I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post descriptions of your brilliant victories and unfortunate defeats here.

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obvert
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by obvert »

I like subs as a concentrated force. It's good to have a few out to recon deeply, possibly pick off a ship or two occasionally and to keep the Allied transport/cargo TFs honest, but grouping 15-20 subs around major targets has always been more productive for me.
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill
fcharton
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by fcharton »

We are playing five turns a week, and this AAR has been lagging behind, so here is a situation report, as 1942 begins.
January 2nd 1942

Aleutians – blocade runners and reinforcements

The Allied blockade of Adak was broken around Christmas, as a small cruiser force, around CL Kiso, managed to surprise two enemy destroyers, sink one (DD Worden) and damage the other (DD Hull). The allies had a cruiser in the area, but chose to retreat, which was a good thing as my forces were very limited.

This allowed reinforcements to land. Adak now sports a base force, an infantry regiment, an engineer unit and decent supplies. So far, my presence in the Aleutians is limited to Adak. The decision to expand will be taken once I have a few more units to spare in this theater.

Burma – on our way to Rangoon

I have sent almost two divisions in Burma. My opponent had gone for a forward defense, but Moulmein fell on my first attempt (for lack of forts, I believe). We have now crossed the Salween, our troops are resting before attacking again and marching on Pegu. Further south, a tank Regiment took Tavoy and Mergui.

Many ships were detected around Rangoon, including transports. I do not know whether they reinforcing, evacuating, or just trying to feed China. At the current rate of advance, te Burma road should be closed in about a week, and Rangoon should be ours by the 20th of January.

Malaya

In the north, the Alor Star pocket surrendered on the first of January. In the South, we are closing on Malacca. Kuala and Temuloh are ours, and Kuantan was taken by paradrop. Another paradrop attempt to cut enemy retreat was ill fated. I lost half of the third Yokosuka.

Once Malacca is ours, we will control the railroad lines from Thailand. Altogether, I have three divisions in Malaya, two more in Bangkok, and a third on its way. With the Alor Star garrison already captured, I am hoping this is enough.

Singapore has been swept, and is bombed daily to slow fort construction. If everything goes right, we should be able to invest the Lion city by the middle of the month, and hopefully to capture it by late January or early February.

Philippines

Three divisions (the 4th, 16th and 48th), reinforced by armor and artillery are converging on Manila. Both the northern and southern parts of the island have been captured. So far the enemy seems to be concentrating in Clark.

My goal is to capture Manila and bottle the Allies in Clark and Bataan. Once this is done, I intend to keep two divisions for the siege, and free the third.

Mindanao is being taken on the cheap. Three SNLF units took all the bases on the west coast of the island. The 65th Brigade in now reinforcing them. With a little luck it should be enough.

Borneo and the Celebes

The North coast of Borneo, from Jesselton to Singkawang, is ours. In the Celebes, I hold Manado and Kendari. These are all my first phase objectives. Macassar, Balikpapan and Tarakan will be attacked later, at the same time as Java.

On the other hand, Ternate, Ambon, and Timor have been captured.

New Guinea

This was the fastest moving theater. Three infantry regiments and a handful of Naval Guard units were committed there. After the northern coast was invaded, we went for Manus, Finschafen, and then Rabaul.

Port Moresby was invaded and captured last week, and Buna should be ours soon, trapping the units retreated from PM. Further south, we captured Milne Bay and Woodlark Island.

Further south, we landed in Tulagi and Ndeni in the south and in the Gilbert Islands.

Altogether, the December invasions were easy. The allies did manage a few counter attacks, sinking transports in the Solomons, defeating my paras in Malacca, but most of the landings went fine, and progress was better than in my previous game.

Supplywise, base captures in China are beginning to pay off, and my supply and resource reserves are slowly moving up.

My goals for January are to take Singapore and Rangoon, put siege on Luzon, and land in Sumatra. If this can be achieved, I will have two months for Java and second phase objectives (which have yet to be decided).

fcharton
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by fcharton »

January 3rd 1942

Night raid on Singkawang


I have a clever enemy, who will make me pay of every careless moment.
For the last couple of days, I have been unloading troops and supplies in Singkawang, while my surface forces were on their way to their base. Zulu obviously noticed it, and sent a cruiser force. It was not nice.

Night Time Surface Combat, near Singkawang at 56,88, Range 11,000 Yards

Japanese Ships
PB Busho Maru, Shell hits 21, and is sunk
PB Keiko Maru, Shell hits 2
xAK Sanko Maru, Shell hits 7
xAK Maebasi Maru, Shell hits 3, Torpedo hits 1, on fire, heavy damage
xAK Mito Maru, Shell hits 23, heavy fires, heavy damage
xAK Tarayasu Maru

Allied Ships
CL Dragon
CL Durban, Shell hits 3
DD Evertsen

Night Time Surface Combat, near Singkawang at 56,88, Range 8,000 Yards

Japanese Ships
DD Yamagumo
DD Tachikaze, Shell hits 4, on fire, heavy damage
xAP Kongo Maru, Shell hits 13, and is sunk

Allied Ships
CL Dragon
CL Durban, Shell hits 1
DD Evertsen


The Maebashi and Mito Maru sank a few hours later. I did not scuttle the Tachikaze, but I doubt she makes it to Kuching.

Fortunately, the Royal Navy did not retreat fast enough. Was it engine damage, or an aggressive captain rushing back, or some other order ? Anyway, Mini-KB was around, and punishment was delivered in the afternoon.

Afternoon Air attack on TF, near Pontianak at 55,89

Weather in hex: Clear sky

Raid detected at 75 NM, estimated altitude 13,000 feet.
Estimated time to target is 32 minutes

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 13
B5N1 Kate x 16

Japanese aircraft losses
B5N1 Kate: 1 destroyed by flak

Allied Ships
CL Durban, Torpedo hits 3, and is sunk
CL Dragon, Torpedo hits 3, and is sunk
DD Evertsen, Torpedo hits 2, and is sunk


Eight hits out of sixteen Kates, I am proud of my flyboys. If Tracker is to be believed, I have sunk six cruisers (for one mine), and nine destroyers (to three), so far.

Although sinking Royal Navy outfits has a distinct charm for a French leaning emperor, I count this engagement as a draw.

China

With scenario one supplies, no reinforcements from Kwantung and stacking limits, China is a bit more involved than in my previous game. So far, I have been focusing on the north, clearing the mountains around Kweisui and Paotow, taking the bases around Loyang, clearing the Yellow river plains.

I am going for a two pronged attack on Sian. A northern move through Yenan, and a southern thrust over the primary road west of Nanyang. At present, my advance is stalled south of Yenan, reinforcements are on their way. On the road to Nanyang, I am waiting for the central plains to be cleared to have enough troops to rotate in and out of the front.

In the south, a general retreat seems under way. Kukong is being evacuated, and we have captured and empty Wuchow yesterday.

One division has been besieging Chuhsien for a while, reinforcements are on their way. I would like to clear the coast by the time Singapore falls.


Imperial travels

I should be back in America at the end of February, with my family. This will be our third trip since 2015. The first one was in New England (from New York to Pemaquid, Maine along the coast, and then through the White Mountains, to Burlington (meeting my AE opponent there), and then south to New York. We had loved the road trip aspect, renting a car and improvising from day to day, so we tried again last April, in the south. We found a flight in to Charleston, a flight out from Miami two weeks later, rented a car, booked our first night, and improvised, from Charleston, to Beaufort, Savannah, the Okefenokee, St Augustine, Ocala, Crystal river, and then down the west coast to Miami.

Another trip was planned in October, in Utah, since Delta has a direct flight from Paris to Salt Lake City (last time, we found the 24 hours from Paris to Charleston, via Dallas, a bit taxing). But the sale of my company happened at that precise moment, and the trip was cancelled, and I owed the family one… The next school holiday, Christmas, was out of the question, and so February it had to be, and since we had already bought travel guides for the south west…

So, we are landing in Albuquerque in mid-February, have a hotel night booked, a car reserved, and leave from Las Vegas in the beginning of March. The rest will be improvised on the spot, depending on the mood, weather, travel guide and road atlas advice, and who shouts loudest. Any advice is welcome.
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PaxMondo
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by PaxMondo »

ORIGINAL: fcharton
So, we are landing in Albuquerque in mid-February, have a hotel night booked, a car reserved, and leave from Las Vegas in the beginning of March. The rest will be improvised on the spot, depending on the mood, weather, travel guide and road atlas advice, and who shouts loudest. Any advice is welcome.
Well:
Santa Fe is a no brainer. Have brunch at Pasquales, be patient there is always a fairly long queue. Get your name on it and then walk around the plaza. Be sure someone gets a bowl of the seasonal cobbler.
Los Alamos. The museum is a must see. There is a picture, blown up to life size on one wall with a technician holding the uranium core for Fat Boy I believe, and the entire Manhattan Project team around him in a semi-circle. One of the most compelling photos I have ever seen.
Grand Canyon. Well, you simply must. Try to book a room at Bright Angel lodge NOW. It is right on the rim. Not much more than the lousy rooms outside the park and worth the fact you can walk the rim at dawn. You could try for one of the Bright Angel cabins, but you would only get one if there is last minute cancellation.

Then some other possibilities:
White Sands: Gypsum dune and lake. On many Friday evening, they have a night hike to the lake and the night sky reflected in the lake is stunning. Not water, but gypsum lake. The surface tension is different than water so the effect is really amazing.
Carlsbad Caverns: if you go, book the Kings Room tour in advance and then be sure you are there the whole day as the tour in the morning. The bats will be hibernating, so you will not see the evening flight.
The above two would normally be a together trip as they are about 3 hours apart south of ABQ.

Petrified Forest. You need to check the dates, it may not be open.
Painted Desert. ditto. Not sure it is open.
Again, you would likely stay in Holbrook, AZ and see both of these. You can also stay in Windlsow, AZ (famous Eagles song )

Send me a note if any of these are appealing. Depending upon which ones, I can then suggest other places. EX: if you would go to Calsbad, then I would suggest coming into AZ from the south and stopping as Bisbee, AZ. Things like that.
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by spence »

From what Zuluhour is posting you seem to be doing OK in the game. So where are you and the famille these days? If you haven't been already the list from PaxMondo seems pretty good: a whole bunch of places that Deb and I were going to visit if we ever made that trip to the SW (we opted for Europe instead). I imagine we'll be headed that way eventually though. Anyways good luck - as a darkside player you'll need it.

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obvert
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by obvert »

ORIGINAL: fcharton

Imperial travels

I should be back in America at the end of February, with my family. This will be our third trip since 2015. The first one was in New England (from New York to Pemaquid, Maine along the coast, and then through the White Mountains, to Burlington (meeting my AE opponent there), and then south to New York. We had loved the road trip aspect, renting a car and improvising from day to day, so we tried again last April, in the south. We found a flight in to Charleston, a flight out from Miami two weeks later, rented a car, booked our first night, and improvised, from Charleston, to Beaufort, Savannah, the Okefenokee, St Augustine, Ocala, Crystal river, and then down the west coast to Miami.

Another trip was planned in October, in Utah, since Delta has a direct flight from Paris to Salt Lake City (last time, we found the 24 hours from Paris to Charleston, via Dallas, a bit taxing). But the sale of my company happened at that precise moment, and the trip was cancelled, and I owed the family one… The next school holiday, Christmas, was out of the question, and so February it had to be, and since we had already bought travel guides for the south west…

So, we are landing in Albuquerque in mid-February, have a hotel night booked, a car reserved, and leave from Las Vegas in the beginning of March. The rest will be improvised on the spot, depending on the mood, weather, travel guide and road atlas advice, and who shouts loudest. Any advice is welcome.

Great plan Francois. I've done similar, coming rom Chicago to Oregon through the SW and up along the Rockies.

This article has some of my favourites in Arizona. I loved the cliff ruins and Pueblos everywhere. Canyon de Chelley is a must visit. I'll also add a plus 1 for Carlsbad Caverns, although that's a bit of a detour for you. I went aged 5 and still remember it.

https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2013/oct/17/top-10-national-parks-in-arizona

Mesa Verde in Southern Colorado is great too, as are the Canyonlands and Arches National Parks. I remember some great family camping spots with lots of facilities, like pools, showers and other amenities, and loads of stars out at night.

Have fun and post some pics of the highlights!
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill
fcharton
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by fcharton »

First half of January 1942, 4th to 17th

Although we are now steadily playing five turns a week, I found little time to update this AAR. I will try to do better now.

From a Japanese standpoint, the war is going fine. Rangoon fell today, Manilla ten days ago. Four divisions are in Johore Baru and will march on Singapore tomorrow (a fifth and assorted small units, for a grand total of six divisions plus supporting artillery and engineers, will join a few days later). The Palembang invasion is sailing. Life is good in the evil empire.

More precisely, here is a theater by theater round up.

Aleutians

Adak was invaded in the first week of the war, and two nearby bases auto-captured. An Allied attempt at blockading it, around mid-December, was broken by a pair of cruiser task forces. This provided enough respite to land an infantry regiment, an engineer regiment, and heaps of supplies. Forts have been built to level three, we are now working on the airfield.

A few days ago, an infantry battalion has landed on Attu, just as enemy carriers (the Yorktown, for sure, maybe another one) appeared in the area. The island was captured, but supplies will have to wait.

The enemy carriers did not cause damage. One of my submarines have the Yorktown in her sights, but missed.

My goal, right now, is to take the island chain up to Cold Harbor, and maybe the northernmost bases on the Alaskan coast (just for the fun of it). I do not really want to make this an important theater, but if it can cost the Allies a bit…

Northern China

Several offensives are on the way. A tank column is marching on Ningsia and Lanchow, from Paotow. An infantry division is following the major road to Turkestan.

South of Yenan, a long and protracted battle is taking place, enemy numbers are slowly dwindling, I hope to take Yenan by the end of January.

The central plains have been captured, and we are slowly progressing on the major road to Sian. This enemy has tried to defend this area by overstacking troops. I try not to exceed stacking limits, and resort to bombardments, which, I believe, cause large supply usage from the defenders.

Several divisions are concentrated around Nanyang, ready to replace the forward elements as the get worn out by deliberate attacks.

So far, Sian and Yenan are my main targets in China, most of my large units are committed there. A few weeks ago, I was afraid this would take a long time, but it seems the enemy is obligingly retreating, I am not sure why. Taking Sian in March seems likely.

Central and Southern China

With most of my heavy units committed in the North, I cannot afford large scale operations in this theater. My main objective, right now, is to clear the coast. The 104th Division is marching on Pakhoi and Nanning. Several divisions have taken Chuhsien, and are now clearing the area before marching on Wenchow. Pucheng and Kanhsien are next.

I do not have enough resources to commit around Changsha. The only move there is a diversionary attack from Ichang to Changteh, to force my opponent to reinforce this area. When I am blocked, those troops will march north to join the Sian invasion.

Burma

One of the fast moving parts. I committed almost two divisions there: the Imperial Guards, and assorted regiments and tanks. Moulmein fell easily, while tanks took the coastal bases. The march on Rangoon was slow, but we managed to reduce enemy numbers, and Rangoon feel today, after a three day battle. The only bad aspect was that the city installations were trashed, the refineries are 85% damaged, as is the industry, and the port and airfield are in sore shape.

So far, I was not very lucky with capturing installations. In China, most of the resources and light industry were captured half damaged. Rangoon seems to follow the pattern. I hope the same does not happen in Sumatra and Java…

Malaysia

Another easy campaign. We managed to eliminate the Alor Star garrison. All other units ran to Singapore. We captured Johore a few days ago, and have now four divisions ready to march on Singapore (2nd, 5th, 18th, and 38th). The 21st, assorted elements of the 56th and various independent infantry, engineer, artillery and armored units, will join them.

I did not manage to bomb Singapore, as the flak seems very effective, but scores of Buffaloes were shot down by my sweeps. So far, about 325 enemy fighters were shot down (over Rangoon, Singapore and Clark Field), for about 120 Japanese.

South of Malaysia, the norther coast of Borneo is all ours, Pontianak is about to be captured. From Singkawang, we took Singkep to try and isolate Palembang. A division and a brigade are assembling in Japan, and will land in Palembang in a couple of weeks.

Philippines

On Luzon, the enemy is now bottled in Clark Field and Bataan. Manilla fell easily on the sixth of January. I am planning to keep three divisions and artillery on the island, and send the rest of the troops south, to capture the Philippine islands.

On Mindanao, Malaybalay is the last enemy base. The 65th brigade is there, together with a few SNLF units.

Celebes

A “corridor”, which includes Ternate, Sorong, Manado, Kendari Ambon, Dili, Lautem Taberfane and Koepang, was captured early in December, to isolate New Guinea. This then, this theater has been calm. I should be moving soon on Kendari and Bali, as a prelude to operations in Java and on the southern coast of Borneo.

My strategy, here, was to cut communications between Australia and the Philippines. The blockade of Borneo and Java comes next.

New Guinea

One of the brightest spots. Port Moresby, Terapo, Buna, and Milne bay are ours. Small Australian units are withering in the jungle. Horn Island is next, together with small bases in the Gulf of Carpentaria. My objective here is to close the Torres Straits for as long as I can. In my previous game against Spence, not controlling the straits helped the Allies to conquer the Moluccas in 1943, and I have come to consider this area (Timor, Babar, Taberfane, Ambon), as the soft underbelly of Japan.


Solomons and Central pacific

Not much to say. We landed in Munda, Tulagi, Ndeni, and occupy most of the Gilberts. The enemy has been raiding this area, playing hide and seek with KB. So far, my carriers did not manage to cause much damage, which is sad. On the other hand, the enemy navy has been very prudent, which makes my invasions easier.


Imperial travels

Thanks for all the comments and suggestions. We are one week from the big day, and as usual very little has been decided… We do know we will first visit Santa Fe, the Bandelier monument and Los Alamos, and then drive west toward Caldera Valley, Jemez Springs and the Chaco Culture Historical Park. After that, it is either north towards Mesa Verde or southwest to Canyon de Chelley…

As Pax said, the Grand Canyon is mandatory, as is Monument Valley (and the parks around, Gooseneck, Valley of the Gods…). I would love to visit the Arches, Bryce and Zion parks, and there is something about Meteor Crater and Hoover Dam, and then, February might be one of the rare moments in the year when the climate in Death Valley is palatable. Choices will have to be made, and it is a good thing, because it will provide us with a reason to come back…

I will try to keep a blog of our trip (http://lescenamerique.blogspot.com). It is in French, but there are pictures (right now, Florida and New England, our previous destinations).
fcharton
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by fcharton »

February 23rd 1942

Sorry for the lack of reporting, I know Zulu posts regularly on his AAR. I did not have much time to update mine. We are nicely progressing, over a five turns per week pace.

Invasionwise, Singapore fell last week. In the historical perimeter, only Java, Balikpapan, northern Sumatra and Port Blair remain to be addressed. A few pockets are left here and there, notably in Malaybalay and Clark Field, and we have landed in northern Australia, hold the Solomons and Gilberts, and Adak in the north. With about six weeks to go in the amphibious bonus (and considering we are scenario 1), I believe we are on schedule.

In China, Yenan fell, and we are closing on Sian. In the south, apart from a pocket in Wenchow, we hold pretty much everything east of the Changsha basin, Kukong, and Nanning.

Considering my global inaptitude, there were relatively few setbacks. Zulu pulled a nice carrier attack on my Palembang landing forces, which fortunately happened after the troops had unloaded. I lot a couple of transports in the process. And I did something very silly with my cruisers just today (more about that later). The enemy is not overly aggressive, I am not overly bold, we are both warring peacefully.

The VP ratio now stands at 1.7:1. So far, I lost about 600 planes, for 700 enemies, and LCU point losses are 278 to 4 650. A pretty calm opening, as I said.

Silly Goto

My strategy in the south pacific is minimal. I am using a few marine units as invasion forces, and send them, month after month, in wavelike simultaneous pushes. We did Shortlands, Milne bay, Tulagi, Kirakira, the southern Gilbert and Baker this way.

With the Solomons, Gilberts and all of New Guinea proudly (and coprosperously) flying the Imperial flag, I had decided to launch a new series, over a line going from Vaitupu to Luganville, including the Santa Cruz islands.

The southernmost thrust, against Luganville was a small landing force followed by a much larger cruiser force, under admiral Goto. I was expecting warships in Luganville, and hoped to surprise them with my oversized escorts.

Well, it did not happen… Yesterday, an enemy task force, around CL Honolulu, managed to sink my landing force, without the escort intervening. I can afford an SNLF company two cargoes and a destroyer, but the loss of face does hurt.

With Goto idle and undetected, I decided to order him to attack whatever was left in Luganville today. With a little luck, they would find the cruiser force low on ammo, and with six cruisers to his one light…

Well, we found them, and we lost a light cruiser and a destroyer to CL Honolulu, and then, three more cruisers to CA Pensacola and Minneapolis. The loss of seven SOC-Seagull on the ground makes me suspect we got something return, but still…

Japanese Ships
CA Aoba
CA Kinugasa, Shell hits 6, on fire
CA Furutaka, Shell hits 4, Torpedo hits 1, and is sunk
CA Kako, Shell hits 6, heavy fires
CL Kashima, Shell hits 24, and is sunk
DD Uzuki, Shell hits 3, heavy fires, heavy damage

Allied Ships
CA Pensacola, Shell hits 5
CA Minneapolis, Shell hits 5, on fire
DD Patterson
DD Jarvis
DD Cummings
DD Case
DD Conyngham, Shell hits 1
DD Shaw


And so, two cruisers are now proudly limping towards Rabaul, out of harm’s way, I am sure. But four cruisers and two destroyers are lost, and I would not care to be in admiral Goto’s boots, next week (I heard the Emperor ask about fluvial patrols in Manchuria at breakfast this morning).

Still, we took Duff and Reef islands today, and Vaitupu should be invaded tomorrow. I think my opponent is pretty methodical, so I try to push the line as far south as I can in the south pacific, every island invaded is a couple more weeks for Japan.

Growing the Empire

So far, invasions went fine. According to Tracker, we now hold 554 base (for 600 to the Allies). In my game against Spence (scenario 2), the number was 473 at the same point in the game. In this game, I have been more systematic, using small units to clear all enemy bases in rear areas, and then emptying those areas to move the front further.

With the exception of Java, northern Sumatra and southern Borneo, the SRA is pretty much done. I have a division worth of troops in northern Australia, holding the coast from Exmouth to Windham, and the small bases on the gulf of Carpentaria. And the fall of Singapore is freeing about six divisions for operations elsewhere.

With six weeks left of amphibious bonus, I need to spend March establishing beachheads which I can reinforce later. I want to land in Northern Sumatra, the Andamans, and between Akyab or Chittagong. I am split as to the opportunity of going for central India or Ceylon. As for Australia, I was thinking of going for Perth at the end of March, but I am tempted to land on the northeastern coast, and break things north of Brisbane. The goal is always the same: force the allies to spend time recovering all those forward areas, giving me time to develop the interior.

I am currently toying with the idea of establishing beachheads everywhere, while the bonus lasts, and deciding to reinforce them later.

Quartermaster in the Pacific

This is scenario one, PDU off, and I have been embarking on a policy of serious aircraft R&D, and whereas I am not accelerating naval builds, I have not cut most of the programs (like I did in my previous game). I am expecting low supply levels early in the war. At present, overall supply levels are stable around 2.9 million tons, as are fuel reserves, around 5.4 million (bunker fuel included). I hope to be able to increase my supply reserves by summer, when the fighting gets less intense and I hold a few more supply producing bases in China and Java. I do not know if this can be achieved in scenario one.

Convoys between Hokkaido and Honshu have been set up, the Sakhalin convoys need a little more port development to be operational, and whereas Japan is still using more resources than it gets every day, we are getting closer. Overall, resource reserves are up, which will allow to save on fuel by not bringing everything back to the home islands.
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Bif1961
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by Bif1961 »

CL Kashima, Shell hits 24, and is sunk. Including this 18 knot light cruiser put you at a maneuver disadvantage and with only one DD in your TF probably account for your performance against his cruiser TF.
fcharton
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RE: I've got a little list, fcharton (J) vs zuluhour (A)

Post by fcharton »

February 24th 1942

End of an era


Singapore is now clear of mines, transports will arrive there and in Palembang to fetch the large combat units I need for the March invasion. Java and Port Blair are the next order of business, but I am also considering Assam and perhaps bits of Australia.

I have five divisions in Singapore and another division worth of small units (two infantry regiments and a mixed brigade). Four divisions are at full strength and can be used right now, the others will need a few weeks. I also have a division and a brigade in Sumatra, and yet another division on Mindanao, all at full strength. And of course, artillery and various support units are in Singapore as well.

I have the impression that two divisions, with tanks, guns and engineers, should be sufficient for Java, which leaves four or five for use elsewhere. Right now, I am split between a strong push in Australia, either Perth or the east coast (I am not landing in Darwin, it is full of troops, I want a siege there) or Assam and Ceylon. All these are intended as raids, I do not want to defend a large perimeter, as I will have neither the units nor the supplies for it. But the further the reconquest begins, the slower it gets.

At present, my preference goes to Australia. I think that if I can get Port Blair and the coastal bases between Calcutta and Rangoon, I will have enough buffer space to slow the allied move into Burma. And this can probably be done with just a few units, maybe two divisions and a few small units. Which would leave three divisions or more for Australia.

Prepping Java

A Naval Guard unit landed in Denpasar today, or would have if I had not forgotten to toggle its “do not unload” switch. KB provided air cover, and managed to shoot down fifteen Dutch bombers, but one of my cargoes was hit, and is now burning. Denpasar is empty, and will fall soon. Then I will try to conquer a small beachhead in the south of Java, before the larger invasions arrive in the North.

KB is now moving closer to attack Surabaya. It should stay around while the Java landings proceed, and then move towards Singapore for the next phase.

Expanding the empire

In the Pacific, Vaitupu fell, this is probably the furthest I will go, together with Baker, which I took a few weeks ago. In the Celebes and Flores, the last enemy bases are being captured. In Burma we took Mandalay, and are marching towards Lashio and northern Burma.

In China, Nanning fell. I had invaded it earlier this month, and the Chinese had evacuated after a long series of inconclusive battles. A general retreat seems in order. Pingsiang seems to have been evacuated, and there seem to be movement in the Hunan basin, around Changsha. I am poised to take the abandoned bases. I would of course prefer to defeat the KMT in the field, but retreating cost them supplies, and central China has a lot of good production bases.

We now hold 561 bases, and have been capturing on average four a day since January. Most of them are empty, though, and the process of sending small units to hold and develop the ground should begin soon.

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