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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal (No Jrcar or Tony)

 
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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 12:27:12 PM   
aoffen

 

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 12:27:44 PM   
aoffen

 

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 12:28:21 PM   
aoffen

 

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 12:29:03 PM   
aoffen

 

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Obviously many more xAK's and xAP's




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< Message edited by aoffen -- 12/6/2011 12:30:51 PM >

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 12:31:47 PM   
aoffen

 

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Sorry messed that last file up. Here it is again.




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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 12:33:39 PM   
aoffen

 

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Have been using pickets on the SFO - PH route, but not in the SOPAC so much. So much area to cover!!

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Post #: 186
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 1:51:54 PM   
Nemo121


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What are your capabilities?

If I were you I'd suggest that you look at the whole Northern Oz operation as one huge delaying action conducted by two competent army officers. The thing with delaying actions is that they usually allow solid defences to form behind them --- meaning, in turn, that the best thing to do is to try to go around. How averse are you to risk?


Have you figured out the division of territories between them yet? The armour raid in China strikes me as more of a light cavalry type action - I believe one of your opponent's is light cav isn't he?

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 2:14:58 PM   
aoffen

 

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I think they are switching control to play to their strengths. Rob is the logistician and defensive warfare man. Tony (the Cav guy) is the go to guy for the offense. I know for sure they switched in China not long before Panzer Armee South struck. Its a smart way to tag team me and one thing I have learnt, is that these guys are smart.

I am absolutely sure they are occupying Darwin in order to deny it to me and give themselves time to fortify in the DEI. I am up for some risk but probably do not have the capability to do anything too adventurous right now, being 4 carriers down already. Lose the other 2 and I am hurting big time for the rest of this year. In 6-12 months it will be a different story I hope - by which time the opportunities will have diminished of course but not sure the is much I can do about that.

You have an evil idea?

Regards
Andrew

PS : Those 2 raiding IJN CV's and the CS all look to have gone down with each taking 8 x 1000lb penetrating bomb hits and the CS a couple of torps as well. They don't yet show up on the sunk ships table allthough their aircraft are showing as Ops and ground losses. May have also bagged 4 or 5 DD's which is nice. The BB Washington is badly hurt - she has 30 sys, 49 float and 18 engine damage. One of the torp hits was a critical and so she out of the war for a quite bit.

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/6/2011 2:22:49 PM   
Nemo121


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Evil idea? Perhaps.

Going dark now.... PM on its way

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/7/2011 8:59:27 AM   
CaptBeefheart


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Well done on attriting the KB.

Can't wait to see the suggestion from Nemo. A feint in the Aleutians while you land in force at Moulmein? A Timor grab cutting off the North OZ expedition? A seizure of Tabi and Tarawa to inderdict the supply of the Fiji/Pago cluster? Some sort of KB trap?

Cheers,
CC

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/8/2011 11:12:29 AM   
Nemo121


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I'm posting the text of the mail I sent aoffen - with his permission... This email contains my "low risk" approach to freeing things up as initially I thought aoffen would only be up for low risk operations.

" OK I've had a preliminary look and in the first round there are changes you can make without any force allocation changes:
1. China
A. You have a good line of supply from Chungking to the Changsha pocket but you haven't actually sent a force down the road to open it. Hence your forces in Changsha are really low on supplies. You could detach 10 AV to open this road and it'd boost the combat power of about 4,000 AV by 200%. So, well worth doing.
B. I recommend you destroy the IJA forces trapped south of Chungking. That will re-open your interior lines and allow you to shift forces more rapidly than the Japanese... which opens up options for you.

In the medium term you should make sure to move the 5,000+ AV in the north to pin down a large IJA force and then launch an offensive in the south aimed at Hong Kong. Based on what I see there you have more than enough AV to make a serious push to Hong Kong.


2. Burma:
You have 1800 AV at the front but could have 4,000 AV quite easily with just a little stripping of garrisons from places which will never be invaded - or which can be adequately defended by a combination of air and naval forces. I'd push them across the river from Kalemyo and towards Shwebo.

At much the same time I'd use paras to take Kathka or BHamo and then fly additional Brigades in by air. You do need to recon more in order to see what is there though first obviously.

The goal would be to open up the Burma front, open up the Burma Road and to get your forces toe to toe with the IJA where you can begin attriting them and forcing them to commit forward. Ideally, once committed forward you'd Inchon them behind and force them to rout to avoid getting cut off.


3. Nicobar Island and Trinkat are still yours.
Why not sub-land and air transport engineers and troops there and begin building them up? They are unlimited in terms of troop size and make a great jumping off point for an invasion of Northern Sumatra AND for Phuket ( which makes a great jumping off point for an invasion of Malaysia --- the threat of which helps win you Burma ).


4. You hold Enggano 6 hexes from Palembang.
I would suggest sub-landing a Bde there and then amphib landing at Cocos Islands ( which is low risk as it is totally on the edge of his perimeter and likely to be poorly held ). Using Cocos you can air transport in more to Enganno and build it up into a major base ( Size 8 Airfield ) which could dominate Southern Sumatra - in combination with landings in northern Sumatra at Sabang.

I think that these 4 actions co-ordinated together would completely blow open the Northern DEI/Burma/China portion of the map ( 9pm to midnight as it were ).



In the south/Australian axis.
You are about to retake Darwin and they've been VERY sloppy in allowing you about a half-dozen useful island bases in the midst of the DEI which are within PBY range of Darwin. So, take Darwin and begin flying troops into Bara and Obi. Once you take Babar ( within FT range of Darwin ) you can extend along an axis running from Darwin through Babar to Bara and Obi and then on to Manado. Once you've gotten Manado you can begin moving on Mindanao.

This axis maximises the utility of FT TFs and PBYs which acts to minimise the risk to your navy in developing this axis.



In the Pacific I'd simply try quick raids on Wake and Marcus with a view to dumping a couple of divisions on each and taking them.

Once you've done that what you'll see is that you'll have rendered everything south of the Marcus/Wake axis irrelevant to Japan AND you'll be threatening Mindanao AND you should be threatening landings in Sumatra ( north and south ) and Malaysia. Personally I'd go for Malaysia since that will collapse the Burma theatre and if handled right could allow the British and Chinese to join up allowing a grand land campaign into Korea proper. Plus, once you have Singapore there's no real problem in shutting off shipping into or out of Palembang.

So, basically, I think your position is good and there are many low-risk options available to you.

I think you could win the war even quicker with one or two high-risk gambits but if you want low to no risk then the above with the exception of the Marcus and Wake ops is the best low to no risk "water flowing around rocks" approach I can see.

Overall they've been sloppy in allowing small bases within PBY range to remain. You should take advantage of this and begin infiltrating into their operative depth before they even realise anything's happening."


After this Aoffen indicated an interest in some more high risk options. Without going into properly high risk I think the moderate risk options are as follows:
1. There are 1500 to 2,000 AV in Oz available for re-allocation at this instant. I would move them north to Ceylon ASAP. You could leave 500 AV behind to exploit the Darwin to Manado axis. So, 500 AV in Oz, 1,500 AV to Ceylon.

2. Push the attack into Burma with 2,000 AV ( no tanks ) with a view to getting the IJA to commit ground troops into Northern Burma but gather the other 3,000 AV ( including all the tanks ) in India.

From India/Ceylon you can then sail down (using evasive routing to avoid naval search missions ) and land at two places:
1. Victoria Point
2. Georgetown

You'd have to decide how you want to weight it... Do you want to take Singapore OR do you want to make a serious effort at taking Bangkok and actually really cutting off the IJA in Burma.

Personally I'd head for Singapore since once you can take that you can insert the Royal Navy into his SLOCs into Palembang and begin FT TFing units onto weakly held islands and begin infiltrating west along Northern Borneo with a view to linking up with the Australians working north to Mindanao from Darwin. Additionally if you got held a little south of Bangkok - which is what I'd expect if you weighted your advance towards Singapore - I would advise that once you had the IJA battled up in Canton and Hong Kong that you would cross the Chinese border with Vietnam and begin pushing eastward with a view to creating a vice for the IJA there:
1. 2,000 AV pressing south through Burma.
2. 1,000 AV stopped just south of Bangkok.
3. 4,000 AV+ pushing west from China through Vietnam.

Supported with aerial bombing of IJA ground forces eventually the Japanese would have to begin considering a naval and air evacuation of their forces and that'd be a great opportunity to really attrit them, pin the navy in place for a long-term ( 1 month long ) operation and conduct some optional offensives in the Pacific.

The key would be co-ordination. Basically you want to force him to react to:
1. The offensive in northern China with about 5,000 AV of Chinese troops
2. The capture of Marcus and Wake - which will necessitate garrisoning a whole new set of islands which are probably only weakly garrisoned now.
3. The invasion of Northern Burma
4. The attack into the Canton/Hong Kong axis by about 4,000 Chinese AV
5. The drive north from Darwin to Mindanao
6. The surprise landings at Victoria and Georgetown

within a fortnight of eachother. It could stretch out to a month if necessary but basically you want them to look at their reserves and say - we don't have enough to do everything, let's shorten the line and voluntarily withdraw.


In July 43 when you get proper CVs with Corsairs on board I'd make the jump from Marcus to the next set of islands with a view to basically linking the northern Borneon axis, the Darwin to Mindanao axis and the PH to Marcus to Iwo Jima axis up via a co-ordinated action to take Luzon. Luzon would be the fulcrum around which the three other axes turn. They also render irrelevant any IJA holdings south or west of them.

At the same time I'd have the Brits and Chinese - who would have joined up by this stage - fighting a land war through China with a view to taking Korea and establishing airbases within range of the Home Islands.

Lastly I'd then march up the island chain from Northern Luzon to Okinawa and from Okinawa via the island chain to Korea.


At that point you pick your place to invade.

This would take about 18 months but is basically a variant of what I did in a WiTP game vs Damian IIRC. There's nothing risky there until you have CV superiority in August '43. Victoria Point and Georgetown can go ahead without CV cover. You'll take losses but combat loading and immediate setting up of CAP should prevent the worst from happening.

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2011 3:24:25 AM   
aoffen

 

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< Message edited by aoffen -- 12/11/2011 3:26:30 AM >

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2011 3:25:49 AM   
aoffen

 

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21 - 29 Jan 1943

Pacific
The Battle of Gisborne ended up as a qualified success. We bagged 2 of the smaller IJN fleet CV's (Hiyo & Junyo) together with a CL and 4 or 5 DD's. During the second day of action as we cleaned up the surface combatants a CAP of 60 A6M3's suddenly appeared over his surviving DD's meaning KB was on the way. We turned hitched our skirts and ran. Fortunately (and it was a close run thing) the CV's got away but the BB Nth Carolina which had been badly winged in the previous day CV fight was caught and despatched by a 6 CV KB. The CA San Francisco and 3 old DD's were also caught too far north and all sunk by the hot pursuit. So in the end it was 2 CV's 1 CL, 5 DD's lost for the IJN vs 1 BB, 1 CA 3 DD's for me. A good win but not without some pain. My CV's ran around the south side of NZ and are now on the way back to Sydney to refit and recover all the damage incurred with their sprints and the air losses from the KB CAP.

Over at PH we have formed the mother of all convoys stuffed full of goodies. It contains 200k of troops, 15 squadrons, 200k of fuel and 200k of supplies packed into 170 ships and escorts including 3 new BB's and 6 CVE's. These will take the long route to Australia and provide the basis of offensive action out of Oz for the rest of this half year. I will send the 2 CV's from Sydney to meet them and escort them in. Need to make sure we don't get sighted here so caution in the watchword.

Australia
I am having problems here. I tried an assault on Darwin with 7th Aust Div plus numerous armour and inf brigades.. Total AV was 1100 and I got well and truly spanked at 1-26. The IJA then counterattacked and threw me back with very heavy losses. See below

Ground combat at Darwin (76,124)
Allied Deliberate attack
Attacking force 26091 troops, 368 guns, 1151 vehicles, Assault Value = 1100
Defending force 20591 troops, 228 guns, 468 vehicles, Assault Value = 667
Allied adjusted assault: 127
Japanese adjusted defense: 3381

Allied assault odds: 1 to 26 (fort level 5)

Combat modifiers
Defender: forts(+), leaders(+), preparation(-)
Attacker: disruption(-), supply(-)

Japanese ground losses:
208 casualties reported
Squads: 0 destroyed, 12 disabled
Non Combat: 1 destroyed, 18 disabled
Engineers: 0 destroyed, 19 disabled
Guns lost 7 (1 destroyed, 6 disabled)
Vehicles lost 67 (6 destroyed, 61 disabled)


Allied ground losses:
2300 casualties reported
Squads: 25 destroyed, 274 disabled
Non Combat: 24 destroyed, 32 disabled
Engineers: 2 destroyed, 26 disabled
Guns lost 32 (5 destroyed, 27 disabled)
Vehicles lost 104 (12 destroyed, 92 disabled)


Assaulting units:
7th Australian Division
Gull Battalion
2/7th Armoured Regiment
4th Armoured Brigade
2/6th Armoured Regiment
2/9th Armoured Regiment
3rd Motor Brigade
2/10th Armoured Regiment
6th Aus Cav Brigade
3rd Army Tank Brigade
1st Australian Army

Defending units:
8th Tank Regiment
Sasebo 6th SNLF
1st Ind. Engr Rgt /2
1st Engineer Co
38th Division
4th Tank Regiment
2nd Tank Regiment
19th Ind. Engineer Regiment
146th Infantry Rgt /2
106th JAAF AF Bn
26th Air Defense AA Regiment
1st Naval Construction Battalion
107th JAAF AF Bn
16th Army
30th JNAF AF Unit /1
46th JAAF AF Bn /1


then the counter attack

Ground combat at Darwin (76,124)
Japanese Shock attack
Attacking force 15257 troops, 156 guns, 385 vehicles, Assault Value = 638
Defending force 24047 troops, 361 guns, 825 vehicles, Assault Value = 627
Japanese adjusted assault: 874
Allied adjusted defense: 126

Japanese assault odds: 6 to 1

Combat modifiers
Defender: disruption(-), preparation(-)
Attacker: shock(+)

Japanese ground losses:
1143 casualties reported
Squads: 4 destroyed, 41 disabled
Non Combat: 0 destroyed, 22 disabled
Engineers: 8 destroyed, 50 disabled
Guns lost 9 (1 destroyed, 8 disabled)
Vehicles lost 33 (1 destroyed, 32 disabled)


Allied ground losses:
4819 casualties reported
Squads: 223 destroyed, 20 disabled
Non Combat: 410 destroyed, 52 disabled
Engineers: 15 destroyed, 6 disabled
Guns lost 70 (49 destroyed, 21 disabled)
Vehicles lost 206 (157 destroyed, 49 disabled)
Units retreated 7


My force is badly roughed up now with AV reduced to 600. My main issue is supplies. I took forever building Tenant Creek up to AF level 7 and have brought 2 army HQ's into the theatre to help attract supplies. Even still I just can't get enough through the system. Daly Waters and Katherine won't repair build mainly thru lack of supply and I can't figure out how to support a force up here. I need at least 2 full divisions plus armour and support to retake Darwin and it looks to be impossible. Anyone with any good ideas?

Burma China to follow in the next post




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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2011 3:33:01 AM   
aoffen

 

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Burma
The offensive into North and Central Burma has begun. He doesn't seem to have appreciated the size of the force I have in the centre, or at least hasn't reacted to it in any noticeable way. We are now across the river and moving on the rail hex from both crossing hexes. A Cav unit is already across the rail to the south as a sacrificial blocker to stop troops heading north or south. Para's are in Dimapur ready to go. I opened the air offensive with attacks on Mytkina & Lashio to distract him as the main thrust and have now hammered Katha for 2 turns. Will go back to attack Mytkina next turn. In a couple of turns we will have 6 div equivalents next to Katha and astride the rail way. Its going well but I am suspicious of the reaction.

China in next post




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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2011 3:50:00 AM   
aoffen

 

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China
On the Burma frontier Paoshan fell. He sent 4 Divisions so I was unable to resist effectively. An IJA unit appeared at Kunming confirming he is trying to link up with the Paohsan force. We have moved on on the armoured thrust at Kweiyang with sufficient strength. Will wait for the remaining troops to arrive so I can attempt a crushing blow rather than a weaker attack that will allow him to retreat intact. After taking care of these guys we will have to march a fair proportion of these troops to Kunming and stop this drive. Retaking Paoshan may be too tough unless the Western Allies have good success in Burma.






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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2011 3:53:03 AM   
aoffen

 

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Response to Nemo's strategy suggestions coming in a few hours.

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RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2011 5:34:37 AM   
aoffen

 

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Re : Future Strategic Developments

First of all thanks to Nemo for all the thought and effort he put in to that response. It is really really appreciated.


The following quote from his post really summarises the Nemo Strategy.

quote:

The key would be co-ordination. Basically you want to force him to react to:
1. The offensive in northern China with about 5,000 AV of Chinese troops
2. The capture of Marcus and Wake - which will necessitate garrisoning a whole new set of islands which are probably only weakly garrisoned now.
3. The invasion of Northern Burma
4. The attack into the Canton/Hong Kong axis by about 4,000 Chinese AV
5. The drive north from Darwin to Mindanao
6. The surprise landings at Victoria and Georgetown


The suggestions are great - I particularly like part 6. Man wouldn't that cause some serious puckering on the other side of the table?

The Burma / China strategy is achievable. The Burma offensive is underway with 3500 AV and strong air support. I hadn't considered offensive action with the Chinese but Nemo is right. I have enough AV's in the south and north to push him harder than I currently am - especially at the same time as we are pushing in Burma. After the Kweiyang pocket is reduced we will send some forces to Kunming to shore up that flank but the rest will head south to join a push towards the coast. In the north I am nervous about leaving the terrain but a push on Nanyang in conjunction with the move in the south is worth a crack. Hopefully the effect of 3 co-ordinated pushes will stretch him.

Regarding Marcus, the drive from Darwin and the end run in Malaya, I have been racking my mind as to how to proceed and my issue is do I really have the capability to achieve all these goals in the the next 6 months? I fear not - I can't even see how I am going to capture Darwin at this point! KB turns up and sows havoc and destruction at at will and we are reduced to hiding in the shadows (ala the Gisborne battle). My LBA pools are more or less empty at this point and we will take heavy losses in Burma. Until the Hellcat arrives and the Warhawk/Thunderbolt availability surge in mid '43 I am struggling to keep my squadrons at full strength.

Am I being too cautious and conservative? I just can't see leaping long distances without CV parity resulting in anything other than cut off troops and heavy shipping losses. What am I missing? If I could see how to take Darwin things might be clearer for an LBA based drive into the DEI but that eludes me at present. That would also allow me to free forces to send to Ceylon for the Malay end run. How the hell do I take Darwin??????

Regards
Andrew

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Post #: 197
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2011 2:46:44 PM   
Nemo121


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Hook left from Melbourne to Port Hedland and then to Derby +/- Wyndham.

With a brute force approach focused on dumping several hundred thousand tons of supplies + four or five additional divisions of troops ( which you DO have available within Australian Divisions ) either landed by ship or just marched up from south-eastern Oz you can take Darwin. I've had success in similar situations by just dumping huge gobs of supply at Wyndham etc and lettting it trickle into Darwin.


Of course, if you're really ballsy you could just ignore Darwin once you take Derby and the base to Darwin's north, put 300 fighters on CAP there and dare the Japanese into a force on force fight with you. From that base you can exploit north and bomb and bombard Darwin until it runs out of supply and then take it at your leisure. You never see people talking about taking that base but in one game I did just that and cut off ten divisions in the Australian hinterland ( after luring them there with a show of weakness ;-) ). That base can be built up to a very respectable AF size. I put BBs and CAs etc at it to defend it, shredded his air force whenever it tried to take them out and traded him BB for BB and CA for CA when he came bombarding.

Eventually he brought his CVs into action to really reduce it. I fought him tooth and nail, losing about 300 or 400 planes in return for gutting KB's flight wings ( killed about 300 of them ) and then unleashed my invasion of Marcus/Wake and the Aleutians a week after he'd just gutted KB in a sideshow. A week after that my opponent resigned. Your opponents won't resign but there's no absolute need to take Darwin, you can use it as a potential fulcrum to draw him in, get him to commit KB and then allow you to unleash your blue ocean offensives without fear of KB.


Really, if you look at the position you don't NEED Darwin. You need A base in that region from which to springboard.... it being Darwin would be nice but not essential. Hell, if you were all maskirovka-y and sneaky it is actually better for that base not to be Darwin since that plays into a narrative whereby a counter-invasion ( and commitment of the reserves you want to be out of place when you hit Marcus and Georgetown ) is possible --- and indeed, subtly, encouraged by you.

The easiest way to lead people is to make them believe that there's an opportunity and that they are following their agenda. Manage their concept of what is and isn't achievable and, assuming you understand their motivations, they'll happily do whatever it is you wished them to do under their own steam, wasting their initiative to do precisely what you wished them to do.... opening up opportunities for you to do what you wish unto them in other theatres.

< Message edited by Nemo121 -- 12/11/2011 2:53:04 PM >


_____________________________

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Well, that's that settled then.

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Post #: 198
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/12/2011 12:00:01 AM   
aoffen

 

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Nemo

You are a bit of an evil bastard aren't you?
(Not to self : Have him my side rather than as an opponent in future)

I am pretty sure Rob and Tony are rather worried about an assault into the DEI and Sumatra. A few things they have said in emails and in various conversations have indicated that and its a good reason for them to have taken out Darwin, Pt Headland etc as a forward defence strategy. Essentially you are saying I should make a show of playing into their hands by obviously moving on Darwin whilst quietly preparing a major blow elsewhere timed to coincide with a major fight in the Darwin area.

The old suck him in with China, Burma and Darwin and then sucker punch him in Malaya trick eh?

I love these forums

Cheers
Andrew

(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 199
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/12/2011 1:58:03 AM   
Nemo121


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The easiest way to mislead anyone is to show them that which their prejudices/beliefs are leading them to expect. Very few people are disciplined enough to look more deeply when things are unfolding precisely in accordance with their own, brilliant masterplan.


So, one option I always have is to find out my opponent's masterplan and feed it back to him until he chokes on it before disemboweling him with a knife he never saw coming. Simple, brutal, effective.


So, if Darwin and the southern DEI are their own expectations which you feed back to them, what's the knife you are going to disembowel them with while they're busy chewing on their own brilliance?

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Well, that's that settled then.

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Post #: 200
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/12/2011 6:02:38 AM   
aoffen

 

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From: Brisvegas, Australia
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At this stage I am leaning in favour of a landing in Burma/Malaya. Mainly because of my limited CV assets at this point. This gives me a better chance of deploying LBA before KB can turn up. Like the idea of landing on Bathurst Is too.

So am thinking along the lines of this as a revised plan for the next 6 months :

Stage 1
Get the big convoy to Oz. Relocate some offensive assets and shipping to Perth

Stage 2
Move on Horn Island and Carnarvon while threatening (but holding back) on the overland route.

Stage 3
Take Pt Hedland and Para drop on Groote Eylandt. At the same time Shift troops to Ceylon
(Can see 4~5 inf div being available for this move with more if I send the USMC. Struggling to find the armour at the moment)

Stage 4
Land on Bathurst Island and take Broome, move assault shipping and CV's to Ceylon. Duke it out.

Stage 5
Seize Nicobar, Victoria Point and/or Georgetown

Concurrent with all this is continuing the offensive in Burma (6 Divs) and start one in China.

How does that all sound?

(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 201
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/15/2011 8:22:03 AM   
aoffen

 

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From: Brisvegas, Australia
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Update on Burma and the Shakespearean conundrum
To drop or not to drop?

The op in Burma is going well, the China offensive not so well.

In Burma
We threw a light cav screen across the main rail line to stop reinforcements or escapees moving strategically. He moved a division in from Schwebo and kicked us out of the way but by that time we had 2 divisions across the rail line in the first jungle hex. We threw a column of recon and support troops that were trying to escape south back into Katha inflicting 900 casualties for 60. He seems to be scrambling to meet our attack, pulling back sugnificant troops from the Paoshan thrust to reinforce Burma. It will be slow going because of the terrain but capturing Katha looks possible depending on how many troops he can pump in there from Myitkyina. To many and the Chinese troops coming from Ledo can threaten, too little and Katha falls easily.

So the big question. We have 2 Chindit brigades ready to deploy from Dimapur and plenty of C-47's to drop them. Do we drop at Bhamo and try and cut his other coms line to the north - the dirt road from Lashio to Myitkyina.

The argument in favour of a drop - we can isolate the whole northern region, make supply an issue for him and threaten to destroy the whole northern force

The argument against - he has substantial strength moving from Paoshan to Ledo who are well positioned to crush the para screen. He will be forced to send those troops up that road and we lose 2 Chindit Brigades albeit if he does this he uses his reinforcements to keep the dirt road open and they aren't fighting us near Katha or counter attacking from Schwebo.

So....do I drop?

In China
Our seige of Kweiyang is painful and slow with our attacks only achieving 1-2 and 1-1. Forts are now at 1 but our troops are bleeding too. Meanwhile a relief force is moving up and they will brush aside our screen in the south. Its a race and I am not sure we will win it. Our move from Kweilin is running into stiff resistance with brigade strength units in each hex. He is threatening Changsha and our Northern push against Nanyang has been called off. Intel shows 36 units with at least 3 div equivalents and armour in the hex. Its a stand off as they threaten to drive on Sian if we move from our blocking position.

What to do?





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(in reply to aoffen)
Post #: 202
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/15/2011 10:36:46 AM   
kfsgo

 

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Joined: 9/16/2010
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quote:

ORIGINAL: aoffen

Darwin Issues



It's a bit late now, but you may want to try it again in future, so:

Contrary to popular belief, supply does flow from Alice Springs to Darwin. Not often - twice a week if you hold it and once a week if you don't and units in-hex are drawing their own supplies, but it does flow. En-route losses are high - ~70%. That is a big problem if you do hold it, since the base has a supply draw limit, but not such a big problem if you don't, since individual units will draw an appropriate extra amount to compensate.

So - in your situation (Darwin held by enemy), the problem is that your army will only move supplies up from Alice Springs once per week. If the intermediate bases had stockpiles they'd draw on those more often, but it's not strictly necessary, getting them to that point would take years and frankly it's probably more effort than it's worth. What you need to do is:

- Install a top-level HQ at Alice Springs and make sure it's as full of kit as you can make it;
- Send to Darwin three times as many troops as you'd need to evict the Japanese if you didn't have supply issues;
- Figure out which day supply movement occurs on; further movements will be on this day +7, +14 etc
- Set the whole force to 'bombard' the day before this occurs, so that when it does they draw a double supply load;
- Don't attack with the whole force, as they'll use up all their kit in two days and you'll be left hanging for the remaining five; rotate forces in and out of reserve so that you always have a supplied fraction of the force active, either on offense or defense;
- Repeat ad nauseam.

Do that and you'll push through them in the end. "Simple", but time-consuming and not easy; you probably don't have three times whatever you sent available, there are probably more useful things they could be doing, and if you're going in without knowing how the times work out it could take you up to two weeks just to figure that out, which gives the Japanese plenty of time to reinforce/land 10 divisions in Sydney Harbour/whatever, so if you can at all go by sea (or skip Darwin entirely) that's preferable. If you really, absolutely gotta do it overland, though...

(in reply to aoffen)
Post #: 203
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/15/2011 11:17:27 AM   
bbbf

 

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From: Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
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Drop the Chindits, if you think it will disrupt his efforts, its worth the losses - even if he crushes them, he has to spend time and supplies to do it. Maintain a cadre and they will rebuild quick enough.

It's what the paras are for and you will get plenty of them over time. They are a wasted asset, if you just leave them for the 'perfect' moment or use them as infantry.


< Message edited by bbbf -- 12/15/2011 11:18:24 AM >


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(in reply to kfsgo)
Post #: 204
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/16/2011 3:20:13 AM   
Nemo121


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At this stage you need to either commit to Burma or not. So, I'd suggest dropping at Bhamo after pounding it with every bomber you have for a day. That way the paras will actually have a chance of taking it. Worst case scenario they don't take it but cut the supplies going north and allow you capture IJA bases in northern Burma... which lets you suck IJA divisions into the fight and out of his reserve.

You need to be sure to keep the pressure on in China no matter what to keep the reserve thinned out also.

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Well, that's that settled then.

(in reply to bbbf)
Post #: 205
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/10/2013 12:29:15 AM   
aoffen

 

Posts: 494
Joined: 6/7/2002
From: Brisvegas, Australia
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Status Update
Just though I would let people know (not sure anyone is actually interested but you never know) that this game is still alive. We have had a few hiatus's over the last 12 months but have now reached Feb 45. I will post a screenshot when I get home tonight but in summary.....

Things have gone better for the Allies than I expected. After a failed landing in the Andaman Islands in Sept 1943 and heavy naval losses (our darkest hour), things started to turn around. We eventually seized the northern end of Sumatra and rolled down to Palembang by early 44. From there, combining with the overland drive from Burma, we took Malaya and Java and effectively captured or destroyed most of the Japanese oil supply by early 44. Things then started to accelerate. Saigon soon fell and in June '44 we made a big jump, landing on Formosa. This triggered some big naval and air battles around the Philippines which we got the better of and for the first time we began to seriously attrit the IJN. Formosa fell quite quickly so we started a B-29 night bombing campaign from the northern tip of Formosa (HR only allows manpower bombing by night) and then jumped to the mainland and began the liberation of China. While our land forces set out on the liberation of Chungking (achieved in Jan 45) we leapt ahead again and landed on Moppo (SE tip of Korea) on Christmas Day 1944. As of 10 Feb we control the south coast of Korea, all of Formosa, Okinawa, the Chinese coast from Shanghai to Hongkong and inland to Changsha with a narrow corridor to Chungking. Tokyo, Osaka, Kobe and Nagoya have been ravaged by firebombing. The Japanese are short of supply and out of fuel but still have a very credible Air Force and army. The navy is almost gone with the exception ironically of his CV force. He probably still has 6 fleet CV's. Preparations are underway now for the invasion of the home islands, although we need a substantial air offensive first to attrit his air power. My biggest weakness is my fighter pools. I am still short of all modern fighters and awash in older generation models. Bomber pools are much healthier. My CV's now act as a mobile fighter base protecting troop convoys from his LBA and I can attest the Allied Death Star effect is real and deadly - not much gets thru 800 Corsairs, Hellcats and Seafires on CAP. The weather is crap in Feb so hopefully after consolidation for a few weeks now I can start the air offensive in March with at least some airframes in the pools and decent weather and we will see how we go.

Can provide more detail if people are interested.
Cheers
Andrew

(in reply to aoffen)
Post #: 206
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/10/2013 12:51:40 AM   
CaptBeefheart


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Joined: 7/4/2003
From: Seoul, Korea
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Color me interested. That's some interesting late game action that I'm sure many would be happy to see more details on.

Sounds like a great comeback.

Cheers,
CC

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(in reply to aoffen)
Post #: 207
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2013 12:22:40 PM   
aoffen

 

Posts: 494
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From: Brisvegas, Australia
Status: offline
Ok Some shots of the game status.
Firstly China.
The first photo is just a screen shot of the current map. Some comments follow on the next post which will be an annotated map





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(in reply to aoffen)
Post #: 208
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2013 12:34:15 PM   
aoffen

 

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Joined: 6/7/2002
From: Brisvegas, Australia
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After landing at Amoy we thrust West, North and East. The Westerly thrust was relative weak (about 2 divisions+) and aimed at Hong Kong. Most of the combat power headed North with the objective of relieving Chungking and East to Shanghai. There was some hard fighting at the crossroads 2 hexes north of Amoy and at Chuhsien and Hangchow but we finally captured Shanghai about 2 days ago and all objectives have now been achieved. During this campaign I figure we have destroyed about 7~8 IJA divisions and have another 3 besieged at Hangchow taking roughly 10 IJA divisions out of his OOB. Friendly losses have been relatively light with 2 divisions and about 3 Brigades banged up and in need of significant rest and rebuild. Chinese forces are now flowing out and taking supplies and replacements.








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(in reply to aoffen)
Post #: 209
RE: Aussies v Aussies - Being clubbed like a baby seal ... - 12/11/2013 12:37:20 PM   
aoffen

 

Posts: 494
Joined: 6/7/2002
From: Brisvegas, Australia
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The situation in Korea looks like this with an annotated map following




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(in reply to aoffen)
Post #: 210
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