Singe My Eyebrows with a Lusty Bullwhip
Posted: Tue Jul 02, 2013 2:24 pm
....I'm testing to see if scintillating subject lines are effective in my race to catch up to GreyJoy. I draw my inspiration from Cap Mandrake.
What's your Strategy?
https://forums.matrixgames.com:443/
GreyJoy has done the European thing and taken the summer off. He and Q-Ball are on summer holiday and the AAR will be pretty much dormant. You would have to sign a similar Armistice if you were not to catch John....I'm testing to see if scintillating subject lines are effective in my race to catch up to GreyJoy. I draw my inspiration from Cap Mandrake.
[:D]ORIGINAL: JocMeister
Lusty bullwhip? That sounds...dirty? [X(]
A comment to add to the posting count: thin black smoke from a ship usually indicates system damage in the 10-15 range, which is likely to have occurred during high speed steaming to get to the area.ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
11/21/42 - D+11, Operation Des Wallace
On the Ground: 27th USA Div. takes Langsa. It appears Medan is lightly held by one small unit. Further to the rear, Tandjoen has a modest garrison. I think what's happening here is that John's having a hard time feeding troops forward to Tandjoen, which is the closest Sumatran base to Singapore. He's concerend about my subs and combat ships. Tonight I'm sending minelayers forward. I feel pretty confident now that Medan will fall in four or five days and there's a chance the Allies can move on Tandjoen. No major news over at Alor Star and Singora.
On the Seas: Nagato and Ise, both showing some black smoke, bombard Singora, doing heavy damage to the feild but none to the garrison. Having BBs operating out in the Gulf of Siam is another example of the Nemo Dividend (and the very thing you guys are positing - that Malaysia siphons off enemy interest from Sumatra). Allied bombardment TFs hit VP (John's pulled out his damaged aircraft, as best I can tell) and Georgetown, catching a bunch of aircraft on the ground. The enemy carrier TF (unknown strength) operating NW of Cocos claims a picket xAK.
In the Air: Sibolga airfield goes to level 4.99. Not very much air activity today as most Allied ships are currently within the main perimeter or on the way back to Colombo.
Burma: Various Allied troops are emerging from the jungle and taking new positions - two Indian brigades, for instance, have bisected the rail line north of Schwebo. Movement dots still indicating a general Japanese withdrawal. Somebody made the valid point that the John can march overland from Tavoy to Bangkok to extract his army from Burma if necessary. True, but the main point has been that it will take John probably two months to get units from Burma into the contested ground at Sumatra. Since he has ten or so divisions committed in Burma, that forces him to haul in units from other distant locales, which will be tough and time consuming.
ORIGINAL: BBfanboy
A comment to add to the posting count: thin black smoke from a ship usually indicates system damage in the 10-15 range, which is likely to have occurred during high speed steaming to get to the area.
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
Seriously.
The coming carrier clash could go either way, right? I mean, the Allied carriers could react, get dispersed, and could lose ugly. Bad ugly. Ugly to the point that John's carriers and combat ships achieve control of the sea lanes. Control such that he can interdict all supply and reinforcement efforts into the distant future.
That's my nightmare scenario. If that happens, the Allied lodgement in Malaya isn't going to have an indefinite shelf life, so the Allied position in Sumatra had better be rock solid.
If, on the other hand, Japan loses a carrier battle - or it is a draw - then the Allies can remain more aggressive.
If the Joint Chiefs see it differently, they need to persuade Admiral King to remove me from command!
Alright, if you're seriously thinking about abandoning your lodgement on Malaya, I'd suggest you reconsider.
In controlling Singora and the rail bases in 'the neck', you're essentially throttling Singapore. It will take John months to bring an effective response from Burma by foot. True dat-there may be other forces coming in from the home islands, China, elsewhere, but if you think he'll be able to hastily dislodge you from that critical rail line, you're mistaken.
Like Sibolga, a US Division, dug into jungle / rough terrain and supplied will be extremely difficult to dislodge. If you can maintain such a lodgement well into 1943, it can be expanded and be a source for metastasis elsewhere on Malaya. If you can keep Singora, you can bring immediate pressure on the Gulf of Siam, reinforcement into Bangkok and, in short order, Singapore. If you can threaten / render Palembang unusable, you have the ingredients for a tightening gauntlet around his throat.
Agree with others that say that as Malaya heats up, Sumatra will be relegated to secondary importance too.
The risk:reward is decidedly in your favor for playing your hand aggressively on Malaya. You can do a lot of harm to his right flank for a modest price. I'd do it.
I forgot to mention that John landed a fast transport detachment at my second from the bottom island off western Sumatra
I don't see how John can ever hope to recapture northern Sumatra via a land campaign. He will need 10 divisions and four to six months.
I don't see how John can ever hope to recapture northern Sumatra via a land campaign. He will need 10 divisions and four to six months.
ORIGINAL: AcePylut
While it seems that John is a "hulk smash" and sees lots of victory points sitting in Sumatra - does he need to invade Northern Sumatra to make your bases ineffective? Or does he just need to isolate the bases to neutralize them?
ORIGINAL: The Sandman
John tends to be a very aggressive player and you've currently got a lot more expendable xAKs and xAPs in the area than you'd need to resupply an existing lodgement, right?
Why not use that against him?
Send out a bunch of small, scattered TFs to make it look like you've started dispersing everything now that you know there are carriers of some kind in the area. Let John smash them. But make sure there's lots of them all over the place.
Once he's expended his sorties on the bait, then come in and smash him with your carriers. IIRC, if he's using aggressive settings for his carrier aviation in order to get them to launch on your warships, he can't keep them from deciding to attack any other naval target in range instead.
If your CVs are fast enough to do this, maybe try to run them through the Malacca and Sunda Straits in one or two turns, in order to interpose your carriers between the KB and Singapore/Batavia/Soerabaja when he sends his carriers back to restock.
Also, do you have any spare cruisers you can send in to bombard Palembang?
And do you know where that juicy all-AO TF that you spotted a few turns back is? They might be an even better target than KB itself.