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RE: Small Ship, Big War

 
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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 1:37:01 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
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February 3, 1943

Location: 60 miles southeast of Kendari
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 186

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

Admiral Ozawa elects not to pursue the retreating enemy ships. This decision is reinforced by a fierce air battle over Koepang the next morning. Enemy four engine bombers attack the transports, escorted by a large group of the dangerous twin-tailed American fighters. The defending Japanese land-based fighters manage to hold their own, but Ozawa suspects that more fighters and bombers are waiting for them in Australia. And at any rate his primary mission is to ensure that the Japanese can reinforce Timor and that the enemy cannot.

Two transports hit the previous day sink in the harbor at Koepang, and the rest, many of them damaged, finish unloading and withdraw. It is by no means certain that they will all survive to reach Soerabaja, but it is judged that their chances are better making the attempt than tying up at Koepang and waiting for the enemy bombers to finish them off.

The Japanese carriers pull back into the Banda Sea to refuel and wait for the next inbound convoy, which is still a number of days away.

---

On Timor the enemy troops make a final attempt to break the Japanese lines before the newly landed troops can get into position. They storm Snakeback Ridge in a dawn attack, but after several hours of fierce fighting are compelled to withdraw with heavy casualties.

---

For fans of irony:

Far to the east, SS Cuttlefish is surprised by a Japanese patrol bomber while running on the surface off the coast of New Ireland. The submarine takes a bomb aft of the sail and the crew struggles to control the flooding enough to allow the stricken sub to survive and return to base.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1051
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 1:41:53 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
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February 4, 1943

Location: 75 miles west of Amboina
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 149

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

Hibiki and the other Japanese ships arrive off Amboina during the night. The tankers are waiting for them, and refueling will commence after sunrise.

Lieutenant Miharu has the ship during the night hours, and he stands on the darkened bridge and gazes out at the calm, inky sea. The air is heavy and oppressive and it feels to Miharu like more rain is on the way.

Hibiki is patrolling on the port flank of the task force. A few hundred meters to starboard the silhouette of heavy cruiser Chokai can be dimly seen. Hibiki is slowly pulling ahead of the cruiser when a simultaneous yell from several of the lookouts brings Miharu out of the bridge at a run.

Four phosphorescent wakes are running in parallel about 150 meters behind the destroyer from port to starboard. They are torpedo wakes, and a single glance tells Miharu that they are heading for Chokai. The lieutenant bolts back into the bridge.

“Combat stations,” he says calmly but urgently. “Signalman, warn Chokai immediately!” The sound of Hibiki’s klaxon rolls across the darkened water as the signalman begins to flash his message.

“Left full rudder, engines to full,” says Miharu. “Prepare depth charges.” Hibiki heels around, pointing her stern at Chokai, and begins to race back down the fading tracks left by the torpedoes. All around the ship men are scrambling to their posts, and at the stern Ensign Handa and his men load depth charges into the Y racks.

Lieutenant Miharu steps out onto the port starboard observation platform and raises his binoculars to look back at Chokai. He dreads at any moment to hear the crump of an explosion from astern. The big cruiser is accelerating and starting to come around onto Hibiki’s bearing, but Miharu does not know if it will be in time.

He steps back into the bridge. “Find that submarine, sonar,” he says.

“Captain on the bridge!” someone calls. Lieutenant Miharu turns to see Captain Ishii stepping away from the ladder. The captain remains at the back and waves for Miharu to carry on.

There has been no sound of explosions from astern. Lieutenant Miharu focuses his attention ahead, to the darkened sea where the enemy submarine is hiding.

“Sir, I have something!” says the sonar operator. “Bearing 20 degrees ahead, range maybe 600 meters!”

“Right 20 degrees,” says Miharu. “Pass the word, set depth charges to 100 feet.” Lieutenant Miharu figures that the enemy submarine has not had time to dive too deeply yet. His orders are obeyed, and Hibiki races ahead.

“Range decreasing,” says the sonar man. “Sir, we’re almost on top of him.”

“Fire depth charges,” says the lieutenant. A few seconds later the Y racks rattle and two depth charges are flung to either side. Geysers of water erupt behind the ship, bracketing the destroyer’s wake. Miharu brings the ship around in a curve. As they approach the same spot he looks to the sonar operator. The man looks frustrated.

“Sir, the contact is 40 degrees to port…no, 25 degrees…it’s fading...I’ve lost him sir, he just disappeared.”

“He’s gone beneath the thermocline,” says Captain Ishii, speaking for the first time. “It’s very strong in these warm waters.” Lieutenant Miharu nods acknowledgment and orders the destroyer to slow to 12 knots. Hibiki cruises slowly back and forth but sonar is unable to locate the submarine again.

Two other destroyers come over to aid in the search, but the submarine has escaped. Hibiki and the other ships continue to search for a while but eventually give up and rejoin the task force, which is zigzagging away into the darkness.

The next morning a boat comes alongside Hibiki. It delivers a case of excellent sake, courtesy of the captain and crew of Chokai.



< Message edited by Cuttlefish -- 7/25/2007 11:29:40 PM >

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1052
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 5:56:15 AM   
kaleun

 

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From: Colorado
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Running out of popcorn here

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Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1053
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 1:14:27 PM   
cantona2


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Ripping stuff Cuttlefish

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1966 was a great year for English Football...Eric was born


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Post #: 1054
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 2:29:08 PM   
tocaff


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Did any of the sake make it out of the ward room to the crew?

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Todd

I never thought that doing an AAR would be so time consuming and difficult.
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(in reply to cantona2)
Post #: 1055
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 10:17:19 PM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

Lieutenant Miharu nods acknowledgment and orders the submarine to slow to 12 knots.


Wow! On top of everything else, Hibiki can transform into a submarine!

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1056
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 11:22:26 PM   
String


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Joined: 10/7/2003
From: Estonia
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Capt. Harlock

quote:

Lieutenant Miharu nods acknowledgment and orders the submarine to slow to 12 knots.


Wow! On top of everything else, Hibiki can transform into a submarine!

Nono, you got it all wrong. Lt. Miharu has such authority that he can even command enemy troops and ships.

(in reply to Capt. Harlock)
Post #: 1057
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/25/2007 11:46:02 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
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quote:

ORIGINAL: String

quote:

ORIGINAL: Capt. Harlock

quote:

Lieutenant Miharu nods acknowledgment and orders the submarine to slow to 12 knots.


Wow! On top of everything else, Hibiki can transform into a submarine!

Nono, you got it all wrong. Lt. Miharu has such authority that he can even command enemy troops and ships.


Ack, fixed that.

He can issue commands to them, but I somehow suspect he'll be disappointed in the results. It would be like trying to give orders to a cat, except that enemy submarines don't look at you blankly and then proceed to groom themselves.

(in reply to String)
Post #: 1058
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/26/2007 12:46:02 AM   
Mike Solli


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From: the flight deck of the Zuikaku
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What's that saying?  Dogs have owners.  Cats have staff.

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Post #: 1059
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/26/2007 12:47:56 AM   
Wolfie1

 

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From: Blackpool, England
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mike Solli

What's that saying? Dogs have owners. Cats have staff.


As I have both, I'd say that that is about spot on.

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Teamwork is essential - it gives the enemy someone else to shoot at.....

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Post #: 1060
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/26/2007 1:28:20 AM   
kaleun

 

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Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

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Post #: 1061
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/26/2007 1:34:29 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
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February 5, 1943

Location: 75 miles west of Amboina
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 474

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

After the fleet refuels the three smaller and slower carriers present, Hiyo, Junyo, and Ryujo, are dispatched back to Truk. They need to rebuild their battered air groups, and Imperial Navy Headquarters wants them to join the three light carriers still in the Central Pacific to stand guard in case the Allies attempt to take advantage of the Japanese preoccupation with Timor to attack elsewhere.

An attempt by a submarine during the afternoon to penetrate the destroyer screen and attack Akagi fails. Whether the submarine involved is same one that attacked Chokai the previous night or is a different one is unknown, but Admiral Ozawa decides that the waters near Amboina have become a little too crowded. He orders the fleet back to the waters off Sulawesi. This will also put the carriers in position to guard the next troop convoy, which is now in the Celebes Sea and about to enter the Makassar Strait.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1062
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/26/2007 1:43:56 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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February 6, 1943

Location: 40 miles south-southwest of Butung Island
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 435

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

“Is this the only case so far?” asks Captain Ishii. He and Hibiki’s medical officer, Lieutenant JG Nakagawa, are standing outside an alcove in the ship’s dispensary. Inside the alcove Seaman Second Class Iwai lies asleep, sweating in the grip of a malarial fever.

“It is,” says Nakagawa. “It’s an isolated incident, I think, though it would not hurt to increase the ship’s supply of quinine.”

“How did he catch it?” says Ishii. “No one aboard has been ashore since we left Truk.”

“Well,” says Nakagawa a little wryly, “we have been close to shore several times, and mosquitoes do fly, you know.” Captain Ishii looks slightly embarrassed.

“Yes, of course they do,” he says. “Will Iwai be all right, and what do you recommend to prevent further cases?”

“Iwai has a mild case, I think, and will be fine once the quinine starts to take effect,” says Nakagawa. “Well enough to return to duty in a few days, perhaps. As far as prevention, it would not hurt to spray pesticide in the crew areas. Limit any shore parties if we do put into port. Otherwise there is not much we can do. It is the curse of the tropics, as much a part of this region as the islands themselves.”

“All right,” says Ishii. “Thank you, Nakagawa, and let me know if more cases turn up.” Nakagawa assures him that he will, and Captain Ishii leaves the dispensary to return to the bridge. As he goes he makes a mental note to himself to have the quartermaster obtain more quinine. If it turns out to be difficult he can put that fellow Ariga on the job, he should be able to turn up something.

He doubts it will be a problem, though. He seems to recall hearing that most of the world’s supply of quinine comes from nearby Java. If that is true he wonders how the enemy’s forces are coping with the shortage.

---

From a US Army pamphlet done in 1943 by Theodore Geisel advising soldiers how to avoid contracting malaria:





Attachment (1)

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1063
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/28/2007 2:28:40 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
Status: offline
February 7, 1943

Location: 60 miles southeast of Makassar
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 397

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

Ensign Izu steps onto the bridge from outside and walks over to Captain Ishii. “Sir,” he says, “Shokaku has just flashed a message. Admiral Ozawa advises all ships that the next troop convoy will be here in two days. We will rendezvous with them then and escort them to Timor.”

“Very well, Ensign, thank you,” says the captain. Izu lingers a moment. “Is there something else on your mind, Ensign?” he asks.

“Yes sir,” Izu says, “that is, with the Captain’s permission I have a question, sir.”

“The Captain grants his permission,” says Ishii with a small smile. “Spit it out, son.”

“Thank you sir,” says Izu. “Do you know which infantry division is aboard those ships?”

“I don’t,” says Captain Ishii with a shake of his head. “They’ve come from China, I think, or maybe Manchukuo.” He pauses as realization comes to him. “Ah yes, I had forgotten, your father is stationed in Manchukuo, isn’t he? A captain?”

“A colonel,” says Izu with just a little bit of pride.

“Yes, that’s right. Well, Ensign, the odds are against it, but stranger things have happened. If I find out what unit it is I will let you know.”

“Thank you, sir,” says Ensign Izu.

“Given how quickly they have gotten here I would say they have most likely come from China,” the captain muses, “but one never knows. The last I heard there was a lot of fighting going on there, so maybe they did bring this division down from Manchukuo. The Germans seem to be keeping the Russians busy, so we could perhaps spare some men from watching the border there.”

“I heard a story when we stopped at Truk that the German Army was having trouble,” says Izu. “Something about a place called Stalingrad.” Captain Ishii snorts.

“I think that if you treat almost everything both the German and Russian governments say as lies you can’t go wrong,” he says. “In any event, I think those two are likely to be shooting at each other for some time yet.”

“Yes sir,” says Izu hopefully. Like many Japanese he has no more sympathy or liking for the Germans than for any other Western power, but he nevertheless wants to believe they are winning. It may sometimes be hard to tell who one’s friends are, but there is no doubt at all that Soviet Russia is an enemy. And Japan has more than enough enemies for the moment.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1064
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/28/2007 3:06:27 AM   
kaleun

 

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Cuttlefish has a knack for keeping up the anxiety level

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Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

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Post #: 1065
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 2:26:22 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
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February 8, 1943

Location: 60 miles southeast of Makassar
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 366

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

To Ensign Izu’s disappointment the division now approaching the Banda Sea turns out to be the 104th Infantry, from China. Until recently they had been doing quiet garrison duty at Kweilin, but following the Allied attack on Timor they were ordered to Hong Kong to board a hastily assembled group of transports.

Their journey has been uneventful, but the soldiers aboard are heartily sick of the voyage and ready to reach land, even if it means braving a gauntlet of enemy aircraft and submarines and then a fight against a trapped and desperate enemy. Anything, most of them think, has to be better than enduring another storm at sea such as the one they are sailing through now.

Hibiki is currently enduring the same conditions, but the intermittent heavy rain and moderate chop hardly qualifies as a storm in the opinion of the crew. They would be amused at the plight of the soldiers, although some aboard might recall their first days at sea and feel a little sympathy. And even the enlisted men, who sling their hammocks in whatever space is available aboard the destroyer, would regard their own conditions as luxurious if they could see the crowded holds into which the soldiers are crammed. The Japanese military does not place a premium on the comfort of its rank and file.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1066
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 2:28:54 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
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February 9, 1943

Location: 60 miles southeast of Makassar
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 2
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 334

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

“Petty Officer, there is something in the water over there, about 175 meters off,” a sailor says to Taiki, pointing. They are standing on the port rail, near the center torpedo mount. Taiki takes the glasses from him and raises them to his eyes. After a moment he sees it, an ominous dark shape riding low in the waves.

“Is it a mine?” asks the sailor.

“It could be,” says Taiki. “Go and advise the bridge, please.” The sailor departs quickly, and Taiki continues to scrutinize the object until Ensign Handa and Chief Petty Officer Shun arrive a moment later. Shun is carrying a rifle. Hibiki slows and begins to circle the object at a respectful distance while Handa studies it through his binoculars.

“What do you think, sir?” asks Taiki. Handa lowers the binoculars and frowns.

“It looks like metal,” he says. “What do you think, Chief?” Shun takes the binoculars and looks at the object. After a moment he hands them back to Handa and hefts the rifle.

“It is possible,” he says. “There is one way to make sure.” He raises the rifle to his shoulder and sights along it. He waits until Hibiki hangs poised for a second at the top of a roll and then fires. Taiki sees a spurt of water in a wave just behind the object. Shun says nothing, but works the bolt and waits. At the right moment he fires again. The watchers hear a faint metallic “spang” but there is no other result.

Shun shoots it several more times. No explosion results, so a boat is dispatched to examine the item more closely. Handa is in charge of the small expedition. The boat goes out, and those watching on deck can see Handa carefully look the thing over. After a moment the item is hauled into the boat, which comes about and returns to Hibiki. Handa has the object hoisted up on deck.

Taiki and the others gather around it when it is aboard. It looks like a short torpedo with stubby wings. Its cylindrical body is partly wrapped in a net to which several cork floats are attached. The thing is studded with barnacles and has several bullet holes in it from Shun’s rifle. Most of the onlookers quickly identify it as a paravane, though of a strange configuration.

“From a British or Australian ship,” says Shun. He points at the net. “That’s native make. The paravane probably had some buoyancy. It was drifting along the bottom and some fisherman snagged it, brought it up, and thought it was a torpedo. They cut the net free.”

“I can’t blame them,” murmurs Taiki. He kneels down to examine it and see if he can figure out what ship it came from, but except for a manufacturer’s plate, which no one can read, it is free of markings.

“Well, it should stay sunk now that it is full of holes,” comments Ensign Handa. “Let’s return it to the sea.” He gestures at several of the nearby sailors, and the paravane is cut free of the net and tossed back over the rail. It hits the water with a splash, bobs once, and then slowly submerges as it falls astern of the destroyer. The remains of the net follow it into the water.

“Don’t worry about the false alarm,” Handa tells Taiki. “Continue to keep a sharp watch. There’s a lot of stuff left over from the fighting here last year, and not all of it is that harmless. The Captain says the Dutch left a lot of mines scattered here and there, and some of them may be adrift.”

“Yes sir,” says Taiki. Handa and the others leave, and Taiki goes back to supervising the port side lookouts. Far behind Hibiki the paravane, which once rode on the bow of HMS Repulse, settles into the mud on the bottom, there to remain.


(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1067
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 10:14:30 AM   
String


Posts: 2661
Joined: 10/7/2003
From: Estonia
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Wow, a very nice touch there Cuttlefish. I liked it a lot :)

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Post #: 1068
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 9:52:25 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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From: Oregon, USA
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February 10, 1943

Location: 60 miles southeast of Makassar
Course: Holding position
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 3
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 474

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

The Japanese transports enter the Banda Sea, heading for Koepang. Admiral Ozawa wants his ships to be able to linger in the waters around Timor should it prove necessary, so he orders his destroyers to refuel before his ships follow. He knows he will be able to overtake the much slower transports the next day.

As it turns out refueling takes much longer than anticipated due to rough seas. Aboard Hibiki Captain Ishii oversees operations while the destroyer comes alongside a big tanker. It is a nerve-wracking operation. Twice the two ships almost collide, a collision which would do the much smaller Hibiki no good at all, and at one point they do grind slightly against each other. The damage is very minor, however. After some sweat and a good deal of swearing on the bridge the operation is concluded successfully. Hibiki’s fuel tanks are full again, and the destroyer moves away from the tanker to sighs of relief among the crew.

As night falls Ozawa’s ships are finally ready to go. They leave the waters around the mouth of Bone Bay and head back into the Banda Sea. It is time once again to visit Timor.


(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1069
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 9:56:39 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
Status: offline
February 11, 1943

Location: 40 miles north-northwest of Raba
Course: South
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 3
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 443

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

Riku looks out over the rail at the green, rugged land visible on the horizon to the south. It is sunny at the moment, though at times rain squalls sweep over the task force and obscure the land from view. Taiki stands nearby, scanning the sky with his binoculars.

“Petty Officer, what island is that?” Riku asks after a moment. Taiki lowers the binoculars and looks at him.

“That’s Flores, one of the Lesser Sunda Islands,” he says. “A pretty big island. We have a small base at Raba there, I think.”

“What do they grow there, do you know? What kind of resources do they have?” asks Riku. Taiki smiles.

“Always thinking, aren’t you?” he asks. Riku looks unabashed.

“Just thinking of the crew, Petty Officer,” he says. “We could use some fresh food. And I need some new trade material to swap with other ships. All for the common good.”

“Of course, Seaman Ariga,” chuckles Taiki. “As it happens, I do not know the answers to your questions. I know the charts and I can name all the islands, but knowing the map is not the same as actually knowing the place. I don’t know what kinds of people live there, or what they eat, or anything like that.”

“A pity,” says Riku with a sigh. “I suppose there is no chance of any kind of time in port soon?”

“We need to support the landings,” says Taiki. “After that I don’t know. A lot depends on what the enemy does next.”

“After their defeat last week do you really think there is any chance they will try something?” Riku says.

“Well, they still have no lack of bombers, at least,” says Taiki. “As for the rest, who knows?”

“I thought that Petty Officers knew everything,” says Riku innocently. “But you do not know what they grow on that island or what our enemy’s intentions are. My illusions are shaken, Petty Officer!”

“I know that you have spent too much time talking and not enough time keeping watch,” says Taiki with a mock growl. “Back to work, Ariga!”

“Yes, Petty Officer,” says Riku obediently, and raises his binoculars again.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1070
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 9:58:38 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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From: Oregon, USA
Status: offline
February 12, 1943

Location: 80 miles north of Koepang
Course: West
Attached to: TF 72
Mission: Air Combat
System Damage: 3
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 407

Orders: Protect reinforcement convoys approaching Timor.

---

Ozawa’s ships slip once again into the Savu Sea. To the south the transports reach Koepang under the cover of darkness and begin quickly to unload. The soldiers of the 104th Division file ashore, grateful to be on solid ground once more.

Enemy search planes discover the transports late in the day. A single air raid by heavy bombers succeeds in mostly evading the Japanese fighters, but only one bomb hit is scored on a transport. By the time night falls again half of the division is ashore, though most of the vital supplies remain aboard.

Mindful that the air raids tomorrow will probably be worse Ozawa details two of his carriers to keep fighters on patrol over Koepang. Meanwhile he orders his ships to shift position to the west overnight to keep the enemy from establishing too solid a fix on his position.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1071
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 11:06:25 PM   
kaleun

 

Posts: 5145
Joined: 5/29/2002
From: Colorado
Status: offline
Have finished eating fingernails
Starts gnawing on fingers

_____________________________

Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1072
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 11:08:01 PM   
ChezDaJez


Posts: 3436
Joined: 11/12/2004
From: Chehalis, WA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kaleun

Have finished eating fingernails
Starts gnawing on fingers


You might need the fingers... try the toenails!

CHez


_____________________________

Ret Navy AWCS (1972-1998)
VP-5, Jacksonville, Fl 1973-78
ASW Ops Center, Rota, Spain 1978-81
VP-40, Mt View, Ca 1981-87
Patrol Wing 10, Mt View, CA 1987-90
ASW Ops Center, Adak, Ak 1990-92
NRD Seattle 1992-96
VP-46, Whidbey Isl, Wa 1996-98

(in reply to kaleun)
Post #: 1073
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 11:08:30 PM   
Terminus


Posts: 41459
Joined: 4/23/2005
From: Denmark
Status: offline
But remember to stretch first...

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We are all dreams of the Giant Space Butterfly.

(in reply to ChezDaJez)
Post #: 1074
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 11:11:56 PM   
kaleun

 

Posts: 5145
Joined: 5/29/2002
From: Colorado
Status: offline
Thanks for the adviceMight need it if this suspense continues too long.

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Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

(in reply to Terminus)
Post #: 1075
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 7/31/2007 11:51:28 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kaleun

Thanks for the adviceMight need it if this suspense continues too long.


I can't resist doing some foreshadowing at this point. The game is only five turns ahead of the AAR right now, but they are a pretty intense five turns. In any history of the Pacific theater written for this alternate version of World War II the name of Timor will echo with sorrow, bloodshed, and deeds of sacrifice and heroism on both sides.

(in reply to kaleun)
Post #: 1076
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 8/1/2007 12:42:13 AM   
Terminus


Posts: 41459
Joined: 4/23/2005
From: Denmark
Status: offline
Sounds like the RL Guadalcanal campaign just got relocated to Timor.

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We are all dreams of the Giant Space Butterfly.

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1077
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 8/1/2007 2:55:33 AM   
Capt. Harlock


Posts: 5358
Joined: 9/15/2001
From: Los Angeles
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Cuttlefish

I can't resist doing some foreshadowing at this point. The game is only five turns ahead of the AAR right now, but they are a pretty intense five turns.



AAARGGHH! I'm going on vacation, and I'll be out of touch from the internet for a week!

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 1078
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 8/1/2007 2:58:15 AM   
Terminus


Posts: 41459
Joined: 4/23/2005
From: Denmark
Status: offline
Don't you feel happy now...?

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We are all dreams of the Giant Space Butterfly.

(in reply to Capt. Harlock)
Post #: 1079
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 8/1/2007 3:22:46 AM   
tocaff


Posts: 4781
Joined: 10/12/2006
From: USA now in Brasil
Status: offline
My internet connection is terminated on Friday and with moving the new connection could take up to 4 weeks.  Most things in Brasil move at their own speed.  

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Todd

I never thought that doing an AAR would be so time consuming and difficult.
www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2080768

(in reply to Terminus)
Post #: 1080
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