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RE: Disaster at Colombo

 
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RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 10:01:56 AM   
CaptBeefheart


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I've got a few things to mention just to make things more confusing. I'm doing a beta game game now, so your mileage may vary, but I found that 50 EXP/70 Low Naval skill-piloted B-25s rack up a lot of skip bombing hits (i.e. naval bombing at 1000 ft.). They are now more useful like they were in WITP. Also, early on I tried some fighter sweeps and they don't seem as effective as they used to be (either that or in Ironman the Japanese are much tougher--could be).

I also like the P-40K and its higher operational rate than the P-38 for CAP. The air war should improve for you when those come in.

Anyway, best of luck. Rooting for the underdog is an American tradition.

Cheers,
CC

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Post #: 181
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 1:55:32 PM   
Canoerebel


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I, too, have found the P-40K an effective Allied fighter (relatively speaking).

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Post #: 182
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 7:04:23 PM   
GreyJoy


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I've taken a deep look at planes stats and, as for as i understand, the "second best" rule won't change much from the 20k limit rule...most of allied fighters have their best second on the range between 15 and 20k...so what changes?

Anyway, two more days have passed by. 9th and 10th Feb are gone and nothing really happened, despite a jap ACM raider that sunk a couple of AKLs near wellington (NZ).
At Singa he delib attacked and got a 1-2 but forts are down to 3...the air power really changes land combat...

Ok, you're right...my CVs have been ordered to look for Jap raiders in CENTPAC...let's see what i can find!

More turns tonight...

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Post #: 183
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 8:48:23 PM   
Nomad


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The P-40K will be able to operate up to 31,000 and your P-47s and P-51s will be able to operate at 31,000 or higher. Hurricane IIcs can go to 31,000 also.

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Post #: 184
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 9:16:12 PM   
FatR

 

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Hurricanes are your best fighters, until Lightnings arrive. Oh, and B-17s. Use the latter carefully and try not to expend them in small attacks, mass is very important for airfield-destroying raids they can excel at. I agree, that they have better uses than NavSearch. Use obsolete 2E bombers, like Hudsons, which will die anyway upon encountering Japanese CAP, to support Catalinas searchers. Use modern 2E bombers, like Marauders and especially Mitchells, for skipbombing attacks. With reasonable levels of LowN skill, they murder all unarmored ships and have good chances of getting past non-KB CAP even with no escort. Use 4E bombers to disable your opponent's bases.

< Message edited by FatR -- 4/19/2011 9:26:09 PM >

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Post #: 185
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 10:54:32 PM   
GreyJoy


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Ok but does this rule favours only the Allies? If so is it really fair?

Two more days into the war. 13th and 14 Feb 1942
The KB springs up east of Noumea...i discovered her only because a groups of 6 zeros performed a sweep mission over the empy base of Noumea...that means my OZ Convoy is in danger!!...Will try to escape moving south east of Pago Pago towards Bora bora...there i should be safe.

Another deliberate attack at Singa...still 1-2 in my favour but the japs managed to down another fort (level 2 now)...the constant bombing of 200+ IJN bombers is making really the difference.
In China he's bombing back to stone age all my bases in Central China..no supplies are left by now...we're ready to be invaded and defeated.

His subs are making my life hard in I.O....another AK is gone today torpedoed by a sub near Diego Garcia.

The KB down there in SOPAC may mean he's really going for Oz...in that case i badly need to push through my convoy!...will try to use the map southern border in order to avoid his search planes...but my TFs are starting to have fuel shortage...cannot linger there forever in the middle of nowhere... Harsh times for the good ones

Ok, i'll try to concentrate my 4Es and use them wisely...let's just hope i can get them to oz in time...

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Post #: 186
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 10:58:31 PM   
Nomad


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No, because his Oscars and Zeros can overfly your P-39D, P-40E, Hurricane IIb, Buffalo, etc.

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Post #: 187
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/19/2011 11:01:23 PM   
GreyJoy


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Thx Nomad, i'll talk to Rader and see if he's ok with this change!

Thx again

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Post #: 188
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/20/2011 10:31:05 PM   
GreyJoy


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15th to 19th Feb 1942

The KB moved from New Caledonia eastwards...paid a visit at Suva (FiJi), bombed the hell out of the port (sinking the lone AM that was parked there) and then moved back again towards the Marshalls...he brought in the whole combined fleet...CVs and fast BBs... luckly he didn't go any further and my convoy can now resume its journey towards Oz...

At Singa in 4 days i counted something like 1600 bombers over the base...every day not less than 400 planes pounded Singa's AF...the combined land assault managed to get only 1-2 but the forts are now down to 1!
At Sebang my dutch boys are repulsing the assaults of 2 jap Rgts...but losses are high and forts are down to 0...the last ducth base in SRA-DEI is falling...
The only good thing in this theatre has been the sinking of a whole supply convoy directed to Sebang that passed too close to our 9.2 CD guns at Singa...1 DD, several PB and some 6 AKs have been badly damaged or sunk.
The intel says he's moving the whole Army (the 25th) that conquered Batavia back to Malaya via-mersing...Singa's days are really about to end.

In China the constant bombing of Kienko (Central China - north of Chungking) managed to destroy our supplies stocks. Now it's been 4 days that the base is completely out of supplies...with 8 jap units marching at the gates think it's time to move back to Chengtu...
Lanchow in the north is being encirled...not much i can do to stop him...

The sub activity in I.O. (near Karachi) is still very high. I think he's using Rangoon as his advanced sub base in the area. I'm placing ASW TFs in all the critical routes...but the fight is fierce and balanced...during the last 4 days we've lost 2 AKs foran enemy sub badly damaged (i hope!).

CV Soryu has been taken away from the "sunk list".... that bastard ship is still afloat

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Post #: 189
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/21/2011 12:11:09 AM   
ny59giants


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India -

Using Buffalos as CAP will get them and their precious pilots killed. You may have to concede control of the skies to him for a few months and pull back your fighters to train up the pilots until they are in the mid-60s in Air experience. Don't forget to do some training at 100' on Sweep to raise their Straf experience up, but more importantly your Defend experience. I waited until the Hurricanes IIa and IIb came out and then mass them over important bases. If you try to face him with a couple of 12 or 16 plane fighter groups he will send in massive waves to kill you.

I hope you have sent the few at start B-17 groups here. I upgrade them all to B-17E models as the D model have no rear gunner and die quickly. Train them up on Ground. Base them at Calcutta and without warning set them at 9000' and port attack on Rangoon. Anything lower and his medium AA guns come into effect.

You have three mobile Indian CD guns. I send one to Chittagong, one to Diamond Harbor, and the other to Viza....(I cannot remember how to spell it all out.

You will get a large AA Bde at Colombo. Ship it back to India and base it a base that he is hitting with Lily, Sally, or Helens. In my game I have it at Ledo with another Heavy AA and BF so I have 120 heavy AA guns there. He is paying a price to kill my C-47 transports.

Use Hudsons for ASW and Naval search. One of the best defenses against his subs is just finding them. If I have to press them into immediate use, I set them for 40% ASW/Search, 30% training, and 20% rest once their morale is at 99. If their morale goes down then check their leaders and make sure you are not using them on extended range.

Viza and the base next to it get a brigade and a BF to start building up forts. Calcutta should be expanding the AF to 7 so you can upgrade planes and then over to forts.

Make sure your LCUs are prepping for their base along with Army and Command HQs. Many players get lazy when it come to prepping.

Good Luck!!


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Post #: 190
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/21/2011 12:30:14 AM   
GreyJoy


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20th-21st Feb

The KB hasn't gone away...it moved south towards NZ...attacked the port of Wellington sinking some 10 ships parked there ...my convoy has been ordered again to move back eastwards...really running out of fuel...it may become a big problem :-(

In India i really don't know how i can defend all those distant places without spreading too much my forces...the indian units have an exp and a morale so low that those experienced japs divisions would eat them for breakfast.

Unfortunately no 4Es are in India...they are all enrouted towards Oz ... In India i only have a couple of p-39 units and 3 Maradeurs...with no replacements these bomber units are pretty useless ...have to blame myself for this...didn't plan enough...really i wasn't thinking that by march i had to think about defending India...

Seband fell today. Now we've lost our last base in Sumatra...when singa will be down the door for India will be open...

Thx NY59

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Post #: 191
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/21/2011 2:22:19 AM   
ADB123

 

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quote:

Seband fell today. Now we've lost our last base in Sumatra...when singa will be down the door for India will be open...


Which LCUs do you currently have in India proper?

What LCUs do you currently have in Ceylon?

Which LCUs will arrive at Aden or Cape Town during the next 4 weeks?

Are the 4Es that you have going to Oz on board ships or are they island hopping?

If they are on board ships, where are they?

Do you have any forces (LCUs or AC) on their way to Oz via Cape Town?

Do you have your Indian combat troops set to "rest" in non-malarial bases?

What troops do you have building up the Forts in Karachi, Bombay, Madras and Calcutta?

Consider starting to send the Engineering units that arrive in the Continental US to the "East Coast" and then send them to Cape Town. You can then send them to Oz, India or both. Sure, it will take two months, but even once your opponent lands anywhere in Force it will still take him a long time to move around either Oz or India. They are both big.

BTW - your experiences in Colombo and now Auckland should be enough of a lesson that you start to follow Rule # 1 regarding Ships in Port:

Rule #1 Regarding Ships in Port - DO NOT LEAVE ANY SHIPS IN ANY PORTS WHERE THE KB CAN ATTACK AND YOU CAN"T DEFEND WITH AS MANY LAND-BASED PLANES AS THE KB CAN PUT IN THE AIR

If you aren't sure what to do with your ships, or if you don't have an immediate need for them, send them somewhere the KB can't go.

Good luck -

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Post #: 192
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/21/2011 2:33:23 AM   
ny59giants


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quote:

In India i really don't know how i can defend all those distant places without spreading too much my forces...the indian units have an exp and a morale so low that those experienced japs divisions would eat them for breakfast.


There are a few places in India that you have to be prepared to defend. Chittagong as he can do a short hook. I did that in my game as Japan. Diamond Harbor to get to Calcutta. Viza and the base next to it. This combined with landing at Chittagong can be a powerful pincher around Calcutta. Madras is tough to land at due to the urban bonus. Ceylon is one to get an unsinkable CV to launch into India from. Karachi and Bombay are self evident. You MUST set a place for your low experienced troops to prep for as once they reach 100% prep, their experience goes up. Look to spend PP to change leaders for some of those Indian divisions (look for high inspiration and admin). High aggression and land rating are good once the division get over 50 experience level.

Find some bomber units in USA that are not permanently restricted and send to Eastern USA. From there you can send them to Cape Town without transports needed. It may take a few months, but you need to plan ahead in this area.

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Post #: 193
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/22/2011 8:22:59 AM   
GreyJoy


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22-26th Feb 1942

The KB seems to be gone for now...she disappeared in the Rabaul area...

Singa is falling. Japan brought in 3500 AVs from Java and now, with the forts gone, with the sky darkened by hundreds of jap bombers, my brave soldiers didn't manage to repulse the enemy's attacks. During the last 2 days japan obtained a double 1-1 and now my AV at Singa is less than 500...tomorrow, maybe 2 more days...but for the 1st of March i'm pretty sure the gates of India will be open.

In China 1000 jap AVs conquered an emptied Kienko (sp?!) - north of Chungking in Central China - while my troops are concentrating in the last 3 bases (Chengtu, Chungking and idontrememberthename).
Kumming is being sieged by more 1000 jap AVs that achieved an 1-1....the road that leads from Burma to China is now closed.

In India i have placed at Viza, Calcutta and at a chokepoint between these two location my best forces. I have two full Indian divisions guarding the possible landings, along with 2 arty and 2 AA units each. 2 Aus bde have been moved to Colombo and the 18th UK Div is prepping and building at Bombay. Some Armoured units that arrived at Aden have been sent to Oz...hopefully they will arrive in time. Colombo recieved some more 2 Indian Bdes and some heavy AA units. Indian tank units are resting at Madras ready to be moved at Viza if the enemy shows any intention of landing there. I'm moving the 3 CD units as you suggested ny59.

Karachi is building very slowly cause i've sent my eng units to build forts in the south...

The main problem related to the defence of India now is the air- power. I'm trying to figure out how i can concentrate my air power near the possible landing locations without dispersing my air units too much.
Do you think i need to change those US air units arrived from Cape town in India and attach them to SouthEast Asia HQ? Does it change anything if an air unit attached to HQ "X" is operating from a base attached to HQ "Y" ??

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RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/22/2011 8:50:54 AM   
ny59giants


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I have heard that you get better coordination with your bombers if there is a HQ at the base along with each of the air units belonging to the same HQ. Thus,you may want to assign all your 4e American bombers to 10th Air Force HQ. I would wait till later in the game as PP are too valuable at this point in the game.

Have you or are you able to move the few non-restricted Chinese units towards India?? Once rebuilt they come to over 1500 Assault Value. They should have started the game in the western part of China.

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Post #: 195
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/22/2011 8:57:09 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: ny59giants

I have heard that you get better coordination with your bombers if there is a HQ at the base along with each of the air units belonging to the same HQ. Thus,you may want to assign all your 4e American bombers to 10th Air Force HQ. I would wait till later in the game as PP are too valuable at this point in the game.

Have you or are you able to move the few non-restricted Chinese units towards India?? Once rebuilt they come to over 1500 Assault Value. They should have started the game in the western part of China.



Unfortunately Burma fell so fast and the situation in China was so grim that i couldn't move anything back to Burma. Also i didn't found any non-restricted chinese units in my rooster...

Yes, at this stage i don't have any PP left to be used for "coordination" pourposes...

10th Air Force HQ? Is it in India? Why should i assign my american bombers in India to an HQ which is not there and does not belong to the SouthEast Asia general HQ?

Again: Thanks a lot

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Post #: 196
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/22/2011 1:36:51 PM   
ny59giants


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The Tenth USAAF HQ arrives at Aden on 1 May 42.

Chinese 6th Corp is at Tuyun broken down into 49 Div, 55 Provisional Div, and 93 Div. If you combined them all, it would cost 336 PP to buy them out and once its TO&E is filled out has 873 AV.

Chinese 5th Corp (954 AV) is spread out at Paoshan (36 Div [57 PP], 88 Div [57 PP]); Tsuyung (200 Div [60 PP], 96 Div [60PP], 22 New Div [34PP]): and Mengtze (2 Res Div [51PP]).

I would try to get them moving towards Ledo, if possible, even if they have to go through the mountains and take months to get there. You have plenty of supply in India (not in China) to use them.

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Post #: 197
RE: Disaster at Colombo - 4/23/2011 1:00:27 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: ny59giants

The Tenth USAAF HQ arrives at Aden on 1 May 42.

Chinese 6th Corp is at Tuyun broken down into 49 Div, 55 Provisional Div, and 93 Div. If you combined them all, it would cost 336 PP to buy them out and once its TO&E is filled out has 873 AV.

Chinese 5th Corp (954 AV) is spread out at Paoshan (36 Div [57 PP], 88 Div [57 PP]); Tsuyung (200 Div [60 PP], 96 Div [60PP], 22 New Div [34PP]): and Mengtze (2 Res Div [51PP]).

I would try to get them moving towards Ledo, if possible, even if they have to go through the mountains and take months to get there. You have plenty of supply in India (not in China) to use them.


Unfortunately mate this is the situation in China/Burma right now...no way to march through the mountains (the burma road is closed in both ways) in time to get to India before the japs close the door...the allies are doomed in this part of the map

Beyond that i spent my PPs to get the more units i could from US to Oz...i barely have 80 PPs right now...




Attachment (1)

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Post #: 198
Singapore Falls - 4/23/2011 10:18:00 AM   
GreyJoy


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AFTER ACTION REPORTS FOR Feb 25, 26 42


the 26th is a sad day for the western powers. Singapore, after a long a bloody siege, falls, giving more than 30k pows to the japs and, more importantly, opening de facto the second stage of the war. Now, with the whole DEI-SRA-MALAYA-PI(execpt for a neutralized Manila), Japan has free hands to roam somewhere and to start the second stage of its expansion.

In China things haven't changed. The theatre is lost. it's now just a matter of time. The supply lines are all closed and, with my troops starving, Japan can simply sit, lay a siege with few troops and bomb me back to stoneage.

In Oz-NZ.... finally the Convoy has been able to resume its route. Now in a week or so we should be able to get enough troops,planes and supplies to make any attempt to invade southern oz a risky task for the japs. The arrival of the Aus bdes from Aden has really been important to give some more strenght to my defences. Now i've elaborated a defensive plan for the big triangle Brisbane-Syney-Melbourne. My forces will be concentrated there, where the terrain and the bases forts will rapresent not an easy picking for any invasion force. And if he lands at Perth or in the north-east he will have to march and face my Aus units where they can use their armoured units. He had conquered Cooktown which, i bet, is the place where he's going to land. I'm pretty sure he's coming for Oz.


In the Hawaii-CENTPAC.... we've reinforced Christmas Isl. with 600 AVs. I'm sending more 500 AVs to Canton Isl and the next step will be Pago Pago where i'd like to have more 500 AVs. Minor islands (Palmyra, Johnston, Midway) will have 100 AVs.

In NOPAC nothing is happening.

India...well...this is probably the theatre were i'm less ready. Only Colombo, Madras and Calcuta have enough AVs to be ready to stop on the beaches the invaders.








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

Ground combat at Singapore (50,84)

Japanese Deliberate attack

Attacking force 94708 troops, 1386 guns, 700 vehicles, Assault Value = 2715

Defending force 30868 troops, 504 guns, 255 vehicles, Assault Value = 415

Japanese adjusted assault: 1627

Allied adjusted defense: 509

Japanese assault odds: 3 to 1 (fort level 0)

Japanese forces CAPTURE Singapore !!!

Combat modifiers
Defender: terrain(+), leaders(+), experience(-)
Attacker:

Japanese ground losses:
3680 casualties reported
Squads: 13 destroyed, 149 disabled
Non Combat: 36 destroyed, 180 disabled
Engineers: 3 destroyed, 14 disabled
Vehicles lost 52 (19 destroyed, 33 disabled)


Allied ground losses:
26283 casualties reported
Squads: 887 destroyed, 0 disabled
Non Combat: 3008 destroyed, 0 disabled
Engineers: 290 destroyed, 0 disabled
Guns lost 539 (539 destroyed, 0 disabled)
Vehicles lost 169 (169 destroyed, 0 disabled)
Units destroyed 41


Assaulting units:
47th Infantry Regiment
8th Tank Regiment
15th Guards Regiment
41st Infantry Regiment
12th Engineer Regiment
15th Naval Guard Unit
Kimura Det
4th Division
21st Division
II./124th Infantry Battalion
16th Naval Guard Unit
17th Indpt Guards Regiment
Miura Det
55th Infantry Regiment
42nd Infantry Regiment
146th Infantry Regiment
113th Infantry Regiment
Yokosuka 2nd SNLF
7th Tank Regiment
1st Tank Regiment
14th Guards Regiment
5th Recon Regiment
4th Tank Regiment
5th Engineer Regiment
11th Infantry Regiment
21st Infantry Regiment
33rd Division
22nd Recon Regiment
1st Formosa Inf. Regiment
I./33rd Inf Regt /2
56th Engineer Regiment
143rd Infantry Regiment
I./124th Infantry Battalion
114th Infantry Regiment
48th Engineer Regiment
91st Nav Gd /1
3rd Mortar Battalion
26th Fld AA Gun Co
92nd JAAF AF Bn
5th Field AF Construction Battalion
Southern Army
35th Fld AA Gun Co
18th Mountain Gun Regiment
38th Road Const Co
82nd JAAF AF Bn
5th Guards Engr Rgt /17
35th Field AA Battalion
1st Medium Field Artillery Regiment
97th JAAF AF Bn
21th JNAF AF Unit
53rd Const Co
8th JNAF Coy
12th JAAF Base Force
6th Shipping Engineer Regiment
62nd JAAF AF Bn
55th Mountain Gun Regiment
15th Const Co
25th Army
20th AA Regiment
21st Medium Field Artillery Battalion
8th Field AF Construction Battalion
43rd Const Co
21st Fld AA Gun Co
14th Ind.Art.Mortar Battalion
48th Field AA Battalion
3rd Ind. Mountain Gun Regiment
34th Field AA Battalion
3rd Medium Field Artillery Regiment
21st Army
30th Fld AA Gun Co
47th Field AA Battalion
55th Const Co
39th Road Const Co
96th JAAF AF Bn
5th Mortar Battalion
37th Const Co
32nd Field AA Battalion
23rd Ind. Engineer Regiment
4th Naval Construction Battalion
54th Const Co
18th Medium Field Artillery Regiment
31st Fld AA Gun Co
36th Const Co
25th JNAF AF Unit
22nd Air Flotilla
48th Field Artillery Regiment
1st RF Gun Battalion
31st Field AA Battalion
21st JAAF AF Bn /1
5th Field Artillery Regiment
41st JAAF AF Bn
18th JAAF AF Bn
15th Ind. Engr Rgt /2

Defending units:
22nd Australian Brigade
2nd Loyal Battalion
6th Indian Brigade
FMSV Brigade
27th Australian Brigade
Singapore Fortress
28th Gurkha Brigade
8th Indian Brigade
3/16th Punjab Battalion
SSVF Brigade
3rd Cavalry Regiment
15th Indian Brigade
2nd Gordons Battalion
5/2nd Punjab Battalion
3rd SSVF Battalion
1st Manchester Battalion
22nd Indian Bde /1
2/215th Bty 80th AT Gun Regiment
110th RAF Base Force
1st HK&S Heavy AA Regiment
3rd Heavy AA Regiment
223 Group RAF
3rd ISF Base Force
224 Group RAF
2nd ISF Base Force
Malayan Air Wing
109th RN Base Force
112th RAF Base Force
Malaya Army
III Indian Corps
2nd HK&S Heavy AA Regiment
109th RAF Base Force
137/155th Field Regiment
1st Indian Heavy AA Regiment
22nd Indian Mountain Gun Regiment
111th RAF Base Force
24th NZ Pioneer Coy
272/273rd Bty 80th AT Gun Regiment
Singapore Base Force
AHQ Far East
5th Field Regiment



(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 199
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/23/2011 10:51:52 AM   
ADB123

 

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I'm trying to figure out why your opponent had so many odds-and-ends units in his Singapore attack stack. Why are all of those AA units and Base Forces there? You weren't bombing his troops were you?

I didn't think that padding-out an attack stack with essentially non-combat LCUs helped in an attack. If it does, then something is very odd about the base-attack model.

On another Front - make certain that you build up your inland air bases in southeastern Oz. You want to be able to fly bombers without having them wiped out in coastal bases by Naval Bombardments. Also, be very, very careful that you cover all of your rail junction bases so that your opponent doesn't cut them with paratroop drops.

Good luck!

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Post #: 200
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/23/2011 11:22:32 AM   
Alfred

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy

...In the Hawaii-CENTPAC.... we've reinforced Christmas Isl. with 600 AVs. I'm sending more 500 AVs to Canton Isl and the next step will be Pago Pago where i'd like to have more 500 AVs. Minor islands (Palmyra, Johnston, Midway) will have 100 AVs.



You haven't really bothered to check the troop capacity limits of the islands, have you.

Chirstmas and Pago are both unlimited, the others are very much limited. The 500 AV you are sending to Canton Island alone will put way above the limit, let alone the combat AV and other support units you already have there. Palmrya, Johston and Midway should be able to accommodate 100 AV each provided you have nothing else on the atoll...which of course you do otherwise you couldn't build your forts or run air operations.

I've now read this entire AAR and a few things are obvious. Foremost of all is that you panic. You abandon positions far too early. You don't seem to understand that at times the order must be given to not retreat a single step, even if you risk being pocketed.

I see no evidence of planning even though several posters have tried to steer you to do so. Instead I see much hand wringing and reacting. Nerves of steel are needed with a cool understanding of what is and what isn't important. To give an example applicable for the future I draw your attention to India. Countless times you moan about the lack of AV to defeat the enemy at the beach yet your "plan" is based on second guessing where the enemy will land. What if you guess the wrong beach? What is plan "B". If you are that concerned about lack of assets to defend India, then why are you bothering to maintain forces on Ceylon? Is it because you think defending Ceylon is more important than India proper? On what basis have you come to that conclusion.

Not all of your performance to date can be attributed to inexperience. Anyway I will stop here before it becomes even more depressing.

Alfred



(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 201
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/23/2011 11:44:41 AM   
fcharton

 

Posts: 1112
Joined: 10/4/2010
From: France
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: ADB123
I'm trying to figure out why your opponent had so many odds-and-ends units in his Singapore attack stack. Why are all of those AA units and Base Forces there? You weren't bombing his troops were you?


I believe that, since Singapore is bound to become a major Japanese hub as soon as it falls, the goal is to have a huge number of engineers to repair as fast as possible, and to have all units ready to be moved by sea to other places as soon as the minefields are cleared. Those units are not needed for the battle, they just "tag along".

Another reason I could imagine is that a larger stack might draw larger amounts of supplies every day (as opposed to having all those units in Johore, where they might interfere with you resupplying of the assault troops in Singapore). Perhaps this avoids the "fight one day-wait for the supplies the next one" syndrome.

Francois

(in reply to ADB123)
Post #: 202
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/23/2011 1:04:27 PM   
GreyJoy


Posts: 6750
Joined: 3/18/2011
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Alfred


quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy

...In the Hawaii-CENTPAC.... we've reinforced Christmas Isl. with 600 AVs. I'm sending more 500 AVs to Canton Isl and the next step will be Pago Pago where i'd like to have more 500 AVs. Minor islands (Palmyra, Johnston, Midway) will have 100 AVs.



You haven't really bothered to check the troop capacity limits of the islands, have you.

Chirstmas and Pago are both unlimited, the others are very much limited. The 500 AV you are sending to Canton Island alone will put way above the limit, let alone the combat AV and other support units you already have there. Palmrya, Johston and Midway should be able to accommodate 100 AV each provided you have nothing else on the atoll...which of course you do otherwise you couldn't build your forts or run air operations.

I've now read this entire AAR and a few things are obvious. Foremost of all is that you panic. You abandon positions far too early. You don't seem to understand that at times the order must be given to not retreat a single step, even if you risk being pocketed.

I see no evidence of planning even though several posters have tried to steer you to do so. Instead I see much hand wringing and reacting. Nerves of steel are needed with a cool understanding of what is and what isn't important. To give an example applicable for the future I draw your attention to India. Countless times you moan about the lack of AV to defeat the enemy at the beach yet your "plan" is based on second guessing where the enemy will land. What if you guess the wrong beach? What is plan "B". If you are that concerned about lack of assets to defend India, then why are you bothering to maintain forces on Ceylon? Is it because you think defending Ceylon is more important than India proper? On what basis have you come to that conclusion.

Not all of your performance to date can be attributed to inexperience. Anyway I will stop here before it becomes even more depressing.

Alfred





Think you're right Alfred. I panic. And i thank you for your being so honest and direct. I have checked the stacking limits of the pacific bases and ... again you're right. I didn't paid enough attention. My mind was only focused in giving enough troops to defend those positions against the possibile japanese advance in CENTPAC. Now i'll try to redeploy the units in excess to other locations. I've checked and seems that the atolls can only manage to have a single regiment and maybe a base force. Nothing else in order to stay inside the limits. Really too few troops to be able to face what Japan can send at this stage. However i'll leave some CD guns hoping to inflict at least some damage.

For what concerns China what can i expect to gain having large stacks pocketed and cut off from any supply surce? I mean, i've already experienced that (many large stacks were pocketed during the first 2 months of war and they have simply been cut off from any possibile action) and Japan can simply leave a strong division guarding the contested hex and bypass me with the mass of his army. He just needs to bomb my stuck stack that, without supplies and with distruption level very high, won't be able to do anything.

I India i made my plans (well, i call them plans but probably they are just skitzofrenic actions) considering Cylon a MUST-defend position. If Japan conquers Cylon he then can decides to land on any beach on the western side of India, thus forcing me to evacuate the south-east of India. While untill i hold Colombo i can deny him the chance of landing close to Bombay... IMHO this is not a wrong strategical conclusion. If he lands somewhere in the south i can fight back or at least i can retreat in order, fighting and gaining time in order to concentrate the Indian forces where they're needed. But if he lands in the west of India i think i won't have the time to redeploy.
Anyway i'm still trying to create a fast-reaction force close to Viza. If i manage to get, let's say 600/800 AVs there, with the two critical masses at Madras and Calcutta, i should be able to redeploy fast enough in order to counter his invasion.

In Oz yes, i've already secured all the inland bases in southern Oz and moved to this part of the continent all those bdes that were spread around. Sydney has now a strong army and with the upcoming US reinforces i think i can have enough AVs and supplies to be ready to face an invasion.

For what concerns his support troops in Singapore, i think i read that support units help to recover disabled squads and units, so probably the good results he had at Singapore are related to the huge amount of support units he brought there with the proper combat units.

Also the theory that wants him to mass his support units in order to get Singapore facilities rebuilt quickly after the fall of the citadel sounds possibile.


(in reply to Alfred)
Post #: 203
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/23/2011 3:01:17 PM   
beppi

 

Posts: 382
Joined: 3/11/2004
From: Austria
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy


quote:

ORIGINAL: Alfred


quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy

...In the Hawaii-CENTPAC.... we've reinforced Christmas Isl. with 600 AVs. I'm sending more 500 AVs to Canton Isl and the next step will be Pago Pago where i'd like to have more 500 AVs. Minor islands (Palmyra, Johnston, Midway) will have 100 AVs.



You haven't really bothered to check the troop capacity limits of the islands, have you.

Chirstmas and Pago are both unlimited, the others are very much limited. The 500 AV you are sending to Canton Island alone will put way above the limit, let alone the combat AV and other support units you already have there. Palmrya, Johston and Midway should be able to accommodate 100 AV each provided you have nothing else on the atoll...which of course you do otherwise you couldn't build your forts or run air operations.

I've now read this entire AAR and a few things are obvious. Foremost of all is that you panic. You abandon positions far too early. You don't seem to understand that at times the order must be given to not retreat a single step, even if you risk being pocketed.

I see no evidence of planning even though several posters have tried to steer you to do so. Instead I see much hand wringing and reacting. Nerves of steel are needed with a cool understanding of what is and what isn't important. To give an example applicable for the future I draw your attention to India. Countless times you moan about the lack of AV to defeat the enemy at the beach yet your "plan" is based on second guessing where the enemy will land. What if you guess the wrong beach? What is plan "B". If you are that concerned about lack of assets to defend India, then why are you bothering to maintain forces on Ceylon? Is it because you think defending Ceylon is more important than India proper? On what basis have you come to that conclusion.

Not all of your performance to date can be attributed to inexperience. Anyway I will stop here before it becomes even more depressing.

Alfred





Think you're right Alfred. I panic. And i thank you for your being so honest and direct. I have checked the stacking limits of the pacific bases and ... again you're right. I didn't paid enough attention. My mind was only focused in giving enough troops to defend those positions against the possibile japanese advance in CENTPAC. Now i'll try to redeploy the units in excess to other locations. I've checked and seems that the atolls can only manage to have a single regiment and maybe a base force. Nothing else in order to stay inside the limits. Really too few troops to be able to face what Japan can send at this stage. However i'll leave some CD guns hoping to inflict at least some damage.

For what concerns China what can i expect to gain having large stacks pocketed and cut off from any supply surce? I mean, i've already experienced that (many large stacks were pocketed during the first 2 months of war and they have simply been cut off from any possibile action) and Japan can simply leave a strong division guarding the contested hex and bypass me with the mass of his army. He just needs to bomb my stuck stack that, without supplies and with distruption level very high, won't be able to do anything.

I India i made my plans (well, i call them plans but probably they are just skitzofrenic actions) considering Cylon a MUST-defend position. If Japan conquers Cylon he then can decides to land on any beach on the western side of India, thus forcing me to evacuate the south-east of India. While untill i hold Colombo i can deny him the chance of landing close to Bombay... IMHO this is not a wrong strategical conclusion. If he lands somewhere in the south i can fight back or at least i can retreat in order, fighting and gaining time in order to concentrate the Indian forces where they're needed. But if he lands in the west of India i think i won't have the time to redeploy.
Anyway i'm still trying to create a fast-reaction force close to Viza. If i manage to get, let's say 600/800 AVs there, with the two critical masses at Madras and Calcutta, i should be able to redeploy fast enough in order to counter his invasion.

In Oz yes, i've already secured all the inland bases in southern Oz and moved to this part of the continent all those bdes that were spread around. Sydney has now a strong army and with the upcoming US reinforces i think i can have enough AVs and supplies to be ready to face an invasion.

For what concerns his support troops in Singapore, i think i read that support units help to recover disabled squads and units, so probably the good results he had at Singapore are related to the huge amount of support units he brought there with the proper combat units.

Also the theory that wants him to mass his support units in order to get Singapore facilities rebuilt quickly after the fall of the citadel sounds possibile.




Your situation in china looks grimm, very grimm. I would expect your opponent to cap the rest of china and just contain you in Chungking. As it is a x4 Hex it is quite hard to take so try at least to hold that hex. All respawned units will come back in that city so try to nod let your opponen to cut off to many units. If they are not destroyed they wont come back. In addition try to forify Kunming and Tsuyung (the city north of it) cause if you lose them the road to burma is open. Then your opponen could move some of his spare divisions to the chinese/burmeesian border east of lashio without breaking any HR. From there a bougth out unit can be quickly moved to rangoon and sent to India.

I doubt that the units in Singapore where where without any purpose. There is no real advantage having more than one Army HQ with you especially that early in the game and when the target is just singapore which will fall without doubt. So there is no reason for special planning. I more or less expect that support stuff to be the support stuff for the invasion of India. Chances are good that this is Raders target for auto victory, and i would expect him to aim for that. You do not get any bonuses neither for repair nor for replacements if you have 3 HQs instead the one neccesary.

For your ideas for Ceylon, why would you think that he needs that target for an indian invasion ? Even if you put the entire Indian army there it can be bypassed. The british airforce is in no condition to stop KB. KB will shut ceylon down if neccesary and the island will be nothing than a huge prision camp and/or KB can just escort any critical convoy for an invasion of northern india. Colombo itself cannot be put into an surface or air TF nor can you sail it around the map and as you do not possess the neccesary airforce to create an unsinkable carrier out of it i would not count it as very important. Not worth to place more than a few 100 AV there.

The only place in india which is a place you have to defend is Karachi, and if possible the coastal cities in the north of india down to bombay. There is the real threat as from that place you can cut off the lifeline to india with netties. You do not have to give up the rest without a fight if he tries to invade but prepare the north, especialy the coastal bases. Preparation means get the fort lvls up as high as possible. Expand the well defandable inland bases to airfield lvl 9 and get the forts in bombay up as it is a good place to defend. Get an idead how you would defend it and think about a possible distribution of air support stuff (HQs and support units). Check the AAR of Canorebel how to defend india and especially what where the mistakes of his opponent and why and how he was able to keep the lifeline of india to karachi open.

With China lost that early, rader can buy out a division from china each month do not forget that.

In the Centpac get defense to the line of islands west of PH and forget the rest. You can place one of the small CD units on each of them but if you opponent needs that island he will get them. It is to easy to cut them off from supply and there is no way to defend them in 1942 against and serious attempt to take them. If you try to protect them with carries the chances to lose you carriers are way beyond 50%. In general i would not try to do any carrier battle prior to 6/43 when the Hellcat arrives. You are already in deep trouble and loosing to much carriers will lose the game for you.

In Australia the goal is to defend the SE of it around sydney and melbourne. Move some strategic reserves from the US to Capetown. From there they can quite qickly be sent to either Australia or India if neccesary. Do not send them to early only if you know where the real target is you should commit them. Neither India nor Australia can be capped very quickly but i think that a it is easier to cut off India from support than Australia. And be sure to have enough lifting capacity there too. And for auto victory one of this two areas will be neccesary. But with china lost even half of india might be enough.



< Message edited by beppi -- 4/23/2011 6:14:57 PM >

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 204
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/23/2011 5:12:31 PM   
Bullwinkle58


Posts: 11302
Joined: 2/24/2009
Status: offline
You are getting excellent advice from Alfred and beppi.

I would only add, in a top-down sense, that this is a NAVAL game first and foremost, and you are thinking land way too much. Your comments on India are a prime example. Mobility, mobility, mobility. If you want to keep him off the west coast of India you'll do that at sea, not on the roads. USe Aden and Abadan to your advantage; he can't follow you there, attack you there, or recon you there. The Allied task in 1942 is not to win the war or game, it is to survive. Just survive. If you can bleed him, great. Use your navies to do that. But, as Alfred so much as says, you need to trade men and VPs for time. Time is the only really important resource since the Japanese can't make more.

China may be toast at this point, but you might want to re-examine the utility of employing huge, poorly-supplied stacks against huge, well-supplied stacks. If you have nothing much else to lose, you might want to break up some of your stacks and try to use the Chinese more as they were used in RL, as supply-line harassment and guerrilla fighters deep in the Japanese rear.

_____________________________

The Moose

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 205
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/24/2011 1:22:33 AM   
Alfred

 

Posts: 6685
Joined: 9/28/2006
Status: offline
GreyJoy,

Your comments in post #203 regarding India/Ceylon and China disclose that you still don’t “get” it.

For the first six months of the war, there are no good options for the Allies; your choice ranges from the disagreeable to the outright bad. One of the hardest things to do is to choose the least bad option when no good options are available. Essentially you fail to assess your means and then draw up a suitable plan, instead fixing upon some ideal outcome and then coming up short in trying to achieve it. That is a sure fire recipe for consistently missing the disagreeable option and choosing instead the bad option. Your performance in China is testimony to this statement.

Regarding your China performance and future plans for India, try assessing the following comments against whatever analytical process you actually engaged in.

(A) China

1. In an ideal world, no Allied pocket would ever occur. In the practical world of AE, not all pockets are the same.
(a) A Dutch pocket means little as you are losing poor quality troops with very limited reinforcements. Even if not pocketed they will quickly lose their combat value due to inability to replenish themselves.
(b) The usual Singapore pocket is a mixed bag. Some quality infantry is lost; some poor quality infantry with limited replacements is lost. Given time most of the pocketed infantry units can become quite valuable. At Singapore you usually will lose some HQs which will respawn, and some which don’t.
(c) Losing an atoll based quality USMC unit which is able to access plenty of replacements, is not good.
(d) Losing a Chinese unit, which will 30 days later respawn at 1/3 if destroyed in combat, is often a very good outcome for the Allied player. You spend no supply in respawning the unit, during the 30 day respawning period you have a reduced demand on your logistics, the respawned unit does not deplete your pools which otherwise often are under intense pressure (assuming you have units able to expend supplies to take replacements).

2. Some Allied pockets are a net loss, contributing little benefit to the Allied cause but a huge benefit to Japan. Some Allied pockets can come close to balancing the Allied/Japanese benefit ledger.
(a) Losing a complete USMC regiment at Canton Island is usually a large net loss on the benefit ledger. You lose 1 VP per 3 items destroyed; you lose a quality unit, your Trans Pacific SLOCs become more vulnerable. Unless you inflicted large casualties on the enemy or distracted them from pursuing more important strategic conquests elsewhere, you will come out very much in the red in this ledger.
(b) Losing a Chinese unit in a pocket may or may not be a good investment. Certainly the loss of VPs is of very low concern because you only lose 1 VP per 12 items destroyed. The respawning feature also greatly mitigates the loss. The key question is whether the Chinese pocket is centred on a vital to Japan position or the Chinese troops could have been more gainfully employed elsewhere.

In your case, early on in China you experienced a few pockets brought about by a combination of good play by your opponent + poor play by your + your inexperience + the poor initial disposition of Chinese forces as at 7 December 1941. You simply failed to systematically assess the factors which brought the situation about and instead concluded that any pocket in China was to be avoided at any cost. In other words, you panicked.

3. Your decision to abandon Changsha and Sian is simply unpardonable and is the direct reason why you are currently faced with the distinct possibility of losing even Chungking in the first half of 1942. Bravo, that may well be a unique Allied achievement. Because you panicked in the face of enemy outflanking manoeuvres, you failed to consider the following factors which differentiate these potential pockets from the earlier Chinese pockets and adjust your plans/actions accordingly.
(a) Changsha is good defensive terrain, one of the best in China. It’s at start fortification level is decent and quite a few units start off prepped for it. It is on one of the few railway lines so subject to the position elsewhere, for once you might be able to transfer forces to and from quicker than the enemy. If you don’t value all these features, then you have no idea how to conduct a defence.
(b) Sian is not on good defensive terrain but its approaches are good defensive terrain.
(c) Changsha in particular, but also Sian, generates useful auto supply daily. This supply cannot be stopped by Japan and hence these cities can never be completely cut off from some supply. Ideally you would never lose access to the outside world but consider what steps Japan would need to take to so cut off these cities completely from the outside world. Merely outflanking the cities does not suffice. The enemy would need to enter the city from each passable hex. That imposes a cost both in enemy units and time which otherwise would be able to continue their uninterrupted advance to Chungking.
(d) Japan cannot afford to simply continue its advance and leave Changsha and Sian in Chinese hands in its rear. Both cities lie astride important Japanese LOCs and the Japanese advance will lose oomph due to logistical difficulties whilst these cities remain under Chinese control.

4. You are well aware of the speed of advance of the enemy and the slow movement rate of your own Chinese troops. Knowing that you still insist on abandoning positions to move onto another position which itself will already be quite untenable long before you arrive. In the process you accomplish the following.
(a) Lose the benefit of whatever fortification level you have in the old position. Without the benefit of forts/entrenchments, your LCUs suffer greater damage from enemy air attacks.
(b) Expose your poor quality units to greater fatigue/disruption in their cross country sightseeing tour.
(c) In some instances removed the Sword of Damocles hanging over your opponent. A good example is the situation around Ichang. Your screen shots show the powerful Chinese units to the west and north of Ichang with movement arrows away from Ichang. Those units are amongst the most powerful in the entire Chinese OOB and they occupy excellent defensive terrain. If they should be moved at all, they should be moved to Changteh. Left at their initial position they indirectly defend Changteh by threatening to move into Ichang the moment Japan advances towards Changteh.

5. Much do you comment on the hordes of enemy aircraft operating in China. Yet have you really closely looked at the air war.
(a) It is not uncommon for an enemy sweep to be conducted by only 3 planes. Why did you not oppose such sweeps with the AVG?
(b) If the enemy is using so many fighters to sweep and escort his bombers which are wreaking your infrastructure and slowing down your units, what does he have left to protect his own advancing columns or rear area infrastructure from your own bomber attacks.
(c) What prevents you from conducting night air operations? Even with your 20k altitude HR, night operations can still be a nuisance.
(d) Why are you not flying your bombers on recon? Recon at 20K is almost immune from AA and rarely gets intercepted. It will not give you high quality intel but it will give you some which will assist your LCUs to inflict greater casualties.

(B) India

I see wishful thinking here, removed from a cold assessment of the possibilities. Your comments regarding Ceylon display a serious misunderstanding of the situation.

1. For the sake of the argument, let’s assume that you are right and Japan cannot land on any western Indian beach or Bombay as long as Colombo remains under Allied control. What are the factors which achieve this equable outcome?
(a) The Royal Navy? The very same force which you just managed to evacuate off map just before the mid January 1942 KB raid. I suppose if you weigh anchor immediately upon identification of the invasion fleet the RN will arrive on map in time to catch the withdrawing invasion fleet.
(b) Ah, but what if you keep the RN on station. Yes, the mighty Hermes strikes terror into the hearts of Japanese players. Even though you already have lost the Repulse and the Prince of Wales, those “R” class battleships are still fast enough to catch enemy merchantmen. However not too many Allied players drool at the prospect of those battleships going up against the KB or the enemy battle line.
(c) Then there is the Royal Air Force. Yes, equipped with Buffaloes, Blenheims, Lysanders, Wapiti and Audax, they are bound to get through the KB CAP of Zeroes to deliver penetrating hits. Obviously the performance of level bombers in the anti ship role in defending Java from invasion was an aberration and the same performance will not be repeated off Ceylon. Face it; at this stage of the war only your torpedo equipped squadrons pose a real threat and you have only a handful of such squadrons, with practically no replacements and in the case of the Vildebeest limited to short range operations. Of course that assumes your fighters will be able to neutralise the enemy CAP.
(d) Taking into account your aircraft replacement rates and the probably shallow pool of trained pilots, just how long do you think the RAF would remain a credible effective force? Who do you think will be worn down the quickest, the British or the Japanese?

2. But must an invasion fleet headed to Bombay or Karachi pass close enough to Colombo to even be discovered and then subjected to attack. The answer is no. Just as your opponent has regularly bypasses and outflanked land units in China, the same can be done at sea. And he has already done so. Recall the KB raid on Colombo and Diego Garcia. You had no warning then, so what makes you think that an invasion fleet could not take a similar route and arrive unannounced at its destination?

3. For the sake of the argument, let’s assume your opponent does share your views regarding Ceylon and decides he must first capture Ceylon. Can you identify a single AAR where the Allied player has thrown back an early 1942 determined and expertly executed Japanese invasion of Ceylon? I can’t think of one off the top of my head. That alone should indicate the odds are poor. So the value in defending Ceylon (or in the words of the earlier discussion, the Ceylon pocket) is whether the time bought allows for the defence of India to be improved. That requires you to;
(a) know exactly what reinforcements you gain balanced against what you will lose in the Ceylon pocket,
(b) how you can maximise the value of the bought time.
Come back to me when you have done that exercise and then demonstrate why Ceylon is a must defend location.

4. To counter a landing between Madras and Calcutta you are assembling a rapid reaction force of 600-800 AV. That equates to 2 divisions. A rapid reaction force is one possible plan but you have to carefully factor in the following.
(a) You have provided no details as to the quality of the rapid reaction force. Adjusted Assault Values only impact on whether an attack is successful or is beaten back. Often what appears to be an impressive Assault Value on paper becomes a very small Adjusted Assault Value.
(b) It is firepower, not assault value which kills enemy troops. At this stage of the war, my money is on the invading Japanese having both superior Assault Value and firepower than your Rapid reaction Force.
(c) If Japan invades India, how big do you think the invasion force will be? My money is that it will brush aside your contemplated Rapid Reaction Force and easily get off the beach. Then again we may well see a rerun of china where the enemy forces move more quickly than do your own. This is why you need to think long and hard as to whether you should really defend Ceylon or whether those troops would be better used as part of your Rapid Reaction Force, and the airplanes used in the interior of India rather than wasted against the KB cap.

At the end of the day you must determine what you have, what it can accomplish and then determine the best plan to utilise your assets. When there are no good options you just have to be ruthless.

Alfred

(in reply to Bullwinkle58)
Post #: 206
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/24/2011 2:56:02 AM   
Bullwinkle58


Posts: 11302
Joined: 2/24/2009
Status: offline
Wow. This should be stickied.

_____________________________

The Moose

(in reply to Alfred)
Post #: 207
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/24/2011 10:30:57 AM   
darbycmcd

 

Posts: 394
Joined: 12/6/2005
Status: offline
Alfred, I don't disagree with what you say, I think many have hinted at the same things.... but dude your tone is way out of line. This is a GAME, and Greyjoy is here posting his AAR in spirit of comraderie and FUN. I think we all at times need to remember that we are really just talking about how to play a video game, it is NOT WAR. So when any of us are tempted to be condescending, think on what we are feeling so very superior about.

(in reply to Bullwinkle58)
Post #: 208
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/24/2011 5:11:07 PM   
GreyJoy


Posts: 6750
Joined: 3/18/2011
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Alfred

GreyJoy,

Your comments in post #203 regarding India/Ceylon and China disclose that you still don’t “get” it.

For the first six months of the war, there are no good options for the Allies; your choice ranges from the disagreeable to the outright bad. One of the hardest things to do is to choose the least bad option when no good options are available. Essentially you fail to assess your means and then draw up a suitable plan, instead fixing upon some ideal outcome and then coming up short in trying to achieve it. That is a sure fire recipe for consistently missing the disagreeable option and choosing instead the bad option. Your performance in China is testimony to this statement.

Regarding your China performance and future plans for India, try assessing the following comments against whatever analytical process you actually engaged in.

(A) China

1. In an ideal world, no Allied pocket would ever occur. In the practical world of AE, not all pockets are the same.
(a) A Dutch pocket means little as you are losing poor quality troops with very limited reinforcements. Even if not pocketed they will quickly lose their combat value due to inability to replenish themselves.
(b) The usual Singapore pocket is a mixed bag. Some quality infantry is lost; some poor quality infantry with limited replacements is lost. Given time most of the pocketed infantry units can become quite valuable. At Singapore you usually will lose some HQs which will respawn, and some which don’t.
(c) Losing an atoll based quality USMC unit which is able to access plenty of replacements, is not good.
(d) Losing a Chinese unit, which will 30 days later respawn at 1/3 if destroyed in combat, is often a very good outcome for the Allied player. You spend no supply in respawning the unit, during the 30 day respawning period you have a reduced demand on your logistics, the respawned unit does not deplete your pools which otherwise often are under intense pressure (assuming you have units able to expend supplies to take replacements).

2. Some Allied pockets are a net loss, contributing little benefit to the Allied cause but a huge benefit to Japan. Some Allied pockets can come close to balancing the Allied/Japanese benefit ledger.
(a) Losing a complete USMC regiment at Canton Island is usually a large net loss on the benefit ledger. You lose 1 VP per 3 items destroyed; you lose a quality unit, your Trans Pacific SLOCs become more vulnerable. Unless you inflicted large casualties on the enemy or distracted them from pursuing more important strategic conquests elsewhere, you will come out very much in the red in this ledger.
(b) Losing a Chinese unit in a pocket may or may not be a good investment. Certainly the loss of VPs is of very low concern because you only lose 1 VP per 12 items destroyed. The respawning feature also greatly mitigates the loss. The key question is whether the Chinese pocket is centred on a vital to Japan position or the Chinese troops could have been more gainfully employed elsewhere.

In your case, early on in China you experienced a few pockets brought about by a combination of good play by your opponent + poor play by your + your inexperience + the poor initial disposition of Chinese forces as at 7 December 1941. You simply failed to systematically assess the factors which brought the situation about and instead concluded that any pocket in China was to be avoided at any cost. In other words, you panicked.

3. Your decision to abandon Changsha and Sian is simply unpardonable and is the direct reason why you are currently faced with the distinct possibility of losing even Chungking in the first half of 1942. Bravo, that may well be a unique Allied achievement. Because you panicked in the face of enemy outflanking manoeuvres, you failed to consider the following factors which differentiate these potential pockets from the earlier Chinese pockets and adjust your plans/actions accordingly.
(a) Changsha is good defensive terrain, one of the best in China. It’s at start fortification level is decent and quite a few units start off prepped for it. It is on one of the few railway lines so subject to the position elsewhere, for once you might be able to transfer forces to and from quicker than the enemy. If you don’t value all these features, then you have no idea how to conduct a defence.
(b) Sian is not on good defensive terrain but its approaches are good defensive terrain.
(c) Changsha in particular, but also Sian, generates useful auto supply daily. This supply cannot be stopped by Japan and hence these cities can never be completely cut off from some supply. Ideally you would never lose access to the outside world but consider what steps Japan would need to take to so cut off these cities completely from the outside world. Merely outflanking the cities does not suffice. The enemy would need to enter the city from each passable hex. That imposes a cost both in enemy units and time which otherwise would be able to continue their uninterrupted advance to Chungking.
(d) Japan cannot afford to simply continue its advance and leave Changsha and Sian in Chinese hands in its rear. Both cities lie astride important Japanese LOCs and the Japanese advance will lose oomph due to logistical difficulties whilst these cities remain under Chinese control.

4. You are well aware of the speed of advance of the enemy and the slow movement rate of your own Chinese troops. Knowing that you still insist on abandoning positions to move onto another position which itself will already be quite untenable long before you arrive. In the process you accomplish the following.
(a) Lose the benefit of whatever fortification level you have in the old position. Without the benefit of forts/entrenchments, your LCUs suffer greater damage from enemy air attacks.
(b) Expose your poor quality units to greater fatigue/disruption in their cross country sightseeing tour.
(c) In some instances removed the Sword of Damocles hanging over your opponent. A good example is the situation around Ichang. Your screen shots show the powerful Chinese units to the west and north of Ichang with movement arrows away from Ichang. Those units are amongst the most powerful in the entire Chinese OOB and they occupy excellent defensive terrain. If they should be moved at all, they should be moved to Changteh. Left at their initial position they indirectly defend Changteh by threatening to move into Ichang the moment Japan advances towards Changteh.

5. Much do you comment on the hordes of enemy aircraft operating in China. Yet have you really closely looked at the air war.
(a) It is not uncommon for an enemy sweep to be conducted by only 3 planes. Why did you not oppose such sweeps with the AVG?
(b) If the enemy is using so many fighters to sweep and escort his bombers which are wreaking your infrastructure and slowing down your units, what does he have left to protect his own advancing columns or rear area infrastructure from your own bomber attacks.
(c) What prevents you from conducting night air operations? Even with your 20k altitude HR, night operations can still be a nuisance.
(d) Why are you not flying your bombers on recon? Recon at 20K is almost immune from AA and rarely gets intercepted. It will not give you high quality intel but it will give you some which will assist your LCUs to inflict greater casualties.

(B) India

I see wishful thinking here, removed from a cold assessment of the possibilities. Your comments regarding Ceylon display a serious misunderstanding of the situation.

1. For the sake of the argument, let’s assume that you are right and Japan cannot land on any western Indian beach or Bombay as long as Colombo remains under Allied control. What are the factors which achieve this equable outcome?
(a) The Royal Navy? The very same force which you just managed to evacuate off map just before the mid January 1942 KB raid. I suppose if you weigh anchor immediately upon identification of the invasion fleet the RN will arrive on map in time to catch the withdrawing invasion fleet.
(b) Ah, but what if you keep the RN on station. Yes, the mighty Hermes strikes terror into the hearts of Japanese players. Even though you already have lost the Repulse and the Prince of Wales, those “R” class battleships are still fast enough to catch enemy merchantmen. However not too many Allied players drool at the prospect of those battleships going up against the KB or the enemy battle line.
(c) Then there is the Royal Air Force. Yes, equipped with Buffaloes, Blenheims, Lysanders, Wapiti and Audax, they are bound to get through the KB CAP of Zeroes to deliver penetrating hits. Obviously the performance of level bombers in the anti ship role in defending Java from invasion was an aberration and the same performance will not be repeated off Ceylon. Face it; at this stage of the war only your torpedo equipped squadrons pose a real threat and you have only a handful of such squadrons, with practically no replacements and in the case of the Vildebeest limited to short range operations. Of course that assumes your fighters will be able to neutralise the enemy CAP.
(d) Taking into account your aircraft replacement rates and the probably shallow pool of trained pilots, just how long do you think the RAF would remain a credible effective force? Who do you think will be worn down the quickest, the British or the Japanese?

2. But must an invasion fleet headed to Bombay or Karachi pass close enough to Colombo to even be discovered and then subjected to attack. The answer is no. Just as your opponent has regularly bypasses and outflanked land units in China, the same can be done at sea. And he has already done so. Recall the KB raid on Colombo and Diego Garcia. You had no warning then, so what makes you think that an invasion fleet could not take a similar route and arrive unannounced at its destination?

3. For the sake of the argument, let’s assume your opponent does share your views regarding Ceylon and decides he must first capture Ceylon. Can you identify a single AAR where the Allied player has thrown back an early 1942 determined and expertly executed Japanese invasion of Ceylon? I can’t think of one off the top of my head. That alone should indicate the odds are poor. So the value in defending Ceylon (or in the words of the earlier discussion, the Ceylon pocket) is whether the time bought allows for the defence of India to be improved. That requires you to;
(a) know exactly what reinforcements you gain balanced against what you will lose in the Ceylon pocket,
(b) how you can maximise the value of the bought time.
Come back to me when you have done that exercise and then demonstrate why Ceylon is a must defend location.

4. To counter a landing between Madras and Calcutta you are assembling a rapid reaction force of 600-800 AV. That equates to 2 divisions. A rapid reaction force is one possible plan but you have to carefully factor in the following.
(a) You have provided no details as to the quality of the rapid reaction force. Adjusted Assault Values only impact on whether an attack is successful or is beaten back. Often what appears to be an impressive Assault Value on paper becomes a very small Adjusted Assault Value.
(b) It is firepower, not assault value which kills enemy troops. At this stage of the war, my money is on the invading Japanese having both superior Assault Value and firepower than your Rapid reaction Force.
(c) If Japan invades India, how big do you think the invasion force will be? My money is that it will brush aside your contemplated Rapid Reaction Force and easily get off the beach. Then again we may well see a rerun of china where the enemy forces move more quickly than do your own. This is why you need to think long and hard as to whether you should really defend Ceylon or whether those troops would be better used as part of your Rapid Reaction Force, and the airplanes used in the interior of India rather than wasted against the KB cap.

At the end of the day you must determine what you have, what it can accomplish and then determine the best plan to utilise your assets. When there are no good options you just have to be ruthless.

Alfred


Alfred (and to all those who kindly replied in my thread): thanks a lot for the time and efforts spent to teach me these hard lessons.
I understand i haven't showed a decent skill level to face my opponent and i know that, especially in the first days of war, i've been pretty lazy, not being able to concentrate and focus on the big picture but being overwhelmed by the events.
However, despite i admit the 90% of the things you said are right, i respectfully disagree with some points of your analysis, especially for what concerns China.

For sure i didn't give to you readers enough elements to judge properly what i have faced there.
My goal was to follow the many examples we have here on the forum and defend Changsha till the very last man, knowing it is the core of Chinese defences.
However what differes this match much from the others i've read is that Rader brought most of the forces initially used to smash Malaya to Hypong (near Hanoi) and from there he moved towards Nanning with the whole 25th Army, supported by not less than 200 IJN bombers and some 50 crack zeros. That side of my perimeter was almost defenceless and, as you know, losing nanning and Liuchow would have cut the railroad which, as you have just said, so important for the chinese. In fact, untill i understood what was going on there, my plan was simple: defend the area around Changsha using the wood terrain hexes and keeping free my RR in order to guarantee a constant flow of supplies to my front line units. When i got what was up there i tried to send my Chungking Army to reinforce the Liuchow sector, keeping at the same time garrisoned Changsa area. However HK fell in those days and he used the masses that conquered HK, reinforced by more LCUs not attached to the Chinese sector restricted HQ, to march from HK up to Wuchow, thus applying lot of pressure on the Liuchow area which was know threatened from south and west. In the meanwhile, using the air power (consider that most of the IJAAF was in China at that moment) he crushed the perimeter on Changsha flanks, directly threatening my RR. At that moment i was really unbalanced, with the Chungking army on half the way to Liuchow and with japanese masses ready to cut the RR west of Changsha.
If i had ordered my guys to defend Changsha till the last man he simply could have marched right towards Chungking from Liuchow.
Consider that Rader is to smart to try to eliminate the pockets he creates. He never faced my stacks frontally. He bypassed them , leaving a couple of strong LCU to guard the contested hex and reducing my AVs with his bombers. every attempt of mine to break these pockets have failed, while the japs contented to isolate them and pass beyond with the bulk of their armies.
I decided to abbandon Changsha at the very last minute, when the RR was already cut and when Liuchow had already fallen. If i had not taken that hard decision i could have had, within the next 2 weeks, 2000 Jap AVs sitting in Chungking, sieging the city and cutting every single supply lines towards the fronts.

In the north i think i was more guilty. I didn't understood in time that i was getting encirled at Chengchow and Loyang, where my best defences were. He cut my retreat route and, using the clear terrain and his tanks, annihilated any attempt of mine to break the pocket. When the pocket was closed and my best units were cut out from any supply route, he sent his dreaded tanks up to Sian and Nanyang.
I had no option but to abbandon Sian area and save those 1000 AVs that were left in that area.

With the abbandon of Chansha and Sian it's true that i've lost China, but at least i managed to get to Central China some 6000 AVs that, if God wants it, could attrit the Japs for some more time.
if i had not taken those decisions, probably now Chungking would be alread in Japs' hands.

I'm not saying that i didn't make any mistake. i've made a LOT of mistakes. I've been lazy and i wasn't able to look any further than a couple of turns at the beginning...but i really feel that you are undervaluating Rader's chinese strategy which has been, more or less, perfect.
He understood that the only real soft spot in China at 7th Dec 41 is Nanning area. From there he can easily conquest Liuchow and than march all the way north, bypassing the whole Changsha area. He used many assets taken from other threatres when i didn't have the strenght to threat him in those very same threatres (Malaya, PI and Pacific).

Last thing about China concerns the use of allied air forces. He really brought everything there. I tried to use the AVG during the first days but, after a couple of victories he started to sweep every single base and bomb the hell out of everything...my AVG got grounded two times in Whucow because of his raids and i even risked of losing it when his forces approached Whuchow with one of my AVG unit still grounded because the base had been bombed for 4 days in a row...could risk to lose those exp pilots so i decided to move back to Chungking...since that moment he had so many numbers in the air that i couldn't really hope to fight at with good chances in the air, so i ordered the AVG to move back to Burma...

For what concerns India, i understand what you say, but, at the same time, i'm not seeing any possibile different winning strategy.
Your analysis basically says: RN is useless at this stage of war. RAF is useless too. My Indian LCUs are of little use against 12 Japanese divisions and the only good troops i have in India (UK and AUS - and some AUS units have been sent to OZ) are too few to really make any difference. So what am i supposed to do?
I'm trying to understand where i can stand and fight in the interior...but the rail/road infrastructure of India is so developed that he can always deny a face-to-face fight unless he knows he has a superior firepower and simply bypass me using his armoured corps.
However don't think i wanna do the same mistakes i've done in China. If i'll see i cannot face him, i will deny the fight and fall back on safer positions, thus gaining time. In India, differently from China, time means reinforcements.
i won't neither make suicide runs with my RN. but, the simple presence of it in the waters around India will make him less confident and will force him to use all his naval assets to cover his possibile invasions. The KB is too strong, i know. But 've already ruined his day at Miri in december when the force Z sneaked into his invasion TF north of Borneo and killed something like 10000 men.

I've read through the AAR of CR against Q-Ball and saw what Japan can throw at you (and Q-Ball invaded India in late march...now we're still in late Feb!) and i ain't no fool. But i have to start from somewhere.
Hopefully my reaction force will be enough to slow down the first landings and force him to commit everything in one single hot spot. Then i'll fall back and will try to defend the interior important cities, where the KB won't be able to catch me and where my RAF will be able to give me some cover.

Oh, i forgot to say something. In China, since when my front units got bypassed and bombed to dust, i've tried always to harras his comunication and supply lines (look at the screen shots). However he seems to have units everywhere with enough firepower to fight back and push back my "partisans"...

Thanks again for all your inputs...and let's hope he goes for Oz and not for India...




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(in reply to Alfred)
Post #: 209
RE: Singapore Falls - 4/24/2011 5:31:32 PM   
Ossian


Posts: 100
Joined: 7/7/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58

Wow. This should be stickied.



Yeah, that was a hell of a post. So much common sense, wisdom and clear thinking in that. Superb stuff.

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(in reply to Bullwinkle58)
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