My subs spotted two sizable TFs roughly centered between Canton Island, Wallis Island and Pago Pago this turn. One TF appears to have transport ships in it and the other has a number of first rate US DDs. My guess is that Marky is bringing some sizeable defensive force to Wallis Island where he already has a base force of some indeterminate size in place. The weather has been fairly poor in the region, which I hope will continue, because I want it to mask my next moves as I send the KB and a strong surface battle group down to the region from Kwajalein.
Both TFs will stop at Tarawa first to refuel and allow me to assess the situation. Although my subs haven't reported any ship-based floatplanes in the area of those two US TFs, I did notice that Marky lost an F3F from an operational loss last turn, which suggests that he may well have some CVs in action. I would love to chance the KB against the US carriers early, even though that has cost me a number of CVs in my other pbems – I'm hoping that I've learned how to handle my CVs better, and I also haven't split up the KB this time. [:-]
The big surprise for me this turn was that Marky has abandoned that crossroads between Hengchow and Changsha, opening up the full central Chinese railway to my use. So I am going to start to use it immediately to reposition my forces and to start to send some "nuisance" forces up towards the far western Chinese bases, just to keep Marky guessing.

It also appears that Marky has moved around a third of his units away from the second crossroads to the north of that main railway crossroads between Hengchow and Changsha. He had been keeping 38 units there for quite some time. Maybe he is getting a bit nervous. He ought to get even more nervous when he sees this turn because I just cut the road to the east of Kweiyang. Will he send units out of his forts to contest my interdiction or will he sit back and keep on building up fortifications?
The bombers in my Chinese Expeditionary Force finally flew with some strength this turn against Ichang. It was a week too late to help me capture the base, but it is still nice to see the planes fly effectively while not taking much damage or fatigue. My land units also completed their withdrawal from Ichang unscathed, although one artillery unit "retreated" for no obvious reason, even though it wasn't attacked. In the end that doesn't matter because I have my forces where they want them and Marky continues to bring more units into a base that is hard for him to supply and easy for me to attack from the air.
In Burma my main attacking force moved closer to an assault on Mandalay. The armoured unit in the attack force was getting ahead of the others, so I reset it to stay where it is for a turn while the other slower units cover the ground ahead. I prefer to have infantry units go against entrenched enemy forces first and have armoured and support units come in afterwards.
Surprisingly, Marky is not trying to bomb my advancing forces. Instead he has a mass of fighters flying CAP over Mandalay. While it is certainly tempting to consider sending in a mass sweep of four Daitais of Zeros against Mandalay, I'm not quite ready to risk my main offensive weapon at this point because I'm not guaranteed of total air superiority. I would much rather let the ground forces push Marky out of Mandalay and use my Zeros in overwhelming air attacks during my upcoming invasion of Java.
Speaking of the DEI, I have a base force and an Aviation Regiment about to land at Palembang, so Marky's forces on Java will soon get to feel the strength of my Army Air Corp that is nicely rested up from their efforts against Singapore. Once again, I'll use Oscars to support the Sallys, with the Zeros in reserve in case Marky tries to bring in any decent Allied fighters.
Speaking of Singapore, my minesweepers swept more mines this turn, but yet another PC "swept" a mine the "hard way", but at least this time it didn't sink right off the bat.
Despite the residual mines I loaded my most-rested Engineering Regiment on a transport TF and sent it on its way to Naga and Manila to assist in the siege there.Speaking of Manila, my army bombers in Luzon finally flew some decent missions against Manila and Bataan, causing damage and casualties. There is still enough flak being thrown up against my planes that I have to rest half of them each turn in order to repair damage and improve morale. The artillery bombardment of Manila also went better this turn, probably because it followed a fairly strong air attack. Never-the-less, I can't see a good reason to do another deliberate attack until that fresh engineering regiment shows up in a couple of game-weeks.

