But in Burma, there are lots of possibilities now!

Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition

ORIGINAL: Lowpe
Moulmein:
Radar picks up several flights of planes inbound! Standbye fighters are scrambled, the British have weak to no fighter coverage...not a bomber gets thru.[:)]
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Moulmein:
Radar picks up several flights of planes inbound! Standbye fighters are scrambled, the British have weak to no fighter coverage...not a bomber gets thru.




All the tanks coming up will either make a full attack at Prome or head to Magwe and cut west from there with 3 division -- not sure which counter offensive to take. Plenty of time to decide though.
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[/center]ORIGINAL: ny59giants
Without knowing all the disposition of troops, I would take Prome and then drive to the hex due east of Ramree. Then you can come back and take Bassien and Rangoon at your leisure.


[/center]ORIGINAL: Lokasenna
Turn off the refinery at Urumchi if the fuel isn't flowing out.
Mine still hasn't started shipping out. I did get some Oil to flow to Fusan, but nothing big yet.
ORIGINAL: mind_messing
- Move in another infantry unit - Naval Guard or SNLF, doesn't really matter which. The "South Seas Garrison" units are also good candidates. The point is to have two units, so the Allied bombardment divides its fire between two units.
ORIGINAL: Lowpe
ORIGINAL: mind_messing
- Move in another infantry unit - Naval Guard or SNLF, doesn't really matter which. The "South Seas Garrison" units are also good candidates. The point is to have two units, so the Allied bombardment divides its fire between two units.
Just throwing out ideas here:
Have you tried multiple COY size units? That would divide the bombardment the most, and perhaps one would get overlooked and provide a slight surprise?
They are about 400 men each and you could focus them instead of spreading them apart to cover lots of bases with 15 AV each...just a thought.
