We are up to May 31 now, and there is action all over the map
In Burma the Allied Airforces continue their live ordinance training program, pounding every Japanese base in range. More and more of my squadrons have passed the 70 XP mark. On land large forces will be arriving in Myitikina in the North and are unloading at Akyab in the South. Everything is on schedule for a big offensive in the July-August time frame.
In China an amazing thing happened. As you may remember there is a force of one division and one engineer regiment isloated between Kwielin and Canton. They have been cut off since early April and the Japanese sent one more engineer regiment to get them out, that opened up a path and moved them 1 hex (to open terrain) in mid May. Well on May 29 8 Chinese divisions launched yet another deliberate attack on the sons of heaven. This time, a lot of them decided to go there:
Allied Deliberate attack
Attacking force 75596 troops, 448 guns, 0 vehicles
Defending force 17688 troops, 47 guns, 0 vehicles
Allied assault odds: 93 to 1
Japanese ground losses:
2927 casualties reported
Guns lost 5
Allied ground losses:
819 casualties reported
Guns lost 28
I got a message saying 20th Engineers destroyed! My first kill of a Japanese unit, ever!
Over on Java land combat did not go as well for the Allies, the Japanese hit Malang and took the place on May 29th:
Japanese Deliberate attack
Attacking force 28802 troops, 347 guns, 4 vehicles
Defending force 3636 troops, 1 guns, 0 vehicles
Japanese assault odds: 18 to 1 (fort level 3)
Japanese forces CAPTURE Malang base !!!
Allied aircraft losses
Hudson I: 3 destroyed
Beaufort V-IX: 9 destroyed
B-25C Mitchell: 7 destroyed
P-40E Warhawk: 4 destroyed
F4F-4 Wildcat: 9 destroyed
PBY Catalina: 4 destroyed
Japanese ground losses:
2 casualties reported
Guns lost 1
Allied ground losses:
6145 casualties reported
The attacking force is the 5th Division and a supporting brigade.
On May 30th the Japanese airforce hit Soerbaja twice. The first attack came out of Bali which has tired airgroups:
Japanese aircraft
Ki-43-Ib Oscar x 3
Ki-21 Sally x 15
Ki-48 Lily x 11
(Allied CAP pictured below)
Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-43-Ib Oscar: 1 destroyed
Ki-21 Sally: 3 destroyed, 2 damaged
Ki-48 Lily: 3 destroyed
The survivors turned back without bombing.
Then Batavia showed up with this:
Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 3 destroyed, 13 damaged
A6M3 Zero: 6 destroyed
Ki-43-Ib Oscar: 6 destroyed
Ki-21 Sally: 2 destroyed, 11 damaged
Ki-48 Lily: 9 destroyed, 4 damaged
Allied aircraft losses
F4F-3 Wildcat: 1 destroyed, 1 damaged
F4F-4 Wildcat: 2 destroyed, 1 damaged
Brewster 339D: 1 destroyed
Kittyhawk I: 10 destroyed
P-39D Airacobra: 3 destroyed
P-40E Warhawk: 8 destroyed
A-20B Boston: 2 destroyed
B-25C Mitchell: 3 destroyed
Wirraway: 1 destroyed
They also put 9 hits on the airfield.
At the same time over the last 3 days the Japanese fleet has been moving away under heavy pressure from Allied bombers, here are some sample results:
May 28th:
Japanese Ships
BB Ise, Bomb hits 1
BB Yamashiro, Bomb hits 1
BB Mutsu, Bomb hits 1
CL Yura
BB Nagato, Bomb hits 2
Japanese Ships
CVL Zuiho, Bomb hits 9, Torpedo hits 3, on fire, heavy damage
She will join Ryuho and Hiyo on the bottom by the 29th.
May 29th:
Japanese Ships
AK Matue Maru, Bomb hits 2, on fire, heavy damage
Japanese Ships
AP Koyo Maru
DD Namikaze
AP Yamato Maru
DD Okikaze
DD Kamikaze
AP Husimi Maru
AP Tatsuwa Maru, Bomb hits 4, on fire, heavy damage
DD Nokaze
Japanese Ships
AP Kansan Maru, Bomb hits 1, on fire
DD Namikaze
AP Miike Maru, Bomb hits 2, on fire
DD Nokaze
AP Yamato Maru
AP Hokuriku Maru
There were also two more bomb hits on Japanese BBs.
May 30th the Japanese are all in the Java Sea now, heading East and North East:
Japanese Ships
DD Nokaze, Bomb hits 2, on fire, heavy damage
DD Namikaze
AP Kashiwara Maru, Bomb hits 2, on fire
AP Awa Maru
AP Koyo Maru, Bomb hits 1
DD Kamikaze
DD Okikaze
At least two DDs have gone down, one to air attack and another in a battle that cost me 3 PT boats on May 28th.
In strategic terms the problem is simple, can the Japanese shut down the airfield at Soerbaja before they run out of steam in the air? The 5th Division shut down Malang which greatly simplifies the situation for Japan, but I don't think it will be enough to tip the balance in favor of Japan on the ground. Soerbaja is a level 7 fort with a level 5 airbase and 36,000 supply. Going from 100,000 Japanese outside to 128,000 Japanese outside is not going to make much difference.
Also the Japanese do not have control of the Sea around Java. Transports carrying supply are trying to slip into Soerbaja right now. The nearest Japanese surface ships are 2 Kongos and some cruisers at Tjiliap. Unfortunately for the Japanese Tjiliap airbase has no fighters and there are 3 (as yet undetected) RN fleet carriers 5 hexes to the West, coming in at full speed for a strike that will take of just before dawn.
Further South Bali is the airbase that is trying to stop Allied ships from getting to Soerbaja. In two days 4 RN BBs are going to bombard the place, this turn they are moving in close with aircover provided by Fulmars from Heremes. The Japanese only have a few planes on Naval, and tomorrow they will have a choice between flying everything out of Bali or hoping my shore bombardment attack on the airfield does not score.
Of course if Blackwatch chooses to bring KB into action then the British will have to run away but he seems to be saving it for a decisive battle. Maybe its lurking somewhere near the Solomons?
Vanakolu now has an EAB, and Engineer unit and 3,000 supplies. It also has a daily visit by Betties from Rabaul and these are hot shot Betties that have been smashing up my transports and thier escorts. The small number of P40Bs flying LRCAP have not stopped them, though they do shoot one down from time to time. I am getting everything out while my ships are only damaged not sunk. In a week there will be APDs iat Luganville delivering supplies while the engineers try to build a port. So far they are doing about 3% a day so I need to get more units in. That will happen in another week or two.
So far I consider this operation a success for these reasons:
1) Nothing has sunk
2) The troops are ashore
3) A very good Betty group is flying over Vanakolu instead of Soerbaja
There is even an off chance that KB is responding to this operation some how.
B17s from Luganville are also bombing Lunga on a regular basis and the Japanese are not even trying to base planes there. The place also got visits from USN bombardment TFs including one with 4 old BBs. That was part training and partly an effort to attract KB away from Java. I don't know if the second part worked, but in case it did I am going to leave off shore bombardment for a few weeks.
In the Phillipines the Allied troops at Naga continue to punish the Japanese in the forest.
May 28th:
Allied assault odds: 2 to 1
Japanese ground losses:
301 casualties reported
Guns lost 6
Allied ground losses:
137 casualties reported
Guns lost 3
May 29th
Allied assault odds: 6 to 1
Japanese ground losses:
349 casualties reported
Guns lost 5
Allied ground losses:
81 casualties reported
Guns lost 4
Vehicles lost 1
May 30th
Allied assault odds: 2 to 1
Japanese ground losses:
222 casualties reported
Guns lost 1
Allied ground losses:
159 casualties reported
Guns lost 5
I have no idea why the odds change up and down this way. On the 31st the Allies will bombard, then on June 1st its back to deliberate assualts. An AK is unloading at Legaspi so the Allied supply situation is holding steady. The Japanese are down to 11520 troops, 3 guns, but still going strong. My one hope is that I will eventually destroy a unit the way the Chinese did.
Clark is at about 6,000 supply and slowly drifting downwards. There are C47s in Mindanao flying in supply and that is slowing the drain but not stopping it. Small numbers of Allied fighters have been trying to LRCAP Clark for the last few days:
Japanese aircraft
Ki-21 Sally x 14
Ki-49 Helen x 17
Allied aircraft
F4F-4 Wildcat x 2
Kittyhawk I x 4
Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-21 Sally: 3 damaged
Ki-49 Helen: 5 damaged
Allied aircraft losses
F4F-4 Wildcat: 2 damaged
Kittyhawk I: 1 damaged
Airbase hits 1
Runway hits 19
But as you can see they are not stopping the bombing attacks or killing many Japs.
The Allies have been counter attacking the Japanese airfields and inflicting slow attrition that way:
Japanese aircraft
Ki-43-Ib Oscar x 18
Allied aircraft
Brewster 339D x 4
B-25C Mitchell x 9
Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-43-Ib Oscar: 2 damaged
Ki-15 Babs: 1 destroyed
E7K2 Alf: 1 destroyed
E13A1 Jake: 1 destroyed
Ki-21 Sally: 1 destroyed
Allied aircraft losses
Brewster 339D: 2 destroyed
B-25C Mitchell: 2 destroyed, 4 damaged
Japanese ground losses:
26 casualties reported
Airbase hits 2
Airbase supply hits 1
Runway hits 7
It seems that both sides are slowly grinding eachother down using the limited resources available. Again this pleases me a lot because IMHO those Japanese planes should all be pounding Java.
Finally Blackwatch continues to bomb transport ships unloading at Lautem:
Japanese aircraft
A6M2 Zero x 8
G3M Nell x 3
G4M1 Betty x 9
Allied aircraft
F4F-4 Wildcat x 6
Brewster 339D x 2
Hurricane II x 12
P-36A Mohawk x 10
Japanese aircraft losses
A6M2 Zero: 5 destroyed
G4M1 Betty: 3 destroyed, 3 damaged
Allied aircraft losses
F4F-4 Wildcat: 1 damaged
Brewster 339D: 1 destroyed
Hurricane II: 2 damaged
P-36A Mohawk: 3 damaged
The Hurricanes have been doing a lot of the killing here. Sadly they have not stopped the Japanese from hitting the merchant ships, but I am shooting down so many Japs that I am not sure I care. Guess which Hurricane II group is going to be first to get Spitfires?
Wraping it up casualties continue to be huge in the air, the Japanese are less than 100 planes ahead of the Allies right now, the numbers ought to shift in Allied favor forever in June. The Japanese must smash Soerbaja but seem to be unwilling to move the assets they need from other theaters to do it, and they will not use KB and thier main battle fleet on the place either.
This is allowing me to use a combination of air and seapower to inflict heavy casualties and even gain local superiority in a critical theater of the the war, and extend the battle for Java, possibly for an indefinite period.
At the same time the clock is ticking for Japan. 2 Australian division are on ship somewhere in the Tasman sea bound for Darwin, and the British have engineers and air support units on the way as well. Aru Island is now a level one airfield which means it can provide CAP over its harbor. The RN is now planning to operate from Broome. If Soerbaja is not Japanese by July it may never be Japanese at all.