Dive Bomber1
Posts: 670
Joined: 10/30/2006 Status: offline
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March 28, 1942 - I'm beginning to feel that AuTiger has set a benchmark for the defense of India with his approach in this game, and there has been nothing that I could do to stop him. This turn, after two months of struggling through the jungle at a mile a day, one of my infantry divisions finally crossed the river to reach Kohima, and during the mandatory shock attack I found out that Tiger now had three Chinese infantry units there along with a Brit infantry unit and a Brit base force. Once again Tiger was able to fly SEAC-Chinese units into a base to stop my attack. What this approach has done is to allow Tiger to put Chinese infantry units in all of the border bases and free up most of his British units, and most importantly his Indian armored units, to stop any incursion into India proper. And what is more, Tiger brought almost ALL of the SEAC units into India or the Burmese border - for example, Tiger has 18 units at Myitkyina! This is a doubly powerful approach for Tiger, because it not only means that I can't capture his border bases, but it also means that I can't pull back from the border because he can then race down the rail line and threaten Mandalay. So I'm stuck with bleeding steadily at the border bases or else losing Burma and putting Indo-China under an even greater threat than is already in place thanks to the 150 4E bombers that Tiger has safely based at the inland Bengal air bases. What made this work was that Tiger had his strategy planned out right from the very start. He flew his 4E bombers and his C-47s from the West Coast across the Pacific to India in December 1941, long before I was in any position to cut off the in-between airbases. Because of the massive replacements that the Allies get for B-17s, B-24s, and especially C-47s, Tiger could afford to take big operational losses during the transit and then still have plenty of planes to rebuild his air units. The only things that have saved me so far from total disaster in the Far East are: Number 1 - the Advanced Weather - which prevents Tiger from flying as often as he wants, and number 2, my misbegotten raid on India which caused Tiger to pay attention to removing my raiding forces for a few weeks before he got back to the business of destroying my forces in Burma. So I'm at a total loss as to what to do. Tiger has slowed down my advances everywhere, so I don't have the forces available for a full-scale invasion of India, and it is probably too late to try it by now anyway. And with Tiger's willingness and ability to fly huge numbers of Chinese infantry wherever he wants means that he can bog down any invasion anyway while his 4E bombers hammer anything that I land or sail around. From my perspective I've effectively lost the game now because I've lost the momentum in Burma and it is only a matter of time before Tiger brings overwhelming force against me in Indo-China. If start to pull back troops and forces now to try to build up a defense in Indo-China I've also lost because that will just allow Tiger to start to move massive US forces into the Central Pacific early if I'm not posing a threat of expansion there. The "lesson learned" that I'm taking away from this pbem match is that it is absolutely mandatory that the Japanese player make a very, VERY serious attack on the Bay of Bengal bases, and as early in the game as absolutely possible, maybe even from Day 1. Unless those Bengal airbases are captured early on the Allied player can gain untouchable supremacy in the region all for the cost of a few planes lost to operational damage. Also, I've been thinking all along how hard it has been to play with PDU "off" in this game, but it has turned out to be the one real "blessing" for me because otherwise I would be facing hundreds of 4E bombers all over the map instead of only in India, Java and Australia. In any event, while the "shadow of doom" slowly stretches further and further into Indo-China I am still keeping up the Bushido Spirit and maintaining my planned expansion. Maybe I'll keep on going eastwards as Tiger follows behind, until I make a last stand in San Diego… <L> So my troops captured Balikpapan this turn, and in a bit of luck, Tiger's troops retreated to Samarinda instead of further along the coast. Therefore, I've redirected the invasion TF that was heading towards Macassar and will have them land in Samarinda instead. I've also redirected my bombers and naval bombardment TFs to get back to pounding Samarinda. In another surprise, Tiger stopped trying to put CAP up over Ichang, so my second-line fighters and bombers continue to look like heroes as they pounded the air fields again and destroyed more Chinese planes on the ground. Tiger is now much more interested in attacking my advancing troops near Lanchow. He apparently doesn't want to spend the Political Points to change the control of his Chinese units to a non-restricted command, so he is marching troops to the north instead of flying them in. But that's okay for him; his troops will still get there long before my troops do. And this hasn't caused Tiger to pull back any troops from Yenen, so his line still hasn't stretched enough for me to penetrate it anywhere. I've come to the conclusion that it isn't possible to make serious gains in China unless the Allied opponent allows himself to be cut off, or retreats. In any event, in response to what I've learned from Admiral Laurent's AAR, I'm sending a fresh naval base force to Onnekotan Jima in an attempt to build a nearby air field to support Paramushiro Jima. And if Tiger gives me the time I will send a couple of base forces and infantry units to take the outer Aleutians, just to keep Tiger a bit "honest" while he prepares his counter-offensive.
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