T120 – 3 October 1943
So pass another VP check point, these are pretty irrelevant at this stage, the Soviet player has a chance at them in early 1943 but now they need to be picking up locations in the Reich – as you can see the Sudden Death is well over the HWM and HWM is met by regaining the USSR plus Rumania. All of which suggests this is going into 1945 (unless everything falls apart during 1944).
Off map, Sardinia is liberated.
More worried about my losses to be honest – fortunately when I checked they were mostly Rumanian, which I can't complain about as I've been leaving them as bait.
Since we approach a bad weather period, dumped a load of low experience airgroups back into the reserve, best to get them up to NM while I can spare them.
Still no massive switch in the weather, probably at least one more week till heavier rains arrive.
Airwar, carried on with the railyard campaign, I'm not using something I really miss as the heavy bombers aren't great in a GS role. For some reason the L1 mission didn't happen – may have been that the railyard selected was already fully damaged. The other delivered, less flak as I don't think there were any ground units at Voroshilovgrad.
Might hit Moscow for a laugh next turn.
Things start to fall apart – inevitable but hopefully bad weather gives me a break. Abandon Sumy – no point taking losses for something I don't need to hold – as before making gains here can lead to problems for the Soviets in terms of rail links.
This is worse, in its implications for the Dneipr bend, so I reinforced the southern sector and trampled on an over-enthusiastic Soviet formation, gave ground north of Poltava – its still a long way to Kiev.
Had to happen, more or less a complete Rumanian army now needs to refit, decided to pull 8A out of its fortifications and back to the Dnepr. The counter-attacks will have stripped any mobility out of a cluster of Soviet tank/mech corps.
VP chart is relevant here. Smolensk will now give no time bonus (so it exchanges at base value), that is handy in case I need to re-organise AGC – this depends on what the Soviets do around Bryansk.
The 2 citiies in the Dnepr bend, I gained +8 time bonus and at the moment, they are worth +10. Neither will fall next turn, so still hopeful I can come out ahead. New focus is not so much on that sector as the subsequent implications for the central Ukraine.
Fairly sure Kiev will be a net gain for me – key is where can I stop the Soviets by next April as my attention now shifts to the T150+ cluster of VP cities.
Ground losses – and another reason to give ground, can't sustain 1-1 exchanges, even if the great majority were Rumanian. I can refit them, and its worth using them this way, but that level of damage will take a few turns to recover.
VVS refuses to come out to play.
Big numbers suggest I'm not the only one feeling the tempo.
Compared to T118, Germans are down 80,000 men (some were scripted transfers) and 300 tanks. My allies are down 50,000 men – mostly the Rumanian disaster.
But I have the Soviets under 6m with a net drop of 400k men and 1,200 tanks. Their reserve is up 160k, so a fair bit has gone to refit but generally the increased tempo has hurt them too.
One bit of good news, at the moment, they actually lack the manpower to recover, oddly I can. It'll take a few turns to refit the Rumanians but its doable – and they are, now, a finite resource as far as I'm concerned.
But even off recovering some large cities, its hard to see the Soviets going above 6,5m on the map and they won't do that till places like Minsk and Kiev are retaken, so I suspect the next phase they will be around 6m. Not that overwhelming but still rather scary. One benefit from here, they can't risk deep salients as they lack the formations to keep pressing, guard the flanks and keep me worried elsewhere.
[1] 'Should I stay or should I go'