End Soviet T63 (27 August 1942) Clear.
The last few turns have seen the battles limited to the area's shown in red on the map. There have also been some successful Axis counter attacks in these area's as well, an unusual reaction from herr Pelton. But not an unwelcomed one. It confirms he is actually spending some time on a turn
The inset map shows a close up around Minsk where the heaviest fighting has been the last few turns.
The latest patch has put a dampener on the divisional wave attacks. Their employment know is only used in favourable circumstances. This is not an issue for me as I now have enough Corp sized units to inflict some pain on the Axis and I am conserving some ARM points now for upgrades and ART XX so the insane 'Stalin' attacks are no more. As you will see from the loss screen this turn saw a ratio of near 2:1 for our attacks. But we inflicted only enough loss on the enemy to hopefully keep his manpower and arm pools in check.
This leads me to the whole reason why I have persisted with these attacks. Simply to keep the German OOB and Pools under control. I really don't want to risk having to grind in 1944. Which may have been on the cards if the Germans were allowed to go unmolested for all of 1942. This is why I have not attacked Finland. All my efforts have been concentrated on Germany. Crushing Finland is not going to get me to Berlin any faster and I am getting enough Guard Corp from my successful attacks on the main front. My original intent was to attack the Finns but the 'Stalin' attacks ate up too many resources to allow it.
Bottom line is I would rather be facing a German OOB of ~ 3.5 M by 1943 with Finland still around than a possible German OOB of ~ 4.0 M with no Finland. That simple.
10 more Inf Corp came on line this turn. Total now at 35. This should allow me 2 or 3 winning battles per turn that will inflict ~10K of losses on Germany, that should be enough to keep the OOB and Pools under control (when you include attrition). Once the rivers freeze I will be able to put some pain on him in the south and from 1943 on the slippery slide for the Reich will begin.
