1944 January 30
The Empire captured:
The Allies captured:
Ruteng
There were Imperial amphibious operations at:
There were Allied amphibious operations at:
Boela
Our subs got a TK and an xAK.
Air attacks on Chungking were of the more damaging nature today. 2,700 AV there.
The same in Burma, on land at least. At sea the IJN carriers darted back to SE of Ceylon and repelled air attacks thrown against them. Curiously they made none of their own on the TFs at Colombo. See map below for their exact position. So are they making their way back into the Bay of Bengal or was/is this an effort to strike the RN at Colombo? Perhaps is was to catch damaged ships making their way past Ceylon (they missed them already!).
Some clarifications from the preliminary post earlier. First, the IJN carriers are 7 hexes from Colombo so they must have set their groups to torpedo range only. Second, the Albacores which attacked them were from our carriers, not LBA. Also, our P-47 groups do not have the range to transfer directly to Colombo. But Corsairs, P-51, and P-38 all do have the range. So, we are moving a squadron of P-51 to Colombo, USMC Corsair to Colombo, P-38 to Trincomalee, and two (6-plane) squadrons of Barracuda II to Trincomalee (to augment the 12-plane squadron at Koggala). We should have stout CAP and good escort for strikes.
There is more IJN combat and convoy traffic moving up the coast, passing Victoria Point.
Allied bombardments in the Pacific.
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Maloelap
Allied Ships Bombarding Maloelap
Allied Ships Bombarding Yap
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Peleliu
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Maloelap
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Saipan
Allied Ships Bombarding Maloelap
Allied Ships Bombarding Maloelap
The attack at Saipan went pretty well.
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Ground combat at Saipan (108,93)
Japanese Bombardment attack
Attacking force 21648 troops, 189 guns, 14 vehicles, Assault Value = 715
Defending force 80638 troops, 1259 guns, 1432 vehicles, Assault Value = 2601
Japanese ground losses:
96 casualties reported
Squads: 1 destroyed, 11 disabled
Non Combat: 0 destroyed, 0 disabled
Engineers: 0 destroyed, 0 disabled
Allied ground losses:
Guns lost 1 (1 destroyed, 0 disabled)
Vehicles lost 3 (3 destroyed, 0 disabled)
Assaulting units:
4th Division
49th Infantry Regiment
148th Infantry Regiment
64th Field AA Battalion
Saipan Naval Fortress
5th Base Force
6th Port Unit
63rd Field AA Battalion
20th Ind. Mtn Gun Battalion
51st Air Division
33rd JNAF AF Unit
18th Army
115th JAAF AF Bn
Defending units:
1st USMC Tank Battalion
193rd Tank Battalion
2nd Marine Division
6th Infantry Division
40th Infantry Division
194th Tank Battalion
41st Infantry Division
25th Infantry Division
766th Tank Battalion
43rd Infantry Division
767th Tank Battalion
XIV US Corps
2nd USMC Field Artillery Battalion
1st USMC Field Artillery Battalion
3rd AmphTrac Engineer Battalion
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Ground combat at Saipan (108,93)
Allied Deliberate attack
Attacking force 77184 troops, 1258 guns, 1378 vehicles, Assault Value = 2601
Defending force 30058 troops, 270 guns, 104 vehicles, Assault Value = 706
Allied engineers reduce fortifications to 6
Allied adjusted assault: 3050
Japanese adjusted defense: 807
Allied assault odds: 3 to 1 (fort level 6)
Allied Assault reduces fortifications to 6
Combat modifiers
Defender: terrain(+), forts(+), disruption(-), experience(-)
Attacker:
Japanese ground losses:
2046 casualties reported
Squads: 11 destroyed, 110 disabled
Non Combat: 2 destroyed, 37 disabled
Engineers: 0 destroyed, 10 disabled
Guns lost 67 (6 destroyed, 61 disabled)
Allied ground losses:
2794 casualties reported
Squads: 147 destroyed, 89 disabled
Non Combat: 36 destroyed, 7 disabled
Engineers: 11 destroyed, 7 disabled
Guns lost 39 (17 destroyed, 22 disabled)
Vehicles lost 77 (55 destroyed, 22 disabled)
Assaulting units:
25th Infantry Division
40th Infantry Division
766th Tank Battalion
6th Infantry Division
43rd Infantry Division
193rd Tank Battalion
41st Infantry Division
194th Tank Battalion
1st USMC Tank Battalion
2nd Marine Division
767th Tank Battalion
XIV US Corps
2nd USMC Field Artillery Battalion
1st USMC Field Artillery Battalion
3rd AmphTrac Engineer Battalion
Defending units:
49th Infantry Regiment
4th Division
148th Infantry Regiment
Saipan Naval Fortress
33rd JNAF AF Unit
51st Air Division
63rd Field AA Battalion
20th Ind. Mtn Gun Battalion
5th Base Force
64th Field AA Battalion
6th Port Unit
18th Army
115th JAAF AF Bn
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The bombardments were better than the day before but not stellar. The fact that fortifications were 'reduced' to level 6 is a clue to why naval and air bombardments usually have mild effect. The additional 54x 16 inch guns hurling projectiles at the defenders also helped. Disruption is high, as you can see below (subsequent post). Four of the divisions and two of the armored units are being put into reserve to recover more quickly. The battleships will stand down as well to preserve their hard-to-repair guns tubes. Perhaps with the large amount of supply we will be able to attack after only one day of rest. The remaining support elements of the USA 41st ID are still at Rota as there are no assault ships free to ferry them. The troop convoy at Saipan still has 35k supply to unload.
The air and naval bombardments against Maloelap must have been finishing off fragments of units because (again this turn) several air groups lost target assignment and four raids went against Kwajalein instead. Maloelap now scouts as i unit, 1,360 troops, 0 guns, 0 AFV. The 88th Naval Guard Unit might be all that remains.
The landing at Boela was made with zero preparation by the troops and it showed, with many squads disabled upon landing. The only saving grace is that there is no opposition.
The jig is up at Kalao; detection is now 2/3 and nearby Ruteng auto-captured!
Tomorrow two Australian Cdo Coy will para-assault Namlea, which recon has shown as undefended for a long time. As soon as it can be arranged, two other units will board subs to assault Salajar.
You can see by today's air losses that flying against Saipan in a stout 2EB is just as dangerous as flying against the KB.
