Bullwinkle58
Posts: 11302
Joined: 2/24/2009 Status: offline
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April 9, 1942 'Round And 'Round It Goes, Where It Stops Nobody Knows Right on cue with the thread in the main forum on PBEM cover messages sent with moves I got the mail for 4/9 with the title "Sucky Movie." I knew I had not done anything which could have resulted in this (soon I hope!), so I assumed I had sunk a carrier or something. Instead, the Singapore Rope-a-Dope continues. I need a strutting Ring Girl to tell me which round this is. Anybody got some poster board and bangles? 1) Singers. Intense day. Saturation bombing with just massive Japanese losses and damage to heavy bombers. One raid with 17 damaged and one lost did no damage or injury to the Allies at all. Zip. Oscars spend over 50 sorties attacking two MLs and sink one, for a lone VP and one probable ops loss. Then the attack. Once again (Ring Girl?) it is a Deliberate attack with no different OOB than last time, except, probably, a lot of un-recovered engineers. I don't understand the division of labor in the Japanese land forces between Singers, China's 109,000-man stack sitting in the mountains, and premium forces refusing to finish off Bataan. Here it is: Ground combat at Singapore (50,84) Japanese Deliberate attack Attacking force 17398 troops, 485 guns, 247 vehicles, Assault Value = 3347 Defending force 41014 troops, 565 guns, 366 vehicles, Assault Value = 888 Japanese adjusted assault: 175 Allied adjusted defense: 5423 Japanese assault odds: 1 to 30 (fort level 3) Combat modifiers Defender: terrain(+), forts(+), leaders(+), experience(-) Attacker: Japanese ground losses: 2726 casualties reported Squads: 7 destroyed, 208 disabled Non Combat: 0 destroyed, 23 disabled Engineers: 0 destroyed, 19 disabled Guns lost 41 (1 destroyed, 40 disabled) Allied ground losses: 277 casualties reported Squads: 2 destroyed, 27 disabled Non Combat: 1 destroyed, 12 disabled Engineers: 1 destroyed, 10 disabled Guns lost 5 (2 destroyed, 3 disabled) Vehicles lost 3 (1 destroyed, 2 disabled) Assaulting units: 2nd Tank Regiment Karafuto Mixed Brigade 55th Infantry Regiment 41st Infantry Regiment 5th Division 113th Infantry Regiment 12th Engineer Regiment 24th Infantry Regiment 114th Infantry Regiment 15th Ind. Engineer Regiment Imperial Guards Division 56th Recon Regiment 16th Infantry Regiment 148th Infantry Regiment 21st Division 4th Division 53rd Division 56th Infantry Regiment 56th Engineer Regiment 4th Guards Division 3rd Mortar Battalion 3rd Ind.Hvy.Art. Battalion 3rd Medium Field Artillery Regiment 1st Hvy.Artillery Regiment 23rd Ind. Engineer Regiment 18th Mountain Gun Regiment 18th Medium Field Artillery Regiment 25th Army 3rd Ind. Mountain Gun Regiment 4th Ind. Engineer Regiment 1st RF Gun Battalion 2nd Mortar Battalion 20th AA Regiment 14th Ind.Art.Mortar Battalion 2nd Ind.Hvy.Art. Battalion 20th Ind. Mtn Gun Battalion 56th Field Artillery Regiment 10th Ind. Mountain Gun Regiment 5th Mortar Battalion 34th Field AA Battalion Defending units: 2nd Loyal Battalion 2/17 Dogra Battalion 3rd Cavalry Regiment 27th Australian Brigade 3rd SSVF Battalion 11th Indian Division 1st Hyderabad Battalion 22nd Australian Brigade SSVF Brigade 9th Indian Division 110th RAF Base Force Singapore Fortress 3rd HK&S Light AA Regiment Singapore Base Force 3rd Heavy AA Regiment FMSV Brigade Malaya Army Malayan Air Wing 1st ISF Base Force 3rd ISF Base Force 2nd HK&S Heavy AA Regiment 24th NZ Pioneer Coy 2nd ISF Base Force III Indian Corps 111th RAF Base Force 109th RAF Base Force 1st Manchester Battalion 112th RAF Base Force 1st Indian Heavy AA Regiment 22nd Indian Mountain Gun Regiment 1st HK&S Heavy AA Regiment 109th RN Base Force Casualties this time are overwhelmingly Japanese. Forts are not reduced. (They were 3 + 1%) Prior to the attack the Allied units in the base had done a good job with what they have to work with. The Aussie 6th had recovered AV from 6 to 18 due, I think, to lavish supply available to use for disabled squads. Anyway, status quo here, and more time for FUDD to kick off. 2) At sea, the sub war picks up near the PI. The first evidence seen that tankers are indeed calling on northern Borneo. No sign of them around Balikpapan, but an RN sub sniffs one out today, headed north. Sub attack near Kanoya at 106,66 Japanese Ships xAK Asakaze Maru, Torpedo hits 1, heavy fires (sunk sound heard) xAK Onoe Maru xAK Toa Maru PB Shinko Maru #2 Allied Ships SS Pollack Sub attack near San Fernando at 79,73 Japanese Ships xAK Toyu Maru, Torpedo hits 1, on fire, heavy damage (confirmed sunk in Ops Report) xAK Yamahagi Maru PB Fuji Maru #3 Allied Ships SS Trusty ASW attack near Hengchun at 81,68 Japanese Ships DD Asagiri TK Kyoko Maru Allied Ships SS Truant SS Truant launches 6 torpedoes at DD Asagiri (No!) Listed only because this kind of follow-up by a different boat is so rare: Sub attack near Laoag at 80,72 Japanese Ships xAK Toyu Maru, Torpedo hits 2, on fire, heavy damage PB Shonon Maru #10 Allied Ships SS KXI 3) Bataan is bombed, but not attacked. High levels of China bombing, mostly Sallys. A rag-end marching north for months is finally killed off near Sian by about 40 Sally sorties. This unit consumed, probably, 800 sorties for a one-third A/ fragment of a 30% TOE unit beginning in January and continuing roughly daily. 4) The hovering stack NE of Tsuyung is bombed again. The other two stacks on the yellow road are nearing merge with it. Down NW of Chungking, the tank unit seen and strafed the last two days looks like it is trying to reverse stopper the yellow road to prevent supply from flowing up the yellow road through the mountains. Right now there is still a clean route, but it might be closed soon. If it is I may have to sally forth, or attack Tsuyung, mega-stack to mega-stack. For now, the clock runs. Paoshan gets stronger. 5) Forts re-hit Samarinda at 1000 feet, and do 9 Oil hits. Interesting no CAP has been shifted here. Balikpapan has a stong one, and recon shows no Oil damage, or perhaps what was done has been repaired. But Japan seems willing to lose pieces of any Oil base except Big B. 6) The BB TF seen last week is re-spotted hovering near Kendari. Don't know why. 7) The three incoming USN carriers are near Pearl. Yorktown takes DB replacements in-port Pearl. The ships are ready at Pearl, the landing forces are there as well. As soon as the carriers come in Operation RIFF-RAFF, the assault on Johnson Island, will load and weigh anchor.
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< Message edited by Bullwinkle58 -- 4/2/2013 2:01:12 AM >
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The Moose
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