Herbie goes Bananas (Full Version)

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wobbly -> Herbie goes Bananas (4/5/2003 7:19:45 AM)

My plan for writing the AAR is to do it from the personal perspective of a 5” gunner on the Chicago – if it sinks then we will see how he ends up! I will edit and add to his diary much as Feinder and knavey have shown how to do. I will add as normal my thought and plans and how they pan out via combat summaries. I would really like input as I go along as to what the board thinks is a good idea. My opponent will also be writing an AAR from the Japanese perspective and he and I are not allowed to read each others – for obvious reasons.
Settings are: scenario 17 jap reinforcements at 160% US 100% very variable, jap sub off, US damage control on.

Please be very careful, while helping, not to give herbie's moves away - an exercise in control????




wobbly -> Diary (4/5/2003 7:21:05 AM)

PRIVATE DIARY: Daniel Curruthers

1st may 1942

Sleep, SLEEP!!! When will they let me get some? I’ve been on the go since getting into Australia in Sydney 5 days ago, can it be so short a time – feels like an eternity? Made landfall and the lads that I came over with decided that a sampling of the local drinking establishments was in order. I have to say the local brew is excellent although the imported stuff from over the ditch is superior ( :D ). Makes me think that the Aussies have a point when they say ours is like sex in a canoe.
3 days on the binge and my liver decided it would rather leave me for another man – I swear I coughed it up with the remnants of baked dingo or whatever it was the bloody Aussies fooled us into believing was local cuisine.
All in all a superior session of brain destruction I have not had; however, to get the call your ship is on 24 hour emergency orders to sail when you are still about 1000 miles away form it’s berth, hung like a rogue elephant, is enough to make a man consider suicide.
Anyway, I’ve made it – 1000 miles of flight in the noisiest C49 and then three hours in a truck find me at my bunk on the USS Chicago: the finest fighting ship in the US Navy. We are putting to sea in a hurry, as the powers that be believe that the Jap is about to pounce – Not on my watch! It’s very close to not being my watch though, if it hadn’t been for an acute case of appendicitis with the guy I’m replacing and I’d still be in Sydney…..in bed mmmmmm
We are putting to sea in an interception force, although I don’t know how many ships are involved. In fact, at the moment I just want to crawl up and catch up on beauty sleep.

May 3rd

Well, we cruised out of Townsville and stopped somewhere south of New Guinea; we then turned around and went back to Townsville???? What gives here? WE smashed through heavy seas, got caught in a huge wind squall/storm. The catpult that launches teh seagulls was busted (sys dam 3) and all for what.
Whats more we rfuel the ships and are putting to sea again - this time under Lee. We have more ships in the Task Force and that makes me a little happier. Talking to some of the crew - especially Legs Lasater, this Lee guy has some fine moves, Being a ships cook gives you the proper perspective I guess.
At least I've caught up on some sleep.... oh and the weather seems clear, will it last?

May 8th

With the clear weather we again have put to sea, and at last the reason is starting to filter through to the troops. Apparently the Japs have been sending warships down to Port Moresby, in the south of New Guinea, and shelling the airbase and facilities there. With this becoming a regular occurence the brass are trying to create a little greeting force - namely us!
Yesterday one of the seagulls we launched (repairs having been made to the crane) managed to sight the offending ships, they fired at our seagull and I have now seen my first battle damage - albeit minor. Everyone is very tense, some of the guys thought we should have chased the Japs but in reality we would never have caught them. In preparation for the imminent battle we did some firing practise today at a sled towed behind on of the destroyers, man we balsted that thing to pieces; the japs aren't going to know what hit 'em!!!

May 9th

Unbelievably the sea is now perfectly calm. Spending the remains of this evening watching the sun go down over the stern, for such a savage place it can really turn on the charm when it wants. An alert has just sounded, all hands to General Quaters... I'll get back to this then!

It's 4am and I can't sleep, my god was that the most intense life experience or what!!! The reason for the alarm was the detection of another enemy force going into Milne Bay. Our battle group put on full steam and headed for the intercept. It was a beautiful night, half a moon and visibility for miles. I can't describe the feeling of anxiety and tension that built as we neared combat. Would they be there? How many would there be? Would we be hit? Would I be hurt, or worse? All these things roll around your mind, your stomach a pit of acid that sloshes at its sides, burning itself worse as the trepidation grows.
As best I can make it out we were coordinated into 2 squadrons of 2 cruisers and 4 destroyers separated by about 2000 yards, the Cruisers in the centre making points of a rectangle, the destroyers screening outside these.
Portland, our sister ship, was leading us into the bay when it was suddenly hit; from the location of my 5 inch gun I could not see the hit, but it was probably a torpedo. There was quite a lull after this and the Portland lost speed, taking on water, we slowed and separated from the Australia and the Chester.
About half an hour after the initial attack the Australia suddenly opened fire out to the east. The Chester also joined in and now I could see the object of their fury. A light cruiser by the looks was now on fire from stem to stern. We trained our gun on her but she was masked by the Chester who was almost directly in the way. Very quickly this enemy Cruiser was sunk.
We continued through the bay in a wide high speed arc when the Portland opened fire. Despite it's wounds she had noticed a destroyer this time, trying to escape directly away from us. The first rounds of the Portland went wide, the destroyer returned fire but aimed at us. It's shells came in missing out to port, one was close enough to cause shrapnel to bounce off the side of the ship - paint damage only. Both squadrons now split further to unmask all guns, including ours, and we let all hell loose on this poor little destroyer. It literally came apart under the barrage. In my minds eye I can still see the jagged outline of it's bridge, haloed by massive fires consuming it in Dante's vengence.
No further targets presented themselves and we were most defnatly in dangerous waters. Continuing at high speed we excited the bay and headed back South. The Portland is unable to keep up as we head south, she detaches with a destroyer, and is soon left behind. As always we are kept in the dark as to what we do now, but at present we head south. the enemy know we are here now so the next move will probably be theirs.
I am a combat veteran!

May 17th

The little port in Townsville is over-run with shipping. Everything painted grey is parked up taking on stores, fuel or getting repairs. The port is nowhere near big enough to take all these ships at a proper dock at the same time. Ships are rotating in and out of each dock and a plethora of Aussie swabbies desend upon it to do whatever it is that must be done. Chicago is now at anchor having had its float plane crane properly overhauled (was only cambat repaired previously).
I sat on the public wharf the kids use to fish off and watched what I could of the scene. 4 or 5 cruisers, many destroyers and even the Yorktown and Lexington are in port. This is the first time I have managed to get this close to the aircraft carriers, they are impressive, but I wonder how they would go up against a battleship!!! I suppose the whole idea is to not let battleships get close.
Sam Johnstone (a friend in my 5" crew) and I went to a dance party in town last night, which is the real reason for being on the docks - again I need some air. I met a young Aussie "sheila" named Nancy; we danced the night away and I drunk just a little too much beer. I know I asked her if she wanted me to walk her home and I am pretty certain she said something about me not being able... This morning however I got a phone call from her at the base. How she managed to track me down I don't know, but the short of it is I am invited to her mother's place for tea tonight!! Tea, what is it with tea!
Back at the the ship and there goes the "tea". We are putting to sea again, effective immediately. The rumour mill is grinding and it looks like it may be Milne bay again. Apparently the Japs have attempted a landing there. I am really excited!

May 19th

It is 11:45 PM and we are at general quarters. All hatches are buttoned, everyone is in the battle stations. We are part of a 2 cruiser 5 destroyers surface attack force making another foray into the, now enemy held, port of Milne Bay - Gili Gili. This time I feel diferent, we have the ships and the crews to take this war to the Japs and unless they have surprise they aren't up to the task. They may be able to pull one over the Limeys and the Dutchies, but unless they attack before declaring war they haven't a chance! Petty Officer Kruger - master of our 5" - is a little more sceptical.

May 20th

All a false alarm! We cruised into Milne Bay hunting or any targets and there weren't any! It appears, whatever evidence the Navy had, was wrong.We have just been released from general quarters and I have a chance to sleep. Hopefully I can mend bridges with a certain female once we get back to port.


May 21st

We aren't heading back to port! As light broke around the world off to the East I was on duty and looked out over the breaking waves and notice ships. More ships than we had in our task force, and more imortantly the unmistakable shape of an Aircraft Carrier. As the light got better it started launching planes, what type was a little hard to tell; the distance and the terrible weather making identification hard. In fact flying planes at all in this must be an excercise in losing your sanity.
We have steamed North again for most of the day. No doubt there is a target out there somewhere but the weather is terrible. It isn't so much wind, although you get that with rain, it is the rain itself. It is as if a swimming pool, slit form tip to tip, is dumping its contents on the ship. The TF has spread out and are relying on radar to keep position. Using such methods nearly result in our colliding with a destroyer. With much flashing of lamps, yelling and waving, the destroyer notices us and turns away - back into the murk. The day ends with little respite on the horizon.

May 22nd

I have woken to a far better weather picture. Clouds still dominate the sky but you can see breaks and more importantly, through those breaks I can see aircraft. Many many aircraft all forming up after lauching from the Carriers - there are two of them it seems; probably Lex and Yorktown from Townsville. We also start launching our float planes, 3 of them are sent in Northerly directions, the forth kept for some other reason - reserve maybe. The planes have finished forming and move off to the north.
We keep station outside the Carriers; which are launching fighters intermittantly for defense of the fleet. We are all expecting an enemy move, apparently we were scouted some time yesterday by the enemy. Again the waiting is the hardest thing; to stay on edge for hour after hour wears you out!
11:55AM planes are returning, they are banking over us as they line up to land on their carriers. It is hard to tell how many have returned.
2:23PM The planes are launching again - it seems we haven't finished giving it to the enemy. Again they head off to the north. No sign of the enemy.
6:56PM and they are back. The carriers gather their flock and at about 8:40 we abruptly turn to the south and put more steam to the engines.

May 23

Like a thief in the night we have again separated from the carriers. They might be heading down to Townsville because it appears we are on our way to Cairns. From here it is not such a run to Gili or Port Moresby if we are required. This probably means Nancy, in Townsville, will liken my name to mud and from henceforth want nothing to do with me.

May 24

We are docked at the port in Cairns. I am on repainting duty today - woopee. Bit of excitement yesterday when a sub was sighted right in the bay - this didn't happen until the afternoon. In the failing light I think they missed nailing him. With the weather again closing in he will probably escape - forecast is for thunder storms.

May 25 - 27th

Little to report

May 28th

We have just returned from another sprint up the coast of Northern Australia. The Japanese are again getting frisky so we put to see in a 5 cruiser strong TF. For some reason or other we are back in Cairns that night. I have it on reasonable authority that there was a bombardment of the field at Port Moresby and we were in striking distance - I don't understand this trepidation. We have shown we are more than a match for the Japs, let us at 'em!

May 29th

Early morning and we have put to sea again. A beautiful day with little in the way of clouds. Apparently the Japs aren't playing around this time: the coast of Port Moresby is alive with ships. Alot of talk amongst the lads - will we go in? Is it likely we will meet more than a small naval force this time?

Wait one sec firing on the other side of the Task Force...

May 30th

It almost seems pointlesss to be writing this down, however I wanted a written version of the events during this war and I suppose I will look back on this as the defining moment. I may have thought we had the wood on the Japs in a surface action but Pearl Harbour was about air attack, somehing this TF has just suffered a massive version of!

We were initially attacked by some dive bombers - the intense feeling of vulnerability is incredible. These planes came over at about 10,000 feet and then started a long dive. They dont appear to dive as steeply as the US navy pilots did when I saw them training. We were at about the point at which they started their dive - they aimed at one of the ships on the other side of the TF. Our Five inch gun was joined by the rest of the AAA armament on the ship in throwing lead at the diving aircraft, 2 exploded in quick succession, then another was hit and forced out of it's dive - it headed back the way it came trailing smoke. We weren't stopping them all though, and these guys had courage. The air was suddenly clear of planes only to show the New Orleans was on fire - she had been hit at least twice - once forward where an ugly black mark showed down the side of the ship and a far more serious hit behind the funnel - where a serious fire was now burning.

The TF turned back towards Oz and put on full steam - but ships cannot outrun planes. Obviously there was a carrier group out to the West because we up to our armpits in planes again. This time the dive bombers were joined by torpedo planes - now these guys weren't courageous - they were suicidal. They attacked at about 100 feet. Dropping the torpedoes meant lining up on the ship and flying a straight course - into the hell storm of AAA. I lost sense of time, the ship began radical manouevers, turning in sharp circles while full power was applied to the screws. Our 5 inch gun was aiming at a dive bomber that had decided we were its target - we exploded it in midair but it also released its bomb - this was the first hit we suffered this day. It hit well forward, and I was surprised at the lack of effect. Just slightly louder than the guns and then a black cloud of smoke. Another bomb hit the stern of the ship starting a fire somewhere below.
Lookouts shouted a warning that the torpedo planes have decided to join in. They pull off a beautiful manouever, attacking from both sides simultaneously. Four attacked from our quarter; one was hit by one of the forward guns and detonated in a huge flash, its torpedo being hit. The others release their fish, a further plane dips it's wing into the sea and cartwheels spectacularly - the shape of a man flying into the air remains in my mind. All 3 fish hit us, one right below our five inch is a dud, but the other 2 make up for it. The ship lurches bodily sideways, everyone in our gun platform is thrown to the deck, usually via the walls. Then another detonation sounds and the ship lurches again - the planes attacking from the other side have also found their mark.

Everyone in our battle station has been injured to some extent: cut heads, wrenched sholders, I have broken my ankle. We however, have come of lightly compaired to other stations. Jason Donovan, a guy that lived around the block from me when I was young walked past our gun - his face a pale mask of shock - his arm missing from the shoulder down. A corpsman notices him and lies him down.

The ship is in a bad way, the only thing that gives us a chance is the initial dive bomb attack. Any watertight doors that were open previously were most definately closed when we were hit. the torpedo that hit us from the other side appears to have jammed the rudder - we still have steam to make about 10 knots but can only utilise it to go in circles. Due to this we have been isolated from the TF (or what remains of it).

The Australia has sunk - hit by many torpedoes she broke in half and sunk in little time. A grouping of the Minneapolis and a couple of DD's are trying to rescue survivors - there will be precious few of these I think. This act of good faith is however their undoing - the Japs have not finished with us by a long way. The Minneapolis and her escort are set upon by the afternoons attacks. We are powerless to help them as the range is too great. She is hammered by numerous torpedoes and bombs; rapidly following the fate of the Australia whom she came to help.

Warned by the forming attack on the Minneapolis we come to full available power and begin carving circles in the water. Another flight of the accursed torpedo bombers singles us out and begins their runs. Many of our AAA sations are out of action so the fire that greets the planes is minimal. However, we are fortunate, the fettered circles we are turning make aiming difficult for them. We are again struck by a dud torpedo and no others find us. The planes fly over the ship, their rear gunners straffing as they pass.

More planes have attacked another of the hurt mini-TF's that have formed, it looks like fresh smoke is climbing above those ships. Thankfully this is the last attack they mounted yesterday and we are released to take stock of this terrible loss.

The Chicago is in a bad way, listing to port and settling low in the water. the Torpedo that stuck forward has apparently gone right through the ship. The torpedo that damaged the rudder system has countered the list somewhat. The fires are under control but the seagull that caught fire is still causing problems.

I am moved to the infirmary to have my ankle splinted but the corpsmen have men of such higher need than myself - and truely I cannot take being in a room of such anguish - that I splint it myself and hobble back to the damage control. Burns must be the most horrific of injuries to suffer!

4 am and we are under way, the calm weather which made bombing so easy has now at last, helped us. With untiring work the afterguard have managed to cut away the hindrance and the rudder is free to move. We have teamed up with the Chester. She has fires still burning but is shipping less water. We stay close and use what fire fighting capacity we can spare to spray her down.

With repairs taking time we havn't put much distance between ourselves and the location in which the attacks happened. What does the new day hold - more horror?

May 30 evening

We have just had the most harrowing, and I'll admit, terrifying day of our lives. It has been a constant battle against fire, up to your chest in water, on the end of a fire hose, prying tortured steel, hammering nails into shoring. All of it done with the soul assaulting fear of an attack from the sky or beneath the waves. They just had to attack - but didn't. What god smiled upon us, what freak of fate decided we should make it through such a day - more why do I survive when 104 of my crewmates did not?
Chicago is a morgue, the dead smother the forward deck, their covered bodies lying on the blackened steel - itself bent upwards and charred - as if clawing at the sky: maybe in lament for its dead crew?
I have worked until I cannot stand, all on a broken ankle, something I would never have done before yesterday. The pain is strangely comforting - a constant reminder that I am alive.
We have continued towards Cairns, in a snake like path - the rudder refuses to hold a course. It has so many warps and bends that it can't decide which direction it wants to push us.

May 31

Blessed port - heavenly Cairns. Unbelievably we have made it. Smoke still hangs over the ship like a pall. The tugs and workmen meet us and start taking over the fight to save our ship. I will not write much more I am off to the hospital to get this ankle seen to properly and then sleep.

10 June

I have been taking it easy for the last week and a half. The ankle has been straped and splinted properly by the medical staff at the local hospital here in Cairns. Most of the injured crewmen who came off the boats went to military hospitals setup at the barracks of the local Australian defense force and at the American medical contingent at the Port. I was a definate non-critical so went locally. Had a nice nurse wrap my leg...

The Chicago has put to sea. To tell you the truth I thought they were mad. She has lost her list and they have put plating over the holes the torpedoes made, but she is most definately not a fit fighting ship. The blackened paintwork and non-water integrity armor plate bent in weird angles. She is the last ship to sail from those that made it back to port. Hopefully she makes it back to Noumea and then on to Pearl - she can't be properly repaired here. It was a strange and empty feeling watching her leave.

As for me, well I don't know what I am going to do, the navy in their infinite wisdom have informed me I will be required for duty again, once fit, on another fighting ship. No time frames and no clue as to what ship. In the meantime I will take my time getting better. I don't think I will be rushing to face the war again. In fact I am having pretty bad nightmares at the moment - mainly of fire and planes - they are a bit incongrous but they are terrifying - I wake up in a sweat - yelling...Had a bit of time off from writing to my diary as really I haven't been up to much. I have been travelling on my way back to Pearl for placement in a new ship. I am not sure which one I am assigned to, and wont find out until I get there.

2nd July

I am writing this on the beach by Noumea, New Caledonia where I am waiting on a ship to get me to Hawaii. I took the train back down to Brisbane, spent 2 nights there and then down to Sydney. There I met Simon Summerfield, a family friend that I haven't seen for years. He is in the army airforce flying mitchells, he has had a torrid time of it. On their first mission against some shipping going into Gili they lost 3 planes - he hit 2 ships though! We both drank to lost companions and then drank again to country, then to the aussies, then the kiwis, then it all gets a little hazy, I could hardly feel the ankle anymore - ahh beer. The "pubs" here close at 6 o'clock so it turned into speed drinking - we managed to latch onto an HQ quatermasters aide and that was the end of it. I woke up under a tarpaulin, behind a shed at the docks - the MPs were 100 feet away form me!
Sitting here, as I am, on the beach, I can see into Noumea harbour and the similarities with Cairns are depressing. Blackened ships with their decks bent back, glass smashed, listing like the wounded sailors they held. There is again not enough berth space to hold them all and small lighters are working alongside injured ships that can stand at anchor.
A flight of twin engine bombers is taking off from the airfield just out of town - I can see them forming up overhead and they are heading out to the East. The mood here is pensive at best bordering on fearful. Wunpuko, a base further north, was taken by the Japanese a few days ago and they have landed troops at Luganville and Efate. These are major ports for our war effort - is there nowhere the japs can be held? It is a long time since basic, I don't know how crash hot I will be with a rifle - wasn't that good at basic actually.




wobbly -> It begins (4/5/2003 7:24:26 AM)

Alright I start by moving most of my aircraft in Oz north spacing them out in cooktown, carins and to a lesser extent Townsville. Weather is thunderstorms so nothing is flying except I have sent the PBY squadron from townsvillle to carins to help move the engineering batt there to gili gili. I feel this is often a throw away but decided to run with it this time. Put the surface force in Brisbane to sea with orders to patrol one sprint distance from gili gili – mitscher in charge. I want to see if he tries to FT an INF force into gili and then pounce on reinforcements (if he sends them) with the surface group. Must keep a beady eye out for carriers!
Moved 2 mitchil sds to PM – I will rotate them through PM and bomb Lae or buna if he takes it to get a bit of XP. Thinking of flying in extra engineers to repair battle damage and tehn stationing a C49 group in PM to get them out again later – thoughts?
Carrier group moves up to luganville – this will be its new base of ops. I will use them in a sniping capacity – his carriers in New Guinea, I’ll go fishing in solomons etc – obviously requires very careful naval scouting.




Raverdave -> (4/5/2003 2:27:55 PM)

Fantasic AAR Wobbly, you and herbie have come up with a novel new approach to AARs.......looking forward to this. 5 stars to the both of you.




fcooke -> Move the ENG into PM. (4/5/2003 5:53:03 PM)

Make him fight for PM, a few ENG units make a huge diff in fixing the place up after the bombardments. You can try to fly them out later but this is not a given. I wouldn't have sent anyone to Gili but it will help dilute his effort a bit. I assume you'll be doing the sub/mine thing around PM to try and hurt his bombardment TF. I like the ambush at Gili thing - a favorite of mine. Just need to make sure his CA TF doesn't cover/visit, cause if they do you'll get spanked.




wobbly -> (4/7/2003 4:39:32 PM)

AFTER ACTION REPORTS FOR 05/03/42

Weather: Partly Cloudy

Sub attack at 21,30

Japanese Ships
AP Mogamigawa Maru, Torpedo hits 2, on fire, heavy damage
DD Asanagi

Allied Ships
SS S-47, Shell hits 2, on fire, heavy damage

Japanese ground losses:
Men lost 22

Well I managed to put a couple of torpedoes into this maru (it's a 3K version) loaded with troops - likely going ot gasmata. He had 1 destroyer looking after it and it sunk the sub!!! Deep water too - ouch.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on 81st Naval Garrison Unit, at 17,42


Allied aircraft
Hudson x 9
B-25D Mitchell x 6
A-20B Havoc x 3


no losses

Japanese ground losses:
Men lost 16

Attacking Level Bombers:
3 x A-20B Havoc at 6000 feet
9 x Hudson at 6000 feet
6 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet

These guys are from PM just gaining experience - however I changing them to naval to see if i can sneak a bomb into the wounded Maru?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on 81st Naval Garrison Unit, at 17,42


Allied aircraft
B-17E Fortress x 12


no losses

Japanese ground losses:
Men lost 23

Attacking Level Bombers:
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
All my Fort's have experience average of 70-75 this seems very high for the beginning of the game? Lost one in flight.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ground combat at Gili Gili

Japanese Deliberate attack

Attacking force 453 troops, 6 guns, 0 vehicles

Defending force 655 troops, 0 guns, 0 vehicles

Japanese assault odds: 0 to 1 (fort level 0)


Japanese ground losses:
Men lost 11

He has odds of 0-1 so wont take the place without reinforcement - I am flying in supplies with a sqd of PBY's, have only lost one, so, so far this little op hasn't been too expensive on planes.
My surface TF that was sitting below gili had retirement orders - doh. However i had forgotten that i reduced the fleet supporting the carriers and moved them over to Townsville. They amalgamate under Lee and are set to move to a sprint distance SE of gili - trap is set, engineers as bait. 4 CA's 7 DD's.
Speaking of the carriers - a Mavis locates my TF at luganville - can't disband the TF - port size 2. However this is not too bad, I will now try and elude further spotting, move the air TF towards Noumea and set homebase as Townsville. If he thinks they are in the west and they are actually in the east - who knows he may stuff up or slip - snipe tactics.

Fcooke, taken your advice and I am airlifting another engineer group into PM - what do you think about stationing some C49's there to get them out later, folly?




Raverdave -> (4/7/2003 5:38:09 PM)

I am not so sure about Fcooke's idea of fighting for PM, You have too few troops at this point of the game, better to withdraw them back to OZ and snipe at him with air and naval assets from cooktown/Cairns as he takes PM. Trade space for time, but not at the expense of your own (limited numbers of) troops.




wobbly -> (4/8/2003 7:29:45 AM)

Another question for my esteemed general/admirals of the bench: I am thinking of marching the Kanga force back from Wau and putting them in Lea - then transfering a portion of an HQ there (to bring down fatigue). To my thinking, as long as the japs don't see a transport tf or fast tf at lea they may assume it is undefended and try to drop a naval garrison on it. With Kanga there (a force I think that often gets killed for little impact). You can extend the time it takes to suppress PM.
Obviously issues are time, to march to lea, realistic impact: it wont take too much to kick them out, recon, just one lot will ruin the surprise.
I have tried this once and it had little impact in stopping the total offensive but I know forces earmarked for PM had to be sent to lea - if the japs run a fine line on forces used this may require a further tf from truk/rabaul hence more time i can LBA him and harrass him with subs, surface tfs and even air tfs - depending on proximity of his.




Full Moon -> (4/8/2003 8:02:37 AM)

Sounds like a good idea but why do you want them to march that long distance? Use Dakotas to fly them back to PM and let them march to Lea Lea.




wobbly -> (4/8/2003 9:09:57 AM)

Excuse my ignorance, can you "pick up" with dakotas? Was of the opinion that you can only deliver. air service units at Wau are non-existent so any C49's sent to wau to deliver them back to PM will rapidly degrade (and obviously be left there). Also they will show up on the map - without recon - as an airbase symbol as soon as I move them to Wau. He may not know where they are going but it will get him interested.
For this to have much effect he does have to be a little neglectful of recon.




Mr.Frag -> (4/8/2003 10:09:57 AM)

Fly in some of the base unit if you want to pull that stunt off, it will support the Dakota's long enough for you to transfer the INF unit over.




fcooke -> Fighting for PM (4/8/2003 5:16:32 PM)

In response to Raverdave's (warranted) scepticism on fighting for PM. I did not intend to say fight to the death for PM, just make it costly for the IJN. Adding more engineers allows you to keep the airfield open, even under heavy bombardment (that unit from Cooktown with the bulldozers can almost singlehandedly do this, but you need ships to get the dozers to PM). This gives you time to punish the invaders and force the IJN to use it's CVs to provide cover, risking them to LBA. Once the AA units get worn down, evac them. When it looks like PM is going to fall, evac an ENG units possible. Make the IJN destroy PM in taking it, so he can't operate it against you the moment it's captured. I agree with Mr. Frag, don't march Kanga force down to Lea Lea - they'll never get there in time. As a bonus, if he see's Wau has planes there and bombs it, that's time not spent bombing PM....




Attack Condor -> What to do with PM (4/9/2003 12:15:28 AM)

Trying to hang onto PM in my AAR with Quark - seeing the impact of the new defensive values given to "non-combatant" units by the 2.30 patch. It's turning into a real bloodbath.

The level of defense assigned to PM must be predicated on the IJN effort to take it. My opponent has sent 4 INF units so I am trying to get a second INF unit airlifted there. With that kind of committment early, I don't fear for the safety of Australia. While the New Guinea INF unit from Cooktown is being ferryed over, a INF unit from Townsville is on the way to Cairns - and others are "shuffled" along the northern highway from Brissy to T'ville. I don't consider leaving Cooktown "naked" that big of a risk - especially if I have PM [I]and[/I] GG operational

Don't make the mistake I did - listen to Full Moon and Mr. Frag and use the C47s to get Kanga Force to PM!

Overall, my strategic goals are to have the New Guinea HQ at PM, the 7th Aus INF HQ at GG, Northern Command HQ at T'ville, and the 3rd INF HQ at Brisbane - with the subordinate units on NG on the same base as their parent HQ, and the units for each HQ in Australia no more than one city away from the parent HQ. My best case timetable to achieve this is August/September.

Just one more opinion for you to consider :D

Great AAR, have fun, and good luck!




wobbly -> (4/9/2003 5:34:25 AM)

Thanks for all the help - really excellent. As a bit of an update - he sent a bombardment force against PM - knocked out a hudson. I have flown the extra engineer in and by morning there is service damage of 4 - perfect.

Attack Condor; agree in respect to the holding of PM. I don't expect to hold PM, not even going to try that hard. The inclusion of non-combat units in defense and ability to fly in reinforcements will enable me to extend the amount of time his transports and maybe his attack tfs are in the danger zone. I have also started moving the whole of the aussie 3rd to townsville. I DO NOT want him taking townsville, a loss here would be disastrous. Further north can work in the same way as PM - whittling of his forces.

OK, sorry guys for my lack of operational knowledge but I still don't see how you make this transfer from Wau work. if I move some air support engineers to Wau. How do I get them back out again? If I use the C49's I have now stationed at Wau, they will move the engineers out but still be stuck in wau themselves - again without support. Do I sacrifice them? I find this a little repugnant as the Kanga force i am doing all this for isn't much bigger than a jap naval garrison anyway!!




Mr.Frag -> (4/9/2003 6:38:32 AM)

It's a trick Wobbly. The support engineers fly out after you move out the Kanga unit. You air transfer them out just as you air tranfer them in. You will loose whatever planes got damaged that turn only. As long as there are some units, repairs happen. As soon as the eng are gone, transfer the planes out. Don't overdo it with too much of a base unit. You just need enough to deal with the C-47's. If you do want to be nasty, read on.

The other option is to go north with Kanga since there is nothing between you and any other bases, just to cause added grief to Japan. Since they too must move troops inland to try and get rid of you, you can generally take 2-3 bases. I normally send it NW NE then SE to swipe those 3 bases, 2 of which directly face Lae.

It causes more trouble long term to Japan to have to deal with size 2 airfields 1 hex from Lae. Since both of these airfields are NOT size zero overbuilt fields like your starting field at Wau, they can both be built to size 4 fields fairly cheaply. NadZab is best as there is no port for him to land troops at, so he MUST come overland and deal with the fatigue that goes with hiking troops overland and then having to fight. If you add a base unit into the mix here, they will steal supply overland from PM and you will be able to actually threaten Lae from 1 hex away which will seriously cause some hair to be pulled as he tries to take PM from you. PM by itself is not of any use. Forward basing of Air is the issue, not PM itself. As long as you have a base unit and a size 2 airfield, you can cause grief to anyone. It does NOT have to be PM.

Think about it...takes some time to do, but boy will it annoy the crap out of your opponent when he now has all these other bases that have to be cleaned out. As long as you air transport SOME of Kanga out of there, it will get replacements. One of those naughty little strategy things. Unit replacements show up as long as you don't loose the WHOLE unit, which means you can continue to transport the replacements into what amounts to hostile territory. The troops at Lae are not strong enough to kick you out without having a regiment diverted from elsewhere.




wobbly -> (4/9/2003 8:24:52 AM)

Frag, you are an evil man - like the idea. AS you say timing will be an important issue. What I really want to pull off if I go this way is to time the kanga force to arrive at a larger airbase during his PM invasion so he has a thorn in his side as he starts it.

However, this does bring me back to the worry about supply. CAP and expecially bombing missions are heavy on supply use. If he takes lea lea i have to fly all supplies into the airfield i capture (and use) - PM will be unable to supply. This was the initial reason for moving the kanga force in the first place. Hold Lae as a retreat hex. Do I want to be bringing another force up to guard Lae lae?




Mr.Frag -> (4/9/2003 11:20:10 AM)

Your units will be fully supplied at the base they happen to be at until after Lae Lae & PM falls. Front that point in time, you'll need to fly in supplies, but these are grunts, they go pretty far on an empty stomach. It is not the actual threat, but the percieved threat that will cause the panic, because he will never know if you are seriously considering jumping Lae until the turn you arrive at the door. By then, it is too late.

P-39D's work great at a range of 2 or 1 and as long as PM is afloat, the base will be fully supplied. They are not level bombers so they don't pig out on supplies anywhere near as bad.

Use your level bombers to punish him if and when he comes to PM/Gili Gili. You simply do not have the transport capacity to support a forward base with level bombers during the games opening month. They must fly from Oz or Noumea until you get some ships to carry goods. Pm with your B-25/26 crowd can eat 10,000+ supplies a DAY! thats 4 AP's a Day you need to run into PM just to break even. Not going to happen with his whole navy coming to visit shortly.

Lea Lea is a lost cause. If you need it to escape, you've lost anyways. Better to fight to the last man in PM and keep fatigue at a minimum. If you can get one of your power house engineer units into PM and get working on the Fortification level exclusively, you aid yourself 100x over. Fortification = Odds, the higher, the better. You have 20 days to get them in if you can. The sooner you do, the better the odds you can get it increased to 3 instead of 2. That REALLY hurts his landing force.

Since only your Hudsons and your B-17's can reach Rabaul, there is nothing you can do to stop Japan this early, but you can certainly put every road block there is in place.

Right off the bat, all your subs fill with mines and head for PM. That means he needs to bring MSW's to land. It buys time. If you manage to sink his MSW's on the way in, his whole landing is scrubbed.

It's the little things that make people pull their hair out, and an angry player makes silly mistakes. Make him angry :D




wobbly -> (4/10/2003 4:54:39 AM)

Mr Frag, If I ask you for a game some time remind me to stop asking, I think the strain would kill me!

Operation Kanga Assault is on the go. The base force at charter towers is going to have some of its number moved to the newly captured base. It will obviously take quite a few days for the kanga force to get to the right location for capture.

He sent 2 bombardment forces into harbours this turn - one to PM little effect, and one to Cairns! Little effect again although my radio mines managed to see the ship number and name on a DD and send it to me before impacting on its hull. He likes bombarding PM so I might look to have my surface force go there instead of Gili, he sent in an FT TF there this turn which I missed anticipation of - hoping react to enemy might have done the business but no cigar.




wobbly -> (4/11/2003 6:25:48 AM)

AFTER ACTION REPORTS FOR 05/06/42

Weather: Thunderstorms

Sub attack at 19,42

Japanese Ships
CL Tenryu
DD Oite

Allied Ships
SS S-39


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sub attack at 19,42

Japanese Ships
CL Tatsuta
DD Yayoi

Allied Ships
SS S-39, Shell hits 2, on fire

yeh gads, thats 2 subs in as many nights that he has managed to put holes in - this one should survive: sys 16 float 49. But for jap anti-sub capacity he is doing well.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

my plans to entrap his surface bombardment groups at either location have come to nothing so far. he is moving in with impunity really. I almost have to set the ships to patrol at PM, but of course this asks for Mr Betty and Mrs Nell to come a calling. I am actually hoping that the TF reacts to a bombardment TF - but I might die waiting so maybe a little send and hope is in order.
However, this does seem like a hiding to nothing - he's just wearing his boats out. The engineers go to sleep in the slit trenches - hide through the bombardment and come out to fix the holes after they've gone. Without a few BB's the bombardment doesn't appear to have the voracity to hinder operations.




Luskan -> (4/12/2003 3:13:19 PM)

You've got plenty of good advice for the early defence of PM - but here is some advice to ensure USN dominance later on.

Don't risk your CVs. For anything. Ever. Until you have 6, you are vulnerable - and even then you are still beatable.

I have lost CVs trying to snipe at the IJN forces invading PM and have lost CVs every time (and it has been a helluva race in both games to catch up and midway my opponents) - and have devised a new and daring plan.

While the IJN navy, CVs, BBs, surface forces are landing at PM, there is always a ton of background supply convoys from Truk to Shortlands, and Truk to Rabaul and Truk to Lunga. Especially those precious IJN tankers that allow his un-economical ships to operate that far south.

Send your CVs, maybe even a surface raider group or two to intercept these transports (harbour raids for the surface raiders, mid ocean for the CVs). Of course, you only do this once his APs are on the horizon and his CVs are tied down to protect them from level bombers etc. etc.




Mr.Frag -> (4/12/2003 10:49:34 PM)

Fully agreed. If you have control problems and don't trust yourself, send them back to Pearl!

6 USA CV's makes for a rude party crash, 4 might not get in the door, 2 never even show up!

You don't need them really until you start your counter-drive to kick Japan back to Truk in October '42. Until then, they are just time bombs waiting for you to goof and loose the game :D

The ratio of CV Fighter aircraft to CV is whats important.

USA = 36 per, Japan = 22 per (averages). Once you get to 6, the amount of CAP you can fly is enough to stop cold the lower numbers of escort that Japan can fly. Until that point in time Japan WILL score CV hits, and since you have fewer larger CV to absorb the bombs, it means that you are more likely to loose important CV vs Japan loosing CVL/CVE.

The important side effect of waiting, all your fighters will be a minimum of F4F-4 and all you Torpedo Bombers will be the greater ranged TBF instead of the hopeless TBD that you start with.




Attack Condor -> (4/16/2003 8:07:35 AM)

One hundred and ten percent agree with Luskan and Mr. Frag - but it doesn't mean the carrier [I]aircraft[/I] can't do some damage from NZ - especially GG if you can get it to a level 2. I've had some luck vs. Quark in our game with that - but if you can pull it off, the IJN will soon find itself with a invasion force sitting on PM and nothing to supply it with.

I moved the CVs to about 24 hexes away from GG and transfered the 4 squadrons of SBDs. Then get the carriers out of there! Either back to Noumea or south to Brisbane. Forget about the TBDs, I just use them for CV ASW duties. If necessary, the SBDs can scoot away either back to the carriers if you send them back towards GG or you can play it safe and transfer the SBDs to T'ville, Brisbane, and then to the CV TF all the way south halfway between Brissy and Noumea.

Don't discount the Wirraways either - although not as much punch as an SBD, a 250 lb bomb still does some damage ;) ).

And FWIW, I rarely have success (for some reason) with PM LBA (A24s, P39s, etc.) on Naval Attack even vs. ships in PM harbor :( (although one notable exception when the A24s hit Shokaku twice). So I just let them pound away at the invaders.

Finally, keep in mind that a cagey IJN player will LRCAP to protect the PM invasion force (probably from Lae or Buna). Keeping the C47s fresh from Australia for supply runs is a MUST! I use four squadrons from T'ville and send one sqdn per turn if I can. Keep a few fighters on CAP yourself over PM to help reduce the chance the Dakotas have to dogfight the Zeroes (even the Army Zeroes can shred the C47s if given a chance).

Good luck!




wobbly -> (4/22/2003 5:34:55 AM)

Dan Curruthers Diary addition (see further up the thread)

i have been away for an extending esater break - hence the lack of updates.

I am getting some truely fiendish advice here! thanks guys. Luskan I do love that idea. Once I get another CV (or maybe 2) that is going to be one I pull - you still have to worry about the betties and Nells after all!

I hear you on the "wait until you have 6 CV's" call but find this very gamey. I know this is a moot point if you keep loosing your CV's but i do like to utilise them to some extent.

I will soon get the Long Island (yah - rapture!) and i am planning on making a small AC TF and cruising it up by Luganville. Hopefully he will scout it and think my CV's are still over that side of the ocean.

He is regularly bombarding PM and sending DD's into GG. If I scout a TF this turn it will have a greeting party. However, I had a seagull scout his departing Bombardment TF and he might twig to the fact it can only have come of a cruiser. i am going to move the SC TF slightly west (closer to cooktown) and hope that the week long break will have made him forget about the sighting. I did get a sighting of his CV's east of shortland.
My CV's have nearly made port in Townsville - undetected.




Attack Condor -> (4/22/2003 10:24:59 AM)

Another thing you can do to improve your defenses...

Mines

I know you don't have any minelayers this early, but consider sending a few S-boats back to Brisbane, disband them and reform a Sub Minelayer TF (you can only do this at Brisbane or Noumea).

Set a target hex for a shallow water hex (use F2 to see the depths) otherwise the mines will disappear . The hex directly south of GG is a neat place to put them in addition to the harbors. Usually the IJN is wary about entering a harbor without minesweeper support, but be on the lookout for shallow water choke points...lay your 2 mines, and [I]keep the sub in the same hex[/I] :D .

Keeping one (and only one) sub in a port hex will work as a last line of defense (assuming the port has good supplies, the sub will never run out of torpedoes) as well :).

Welcome back!




Philwd -> (4/22/2003 1:22:27 PM)

Well well well. So the secret USN strategy to beat us IJN types is wait for 6 CV's. :D

To me this just escalates. The IJN player will gladly move a few squadrons of Vals off and replace them with more Zeros. IJN gets so many more Kates which are the real ship killers. If there are no big CV battles IJN gets to keep his high exp pilots and all Kate squadrons will fill out. The extra Zeros even things up nicely.

Where's Adm Halsey when you need him?:D

Now when Attack Condor moved the air wings to GG that really caught me off guard. I didn't have enough Zero's to LRCAP everything. Even using all my CV fighters. And of course the SBDs knew what TF didn't have a CAP.

I also agree totally about mining.

An alternative to Frag's use of the Kanga force is to airlift another regiment into Wau and have it run amok. Between the Kanga and 1 regiment of the 7th you could take Lae before the IJN knew what hit him. This takes on more possibilities if the 3rd Aussie arrives early( if you use variable reinforcements) and covers the Aussie cities. IJN would have to divert a whole division to retake Lae and that would seriously set back any efforts to take GG and PM. If you sense a big enough force coming retreat back to Wau and airlift out.

BTW I won't tell herbieh about loading up the zeros. I love the way you two have organized your AAR.

Good Luck
Quark(wily IJN player)




wobbly -> Contact (4/23/2003 6:08:53 AM)

Another update in the war diary of Dan Curruthers added above.

AFTER ACTION REPORTS FOR 05/08/42

Weather: Partly Cloudy

Night Time Surface Combat at 0,0

Japanese Ships
DD Yuzuki, Shell hits 17, and is sunk
DD Kikuzuki, Shell hits 31, and is sunk

Allied Ships
CA Portland
CA Chester
CA Chicago
CA Australia
CL Hobart
DD Sims
DD Hammann
DD Walke
DD Morris
DD Farragut

Excellent, Lee reacts tot this FT TF coming into GG and smashes them - unfortunately herbie had mined the waters (seems a little dangerous considering he is FTing into there) and the Portland hit one sys 23.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Naval bombardment of Port Moresby, at 10,40


Allied aircraft


Allied aircraft losses
A-20B Havoc x 2 destroyed
A-20B Havoc x 5 damaged

Airbase hits 7
Runway hits 29

Obviously there was another TF about, one that Lee missed. Considering the Coast watchers thought there was 2 BB's in the attacking TF (likely CA's) it is probably better Lee went after the FT TF anyway - get some nice night time experience. Had to retire the havoc squadron - they are down to 8.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on Buna , at 12,38

Japanese aircraft
A6M2-N Rufe x 8

no losses

?????? Don't know what this is about. I do know he is basing them and Mavis's out of lae now though.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on Port Moresby , at 10,40

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 27
G3M Nell x 39
G4M1 Betty x 23

Allied aircraft
P-39D Airacobra x 7

no losses

Allied aircraft losses
P-39D Airacobra x 1 destroyed
P-39D Airacobra x 1 damaged

Runway hits 1

Attacking Level Bombers:
23 x G4M1 Betty at 26000 feet
11 x G3M Nell at 26000 feet
3 x G3M Nell at 26000 feet
4 x G3M Nell at 26000 feet
11 x G3M Nell at 26000 feet
10 x G3M Nell at 26000 feet

Or what this is about really - just wearing out the planes - although he only lost one nell.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on Buna , at 12,38

Japanese aircraft
A6M2-N Rufe x 8

no losses


In other news, a PBY scouts an AV south of Gili... why do this, it can't fly it's planes? I don't think it is misinformation (i.e. a CS) as I doubt he has one yet - puzzling, there are 2 other ships in the TF. No news as to his CV's, but news as to mine. They will make port at Townsville next turn.
Quark, thanks for the encouragement, we are on "very variable" and I have got the aussie 3rd! I have started the implimentation of Operation "Back Passage" with the Kanga force 8 miles out of Wau. I have earmarked the base force at charter towers to be airlifted in to run the air show: the problem is timing. I don't know whether to impliment the attack on Lae as he attacks PM or before so he starts to have thoughts about sending the attack force for PM to Lae instead.
Also, incredibly, the powers that be at Pearl have decided to rate the probablility of shipping reinforcement to the area as high!




wobbly -> (4/24/2003 3:52:52 AM)

Well he definately did have an AV southeast of gili, he moves it closer to PM this turn and one of my medium bombers spots it. Everything at PM is set to naval attack (with the medium bombers set to bomb ground forces at gili) even 1 sqd of P39's, at 100 ft, are set to naval.
With no other ships in the TF (he either split the others off or it was spurious info) the kamikawa maru is no more. The P39's manage 4 bomb hits included with many 37 mm and .50 cal. Even the level bombers hit the target (once it has slowed down).

In other news, the air combat TF made it to townsville. He manages to recon a BB in townsville but that is all. I don't know if he knows I have the carriers there or not....

He captures lunga with a garrison inf batt and some engineers and he has landed some troops on Tulagi so that will go next.




Attack Condor -> (4/24/2003 11:37:01 PM)

[QUOTE][I]originally posted by wobbly[/I]

[B]In other news, the air combat TF made it to townsville. He manages to recon a BB in townsville but that is all. I don't know if he knows I have the carriers there or not....[/B][/QUOTE]

The jig is up. If your opponent has played #17 for any length of time, he knows US battleships aren't in theater this early. He may not trust the tired eyes of the search pilot yelling out "Battleship!! Battleship!!" but he now knows [I]something[/I] very big is at Townsville. He may not know for sure they're your carriers, but I'm sure he's thinking very hard that they may be. :)

Be safe. What would change in your plans if you knew that [I]he knew[/I] your CVs were at Townsville?

Also, consider the power of the Seagull aircraft on your cruisers. If you want to misdirect your opponent, one trick is to send a small cruiser force (e.g. 1xCA, 2xDD) somewhere where you want his attention, then set the Seagulls to 100% naval search.

Conversely, if you want to sneak up on him, set the Seagulls to "Stand Down" (put them in the hangar, lock the door and lose the key for a few days ;) ).

Nothing ruins a suprise raid more than the notification "SOC-3 Seagull sights 1 ship" :rolleyes: After all, you're probably operating in an area where your PBYs and perhaps your level bombers are on Naval Search mode anyway. Planning, stealth, and hopes are often dashed when the enemy TF looks up at the sound of a biplane sputtering in the air. Nothing against the little plane, but the IJN staff knows that the Seagull doesn't have a range of 1200 miles ;)

The same applies to the CVs... if you want to hide them, set the SBDs to Naval Attack with a search of 0%. If the SBDs sight something and then [I]don't[/I] attack, your carriers are rather hung out to dry.

Good luck!




wobbly -> (4/28/2003 3:35:51 AM)

"The jig is up. If your opponent has played #17 for any length of time, he knows US battleships aren't in theater this early. He may not trust the tired eyes of the search pilot yelling out "Battleship!! Battleship!!" but he now knows something very big is at Townsville. He may not know for sure they're your carriers, but I'm sure he's thinking very hard that they may be. "

Possibly, he does know my cruisers are about as they were the culprits in the sinking of his 2 DD's. They retired to Townsville. I had the portland there as a single ship TF - and I think this was the BB he sighted; the problem, o course, is you can't be sure.

I hear you with the seagulls, didn't mean to leave them flying - oops.

Another turn done, nothing ot report though. I have scouted a few ships at Rabaul and he took Tulagi. The continued overflight by rufes of buna continues, still don't know what he is doing here. maybe he thinks i will send C49's in and he will intercept them. i thought you just did LRCAP for that though...
I have set the level bombers to attack LAE, see if I can shut it down.




wobbly -> (4/29/2003 4:44:22 AM)

In an interesting turn of events the Japs have stationed a surface taskforce at Gili. They don't appear to have dropped anyone off... I think this was an attempt to make a surface group react into them - thankfully noone was there to do so. However, i am taking a risk that he will move away this turn, as I am sending in 4 DD's with supplies! - fingers crossed.
They also appear to be moving troops to buna via slow transport - a mitchell recons 2 troop ships this turn. I itched at sending the CV's out on a little foray but managed to overcome the urge and they stay in the barn. Threfore i set all the p39's to 100 ft Naval attack - as you can see in the following combat report - they can't even fight unescorted bombers at altitude so they may as well try hitting ships instead. As an aside - the CV's have been in dock 3 days now and I don't seem to be getting replacements to flesh out the CV airgroups. Also, do you only get a conversion to F4F-4's when there are 27 in the pool? I currently have 22.

AFTER ACTION REPORTS FOR 05/11/42

Weather: Overcast

Air attack on Buna , at 12,38

Japanese aircraft
A6M2-N Rufe x 7

no losses

these guys must be getting tired!

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on Port Moresby , at 10,40

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 27
G3M Nell x 21

Allied aircraft
P-39D Airacobra x 13

Japanese aircraft losses
G3M Nell x 1 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
P-39D Airacobra x 6 destroyed
P-39D Airacobra x 1 damaged

PO2 G.Kawakami of F1/Tainan Daitai is credited with kill number 2

CPT D. Mcgovern of 35th FS bails out and is RESCUED

Attacking Level Bombers:
21 x G3M Nell at 26000 feet

Shows how bad the P39's are at altitude - don't even hit a bomber and they are too high for the flak - however the bombers also do no damage to the airfield.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on TF, near Gili Gili at 17,42


Allied aircraft
A-24 Dauntless x 14
B-25D Mitchell x 9
B-26B Marauder x 12


Allied aircraft losses
A-24 Dauntless x 1 destroyed
A-24 Dauntless x 12 damaged
B-25D Mitchell x 2 damaged
B-26B Marauder x 2 damaged

Japanese Ships
CA Aoba
DD Sazanami, Bomb hits 1
CA Kako, on fire
CA Furutaka, Bomb hits 1, on fire
CA Haguro

Attacking Level Bombers:
2 x B-26B Marauder at 6000 feet
3 x B-26B Marauder at 6000 feet
3 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet
4 x B-26B Marauder at 6000 feet
3 x B-26B Marauder at 6000 feet
4 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet
2 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet

The mines he laid in the harbour strike the kako and I get a couple of bomb hits, only the Sazanami is likely to be hurt. I hope this is enough to persude them to sod off, if he leaves this group there it will decimate my FT destroyers.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on Lae , at 9,33


Allied aircraft
B-17E Fortress x 18


Allied aircraft losses
B-17E Fortress x 3 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
Men lost 39

Airbase hits 3
Runway hits 5

Attacking Level Bombers:
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet
3 x B-17E Fortress at 6000 feet

ouch, the 3 fortresses that are damaged are all lost.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on Buna , at 12,38

Japanese aircraft
A6M2-N Rufe x 7

no losses


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on TF, near Gili Gili at 17,42


Allied aircraft
A-24 Dauntless x 7
B-25D Mitchell x 9
B-26B Marauder x 9


Allied aircraft losses
A-24 Dauntless x 1 destroyed
A-24 Dauntless x 2 damaged
B-25D Mitchell x 3 damaged
B-26B Marauder x 1 damaged

Japanese Ships
CA Myoko
CA Kako, on fire
CA Aoba
CA Furutaka, on fire

Attacking Level Bombers:
3 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet
2 x B-26B Marauder at 6000 feet
4 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet
3 x B-26B Marauder at 6000 feet
2 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet
4 x B-26B Marauder at 6000 feet

The A24's and the mitchells need to be rotated out to cooktown and another sqd rotated in. the p39's are due for a break too although i want them to have a crack at the transports heading for Buna.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air attack on TF, near Gili Gili at 17,42


Allied aircraft
Hudson x 4
B-25D Mitchell x 8


Allied aircraft losses
B-25D Mitchell x 2 damaged

Japanese Ships
CA Aoba
CA Haguro
CA Kako, on fire

Attacking Level Bombers:
4 x Hudson at 6000 feet
4 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet
4 x B-25D Mitchell at 6000 feet

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In other news he appears to be fortifying lunga reasonably heavily - I have nothing over that side to catch them with their trousers down so it looks like he will continue here.
Still 10 days out to reinorcements - the mighty CVE long Island.




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