RE: Fresh Squeezed Java
Posted: Sun Nov 15, 2009 9:24 pm
[font="Arial"]However absorbed a commander may be in the elaboration of his own thoughts, it is sometimes necessary to take the enemy into account.[/font]
- Winston Churchill
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4/24/1942 – 4/26/1942
It seems my suspicions that Q-Ball might try something at Luganville were not unfounded. From the Ops report for 26 April:
[font="Courier New"]Allied Carrier Aircraft sighted over Luganville
Allied Aircraft sighted over Lashio
SB2U-3 Vindicator sighted over Luganville[/font]
There were no Japanese ships there, as mentioned in my last report, but no doubt that was what my opponent was hoping to find. Suspicion, move, countermove…this is a great game.
What I anticipate now is that Q-Ball will pull his carriers back quickly, probably to Pago Pago. I have ordered several submarines to try and intercept in case this is what he does. If he is feeling bold, though, and is willing to risk a carrier battle he might send his carriers northwest. Luganville is not yet an active airbase and Lunga so far is only a level 1 airfield, so KB and surface forces would be the only threats he has to worry about (of course, those are considerable threats). I have ordered my shipping in the area to pull back a little, just in case.
Nicks and Dings: submarine I-174 sank 2 xAKLs off Exmouth, one with torpedoes and one with gunfire. Both ships were loaded with fuel. My guess is that Q-Ball was using the surviving short-range Dutch AOs to pull fuel out of Java and storing it in northwestern Australia, and that now he’s using what’s available to move the fuel to the Pacific side.
Four Allied PT boats hit Batavia and sank two of three Japanese minesweepers there. The PT boats got away clean. In the Java Sea a submarine put a torpedo into DD Kamikaze; the destroyer should survive provided no further hits are scored. Already another submarine has bounced a dud off her as she limped towards Balikpapan. And on the same turn Japanese ASW forces damaged a sub right in the harbor there.
Trust: it seems that Q-Ball has a habit of occasionally forgetting to close out turns before sending them. To make things easier if he does this he sent me his password. That is quite a gesture of trust. I think it says more about the quality of my opponent than it does about my reliability.
- Winston Churchill
---
4/24/1942 – 4/26/1942
It seems my suspicions that Q-Ball might try something at Luganville were not unfounded. From the Ops report for 26 April:
[font="Courier New"]Allied Carrier Aircraft sighted over Luganville
Allied Aircraft sighted over Lashio
SB2U-3 Vindicator sighted over Luganville[/font]
There were no Japanese ships there, as mentioned in my last report, but no doubt that was what my opponent was hoping to find. Suspicion, move, countermove…this is a great game.
What I anticipate now is that Q-Ball will pull his carriers back quickly, probably to Pago Pago. I have ordered several submarines to try and intercept in case this is what he does. If he is feeling bold, though, and is willing to risk a carrier battle he might send his carriers northwest. Luganville is not yet an active airbase and Lunga so far is only a level 1 airfield, so KB and surface forces would be the only threats he has to worry about (of course, those are considerable threats). I have ordered my shipping in the area to pull back a little, just in case.
Nicks and Dings: submarine I-174 sank 2 xAKLs off Exmouth, one with torpedoes and one with gunfire. Both ships were loaded with fuel. My guess is that Q-Ball was using the surviving short-range Dutch AOs to pull fuel out of Java and storing it in northwestern Australia, and that now he’s using what’s available to move the fuel to the Pacific side.
Four Allied PT boats hit Batavia and sank two of three Japanese minesweepers there. The PT boats got away clean. In the Java Sea a submarine put a torpedo into DD Kamikaze; the destroyer should survive provided no further hits are scored. Already another submarine has bounced a dud off her as she limped towards Balikpapan. And on the same turn Japanese ASW forces damaged a sub right in the harbor there.
Trust: it seems that Q-Ball has a habit of occasionally forgetting to close out turns before sending them. To make things easier if he does this he sent me his password. That is quite a gesture of trust. I think it says more about the quality of my opponent than it does about my reliability.




