OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post descriptions of your brilliant successes and unfortunate demises.

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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-7-42


CBI:

All quiet in China, but Rangoon is captured in Burma and the IJA is closing in on Mandalay. The 33rd, 55th and the Imperial Guards Division have been identified in Burma. The Japanese juggernaut cant be stopped in Burma but with this concentration of force present here Im not sure that the Japanese have enough troops left in Malaya or Luzon to finish the job. In my last 2 PBEMs as the Allies Japan has sued for peace by Feb. 1942 due to their inability to take Manila/Clark, Singapore or invade Java due to being spread too thin.


MALAYA:

I count only 2 IJA divisions here and maybe a couple of brigades. Even though 3 SEAC brigades have been withdrawn to India the rest retreated in good order and are heavily fortified with supply in Singapore.


PI:

The Japanese outnumber the Allies by 51,000 to 21,000 at Naga but at Manila the Allies outnumber the Japanese 60,000 to 30,000. I think that Japan will need to starve out the Allies to prevail here due to a lack of numerical superiority.


SOUTH PACIFIC:

KB and the Glen equiped subs scour the South Pacific looking for prey but no targets are to be found.

The initial rapid expansion of the Japanese has slowed to a crawl now across the map. Things are especially quiet in the New Guinea/Solomons area with no Japanese activity since the capture of Rabaul 2 weeks ago.

Here is a screenie of NG/Solomons....not a ship to be found:

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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-9-42



THE AIR WAR

After a few days of relative calm across the Pacific Theatre things begin to heat up again. Allied recon reveals a buildup of fighters and bombers at Kuching and ABDA decides to hit them 1st before they can strike Batavia or Palembang. The B-17s have been resting and taking on replacements for over a week now(since the SEAC evacuation operations) and are ordered to hit the airfield at Kuching.

First 41 B-17s from Palembang strike Kuching:

Day Air attack on Kuching , at 28,56

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 16

Allied aircraft
Brewster 339D x 5
B-17E Fortress x 41

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 5 destroyed, 7 damaged
G4M1 Betty: 2 destroyed
Ki-59 Theresa: 2 destroyed
Ki-46-II Dinah: 1 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
Brewster 339D: 3 destroyed
B-17E Fortress: 11 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
63 casualties reported
Guns lost 2

Airbase hits 1
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 15

Then 35 B-17s from Batavia join in:

Day Air attack on Kuching , at 28,56

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 15

Allied aircraft
Buffalo I x 9
B-17C Fortress x 16
B-17E Fortress x 19

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 6 destroyed, 4 damaged
G4M1 Betty: 8 destroyed
Ki-46-II Dinah: 2 destroyed
Ki-59 Theresa: 2 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
Buffalo I: 1 destroyed, 1 damaged
B-17C Fortress: 2 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
105 casualties reported

Airbase hits 10
Airbase supply hits 1
Runway hits 45


The Japanese lose 60 AC today vs 8 Allied AC including 18 A6M2s and 19 Bettys. 42 Japanese AC are destroyed on the ground at Kuching and the base itself is heavily damaged.

In just slightly over 1 month of war 78 A6M2s have been destroyed.


In one of the quirkier engagements of the war, AV Childs....a refugee from Manila with 95% sys damage....limps almost halfway across the Pacific from the PI to Hawaii only to run into a TF of unescorted IJN tankers:

Day Time Surface Combat at 64,57

Japanese Ships
TK Akatsuki Maru
TK Itukusima Maru
TK Nisshin Maru
TK Nisshin Maru #2

Allied Ships
AVD Childs, Shell hits 4, heavy damage


PI:

21,000 Allied troops at Naga stop 70,000 IJA cold with minimal losses.

The 30,000 IJA at Manila continue to bombard the 66,000 Allied defenders.


MALAYA:

30,000 IJA assault Johore Bharu but are repulsed with heavy losses.


CBI:

IJA achieves 1000:1 odds on a hapless Commonwealth brigade as they blitz their way through Burma.


COMMENTS:

CV Shokaku and CV Zuikaku reappear in the South China Sea escorting 2 transport TFs ....probable target of Palembang. It now appears that the Japanese had massed the Bettys at Kuching to hit Palembang with a combined land and naval air attack prior to amphibious assault. The Allied pre-emptive strike on Kuching destroying 42 AC on the ground and another 4 A6M2s in A2A combat with the B-17s was most fortuitous. Only 1 B-17 was lost in the 2 strikes. Unfortunately, 5th Bomber Group has just taken on replacements at Palembang and many damaged B-17ss lay around on the airfield there. The Allies cant afford a Japanese airstrike there killing all the damaged B-17s so the AVG and the Dutch fighters are placed on CAP over Palembang.

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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-10-42 THE AIR WAR


The fight for air supremacy over the DEI rages on as both sides commit all their assets in the region.

CV Shokaku and CV Zuikaku send in their naval bombers to shut down the airfield at Palembang but the AVG and the Dutch fighters are waiting for them:

Day Air attack on Palembang , at 20,55

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 23
B5N Kate x 43

Allied aircraft
Hawk 75A x 14
CW-21B Demon x 13
Brewster 339D x 18
P-40B Tomahawk x 12
P-40E Warhawk x 13

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 16 destroyed
B5N Kate: 12 destroyed, 12 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Hawk 75A: 6 destroyed
CW-21B Demon: 7 destroyed
Brewster 339D: 9 destroyed, 1 damaged
P-40B Tomahawk: 2 destroyed, 3 damaged
P-40E Warhawk: 3 destroyed, 4 damaged


Allied ground losses:
9 casualties reported

Airbase hits 1
Airbase supply hits 1
Runway hits 11

16 A6M2s and 14 Kates are lost vs 3 P-40Es, 2 P-40Bs and 22 obsolescent Dutch fighters. The losses for both sides are unsustainable but especially so for the CV AC.

Meanwhile the B-17s hit Kuching again but with their high fatigue are handled roughly by the the Zeros:

Day Air attack on Kuching , at 28,56

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 19

Allied aircraft
Buffalo I x 5
B-17C Fortress x 13
B-17E Fortress x 14

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 3 destroyed, 11 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Buffalo I: 3 destroyed
B-17C Fortress: 4 destroyed, 5 damaged
B-17E Fortress: 1 destroyed, 3 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
14 casualties reported

Airbase hits 1
Runway hits 9

Today Japan loses 48 AC vs 42 Allied. For the entire war the Japanese have lost 635 AC vs 595 Allied AC.


MALAYA:

Japanese deliberate attack at Johore Bharu is repulsed with heavy losses.


PI:

IJA deliberate assault at Naga is thrown back wiith heavy losses.




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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by Mike Solli »

OMG. Those Japanese losses are outrageous. I'm 4 months into my PBEM and still haven't lost 78 Zeros. Your air losses should be 2-3 times his. You're doing great. Don't worry about your losses. Just keep doing what you're doing. He'll soon be out of trained pilots and then KB is yours. Keep encouraging him to us KB against bases like the attack against Palembang. Let him totally destroy your airforce in the DEI. Look at your air reinforcements and plane/pilot replacements. He can't hope to compete.
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

Mike....thanks for your comments. Actually the attrition rate has picked up a bit over the last 4 days and as of 1/14/42.....only 5 weeks into the war....the Japanese have lost 118 A6M2. Only 28 were destroyed on the ground so that leaves 90 pre-war pilots that need to be replaced.



SITUATION REPORT: 1-11-42


MALAYA:

IJA troops are again repulsed at Johore Bharu by the crack Australian Brigades:

Ground combat at Johore Bahru

Japanese Deliberate attack

Attacking force 48701 troops, 247 guns, 116 vehicles

Defending force 7251 troops, 36 guns, 2 vehicles

Japanese engineers reduce fortifications to 3

Japanese assault odds: 0 to 1 (fort level 3)


Japanese ground losses:
481 casualties reported
Guns lost 9
Vehicles lost 1

Allied ground losses:
207 casualties reported
Guns lost 5

The fortification level has been reduced to 3 so the Allied defenders are given orders to fall back on Singapore.



PI:

A Japanese shock attack at Naga is thrown back with huge casualties:


Ground combat at Naga

Japanese Shock attack

Attacking force 66973 troops, 371 guns, 268 vehicles

Defending force 19796 troops, 164 guns, 150 vehicles

Japanese assault odds: 0 to 1 (fort level 1)


Japanese ground losses:
4342 casualties reported
Guns lost 29
Vehicles lost 4

Allied ground losses:
602 casualties reported
Guns lost 11
Vehicles lost 7

The supply situation in Luzon hasnt become critical yet...there are 17,000 supply at Manila and another 8,000 supply at Naga. The Naga defenders hope to hold out until most of the supply there has been siphoned into Manila and then will withdraw.


DEI:

CV Shokaku and CV Zuikaku are compelled to withdraw into the South China Sea after losing over 20% of their AC complement yesterday. It appears as if the Palembang invasion has also been postponed until Japan achieves air superiority in the DEI as the transports also withdraw.

The B-17s at Batavia continue to pound the Japanese airfield at Kuching while Japanese bombers based at Balikpapan return the favor at Soerabaja.

The IJN CVL/CVE TF enters the Java Sea and steams north...probably to assist in the suppression of the airbase at Palembang.

50 Allied torpedo bombers are staged into Madoien in central Java to ambush the CVL/CVEs.


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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-12-41 THE AIR WAR


The battle for air supremacy rages on over the DEI. The B-17s at Batavia are grounded by bad weather so Kuching is given a respite. The Japanese attacks go through however starting with the raid by Balikpapan based Bettys on Soerabaja:

Day Air attack on Soerabaja , at 22,65

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 18
G4M1 Betty x 43

Allied aircraft
no flights

Japanese aircraft losses
G4M1 Betty: 1 destroyed, 7 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
C-47 Dakota: 2 destroyed
C-60A Lodestar: 1 destroyed


Allied ground losses:
33 casualties reported
Guns lost 1

Airbase hits 7
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 34


Then the Kuching Bettys hit Palembang :

Day Air attack on Palembang , at 20,55

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 29
G4M1 Betty x 40
Ki-46-II Dinah x 1

Allied aircraft
Hawk 75A x 9
CW-21B Demon x 9
P-40B Tomahawk x 8
P-40E Warhawk x 12

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 7 destroyed
G4M1 Betty: 4 destroyed, 2 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Hawk 75A: 8 destroyed
CW-21B Demon: 2 destroyed
P-40B Tomahawk: 3 destroyed, 2 damaged
P-40E Warhawk: 4 destroyed, 4 damaged
Brewster 339D: 2 destroyed
B-17E Fortress: 1 destroyed

Airbase hits 7
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 9

Heavy losses on both sides. Allied fighter losses are unsustainable. ABDA Fighter Command is near the breaking point.

The Allied ambush of the IJN CVLs in the Java Sea does not go off as planned. Out of 48 available torpedo bombers only 5 flew and they were quickly dispatched by the CVL's CAP:


Day Air attack on TF at 23,61

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 25

Allied aircraft
Brewster 339D x 9
T.IVa x 5

No Japanese losses

Allied aircraft losses
Brewster 339D: 8 destroyed
T.IVa: 1 destroyed, 3 damaged

Japanese Ships
CVL Zuiho

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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by BlackSunshine »

Wow. Nice read Admiral. You're doing a heck of a job of explaining what is going on for both sides.

I'm very surprised at not only how reckless, but how agressive your opponent has been. And you are very right, he is spreading himself very, very thin. Can't believe he split his CV's up so much. He's very lucky that your ambushes have not done as much damage as they could have.

I am a lot more cautious, in fact his sweep of the Java Sea is something I would never attempt. I hate to have my CV out of range of my LBA. I prefer to capture a large forward airfield (Jesselton is a favorite) and then launch Betty's and Nells from there.

It should be very interesting.
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

BlackSunshine thanks for your comments!


SITUATION REPORT: 1-14-42 THE AIR WAR


After a couple of days of bad weather, the B-17s from Batavia hit Kuching hard:

AFTER ACTION REPORTS FOR 01/14/42

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Day Air attack on Kuching , at 28,56

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 41

Allied aircraft
B-17C Fortress x 15
B-17E Fortress x 36

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 7 destroyed, 21 damaged
G4M1 Betty: 4 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
B-17C Fortress: 1 destroyed, 10 damaged
B-17E Fortress: 7 destroyed, 22 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
75 casualties reported
Guns lost 1

Airbase hits 7
Airbase supply hits 1
Runway hits 12

Kuching airfield is now over 50% damaged.

The bombers at Kuching havent hit Palembang for a couple of days so the Japanese must also he hurting from this battle of attrition. With the 2 day respite, the Allies have been able to evacuate most of their damaged bombers and fighters from Palembang and fighter strength is gradually building up again at Batavia.

This series of running air battles has forced the Japanese to retreat ALL CV/CVL/CVE and all transports from the Java Sea to far north in the South Shina Sea.....the invasion of Palembang has been definitely postponed and ABDA has been given a week or two to re-group and prepare for the next assault.

Japanese bombers at Balikpapan continue to work over Soerabaja:

Day Air attack on Soerabaja , at 22,65

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 18
G4M1 Betty x 35

Allied aircraft
no flights

Japanese aircraft losses
G4M1 Betty: 2 destroyed, 5 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
C-47 Dakota: 1 destroyed
C-60A Lodestar: 1 destroyed
Buffalo I: 1 destroyed


Allied ground losses:
17 casualties reported

Airbase hits 4
Runway hits 38


CBI:

IJA troops shock attack their way across the Irrawaddy River to outflank Mandalay from the south.


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STRATEGIC AND OPERATIONAL ANALYSIS

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-21-42 STRATEGIC AND OPERATIONAL ANALYSIS


The entire Pacific Theater of Operations has been ominously quiet for the past week. I think that this would be a good time to review the first 6 weeks of the war as the break in action probably represents a major shift in Japanese strategy/force allocation.


JAPANESE WAR PLAN:

This is my first experience with a non Pearl Harbor opening gambit. The genius of Przemcio's 1st turn port attack on Manila is NOT the destruction of shipping in the Far East that he so desperately sought....it is the starting position of the KB in the Far East that eliminates the normal 2 week transit time from Pearl Harbor in a standard Japanese opening move. With the KB starting off Manila, it can reach the Java Sea by 12/9/41. As the Allies, I dont mind losing the 50-60 ships that start in the PI/Borneo/Sulawesi area, its the ships that start in Java that concern me. If you try to load fuel on ships in Java on 12/7/41, the KB can reach the Java Sea before the transports reach the Indian Ocean as happened to me and the AK/TKs are lost. This means that all shipping must exit the DEI on 12/7/41 or it is gone. Without evacuating fuel from Java there can be no buildup of fuel stocks in Timor or NW Australia which severely limits basing of Allied combat ships. This means there can be almost no Allied surface interceptions in the SRA without the fuel or sufficient air cover. In retrospect, Im glad that I committed Force Z at Kuantan on 12/8/41 as it has been the only opportunity for the Allies to commit surface forces in the Far East so far. Normally with a standard Japanese opening attack on Pearl Harbor, the Allies have a couple of weeks to get their defenses in order before all heck breaks loose.

With the KB starting off Manila, all units in the SRA are fixed in place with no time to redeploy, reinforce or resupply. Borneo and Sulawesi can be overrun in 7-10 days before the Allied torpedo bombers can begin to attrition the IJN surface ships. The battle develops so rapidly that Allied units have no time to entrench and all the normal Allied defensive strategies go out the window.

I lost about 50 auxilliary ships that begin in the PI/SRA and another 25 escaped eastward to Pearl Harbor. With small CVL/CVE groups blocking all exits from the SRA I lost CA Houston, CL Boise, the 3 DDs from Hong Kong and the 4 DDs from Manila. Only the CL Marblehead TF from Balikpapan escaped and just by a whisker.

The downside of this opening gambit is that ALL naval and air forces at Pearl Harbor are unscathed. The B-17s and the 72 P-40Bs that start at Pearl Harbor are just reaching tha DEI now and Japan will soon feel their effect. Also, the USN now has 11 BBs and the RN has 3 BBs so surface parity has already been achieved and it only gets worse from here. Allied buildup and resupply across the Pacific also goes unchecked. The US has reinforced Wake/Midway/Lahaina/Palmyra/Canton and Noumea with at least a regiment sized force and CD units and supply.

I predicted at the start of the war that the Japanese had their naval offensive operations reversed. Instead of starting KB in the central Pacific and then redeploying to the DEI, KB started in the Far East, redeployed to the central Pacific in late Dember 1941 for a failed rald on Canton Island, and then I suspect it is back in transit to the DEI to tidy things up there. Thats ok with me....KB spending 4 of the first 6 weeks of the war CRUISING.


ALLIED DEFENSES:

The only bases I consider to be absolutely critical to the Allied war effort and worthy of an all-out defense are Karachi, Noumea, New Zealand and Pearl Harbor. My 2nd tier of bases would include Port Moresby, SE Australia, NE India and Canton Island.

With the initial rapid Japanese expansion in the first 2 weeks of the war I thought that in the south Pacific I could only concentrate on holding Noumea/New Caledonia....I was ready to concede Port Moresby and the New Hebrides. With Japanese expansion at a standstill since the first of the year Im considering an attempt at reinforcing Port Moresby. With IJN Glen equiped subs patrolling around Port Moresby I suspect that KB is sitting at Truk waiting for it. Noumea has been turned into a fortress....2 divisions, engineers, aviation personel, CD and AA units and 100,000+ supply and fuel. If/when KB redeploys to take out Java a major reinforcement operation will begin for Port Moresby.

Singapore and Manila remain my 2 defensive bastions in Malaya and the PI respectively. As long as my supply lasts these 2 fortresses should hold out and continue to tie down 5-6 IJA divisions.


THE AIR WAR

Massive attrition in the DEI as both sides fight for air superiority. Japan has lost over 700 AC and the Allies 675....mostly obsolete plane types for the Allies. Japan had to call off their Palembang invasion and withdraw into the China Sea after suffering unsustainable AC losses. With no Japanese air operations for a week here, I think that the full KB will be commited here along with all land based A6M2s in an operation to overwhelm ABDA fighter defenses on Java. If this is the case I may just take my toys and go home....ie evacuate to SEAC and Australia. This type of operation would open opportunities for me elsewhere(such as Port Moresby).

The first transports from the US west coast are just reaching SE Australia and modern fighters and bombers are now pouring into the country. Approximately 15 new aircraft per day are staging into the DEI from northern Australia.

Przemcio231 was very concerned about Allied 4E bombers and placed many restrictions on them. Evidently he doesnt realize that in v1.6 the Allies only get 40 B-17s per month. I find that Im converting my Bolo air groups to B-25s, B-26s and A-20s.....anything that will fly. I doubt that I will ever fill up my original 4E groups (until I receive B-24s) let alone convert new ones.

The tide of the air way is also starting to turn in the CBI. SEAC received 5 new squadrons of Hurricanes last week and the 3 USAAF squadrons that evacuated from Clark Field to India at the start of the war are being converted into P-40Es, P-39s and Mohawks. Most of the fighter squadrons have been making ground attacks on the advancing Japanese troops to build their experience levels and most groups now have experience in the 60s.



LOGISTICS:

I normally evacuate 40-50,000 oil to Australia so fuel/supply is not usually an issue there. With no oil evacuation this game both fuel and supply are critically short in Australia. Supply convoys are now headed towards Australia from both the US west coast and Karachi, but a continued need to resupply Australia in this game will be a constant drain on Allied transport capabilities. Fuel and supplies have been dropped off at Midway,Palmyra,Suva, Canton and Noumea.

Here is a screen shot of the strategic map:





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OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-24-42 THE AIR WAR: JAPANESE AIRSTRIKES AND THE ALLIES "OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER"


After an almost 10 day lull in the action, the air war heated up yesterday and today with massive Japanese airstrikes at Batavia and Palembang.

50 A6M2s and 66 Japanese naval bombers from Kuching attempt to suppress the Allied airfield at Batavia in a major counterair strike. The AVG and the gritty Dutch fighters on CAP over Batavia rise to the occasion:

AFTER ACTION REPORTS FOR 01/24/42

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Day Air attack on Batavia , at 19,59

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 50
G3M Nell x 25
G4M1 Betty x 41

Allied aircraft
Hawk 75A x 18
CW-21B Demon x 18
Buffalo I x 9
P-40B Tomahawk x 30
P-40E Warhawk x 13

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 28 destroyed
G3M Nell: 6 destroyed, 8 damaged
G4M1 Betty: 6 destroyed, 12 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Hawk 75A: 11 destroyed
CW-21B Demon: 7 destroyed, 2 damaged
Buffalo I: 7 destroyed
P-40B Tomahawk: 10 destroyed, 6 damaged
P-40E Warhawk: 6 destroyed, 2 damaged

Airbase hits 1
Runway hits 3

Another major Japanese airstrike from Johore Bharu attempts to soften up the defenders at Palembang prior to invasion:

Day Air attack on So.Sumatra Garrison Battalion, at 20,55

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 20
G3M Nell x 17
Ki-43-Ib Oscar x 10
Ki-21 Sally x 44

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-21 Sally: 1 damaged


Allied ground losses:
100 casualties reported
Guns lost 6

The Japanese lose 53 AC today including an astounding 36 A6M2s, 7 Nells and 7 Bettys. Allied losses are 46 AC including 11 P-40Bs, 7 P-40Es, 11 Hawks, 7 Demons and 7 Buffaloes.

The Japanese have now lost 814 AC vs 742 Allied AC.


OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER:

The time looks ripe for a major Allied aerial counterattack. The Japanese had 110 A6M2s and 65 bombers at Kuching. After todays attack on Batavia 2 A6M2 squadrons are shot up and depleted. This leaves 2 squadrons of A6M2s left at Kuching of which 30-35 will fly CAP. After 2 consecutive days of long range bombing attacks on Palembang and then Batavia, the Nells and Bettys at Kuching should have high fatigue and low morale and should be sitting on the tarmac tomorrow. The Japanese bombers at Johore Bharu should also be a bit fatigued from hitting Palembang today.


Overnight, the Allies stage 115 B-17s from the DEI into Singapore. The B-17s will be ordered to strike Kuching tomorrow(with full bomb loads).
The Allies also stage 100 RAF bombers into Singapore with orders to hit Johore Bharu and another 100 Martin 139s, B-25s and B-26s into Palembang also with orders to strike Johore Bharu. Any Japanese aircraft attempting to rest/rebuild tomorrow should be sitting ducks for the 315 Allied bombers in a truly multinational air superiority operation.
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-25-42 OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER


The Allied counterair strikes go off better than planned. Amazingly there is almost no CAP over either Japanese airfield at Johore Bharu or Kuching.


The RAF raid on Johore Bharu goes in first:

Day Air attack on Johore Bahru , at 22,49

Japanese aircraft
Ki-43-Ib Oscar x 2

Allied aircraft
Buffalo I x 14
Blenheim IV x 37
Hudson I x 44
IL-4c x 14

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-21 Sally: 1 destroyed
G3M Nell: 1 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
Buffalo I: 1 damaged
Blenheim IV: 1 damaged
Hudson I: 1 destroyed, 1 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
37 casualties reported
Guns lost 2

Airbase hits 8
Airbase supply hits 6
Runway hits 36


Then the Martins, B-25s and B-26s from Palembang hit Johore Bharu:

Day Air attack on Johore Bahru , at 22,49

Japanese aircraft
Ki-43-Ib Oscar x 2

Allied aircraft
Buffalo I x 16
Martin 139 x 25
B-25C Mitchell x 22
B-26B Marauder x 31

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-21 Sally: 2 destroyed


Japanese ground losses:
65 casualties reported

Airbase hits 6
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 65

The Allies so far have suffered almost no losses.

The B-17 raid from Singapore hits Batavia hard after brushing aside minor CAP:

Day Air attack on Kuching , at 28,56

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 14

Allied aircraft
Brewster 339D x 8
B-17C Fortress x 14
B-17E Fortress x 91

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 10 destroyed
G3M Nell: 6 destroyed
Ki-46-II Dinah: 2 destroyed
G4M1 Betty: 2 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
Brewster 339D: 7 destroyed
B-17C Fortress: 1 damaged
B-17E Fortress: 3 destroyed, 11 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
443 casualties reported
Guns lost 2

Airbase hits 14
Airbase supply hits 7
Runway hits 105


The Japanese fighters and bombers from Kuching launch a counterstrike on Batavia airfeld against valiant but outnumbered AVG and Dutch fighters:

Day Air attack on Batavia , at 19,59

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 73
G3M Nell x 15
G4M1 Betty x 28

Allied aircraft
Hawk 75A x 7
CW-21B Demon x 10
P-40B Tomahawk x 33
P-40E Warhawk x 13

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 21 destroyed, 2 damaged
G3M Nell: 1 destroyed, 1 damaged
G4M1 Betty: 2 destroyed, 12 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Hawk 75A: 4 destroyed
CW-21B Demon: 10 destroyed
P-40B Tomahawk: 14 destroyed, 5 damaged
P-40E Warhawk: 8 destroyed

Airbase hits 1
Runway hits 6

Japanese losses today are 77 AC including 40 A6M2s, 15 Nells and 6 Bettys. The Allies lose 56 AC including 14 P-40Bs and 8 P-40Es. The Japanese airfields at Johore Bharu and Kuching are heavily damaged while Batavia airfield is untouched.


Meanwhile, Japanese CVs, BBs, CAs and transports are spotted in the South China Sea heading SW. The invasion of Palembang, once postponed appears to be on again.

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racndoc
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-26-42 OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER

The RAF hits Johore Bharu again:

Day Air attack on Johore Bahru , at 22,49

Japanese aircraft
Ki-43-Ib Oscar x 1

Allied aircraft
Buffalo I x 12
Blenheim IV x 30
Hudson I x 36
IL-4c x 13

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-43-Ib Oscar: 2 destroyed
Ki-21 Sally: 8 destroyed
G3M Nell: 3 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
Blenheim IV: 2 damaged
Hudson I: 1 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
46 casualties reported

Airbase hits 7
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 55


The B-17s level Kuching:

Day Air attack on Kuching , at 28,56

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 3

Allied aircraft
Brewster 339D x 1
B-17C Fortress x 14
B-17E Fortress x 69

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 24 destroyed
G4M1 Betty: 15 destroyed
Ki-46-II Dinah: 4 destroyed
G3M Nell: 6 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
B-17E Fortress: 2 damaged

Japanese ground losses:
252 casualties reported
Guns lost 2

Airbase hits 22
Airbase supply hits 6
Runway hits 63

Japanese bombers from Kuantan give a payback to Singapore:

Day Air attack on Singapore , at 23,50

Japanese aircraft
Ki-27 Nate x 29
Ki-21 Sally x 55
Ki-48 Lily x 29

Allied aircraft
no flights

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-21 Sally: 2 damaged
Ki-48 Lily: 1 destroyed, 2 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Catalina I: 1 destroyed
B-17E Fortress: 2 destroyed


Allied ground losses:
59 casualties reported
Guns lost 1

Airbase hits 22
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 44

128 Japanese aircraft are destroyed today including 48 A6M2s , 29 Bettys, 16 Sallys and 17 Nells. Allied losses are 11 AC. Operation Rolling Thunder was a complete success in establishing air superiority in the DEI but its not sufficient to stop the Japanese onslaught in the Java Sea.

A Japanese bombardment TF runs into PTs defending Palembang and DD Oyashio takes a torpedo:

Day Time Surface Combat, near Palembang at 20,55

Japanese Ships
BB Hiei
BB Kirishima
BB Mutsu
CA Nachi
DD Kuroshio, Shell hits 5
DD Oyashio, Torpedo hits 1
DD Natsushio
DD Hayashio

Allied Ships
PT PT-33, Shell hits 7, and is sunk
PT PT-35, Shell hits 7, and is sunk
PT TM-10
PT TM-13

Day Time Surface Combat, near Palembang at 20,55

Japanese Ships
BB Hiei
BB Kirishima
BB Mutsu
CA Nachi
DD Kuroshio
DD Oyashio
DD Natsushio
DD Hayashio

Allied Ships
PT TM-4
PT TM-5, Shell hits 19, and is sunk
PT TM-8, Shell hits 3, and is sunk
PT TM-9

Then the IJN BBs level Palembang:

Naval bombardment of Palembang, at 20,55


Allied aircraft
no flights


Allied aircraft losses
B-17E Fortress: 1 destroyed

Japanese Ships
DD Hayashio
DD Natsushio
DD Oyashio
DD Kuroshio
CA Nachi
BB Mutsu
BB Kirishima
BB Hiei


Allied ground losses:
375 casualties reported
Guns lost 7
Vehicles lost 2

Airbase hits 6
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 22
Port hits 9
Port fuel hits 4
Port supply hits 8

With IJN transports hovering off the coast the invasion of Palembang looks imminent for tomorrow.

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Tophat1815
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by Tophat1815 »



ok,
I see why he is frustrated,but i do take exception to his "I wanted to do and follow a more historical way of playing". Thats just nonsense with his whole non-PH plan and these restrictions he made you agree to first:

And then in a moment of temporary insanity I agreed to further limit Allied 4E deployment:

level 4 airfields.....1 4E group
level 5 airfields.....2 4E groups
level 6 airfields.....4 4E groups
level 7 airifelds.....6 4E groups
PH, US West Coast...10 4E groups
CBI......max 4 4E groups on airfields larger than level 6
4E bombers have to drop leaflets on their targets the day before they attack to warn the defenders(just kidding)


He basically forced you to shove assets into the large airbases you have.yet he didn't come with enough boys in the beginning to do the job of shutting you down.[X(]
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BlackSunshine
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by BlackSunshine »

You're absolutely shredding his zeros. How??

Any idea what altitude you both are using? Experience levels? I just don't see how he can be losing that many zero's unless they are either extremely fatigued or low experience.

You're absolutely dominating the air war at a period of the war where Japan should have unquestioned air superiority.
Tophat1815
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by Tophat1815 »



Look at the combats...the japs are pissin away their fighters and good pilots in dribs and drabs! Also nates can defend vs 4E's anything but Zero's in the Grinder! Others are being blasted to the dark ages with bombing! <Zero's very impressive in the air,much less so on the ground>
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by PimpYourAFV »


Perhaps poor Przemcio bit off a little more than he can chew with the veteran AdmSpruance. I like the Rolling Thunder campaign so early in the war. [:)]
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wild_Willie2
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by wild_Willie2 »

Perhaps poor Przemcio bit off a little more than he can chew with the veteran AdmSpruance. I like the Rolling Thunder campaign so early in the war.

I am playing Przemcio in another PBEM as the Jap scen 15 NIK mod 5.0. He is clearly a beginner, it is 2/42 and I have sunk 130 Allied ships and lost 20 myself. He ATTACKS me with all his forces in china, while china does not have the supply to support these operations... He also does not move his subs once detected, giving me time to mass ASW forces against them and kill them (25 subs sunk). I have some other nice tricks for him up my sleeve, he will see when they happen... [:D][;)]
In vinum illic est sapientia , in matera illic est vires , in aqua illic es bacteria.

In wine there is wisdom, in beer there is strength, in water there are bacteria.
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racndoc
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

Gentlemen....thanks for all your comments. I will try to respond to a couple of your questions.

Tophat....there are even more restrictive house rules for me than you mentioned. My opponent asked for a house rule banning ALL US bombers from CBI until June 1943. If I cant use my SEAC bombers in CBI, Im definitely going to use them in the DEI....I have to use then somewhere.

Japan was attempting to capture Palembang on 1-12-42. All Ive done with all the air war stuff is push their schedule back 3 weeks. If you dont draw a line in the sand and try to hold Java/Sumatra in January 1942 then you will be facing the Japanese in Noumea in March 1942. Lunga was taken 12/7/41. Port Moresby will be invaded tomorrow(1/29/42).


BlackSunshine...I just wanted to respond to your questions on the air war. As of 1/28/42 Japan has lost 1043 AC vs Allied 850 AC. Japan has lost 247 A6M2s.....116 A2A, 42 operational and 89 on the ground. The operational losses are a bit higher than normal due to my opponent flying frequent long range missions with little regard for fatigue or bad weather.

As far as the A2A, my opponent flies his bombers at 7000 ft so I imagine the escort is at 10,000 ft. My CAP has the P-40s at 20,000 ft and my Dutch fighters at around 30,000 ft. My hope here is that his escort will preferentially engage my P-40s while the Dutch fighters survive at higher altitudes to work over his bombers. When I watch the combat reports my Hawks seem to get butchered by the A6M2s but my Demons and Brewsters fare better. My 2 Demon squadrons have 25 kills between them and my 2 Hawk squadrons have 10 kills betweeen them. I even have a Brewster squadron with 8 kills that has been used almost exclusively in an escort role.

I think the turn that hurt Japan the most was 1/24/42. You can go back through this thread to read the combat replay but Japan sent 73 A6M2s from Kuching on bomber escort against Batavia (the Zeros surely must have been fatigued after hitting Palembang the day before) and lost 36 A6M2s in A2A. Then Japan took on AC replacements at Kuching so the A6M2s were sitting on the ground damaged and were dead meat for the B-17s.

Japan finally committed 2 CVs on 1/27/42 to strike the airfield at Singapore....they heavily damaged the airfield and destroyed 7 B-17s but lost 7 Kates/Vals.

Ive had 15 B-17s destroyed on the ground at Singapore the last 2 days and will probably lose another 6-7 there but it was worth the cost to slow down Japanese expansion for a couple of weeks.


SITUATION REPORT: 1-28-42

DEI/SINGAPORE:

Japanese transports continue to bear down on Palembang while their air force attempts to close the airfield at Singapore:

Day Air attack on Singapore , at 23,50

Japanese aircraft
Ki-27 Nate x 29
Ki-21 Sally x 58
Ki-48 Lily x 36

Allied aircraft
no flights

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-21 Sally: 2 damaged
Ki-48 Lily: 3 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
B-17E Fortress: 4 destroyed
Catalina I: 1 destroyed


Allied ground losses:
69 casualties reported
Guns lost 1

Airbase hits 4
Airbase supply hits 7
Runway hits 51


Japan fails to fly CAP over their bombardment TFs at Palembang and the Dutch/British naval bombers make them pay:

Day Air attack on TF, near Palembang at 20,55


Allied aircraft
Swordfish x 8
Buffalo I x 2
T.IVa x 7
Martin 139 x 5
Beaufort V-IX x 21


Allied aircraft losses
Swordfish: 1 destroyed, 2 damaged
T.IVa: 2 damaged
Martin 139: 1 damaged
Beaufort V-IX: 12 damaged

Japanese Ships
CA Mogami
DD Kari
CA Mikuma, Torpedo hits 1, on fire
CA Takao, Torpedo hits 3, on fire, heavy damage
DD Amagiri
CL Jintsu
CA Atago
CA Suzuya

Day Air attack on TF, near Palembang at 20,55


Allied aircraft
Martin 139 x 3


Allied aircraft losses
Martin 139: 1 destroyed

Japanese Ships
BB Kirishima


An Allied bomber strike on the IJN CVs is unsuccessful:

Day Air attack on TF at 22,55

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 26

Allied aircraft
Brewster 339D x 2
Buffalo I x 13
Martin 139 x 9

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 1 destroyed, 1 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Buffalo I: 4 destroyed
Martin 139: 7 damaged

Japanese Ships
CVE Hosho
CV Shokaku
CA Haguro


NEW GUINEA:

Japanese transports were spotted 2 days ago heading for Port Moresby. An Allied reinforcement TF was rushed north towards Port Moresby but was turned back south yesterday when an IJN Bombardment TF also heading to Port Moresby was spotted. Austarlian search planes never spotted any IJN CVs in the area but the Allied transports were ordered to disperse as they fled home just in case. 4 IJN CVs show up today and decimate the transports:

Day Air attack on TF at 48,95

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 9
D3A Val x 22

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AK Bengalen, Bomb hits 6, on fire, heavy damage


Allied ground losses:
58 casualties reported
Guns lost 4


Day Air attack on TF at 48,95

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 28
D3A Val x 8
B5N Kate x 9

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AK Johanne Justesen, Bomb hits 4, Torpedo hits 5, on fire, heavy
damage


Allied ground losses:
209 casualties reported


Day Air attack on TF at 48,95

Japanese aircraft
B5N Kate x 8

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AK Empire Peri, Torpedo hits 3, on fire, heavy damage


Allied ground losses:
100 casualties reported


Day Air attack on TF at 48,95

Japanese aircraft
D3A Val x 19

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AK Belawan, Bomb hits 6, on fire, heavy damage


Allied ground losses:
112 casualties reported
Guns lost 1


Day Air attack on TF at 48,95

Japanese aircraft
D3A Val x 19
B5N Kate x 21

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AK Meroendoeng, Bomb hits 8, Torpedo hits 1, on fire, heavy damage


Allied ground losses:
189 casualties reported

Day Air attack on TF at 48,95

Japanese aircraft
D3A Val x 19
B5N Kate x 21

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AK Ban Ho Guan, Bomb hits 13, on fire, heavy damage


Allied ground losses:
239 casualties reported


Day Air attack on TF at 48,95

Japanese aircraft
D3A Val x 22
B5N Kate x 24

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AK Soerabaja, Bomb hits 6, Torpedo hits 3, on fire, heavy damage


Allied ground losses:
143 casualties reported


Day Air attack on TF at 49,97

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 27
D3A Val x 7

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
AP Van Neck, Bomb hits 2, on fire, heavy damage


Allied ground losses:
44 casualties reported


Day Air attack on TF at 49,97

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 9
B5N Kate x 24

No Japanese losses

Allied Ships
MSW Bungaree, Torpedo hits 4, on fire, heavy damage

4 transports sink immediately and the rest will face the wrath of KB tomorrow.

An IJN bombardment TF hits Port Moresby again without CAP and the Australian torpedo bombers try to pay them back:

Day Air attack on TF, near Port Moresby at 53,91


Allied aircraft
Beaufort V-IX x 5


No Allied losses

Japanese Ships
CA Kako
CA Kinugasa
CA Aoba

Day Air attack on TF at 53,92


Allied aircraft
Beaufort V-IX x 3


No Allied losses

Japanese Ships
AP Tsuruga Maru

No hits on the IJN surface ships or transports(no hits yesterday from 21 Beauforts either).

The surviving Beauforts are withdrawn from Port Moresby as Japanese assault forces are expected to commence landings tomorrow.





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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by Capt. Harlock »

4 IJN CVs show up today and decimate the transports:

Your defense of the DEI is going well; the Japanese Empire should feel fuel shortages in a couple of months. But it looks like you got caught with your britches down in New Guinea. Well, at least you now have a read on the locations of most of the Japanese CV's.

IMHO, the restriction on American bombers in the CBI theater is not realistic. The Commonwealth made extensive use of American model 2E bombers.
Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

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racndoc
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RE: OPERATION PACIFIC: Przemcio231(J) vs Spruance(A)

Post by racndoc »

SITUATION REPORT: 1-29-42


DEI:

Allied naval bombers from Batavia go to work as IJN transports approach Palembang. The IJN assault transports are savaged by Martin 139s and B-26S:

Day Air attack on TF at 22,54


Allied aircraft
Martin 139 x 8
B-26B Marauder x 18


No Allied losses

Japanese Ships
AP Midori Maru
AP Meisho Maru, Bomb hits 2, on fire, heavy damage
AP Meiten Maru, Bomb hits 3, on fire
AP Kaishi Maru
AP Kaika Maru, Bomb hits 2, on fire

Japanese ground losses:
166 casualties reported
Guns lost 4

Day Air attack on TF at 22,54

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 11

Allied aircraft
Martin 139 x 3

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 1 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Martin 139: 2 destroyed

Japanese Ships
AP Ume Maru, Bomb hits 1

Japanese ground losses:
10 casualties reported

Then 25 torpedo bombers and 30 medium bombers go after the IJN CV TF:

Day Air attack on TF, near Palembang at 20,55

Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 14

Allied aircraft
Swordfish x 6
Brewster 339D x 12
T.IVa x 6
Martin 139 x 9
Beaufort V-IX x 13
B-26B Marauder x 21

Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 3 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
Swordfish: 3 destroyed
Brewster 339D: 1 destroyed, 1 damaged
T.IVa: 2 destroyed, 2 damaged
Martin 139: 1 damaged
Beaufort V-IX: 2 destroyed, 7 damaged
B-26B Marauder: 2 destroyed, 4 damaged

Japanese Ships
CV Shokaku, Bomb hits 1
CV Zuikaku
CA Myoko
CVE Hosho

The Japanese are lucky to escape with minor damage.


MALAYA:

Japanese bombers continue to suppress Singapore:

Day Air attack on Singapore , at 23,50

Japanese aircraft
Ki-27 Nate x 32
Ki-21 Sally x 56
Ki-48 Lily x 35

Allied aircraft
no flights

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-21 Sally: 3 damaged
Ki-48 Lily: 1 destroyed, 1 damaged

Allied aircraft losses
B-17E Fortress: 2 destroyed


Allied ground losses:
22 casualties reported

Airbase hits 6
Airbase supply hits 6
Runway hits 81

The fortress at Singapore is holding strong and you begin to wonder who is besieging whom:

Ground combat at Singapore

Japanese Bombardment attack

Attacking force 38222 troops, 206 guns, 5 vehicles

Defending force 56507 troops, 447 guns, 16 vehicles



Allied ground losses:
89 casualties reported



PI:

IJA troops conduct deliberate attacks on Manila for the 2nd day in a row only to suffer massive casualties:

Ground combat at Manila

Japanese Deliberate attack

Attacking force 114117 troops, 730 guns, 593 vehicles

Defending force 75475 troops, 578 guns, 83 vehicles

Japanese assault odds: 0 to 1 (fort level 5)


Japanese ground losses:
4145 casualties reported
Guns lost 42
Vehicles lost 12

Allied ground losses:
1091 casualties reported
Guns lost 46
Vehicles lost 4



NEW GUINEA:

The Allied transports make good their escape back to Australia as Japanese troops invade at Port Moresby:

Naval bombardment of Port Moresby, at 53,91

Japanese Ships
DD Yuzuki
DD Kikuzuki
DD Uzuki
DD Oboro
CA Kako
CA Furutaka
CA Kinugasa
CA Aoba


Allied ground losses:
95 casualties reported
Guns lost 1
Vehicles lost 1

Airbase hits 2
Runway hits 4
Port hits 2
Port fuel hits 1

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coastal Guns at Port Moresby, 53,91, firing at TF 111
TF 111 troops unloading over beach at Port Moresby, 53,91


26 Coastal gun shots fired in defense.
Japanese ground losses:
475 casualties reported
Guns lost 1

Ground combat at Port Moresby

Allied Bombardment attack

Attacking force 2169 troops, 18 guns, 0 vehicles

Defending force 5892 troops, 77 guns, 0 vehicles





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