Jan 20, 1942
The end of the Battle of Kuching - thank goodness!
Subs
We hear unexplained sinking noises in the night phase. We have hopes it's the
Lexington, but lack of CAG losses in the daily report after the replay indicate it was probably the fiercely burning
Witte de With.
SE Fleet
Nadzab occupied. All the occupations around Lae get Cribtop HQ thinking. We will seize Wau by air assault if necessary as that will probably cause the PM garrison to surrender rather than retreat. We continue to unload supplies and allow our troops' disruption to drop. In the meantime Netties from Rabaul and Kates from KB pound enemy ground forces to increase their DIS.
14th Army
We try a bombardment attack at Clark, but enemy AV is STILL going up. We will send some CLs and DDs to patrol near Bataan to make sure DSwain isn't slipping in supplies. IJAAF bombers pound the empty Clark Field each turn to force supply expenditure. The AF is up to 60+ damage and climbing.
16th Army
Mercifully, the enemy CVs withdraw, apparently toward Batavia. This is further evidence that
Lex really did take hits. An elaborate effort to catch the damaged CV with subs, LBA and KBL lurking within 9 hexes of her anticipated retreat route comes to naught. KBL does launch a small raid and sink xAKL
Meroendang, along with possibly an HDML hit by a searching Jake. These ships were about 6 hexes off Kuantan. Why are they wandering in a major battle zone? An "underground railroad" supply effort returning from Bataan? Picket ships suicidally protecting
Lex? Odd. IJAAF bombers were on NavSearch/Nav Attack out of Khota Baru, hoping more to find the enemy and attrit his CAP than to do any damage. With the enemy CVs fleeing, all this achieves is a raid into Singapore's hex that attacks and misses several fat xAP and xAK at the cost of 3 Oscars. Hurricanes make up part of the CAP - more proof DSwain is determined to stand fast in the DEI. Is the enemy pulling troops from Singers or reinforcing the position? Recon indicates the former is more likely, but we shall see soon enough.
Frankly, we are just glad the enemy is gone. Time to take stock. Our troops ashore at Kuching outnumber the enemy, but are having trouble reducing DIS due to lack of supply. Subs and transport A/C are mobilized to help with this. The subs can even pull supply from nearby Miri. The enemy is flying in a small LCU to reinforce his garrison, however. Kuching may take a while.
The enemy's withdrawal is a blessing, as Siam Sqdn burned all her fuel getting to Soc Trang. These heavies were pinned here as a result until the enemy left. We can now slip in an oiler and siphon enough fuel to get them to Cam Ranh Bay. Speaking of Cam Ranh Bay, all IJN shipping here fled to Samah at high speed the day after the enemy CVs initiated the Battle of Kuching. They will now return home and disband.
We agonize over Kendari. Our ships started the turn in the hex, but hadn't unloaded. An enemy TF with 9 BB/CL is "reported" moving SE away from Kuching. Cribtop Intel believes this is a false report. If this was an SCTF, it could have intervened yesterday as the encounter with enemy PGs on the 18th more than tipped our hand. Further, massive SCTF were spotted accompanying the enemy CVs near Kuching, and the Allies only have so many ships. Still, there is a chance this is the USN/KNIL cruiser sqdn. In the end, we decide to withdraw a few hexes and LRCAP the TF from Manado. If the enemy is real, he will move into Kendari and our Netties may hit him. If not, we can always go back tomorrow. Still, the risk to this invasion is growing. Cribtop HQ strongly considers withdrawal, but decides on balance the risk is worth this critical base. Kendari will allow us to extend an LBA umbrella over the whole eastern DEI. Further, we want to prove both to ourselves and to DSwain that Kuching has not blunted our aggressiveness. Why this factor is important I'm not sure, but my gut tells me it is - and I listen to my gut when it is this insistent. The initiative will remain with Japan.
As our ships withdraw, Sulu Sea Sqdn encounters the troublesome enemy PTs. One gets off a shot at CA
Myoko but misses.
Myoko shoots back and obliterates her assailant. The remaining 3 PTs flee.
China
Yet another DA in the Sinyang Kessel yields 1724(240) vs 280(0) casualties. Only one enemy corps (85th) has any AV left in the replays. Our troops have built up some DIS, so we will back off and let the bombers and artillery rough up this lone unit in the hopes that a subsequent attack will finish the whole force.
We begin to reorganize elsewhere. In Loyang, the three Divs that took Chengchow and Loyang will rest a few days. The two fresh brigades, together with other forces formerly holding the line, will advance on the 5 enemy units 1 hex west of Chengchow and try to smash them before they can escape. The 26 ruined units west of Loyang would take forever to reduce in a non-base hex, so we will try to show our armor is moving to cut them off in the hopes of forcing them to retreat towards Sian. We will post a screenie of this front soon.