Canoerebel -> The NY Times Calls for Resignations (3/12/2008 10:48:30 PM)
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1/14/43 to 1/17/43 This was an inauspicious period for the Allies; so bleak-looking, in fact, that the New York Times has called for resignations of the entire US Military - from Commander in Chief down to battallion level. Oof. Wotje: The garrison capitulated through no fault of their own. They held on gamely against tough odds and weren't reinforced. A month of constant bombing and bombardment, then the invasion followed by reinforcements, spelled doom for the Marines. A deliberate attack at 1:1 on the 15th dropped forts from 4 to 3 and cost the Japs 1395/51 to 1286/35/1. Another attack the following day came off at 4:1. The Allies capitulated. There was one final Allied offensive that brought some smiles - 12 PT boats damaged and sank quite a few Jap AKs and MSW over two or three days. I learned a tough lesson at Wotje that I'll put to good use in the future. My instincts that I could pull off the initial invasion were right, and the invasion did at least temporarily bring some relief to Australia as John deployed the KB around Wotje. But the invasion needed either the ability to bring in supplies or reinforcements, or to create such mayhem elsewhere that the Japs were crippled or severly hampered in their ability to deal with two "critical" areas. So the invasion ultimately died with a wimper. Australia: The press was shocked to see the arrival of the entire Jap army at Sydney. Well, the press exaggerated a bit, but there are seven divisions (4, 20, 10, 16, 48, 2, and 56), two brigades (7th Ind. and 1st Mixed), six tank regiments, three artillery units, and three engineers. These guys showed up on the 15th and promplty bombarded (doing little damage - 33 casualties). The Jap army is 174,446/2050/37 strong with an unmodified AV of 4238. The Allied army is 166,227/1199/326 with an unmodified AV of 2767. Forts are 9. Supplies are 48k. The Japs bombarded again on the 16th and 17th getting similar puny results. If the Japs are beat up bad when they attack, I'll weigh the possibility of counter-attacking the following turn (but only if the Japs get really savaged). Allied bombers (the few that remain) struck shipping at Newcastle on the 17th, torpedoeing three ships. Despite the shock of seeing Jap troops in Sydney, I feel good about things at the moment. A major dogfight over Melbourne on the 14th cost the Japs 38 Zeros, 7 Tonys, 8 Sallys, and 4 Helens. The Allies lost 18 Hurricanes, 7 Spitfires, and 5 Kittyhawks. Burma: Things were going good, but Jap reinforcements have arrived on the 16th, so I'm not sure what the future holds. On the 14th, an Allied deliberate attack at 1:1 dropped forts to 2 and inflicted 2932/45/20 to 2357/49/1 (the first time the Japs took greater losses; there was great rejoicing in Allied HQ, but it only lasted another day). Another deliberate at 1:1 on the 15th dropped forts to 1 (yay!) and inflicted 2031/59/1 to 3274/56/7. But the Jap 38th Division was seen on sight followed the next day by 21st Div. Allied bombers with escorts have been hitting Meiktila daily doing pretty good damage. Beauforts from Chittagong sank three ML on the 15th or 16th. I've pulled a bunch of depleted Chinese units back to Mandalay (AVs ranged from zero - zero for goodness sake! - to about 25) and replaced them with part of an Indian division and two strong Chinese units. I'll try another deliberate attack tomorrow. If things turn out poorly, I'll have to seriously evaluate the future of the Allied campaign against Meiktila. China: The four Jap divisions that showed up at Wuchow promptly withdrew. They didn't stand a chance and Chinese bombardments were hitting them pretty hard (300 casualties a day).
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