12:17:19 AM)

Dino, i was talking about this statement...

quote:

ORIGINAL: Charbroiled

These arguments about taking Sydney or Karachi being gamey are all relevant to the players involved and should not be label as being gamey is ALL cases.





Honda -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 12:18:30 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider

I'd say it was an excellent game move on your part! Well done!

The Allied player should not have left Sydney undefended and you were able to place 8 divisions into Sydney.

IRL now that you have occupied Sydney how do you subdue the rest of the country? Wouldn't the Australians raise units elsewhere?

IRL How do you insure that enough supply arrives to feed and arm the 8 divisions to enable you to subdue the rest of the country? How do you unload the ships carrying all of those supplies if the port facilities at Sydney were damaged? Where do you store all of those supplies to support the eight divisions? How long would that mountain of supplies remain uncontaminated and usable? How vulnerable would that mountain of supplies be to air attack?



First I make sure have plenty of supply going with the invasion fleet. I have emergency supply in Noumea. Facilities are no longer damaged with 1000+ engineers working around the clock. Sydney is a huge base so no problem with storing. The not so mountain of supply is of course vunruable to air attack, more so with no forts. B17 just appeared on naval search over Sydney[:D]
But the most important thing is to make my troops selfsufficent. That's why I went for the industrial south. IIRC it was japanese doctrine to make their army live ofthe land it is stationed in as much as possible. Maybe we should tell them it was gamey...

The Australia operation was my strategic goal from the onset. As I said I plenned for it since the PI campaign which I deliberatly aborted once I pushed the enemy to Manila and left a blocking force. I also went for India with embarrasingly small force and just got away with it. However, I had to seriosly weaken the CenPac under 4th fleet and have lost Wake. And simultaniously with the taking of Sydney the enemy ivaded the Marshalls. It seems now the invasion will be defeated but I don't want to speak to soon. And the road to Sydney was indeed Rabaul-Lunga-Noumea-Sydney...IOt was at Noumea that the CV battle occured with me losing 2 CVs, 1 in the yards till '45 v. 4 american CVs sunk.
I must confess I now understand Pauk's frustration...




Dino -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 12:20:33 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Nemo121

IF after Sydney falls the Allied player ALSO lets Melbourne fall.... well his incompetence dooms him long before any game mechanic does there.


This scenario would imply that majority of Aus. forces are north of Sydney, in which case there isn't much Allied player can do to save Melbourne.

Once Sydney falls, the fall of Melbourne is almost inevitable, regardless of players competence.




pauk -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 12:27:58 AM)

the good thing about this thread is that Invasion of India is now justified![:D]

common you all JFBs you can invade India now!!!![:D]

On a more serious note, i think it is pointless that we all arguing about being gamey/not gamey... perhaps we should listen Honda's opponent first?




treespider -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 12:29:53 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Honda

And the road to Sydney was indeed Rabaul-Lunga-Noumea-Sydney...IOt was at Noumea that the CV battle occured with me losing 2 CVs, 1 in the yards till '45 v. 4 american CVs sunk.


Then in that scenario IMO invading Sydney was not gamey...I must confess I have not followed your AAR. I was describing a situation in which the Japanese did not bother securing their flanks for a push into Australia.




Dino -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 12:39:04 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: pauk

the good thing about this thread is that Invasion of India is now justified![:D]


The good thing about this thread is that Honda's original question got answered. [:)]

quote:

common you all JFBs you can invade India now!!!![:D]


...and don't ask "What are these Marines doing here?" [X(][:D]

quote:


On a more serious note, i think it is pointless that we all arguing about being gamey/not gamey... perhaps we should listen Honda's opponent first?

[sm=bow.gif]




treespider -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 12:42:53 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Nemo121

Treespider,

Read up on Barbarossa. The German armoured spearheads so far exceeded their supply echelons that they were operating off of captured Soviet fuel and paradropped ammunition etc.


Yes and Infantry were steadily closing ithe gap between the front and the armored spearheads.

quote:


Operational Manoeuvre Groups are not paraborne. They are armoured and mechanised units which drive through a hole in an enemy line for a target a minimum of 250 to 500km behind enemy lines. Since the range of land warfare is much "shorter" than naval warfare this equates quite well with the CONCEPT, if applied to naval warfare, obviously operating to a much greater operational depth of up to a few of thousand kms.

Also, Inchon, Gallipoli and a whole host of strategems from the Middle Ages featured the landing of significant land forces in the enemy's operational depth far behind the strength of the front.


Like a good attorney you are changing the point of the discussion from strategic depth to operational depth.

quote:


As to the marines... Sure. BUT the key point is that it was an operation into the enemy's operational depth. One could easily argue that the IJN performed the task of securing the Sea Lines of Communication for this endeavour.


quote:

The sole occupation of Karachi without the rest of India being controlled should not stop British reinforcements from arriving in Theater.


Agreed. That's why I only play on maps which have Aden in play anymore.


quote:

Likewise the sole occupation of Sydney should not stop Australian reinforcements.

Hmm, well here facts get in the way of your argument. If Sydney falls Australian reinforcements will arrive in Melbourne and if Melbourne falls and they follow the same logic as other forces it is quite possible that they will arrive in other non-occupied bases. Unfortunately the manual which goes into some detail about China and the Home Islands doesn't give this same detail about other areas. Still, the point is that the fall of Sydney is not the end. Aussie reinforcements will then arrive in Melbourne. IF after Sydney falls the Allied player ALSO lets Melbourne fall.... well his incompetence dooms him long before any game mechanic does there.


What is my argument that facts are getting in the way of?





quote:


Treespider,
Personally I do think that India, in early 42, was both militarily vulnerable and politically vulnerable and that cutting it off from naval reinforcements had the potential ( I can't be sure if it would or wouldn't have but I think the potential was there) to cause the collapse of the British government and the disintegration of much of the native Indian forces fighting with them.



IMO it would depend on what else were taking place...certainly if Sri Lanka and Karachi and Bombay were occupied by the Japanese, the British would obviously be reevaluating their options. However if only Karachi were occupied I would suggest that the Japanese would be in a very precarious position.




Nemo121 -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 2:19:24 AM)

quote:

Once Sydney falls, the fall of Melbourne is almost inevitable, regardless of players competence. 


Not at all. What you say is only correct if the Allied player has failed to garrison Melbourne. If he has failed to garrison such a crucial base then he deserves absolutely everything he gets. IF he has garrisoned it with a division behind level 9 forts then Melbourne is almost inviolable.


quote:

I was describing a situation in which the Japanese did not bother securing their flanks for a push into Australia.

By this same token most succesful Panzer operations throughout history were "gamey". Silly.


Strategic and operational depths are very close cousins and the point at which they change over is open to much discussion. As such I feel free to mix and match.


quote:

However if only Karachi were occupied I would suggest that the Japanese would be in a very precarious position. 

Correct. I don't say it is the best strategy I just argue that it is a valid option and shouldn't be dismissed as "gamey" and/or banned by rules. Players should defend what they want to hold, not create rules to gift it to themselves in perpetuity.




treespider -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 3:54:34 AM)


quote:

quote:

However if only Karachi were occupied I would suggest that the Japanese would be in a very precarious position. 

Correct. I don't say it is the best strategy I just argue that it is a valid option and shouldn't be dismissed as "gamey" and/or banned by rules. Players should defend what they want to hold, not create rules to gift it to themselves in perpetuity.



By the same token game mechanics should not reward the player for pulling such a risky stunt...which is the point of my diatribe in this thread. The denial of future reinforcements by the mere occupation of one hex is the kind of game mechanic to which I refer.




Raverdave -> Honda's folly. (12/6/2006 11:42:17 AM)

Ah hem. Well seeing as I am the "other" person what I have to say should carry some weight. I couldn't careless what hair-brained plan Honda has come up with, just so long as he sticks around to play the game to it's logical conclusion in '44 or '45 (godforbid'46).





[image]local://upfiles/5619/7DF64D311DB5407590A9FBEF3A08D79E.jpg[/image]




Honda -> RE: Honda's folly. (12/6/2006 12:12:27 PM)

Thanks Raver. [;)]




Ron Saueracker -> RE: Anyone know... (12/6/2006 1:07:36 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Honda


quote:

ORIGINAL: treespider

I'd say it was an excellent game move on your part! Well done!

The Allied player should not have left Sydney undefended and you were able to place 8 divisions into Sydney.

IRL now that you have occupied Sydney how do you subdue the rest of the country? Wouldn't the Australians raise units elsewhere?

IRL How do you insure that enough supply arrives to feed and arm the 8 divisions to enable you to subdue the rest of the country? How do you unload the ships carrying all of those supplies if the port facilities at Sydney were damaged? Where do you store all of those supplies to support the eight divisions? How long would that mountain of supplies remain uncontaminated and usable? How vulnerable would that mountain of supplies be to air attack?



First I make sure have plenty of supply going with the invasion fleet. I have emergency supply in Noumea. Facilities are no longer damaged with 1000+ engineers working around the clock. Sydney is a huge base so no problem with storing. The not so mountain of supply is of course vunruable to air attack, more so with no forts. B17 just appeared on naval search over Sydney[:D]
But the most important thing is to make my troops selfsufficent. That's why I went for the industrial south. IIRC it was japanese doctrine to make their army live ofthe land it is stationed in as much as possible. Maybe we should tell them it was gamey...

The Australia operation was my strategic goal from the onset. As I said I plenned for it since the PI campaign which I deliberatly aborted once I pushed the enemy to Manila and left a blocking force. I also went for India with embarrasingly small force and just got away with it. However, I had to seriosly weaken the CenPac under 4th fleet and have lost Wake. And simultaniously with the taking of Sydney the enemy ivaded the Marshalls. It seems now the invasion will be defeated but I don't want to speak to soon. And the road to Sydney was indeed Rabaul-Lunga-Noumea-Sydney...IOt was at Noumea that the CV battle occured with me losing 2 CVs, 1 in the yards till '45 v. 4 american CVs sunk.
I must confess I now understand Pauk's frustration...



Frustration over what?




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