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RE: One Weird Battle

 
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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 5:11:00 PM   
vettim89


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quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

quote:

ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58

quote:

ORIGINAL: vettim89


Three months to fully prep a Marine Div and it would be Allied again. At this stage of the game you could at best class it as a diversion.

By the way, all the facts I just stated make the case for you to leave Marcus Island alone. It is too far away from supporting bases and Brad could just take it right back. It could become your Hougoumont


You could land two divisions of any stripe with 20-30 prep and wipe it clean in a couple of weeks. They get experience, and back at PH re-build quickly if PacFlt is there.

Your comment on the 6000 man limit being a game-changer is spot-on. If you have base forces needed to do constructive work you can't defend the place, and vice versa.

Glad you brought up Marcus I. I've thought that same thing. Too soon, too deep. Those guys are sacrificial lambs.

Edit: wrote this before reading CR's two posts above.


If you are talking about Midway, not exactly. Either they win on the first day or they attack thereafter without supplies, unless you land supplies daily. This is because two divisions is way beyond the point where all supplies ashore will be taken at the end of the turn by the over stacking penalty.

But - two divisions ought to blast away all enemy forces upon landing. The only reservation I have is that with 20-30% prep I wonder if they will suffer such disruption that even such large forces would be unable to handle a regiment.


Yeah I wouldn't want to chance it either. Failure to blow through the defense on day 1 would lead to a very ugly stalemate that you might find hard to resolve. Could easily become a Gallipoli in the Pacific (I have now reference two different conflicts in my last few posts. I will now endeavor to make a reference in as many future posts as possible. Just kidding)

Dan, you are in a peculiar situation here. One one hand your are best served by preparing for all eventualities. On the other hand, there is the danger of becoming "captured by the system". By that I mean allowing your own views of how you see the game progressing to influence your planning. Historically the best examples of this would be the Pearl Harbor attack and 9/11. In each case the planners knew that such an attack was possible but considered it beyond the capabilities of their opponents.

I just say this as this is the point where you can set yourself up by closing your mind to the possibilities of what your opponent can accomplish. This is especially true considering this is a Scenario 2 game. I give you Yubari's experience in the Ocean of Blood AAR as an example. Of note, chronlogically you are at almost the same exact point that he was when he had his hat handed to him in the Adaman Sea. I think you might want to take a step back and reevaluate this situation. Brad has not suffered any attritiion of his naval strength at all to this point. Yes, it is time to start pushing back but I think you should slow down a second and reevaluate the implications of Scenario 2's OOB. To ghost SUluSea quoting Bob Marley, "Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our minds".

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 6:01:40 PM   
Canoerebel


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Well, darn it, even somebody as eloquent, resolved, svelte, and humble as I am has been unable to sway the onlookers. Shoot, I hate it when my omnisicence proves flawed.

But I don't think I'm biting off more than I can chew, nor risking too much here. These operations are low risk (in the sense that I'm not commiting or exposing vital assets) nibbling along the periphery.

Committing my carriers would be a major mistake, but I don't plan on doing that. There is a risk that Brad could leap forward with the KB and surprise me, but I'm keeping that risk as low as possible without sending my carriers back to Capetown. The use of picket ships, patrol aircraft, and the restriction of my carriers to waters close to home should prevent such a calamity from occuring.

My carriers will only be used to support an invasion of Noumea if the KB ends up hitting my Marcus or Wake TFs. This is the point - to be ready to gain some ground where the enemy aint by committing non-vital assets at two extreme points.

You guys are right about the IJN and IJAF being as strong as ever, so I don't want to tangle anytime soon. But I do want to feint, and probe, and commit to low-risk operations that can apply some pressure.

< Message edited by Canoerebel -- 2/2/2011 6:02:19 PM >

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 6:17:52 PM   
witpqs


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CR,

You are right to value the taking of risks. I mean actual risks, not just actions that you think your opponent will perceive as risky. The difference is, if you are trying to be perceived as taking risks but in reality are playing timid with some faux risks out there, your opponent will catch on.

When your opponent knows that you are willing to risk, and you are willing to risk, that greatly enlarges the scope of your actions that he must consider.

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Post #: 1473
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 6:51:04 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

But - two divisions ought to blast away all enemy forces upon landing. The only reservation I have is that with 20-30% prep I wonder if they will suffer such disruption that even such large forces would be unable to handle a regiment.


Yes, I meant the blasting part. The two weeks is prep and transit. As soon as he takes Midway, you proceed to take it back. With a 6000 man limit I wouldn't say he could be at more than 2 Forts by then, and probably 1 if he worked on an airfield in parallel. And if he has a regiment htere, he probably doesn't have fort-building unit(s).

< Message edited by Bullwinkle58 -- 2/2/2011 7:00:12 PM >


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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 6:52:32 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth

[Maybe you'll get his attention if the carriers show up outside of Minsk


Oooooh, cruel. I like it.

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Post #: 1475
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 7:20:57 PM   
Canoerebel


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11/16/42

CenPac: The two Allied invasion aramada's are entering Indian country, the Marcus group to the NW of Midway, the Wake group just to the SSW. Picket ships are to the front. Combat ships and CVE TFs trailing. My ships are dispersed enough that a KB-sized ambush wouldn't catch them in one net. This operation depends on surprise, dispersal, and speed. I issued orders for the Wake TFs to proceed. D-Day is probably about four days away. No signs of detection.

SoPac: Darn it, by issuing orders to certain TFs to begin following the carriers, the carriers just froze in their tracks, a day SE of Auckland. B-17s hit the airfield at Noumea, and picket ships nudged a bit closer to their main posts, with more heading out from Auckland at flank speed, including a pair of two-DD TFs. In a few days, B-17s will hit Noumea from both Suva and from Lord Howe Island. The sudden increase should catch Brad's attention. No signs of actual detection of my carriers or other major TFs.

India: The Allies took Jamedshpur, just three hexes west of Calcutta. The divebombers at Mangalore didn't sortie vs. shipping at Madras.

SigInt: Had a report of CA Kinugasa at Nauru Island a day or two back. I'm evaluating this as escort for an important supply or reinforcement convoy, though it might be part of a surface combat TF centrally posted to raid or react.

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Post #: 1476
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 8:14:50 PM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

India: 6th Guards/C Div. will evaporate tomorrow; 48th Div. moved a hex west off any road into a jungle/coastal hex. Is there any reason Brad can't use subs or amphibious patrol aircraft to lift these troops out? I'll get troops there to finish them off as soon as possible. In the meantime, aircraft and bombardment TFs will pay them a visit. To the south, an IJA remant stack aouth of Goa retreated after another attack.


To use another Civil War analogy, this would look something like Lee's retreat from Petersburg -- except the IJA units have no intention of surrendering.

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 8:46:05 PM   
vettim89


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quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

CR,

You are right to value the taking of risks. I mean actual risks, not just actions that you think your opponent will perceive as risky. The difference is, if you are trying to be perceived as taking risks but in reality are playing timid with some faux risks out there, your opponent will catch on.

When your opponent knows that you are willing to risk, and you are willing to risk, that greatly enlarges the scope of your actions that he must consider.


Huh? I think only Vincini could understand that

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 8:51:43 PM   
Canoerebel


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Hey, I understood it!

I think witpqs is right - there is merit in attacking for the sake of attacking as long as it's part of a well-thought-out plan and not just flying off the handle. Two things I can think of:

1) As witpqs is points out, it can put the notion into the opponent's head that you're willing to attack.
2) Sometimes, an attack has totally unforeseen consquences: the opponent makes a mistake, or overreacts, or does something rash. Heck that's what happened with the Doolittle Raid - a huge risk of a rare and valuable Allied asset to do something that really couldn't be done and wouldn't accomplish much even if it was done...only that it was done and led directly to the Battle of Midway.

Well, I've just stated the obvious. Sorry guys, I know you know all this stuff. But sometimes we forget to factor in item two merely because we CAN'T predict something of the sort happening. But I saw it happen in my games with Miller and John III, where wacky Allied attacks ended up prompting my opponents to do something wacky that really cost them.

Sometimes, bringing pressure to bear is worthwhile in and of itself.

< Message edited by Canoerebel -- 2/2/2011 8:58:37 PM >

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 8:52:44 PM   
Chickenboy


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Hey, CR-

Try to have some discipline on the high seas, will 'ya? Your navy in India needs some help on the whole seamanship thing, dude.

http://www.ndtv.com/video/player/news/the-collision-that-set-a-warship-on-fire/189725

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 8:57:02 PM   
Canoerebel


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Hey, CB, how much snow did you get?

As for the Indian naval vessel hitting a merchant ship, two questions:

1. Why is the Indian newscaster speaking English?

2. Why are there passengers milling around on a naval vessel?

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 9:23:01 PM   
Chickenboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Hey, CB, how much snow did you get?

As for the Indian naval vessel hitting a merchant ship, two questions:

1. Why is the Indian newscaster speaking English?

2. Why are there passengers milling around on a naval vessel?


We were well North of the latest SNOWNAMI. We've received maybe 4" in the last week. Plenty cold though.

1. Because they speak English in India.

2. Apparently, as the report indicates, the Indian Navy has a policy of taking family out for a cruise in Bombay harbor once annually. A particularly inauspicious time to collide with an oil tanker, if you ask my opinion.

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 9:27:57 PM   
Canoerebel


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Well, they speak English in Germany, too, but I would expect German newscasts to be in German.

Is English prevalant in India? For instance are there so many languages spoken in India that English is a useful "universal trade language"?

Not that you're necessarily an expert on India, but I'm just curious.

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 9:49:46 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Well, they speak English in Germany, too, but I would expect German newscasts to be in German.

Is English prevalant in India? For instance are there so many languages spoken in India that English is a useful "universal trade language"?

Not that you're necessarily an expert on India, but I'm just curious.


Butting in, but I took an Indian history course back in the day. Very interesting place.

As I recall, there are eight official languages in India, out of hundreds (thousands?) of dialects of the majors. English is spoken by most of the population outside of strictly rural areas at least as a strong second language.

Edit: Apparently it's 18 official langiages in their constitution. Either they changed since 1978, or my memory is going.

Edit edit: Apparently it's a real nest of language problems there. Hindi is the main "official" language, but there's no "national" language. States can set their own business language standards. The constitution mentions the 18. English was supposed to have been phased out 15 years after the constitution went into effect, but wasn't. The Indian Supreme Court conducts business in English, and Parliament hasn't acted to change this.

Canada has trouble with two, so India's situation, growing as it did out of a patchwork of competing states, principalities, conquered regions under the Mogul Empire, European trade colonies, European imperial empire, etc. is a real problem. Nothing cements a nation together like shared language.

< Message edited by Bullwinkle58 -- 2/2/2011 10:00:31 PM >


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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 10:09:36 PM   
Canoerebel


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Wow! That's interesting, and I had no idea. (I did know that Hindi was a/the major language, but that was about the extent of my knowledge.)

So, India is having the same success in supplanting English that we Americans did in implmenting the metric system....(ah, I still remember my 7th grade math teacher scaring the class to death with that announcement).

P.S. Somebody correctly said that this AAR is turning into the Thread Light. Arg, I apologize for the stream of consciousness stuff. I'll try to get back on track, gents.



< Message edited by Canoerebel -- 2/2/2011 10:11:24 PM >

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 10:15:06 PM   
anarchyintheuk

 

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Stream of consciousness and an aar at the same time . . . best of both worlds imo.

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 10:19:00 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: anarchyintheuk

Stream of consciousness and an aar at the same time . . . best of both worlds imo.


Yeah, forum memory space costs Matrix about, what, a fraction of a cent per meg?

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 10:42:49 PM   
Chickenboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Wow! That's interesting, and I had no idea. (I did know that Hindi was a/the major language, but that was about the extent of my knowledge.)

So, India is having the same success in supplanting English that we Americans did in implmenting the metric system....(ah, I still remember my 7th grade math teacher scaring the class to death with that announcement).

P.S. Somebody correctly said that this AAR is turning into the Thread Light. Arg, I apologize for the stream of consciousness stuff. I'll try to get back on track, gents.



I would say that English is the language used by default in government, medicine and much of higher education in India. Many Indians that I've met speak Hindi (or their particular dialect) pretty fluently too. Urdu would be another common regional language for many of the mostly muslim northern provinces.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_English

Perhaps this is akin to Togalog in the Philippines. Many Philippinos (particularly those with post-secondary education) speak English regularly. However, in their homes or their neighborhoods, will most commonly converse in Togalog.

As nice as NW GA is, Canoerebel, you really ought to get out more often. See the world, o' defender of India!

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/2/2011 11:43:40 PM   
Canoerebel


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I often jokingly tell people that I haven't "left the Confederacy in xx years." While there is a hint of truth underlying the jest, I do make it out of the CSA on occasion.

Back in 2004, my family and I went on a long camping trip to New York and New England. This was the first foray for any of us to that neck of the woods. Now, I had been told all my life that Yankees were usually pretty curt or gruff, and not infrequently churlish or rude. So I went north expecting to find the populace quite different from the rural South.

To the surprise and great pleasure of me, my wife, and my children, we enjoyed every minute of that trip, including our foray into New York City. But during our long stay in New England, we found the people pleasant and friendly and just like the folks at home. We were welcomed and knew that if had life called us to live up that way, we would have done so gladly.

This past summer we did a three-week camping trip out west. We met many nice people during that journey, but I must say that, on average, we found the residents of the Rocky Mountain States more "different" from back home than New Englanders. This surprised me.

I love traveling, but my career, family, and community responsibilities have kept me confined to the good ol' USA. My wife, however, has ventured to German, Romania, and Israel over the past four years. She makes a good ambassador for the family.

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 12:45:14 AM   
Grollub


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quote:

ORIGINAL: vettim89


quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

CR,

You are right to value the taking of risks. I mean actual risks, not just actions that you think your opponent will perceive as risky. The difference is, if you are trying to be perceived as taking risks but in reality are playing timid with some faux risks out there, your opponent will catch on.

When your opponent knows that you are willing to risk, and you are willing to risk, that greatly enlarges the scope of your actions that he must consider.


Huh? I think only Vincini could understand that

I thought it made perfect sense

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 12:46:25 AM   
JohnDillworth


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quote:

Huh? I think only Vincini could understand that

Well he is involved in a land war in Asia, no?

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 12:51:04 AM   
Grollub


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Well, darn it, even somebody as eloquent, resolved, svelte, and humble as I am has been unable to sway the onlookers. Shoot, I hate it when my omnisicence proves flawed.




CR, I guess you're drawing on some past Midway experience here? For what it's worth, my experience as an Allied player concerning Midway is mostly as the other guys commenting - so what? If the Jap player takes it, it's inifinitely easier for you to retake than for the Jap player to support/supply it.

In other words, given what you've stated defends that island, the proximity to PH, and the the current date in the campaign, I wouldn't be overly worried.

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RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 7:26:35 AM   
JeffroK


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

quote:

Marcus: Vettim, you're exactly right about Marcus Island, but I'm considering taking it with the full expectation that I won't hold it. Why? Four reasons: (1) I'll garrison the island with a RCT and a Marine CD, which means it will exact a toll on the Japanese in re-taking it; (2) If I take Wake and Marcus, Brad's full attention is going to be that way for awhile; I think this will help the Allies move on Tarawa (forces already prepped at Pearl); (3) according to SigInt, Brad has had just 2k troops at Iwo since the start of the war - attack Marcus and I'll have Brad beefing up security there, an any troops siphoned off the real targets is a bonus; and (4) I want these moves to lend the appearance (along with my build up in the Aleutians) that the Allies are looking this way - CenPac and NoPac. This will be critical come early '43 when the Allies commit a large feint toward the Kuriles while actually moving on Sumatra. Despite all those "worthwhile" goals, I'm still not positive I'll go through with the Marcus invasion


Something many dont factor in is you are not doing these in isolation, I can imagine the chagrin at seeing landings at Wake & Marcus, movement in the Noumea & Aleutians areas plus the continued advance in India.

Where does QBall react, (neither Wake or Marcus are key points, but bleeding annoying losses as they cramp the navsearch ability of the empire) Noumea is also acceptable as a loss though a far better potential base for the Allies. Action in the Addu/Kiska area might really start bells ringing given your History.

If you also plan to hit the Tarawa/Makin area you just might get QBall running from pillar to post and make a mistake.

This is going to make good reading soon.


< Message edited by JeffK -- 2/3/2011 7:27:48 AM >


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Post #: 1493
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 1:09:17 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

I would say that English is the language used by default in government, medicine and much of higher education in India.


It's no accident that India got our call center business.

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Post #: 1494
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 3:16:27 PM   
John 3rd


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Hey, I understood it!

I think witpqs is right - there is merit in attacking for the sake of attacking as long as it's part of a well-thought-out plan and not just flying off the handle. Two things I can think of:

1) As witpqs is points out, it can put the notion into the opponent's head that you're willing to attack.
2) Sometimes, an attack has totally unforeseen consquences: the opponent makes a mistake, or overreacts, or does something rash. Heck that's what happened with the Doolittle Raid - a huge risk of a rare and valuable Allied asset to do something that really couldn't be done and wouldn't accomplish much even if it was done...only that it was done and led directly to the Battle of Midway.

Well, I've just stated the obvious. Sorry guys, I know you know all this stuff. But sometimes we forget to factor in item two merely because we CAN'T predict something of the sort happening. But I saw it happen in my games with Miller and John III, where wacky Allied attacks ended up prompting my opponents to do something wacky that really cost them.

Sometimes, bringing pressure to bear is worthwhile in and of itself.


"Wacky?" Wacky! I still hold that is was more fundamentally insane then wacky. Attempting to land on the Northern Home Isles in 1943. CRAZY!

Do you remember the stress and trauma of those game weeks Dan? I sank 100s of your ships, drove you out of Hokkaido, and YOU STILL KEPT COMING. I'm starting to get the cold shakes again...


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Post #: 1495
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 3:31:37 PM   
Canoerebel


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It was a nutty, captivating, amazing sequence, wasn't it?! Here's kind of how I remember the battle, John:

1. Allies get pretty decent strategic surprise. You catch wind of the invasion fleet approaching northern Japan, and you're wondering where they are heading (and I am too, somewhat!).

2. You had just finished withdrawing most of your Australian Expeditionary Army (don't make me relive that debacle!) from Oz to places much closer to Japan.

3. My invasion force came ashore on Hokkaido in relatively decent shape, but very quickly the wrath of Japan descended, sinking scores (hundreds?) of transports.

4. I managed to take Sopporro and another base or two or three, but you counterinvaded right behind me and chased my beleauged force right up the coast. While I was trying to figure out how to save my Hokkaido army, I landed a force on lightly garrisoned Sikhalin Island and managed to take both bases (and this proved the key moment in the battle). Then I surprised myself in evacuating a decent part of my Hokkaido army to Sikhalin Island. Winter had descended, so you had no chance to counterinvade for months.

5. Meanwhile, the KB and Kaigun arrived and we engaged in a bitter battle all around the Kuriles. I took a shellacking. I had already issued orders during one critical turn for the remnants of my fleet to withdraw, effectively giving up on the invasion, when I saw the possiblity to draw to an inside straight. I sent a bunch of PBY Liberators to the Allied airfields or two on Hokkaido and Sikhalin. I didn't have any base forces, but thought there was a shot they might sortie and find your capital ships unprotected. It worked, and how. Suddenly a bunch of IJN carriers were damaged. Then several more ran into Allied combat TFs when I somehow guessed exactly where one of your carrier TFs would end a turn.

6. As a result of all this, the KB was weakened considerably. Meantime, my carriers were totally out of aircraft...but I managed to land enough supply at Shikuka to rearm them. So suddenly, instead of having a totally depleted Allied carrier force facing an overwhelming and untouched KB, I had a totally potent carrier force facing a very dimished KB. And all that happened over the span of about two turns.

7. By the time spring arrive, the Allies had consolidated their hold on Sikhalin Island and the campaign had ended. My supply line was intact as were my carriers. I was going to be okay.

Man, what a battle!

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Post #: 1496
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 3:55:18 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: John 3rd

Do you remember the stress and trauma of those game weeks Dan? I sank 100s of your ships, drove you out of Hokkaido, and YOU STILL KEPT COMING. I'm starting to get the cold shakes again...



OK you two, get a room!!

(Or, start another game together. You're well matched.)

_____________________________

The Moose

(in reply to John 3rd)
Post #: 1497
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 3:57:35 PM   
Canoerebel


Posts: 21100
Joined: 12/14/2002
From: Northwestern Georgia, USA
Status: offline
I'm trying to be patient as I await the next turn from Q-Ball. He's over in the WitE room busily engaged in his new PBEM, but he didn't send the usual turn in our game last night. I'm anxious to get on with the invasions, but I take it that his lack of interest might indicate that he isn't aware that big things are going on at the moment.

Darn that WitE!

< Message edited by Canoerebel -- 2/3/2011 3:58:16 PM >

(in reply to Bullwinkle58)
Post #: 1498
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 4:39:09 PM   
witpqs


Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004
From: Argleton
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

It was a nutty, captivating, amazing sequence, wasn't it?! Here's kind of how I remember the battle, John:

1. Allies get pretty decent strategic surprise. You catch wind of the invasion fleet approaching northern Japan, and you're wondering where they are heading (and I am too, somewhat!).

2. You had just finished withdrawing most of your Australian Expeditionary Army (don't make me relive that debacle!) from Oz to places much closer to Japan.

3. My invasion force came ashore on Hokkaido in relatively decent shape, but very quickly the wrath of Japan descended, sinking scores (hundreds?) of transports.

4. I managed to take Sopporro and another base or two or three, but you counterinvaded right behind me and chased my beleauged force right up the coast. While I was trying to figure out how to save my Hokkaido army, I landed a force on lightly garrisoned Sikhalin Island and managed to take both bases (and this proved the key moment in the battle). Then I surprised myself in evacuating a decent part of my Hokkaido army to Sikhalin Island. Winter had descended, so you had no chance to counterinvade for months.

5. Meanwhile, the KB and Kaigun arrived and we engaged in a bitter battle all around the Kuriles. I took a shellacking. I had already issued orders during one critical turn for the remnants of my fleet to withdraw, effectively giving up on the invasion, when I saw the possiblity to draw to an inside straight. I sent a bunch of PBY Liberators to the Allied airfields or two on Hokkaido and Sikhalin. I didn't have any base forces, but thought there was a shot they might sortie and find your capital ships unprotected. It worked, and how. Suddenly a bunch of IJN carriers were damaged. Then several more ran into Allied combat TFs when I somehow guessed exactly where one of your carrier TFs would end a turn.

6. As a result of all this, the KB was weakened considerably. Meantime, my carriers were totally out of aircraft...but I managed to land enough supply at Shikuka to rearm them. So suddenly, instead of having a totally depleted Allied carrier force facing an overwhelming and untouched KB, I had a totally potent carrier force facing a very dimished KB. And all that happened over the span of about two turns.

7. By the time spring arrive, the Allies had consolidated their hold on Sikhalin Island and the campaign had ended. My supply line was intact as were my carriers. I was going to be okay.

Man, what a battle!


Well planned and all went according to the script.

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 1499
RE: One Weird Battle - 2/3/2011 6:13:07 PM   
vettim89


Posts: 3615
Joined: 7/14/2007
From: Toledo, Ohio
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

It was a nutty, captivating, amazing sequence, wasn't it?! Here's kind of how I remember the battle, John:

1. Allies get pretty decent strategic surprise. You catch wind of the invasion fleet approaching northern Japan, and you're wondering where they are heading (and I am too, somewhat!).

2. You had just finished withdrawing most of your Australian Expeditionary Army (don't make me relive that debacle!) from Oz to places much closer to Japan.

3. My invasion force came ashore on Hokkaido in relatively decent shape, but very quickly the wrath of Japan descended, sinking scores (hundreds?) of transports.

4. I managed to take Sopporro and another base or two or three, but you counterinvaded right behind me and chased my beleauged force right up the coast. While I was trying to figure out how to save my Hokkaido army, I landed a force on lightly garrisoned Sikhalin Island and managed to take both bases (and this proved the key moment in the battle). Then I surprised myself in evacuating a decent part of my Hokkaido army to Sikhalin Island. Winter had descended, so you had no chance to counterinvade for months.

5. Meanwhile, the KB and Kaigun arrived and we engaged in a bitter battle all around the Kuriles. I took a shellacking. I had already issued orders during one critical turn for the remnants of my fleet to withdraw, effectively giving up on the invasion, when I saw the possiblity to draw to an inside straight. I sent a bunch of PBY Liberators to the Allied airfields or two on Hokkaido and Sikhalin. I didn't have any base forces, but thought there was a shot they might sortie and find your capital ships unprotected. It worked, and how. Suddenly a bunch of IJN carriers were damaged. Then several more ran into Allied combat TFs when I somehow guessed exactly where one of your carrier TFs would end a turn.

6. As a result of all this, the KB was weakened considerably. Meantime, my carriers were totally out of aircraft...but I managed to land enough supply at Shikuka to rearm them. So suddenly, instead of having a totally depleted Allied carrier force facing an overwhelming and untouched KB, I had a totally potent carrier force facing a very dimished KB. And all that happened over the span of about two turns.

7. By the time spring arrive, the Allies had consolidated their hold on Sikhalin Island and the campaign had ended. My supply line was intact as were my carriers. I was going to be okay.

Man, what a battle!


Well planned and all went according to the script.



What's truly amazing is that after that the man had the audacity to post in my AAR a few months later that I was too aggressive going for Tarawa in the summer of 1943.

Forlorn Hopes will likely be the only game where we saw an Allied invasion of Japan in 1943 and a Japanese Invasion of India in 1945 (or was it late 1944?)

_____________________________

"We have met the enemy and they are ours" - Commodore O.H. Perry

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 1500
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