composer99
Posts: 2923
Joined: 6/6/2005 From: Ottawa, Canada Status: offline
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There are, as far as I can see, two primary ways of attempting a Sealion. First, there is the "shoestring" Sealion, which is usually undertaken in the summer of 1940 (yes, while fighting in France!), and in response to a shortage of CW land units in the UK (especially in southern England), especially if the CW has moved its naval transport units and they are out of position to bring reinforcements back to the UK. While this invasion is unlikely to result in the conquest of the UK, it can cripple CW production and hamper the Allied military build-up. (I speak from bitter personal experience.) The second is the prepared invasion, to be undertaken in the spring/summer of 1941 - maybe in fall 1940 if Germany blows bps on transports. This is a much bigger affair, with Axis Marines and extra sealift units in the mix, possibly a supply unit. I haven't personally seen a 1941 Sealion work, yet, but I believe there are accounts where it has. Unrelated to the methods of Sealion, I should add that Sealion can work, as it were, even if the outcome isn't the conquest of the UK. If the invasion of the UK by the Axis results in both destroyed Allied matériel and economic damage (destroyed blue factories) sufficient to delay the Allied build-up and attacks in Italy and NW Europe by, say, at least 4 turns (thus wasting at least one summer campaign season), and does not also leave Germany vulnerable to the USSR, then it can be legitimately said to have worked.
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~ Composer99
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