Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Battle Reports & After Action Reports (AAR's)

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BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

Horseman wrote: Sun May 03, 2020 1:49 pm Nicely done Herr General.

I do enjoy your writing style :D
Thanks Horseman - I'm just glad someone's reading it :-) I guess I can point to some of the memoirs I've read as inspiration for the writing style and my past experience as a teacher- if I get enough slots, I hope to pay my own laughably small tribute to Erhaud Raus (Panzer Operations - buy it and read it) and Gottlob Biedermann (In Deadly Combat, a German soldier's memoir of the Eastern Front - buy it and and read it) by adding their formations to my Corps. Might be easier for the latter, as he was a PaK gefreiter and later NCO in 132nd Infanterie whilst Raus was a general, but we'll see how things go :-)

I love this game.
Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Sun May 03, 2020 10:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

1 Nov 1941

Dear reader, I write to you from a cramped compartment on a troop transport train traversing the featureless plains north from the Don. In its infinite wisdom, OKH has decided that our Panzer Corps (note the "Panzer") is to be transferred from Army Group South to Army Group Centre in preparation for an all-out attempt to seize Moscow. Yes, let that sink in; Panzers........Moscow. I do not know the equivalent German colloquialism for the English phrase "they don't know their arse from their elbow", but if I did I would have deployed it when I had to pass on the Corps' Order Of The Day to our divisions on 25th October after Generalleutnant Von Walrus had received OKH's direction. It seems that the successes of XIX Panzer Corps and, in particular, Herr General's ability to achieve results in urban settings with careful regard for manpower and regimental morale, have come to the attention of our betters in the Oberkommando. This is not to say that OKH has expanded Herr General's command remit - he hasn't been assigned a full armee to achieve this most critical of objectives - we'll be making do with our existing 4 divisions and it will be up to me to organise what new equipment I can from our stretched supply lines and plan the best use of our logistics network to maximise the effectiveness of the footprint we can put down on the approaches to the capital of the Soviet Union.

The planned date for the commencement of offensive operations is 15 Nov. Allow me to present our expected Order Of Battle now to you, as the next two weeks will allow the Corps staff precious little time to do anything other than do what we can to make the lives of our divisions as logistically simple as possible once they all start arriving in the formation areas. Herr General has asked for extra support from Luftflotte IV and they have agreed to expand the size of the jagdgeschwader at our disposal, concurring with our assessment that the Soviet capital will be a hotbed of Red air activity and that we need to have the strength to both safeguard our upgraded artillerie and conduct air superiority missions.

3 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 3 (Pz IIIH)
Panzer-Regiment 9 (Pz IVE)
Pioniere-Abt 93 (SdKfz 251)
Schwere-Panzerjager-Abt 300 (Sturer Emil prototype)
Aufklarung-Abt 3 (SdKfz 232)
Sturm-Abteilung 203 (StuG IIIB)

10 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 10 (Pz IIIH)
Panzer-Regiment 13 (Pz IIIJ)
Pioniere-Abt 100 (mot)
Panzerjager-Abt 10 (Pak 38SF 50mm)
Sturm-Abteilung 210 (StuG IIIB) (in reserve)


49 Infanterie Division (Mot) - motorised infanterie transport unattached for this operation:
Infanterie-Regiment 49
Infanterie-Regiment 149
Pioniere-Abt 49
Artillerie-Regiment 49 (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Panzerjager-Abt 49 (Pak 38SF 50mm)
Sturm-Abteilung 209 (StuG IIIB)

25 Infanterie Division:
Infanterie-Regiment 25
Infanterie-Regiment 125
Pioniere-Abt 25
Artillerie-Regiment 25 (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Sturm-Abteilung 225 (StuG IIIB)
Sturm-Abteilung 226 (Flammpanzer II)
Aufklarung-Abt 25 (Pz IIF) (In reserve)

JG26:
Gruppe I (Bf 109F)
Gruppe II (Bf 109F)
Gruppe III (Bf 109F)
Gruppe IV (Bf 109F)

ZG 99:
Gruppe I (Bf 110C)
Gruppe II (Bf 110D)
Gruppe III (Bf 110D) (in reserve)

StG 3:
Gruppe I (Ju 87D)

KG 88:
Gruppe I (Ju 88A)
Gruppe II (He 111H2) (in reserve)
Gruppe III (Do 217E)

XIX Corps Assets in support:
Schwere-Artillerie-Regiment "Eiffel" (170mm, Sdkfz 7)
Fi-156 "Storch" Flight

We had been informed that a number of prototype-stage Pz IV models with longer-barreled main guns had been made available, but it was decided that our precious logistical capacity was better utilised in support of heavier artillery for our assault divisions as well as a forward deployment of the Corps-level artillerie-regiment.
Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Mon May 04, 2020 7:57 am, edited 5 times in total.
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

13th Nov 1941

The die is cast. The success or failure of the Wehrmacht's entire effort since June rests on XIX Panzer Corps and its subordinated luftwaffe gruppen. The administrative, logistical and psychological heart of the Soviet Union is there, within touching distance. The domes of St Basil's Cathederal, the walls of the Kremlin, the tomb of Lenin - will they remain ethereal objectives on the Corps' maps, never to crystallise.........or do we dare dream that we will fly the war flag of the Reich over Red Square? Dear reader, I beg to report that I have always been considered a dreamer.

Image

The task facing 3 Panzer - an unsupported conquest of Tula and drive to establish a sound position east of Moscow ahead of the expected Soviet reinforcements we have been advised to expect imminently - is not to be underestimated. Indeed, the monumental challenge facing all our formations in the bitter weather against a desperate foe is almost impossible to overstate. Vorwarts zum engultigen sieg!
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

15 Nov 1941

A clear day has dawned above a frigid landscape; the division HQs have confirmed that their preparations are in order. If not now, then when? If not us, then whom? We will do what we must, no matter the cost.

16 Nov 1941

The defensive line west of the city is full of Soviets - a "human wave" roils towards us. The experienced heads in 25 Infanterie stop short of the the trench line, get their machine guns and mortars ready, and let the brown tide come to them knowing that the enemy advance has to come through the curtain of supporting fire from their StuGs. 10 Panzer tucks in on their flank to help lengthen the coastline that tide has to break against.

Image

17 Nov 1941

49 Motorised is fully engaged around the peripheral town of Naro-Fominsk. It reports contact with very well-equipped and disciplined enemy infantry, certainly a cut above what we've come up against in the Ukraine.

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Reports from our other divisions confirm ongoing engagements - Soviet air power is indeed present in strength and Herr General has decided to favour air defence of our heavy artillerie over seek & destroy air operations.

18 Nov 1941

3 Panzer reports a defeat in detail of the substantial infantry army (with cavalry support) in and around Tula. The last defenders surrendered, realising the hopelessness of their situation. The bridge at Serupkhov is more than a day's travel away, but that is the next objective for the main body of the divsion.

Image

19 Nov 1941

After 72 hours of non-stop combat, there is a slight pause for breath west of Moscow. The red wave has evaporated in front of the careful tactical maneuvers of 25 Inf and 10 Pz, but these formations have taken their own share of casualties. Another unit of the problematically solid Soviet infantry is holding us up around the wreckage of the fort StG 3 just finished bombing out. Herr General has instructed all commands to avoid direct confrontations in equal, regimental, strength with these elite formations unless air, StuG and / or artillerie support is available.

Image

22 Nov 1941

Heavy fighting continues to rage on the southern periphery of Moscow; 49 Inf has advanced further east towards more fortifications whilst a large air engagement evolved as units were vectored in from various airfields to destroy an enemy fighter wing.

Image

24 Nov 1941

25 Infanterie's advance to the west of the city has continued, held up by enemy strongpoints and the disappointingly stubborn elite foot unit of the enemy. Corps had instructed the reduction and elimination of the strongpoints to ensure effective lines of supply to the advancing infantierie. Finally, this "Guards" unit was cornered against the river and was permitted to surrender honourably. Another air superiority engagement formed in this sector, with the versatile zerstorers of ZG 99 tipping the balance in our favour once again.

Image

In 49 Motorised's sector, another enemy strongpoint has been cut off and is being reduced.

Image

25 Nov 1941

An assault group of Pioneires, StuGs and Auflkarungs have overrun the relatively undefended settlements in the SE of the operational area, as revealed by our Storch flight. These units will be recalled back to rejoin the main combat formations as quickly as possible.

Image

26 Nov 1941

A very troublesome enemy FlaK battery had served to effectively close off airspace above the "seam" between 25 Infanterie and 10 Panzer in Moscow's NW suburbs. It had no answer to the flamethrowers of Pioniere-Regiment 25, once they were able to close within engagement range.

Image

29 Nov 1941

After an advance obstructed by the remarkably unfrozen waterways north of Moscow, Pionerie-Regiment 100 captured Kilmy single-handed - the town's defenders being an overmatched and unsupported PaK batallion. The armoured bulk of 10 Panzer was busying itself fording the river running alongside the main northern arterial road connecting Moscow and Kilmy.

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Administrative buildings and industrial facilities in the west of Moscow have been secured by the hard-working landsers of 25 Infanterie; the medical stations here at Corps HQ are edging closer to capacity but I remain thankful for the brave men standing by in the replacement batallions.

Image

30 Nov 1941

Today has been a tale of success and foreboding. 3 Panzer has re-organised, eliminating enemy armour around the town of Kolomna east of Moscow. However, ongoing reconnaissance flights beyond the current engagement areas have revealed the enormity of the Soviet reinforcements we'd been briefed to expect!!

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2 Dec 1941

All over Moscow, brave men of the Reich are being wounded, maimed and killed as XIX Panzer Corps metaphorically tries to close the grasp of the whole of Germany around what its bleeding fingers are tenuously holding in their tips. The Reds are moving everything they have towards us in a final attempt to peel our fingers back. I honestly don't know if our forces will endure - we have embargoed the sharing of the reconnaissance flights with division HQs.

Image

4 Dec 1941

A new red wave crashes upon the formation least equipped to resist it - 10 Panzer - at Kilmy. This wave is made of steel, not men, and 10 Panzer's choices of defensive terrain are almost non-existent. I am dismayed to report that the order was given to move up as many replacement men and vehicles from its replacement formations as we can organise yesterday; we have ZG99-I and JG26 - III available to interdict the enemy tanks where possible but it's a grim situation.

Image

On the other hand, success was reported to the east where an enemy armoured counter-attack at Kolomna was replused by 3 Panzer with support from the rebased StG 3 Stukas and ZG 99 - II.

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5 Dec 1941

The storm rages in central Moscow. Enemy tanks are in the wide avenues and surrounding streets - the list of Close Combat Badges that our landers will receive for tank kills is growing exponentially......sadly, so is our casualty list.

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6 Dec 1941

With both trepidation and pride, I am overjoyed to report that Pioniere-Regiment 25 - battered as it is - is in place behind the Kremlin walls! Communications from across the city are indicating that the highest point of the Soviet tide has been weathered, at least in the Centre. 10 Panzer continues to report a static battle of attrition in and around Kilmy, with emergency retreats of battered units becoming more and more frequent. If they lose their foothold at Kilmy, the road will be open for the Reds to assemble another massive force from their northern reserves.

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9 Dec 1941

I have no words. Moscow has been secured. All glory to the dead of XIX Panzer Corps!
Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Wed May 06, 2020 10:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

OUT OF CHARACTER FINDINGS:

Only the best wargaming I've had in years - thanks devs! The gulf in my ability to construct, deploy and manage a Corps compared with the understanding I'd need to have secured all the bonus objectives here is......chastening :-)

I will admit to restarting the scenario from scratch once as I'd ended up using my (weakest) northern division to shore up the assault of the northern / central areas of the city and the reinforcement wave just rolled in and caught 10 Panzer in a terrible position with no hope of getting to the Kilmy victory hex. That's my bit of alternate history done :-)

I probably could have expended a lot more manpower and got one, perhaps two bonus hexes but the sheer volume of Reds.....all that heavy FlaK.....anti tank guns waiting around the bonus hexes.......maybe I'll need to restart the campaign, switch heroes back on and XP point-farm for my primary combat units like a zealot to be able to get close to the bonus victory in the future!

Still, I went from thinking "all under control" as I advanced eastwards, to thinking "I hate that FlaK in NW Moscow" and then "OMG that reserve force is twice as tough as everything I've already fought through to get this far".....to then thinking "I can do this". We then moved to "KV1's in the streets! And T34s! How am I going to hold?" on to "Suppression from my 170mm arty backed up by veteran infantry close assaults creates interesting steel street furniture", followed by "I've got this in the Centre but the north is taking a kicking and I'm not certain I can hold it" and finally with three turns left "this is all back under control and let's play it out, but you can forget any bonus objectives".

Did I say "thanks Devs"? Brilliant stuff. Oh yeah, I hate Guards infantry with a passion.
Horseman
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by Horseman »

BaronVonWalrus wrote: Wed May 06, 2020 8:29 pm OUT OF CHARACTER FINDINGS:

Only the best wargaming I've had in years - thanks devs! The gulf in my ability to construct, deploy and manage a Corps compared with the understanding I'd need to have secured all the bonus objectives here is......chastening :-)

I will admit to restarting the scenario from scratch once as I'd ended up using my (weakest) northern division to shore up the assault of the northern / central areas of the city and the reinforcement wave just rolled in and caught 10 Panzer in a terrible position with no hope of getting to the Kilmy victory hex. That's my bit of alternate history done :-)

I probably could have expended a lot more manpower and got one, perhaps two bonus hexes but the sheer volume of Reds.....all that heavy FlaK.....anti tank guns waiting around the bonus hexes.......maybe I'll need to restart the campaign, switch heroes back on and XP point-farm for my primary combat units like a zealot to be able to get close to the bonus victory in the future!

Still, I went from thinking "all under control" as I advanced eastwards, to thinking "I hate that FlaK in NW Moscow" and then "OMG that reserve force is twice as tough as everything I've already fought through to get this far".....to then thinking "I can do this". We then moved to "KV1's in the streets! And T34s! How am I going to hold?" on to "Suppression from my 170mm arty backed up by veteran infantry close assaults creates interesting steel street furniture", followed by "I've got this in the Centre but the north is taking a kicking and I'm not certain I can hold it" and finally with three turns left "this is all back under control and let's play it out, but you can forget any bonus objectives".

Did I say "thanks Devs"? Brilliant stuff. Oh yeah, I hate Guards infantry with a passion.
Moscow was certainly one of my favourites too. When the counter attack came I was "all strung out" and several of my Panzers took a real beating.

You made life a lot more difficult for yourself by having lots of non Pioneer infantry (I did the same thing BTW as trying to use a somewhat historical core force). Fighting through the streets in such a large built up area is exactly what those flame thrower toting nutters excel at.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

Horseman wrote: Thu May 07, 2020 8:30 am
BaronVonWalrus wrote: Wed May 06, 2020 8:29 pm OUT OF CHARACTER FINDINGS:

Only the best wargaming I've had in years - thanks devs! The gulf in my ability to construct, deploy and manage a Corps compared with the understanding I'd need to have secured all the bonus objectives here is......chastening :-)

I will admit to restarting the scenario from scratch once as I'd ended up using my (weakest) northern division to shore up the assault of the northern / central areas of the city and the reinforcement wave just rolled in and caught 10 Panzer in a terrible position with no hope of getting to the Kilmy victory hex. That's my bit of alternate history done :-)

I probably could have expended a lot more manpower and got one, perhaps two bonus hexes but the sheer volume of Reds.....all that heavy FlaK.....anti tank guns waiting around the bonus hexes.......maybe I'll need to restart the campaign, switch heroes back on and XP point-farm for my primary combat units like a zealot to be able to get close to the bonus victory in the future!

Still, I went from thinking "all under control" as I advanced eastwards, to thinking "I hate that FlaK in NW Moscow" and then "OMG that reserve force is twice as tough as everything I've already fought through to get this far".....to then thinking "I can do this". We then moved to "KV1's in the streets! And T34s! How am I going to hold?" on to "Suppression from my 170mm arty backed up by veteran infantry close assaults creates interesting steel street furniture", followed by "I've got this in the Centre but the north is taking a kicking and I'm not certain I can hold it" and finally with three turns left "this is all back under control and let's play it out, but you can forget any bonus objectives".

Did I say "thanks Devs"? Brilliant stuff. Oh yeah, I hate Guards infantry with a passion.
Moscow was certainly one of my favourites too. When the counter attack came I was "all strung out" and several of my Panzers took a real beating.

You made life a lot more difficult for yourself by having lots of non Pioneer infantry (I did the same thing BTW as trying to use a somewhat historical core force). Fighting through the streets in such a large built up area is exactly what those flame thrower toting nutters excel at.
It was definitely one of those "great gaming sessions" that all of us collect over the years, for sure. I'm certainly going to try and stick with reasonably historic formations if I can, although you're right to point out the extent of my unwitting self-handicap; I've just been briefed for the next battle which is a return to Kharkov and a mission to turn defence into attack in what looks like good tank country. I think it's time XIX Panzer Corps re-organised and formed a new Panzer Division out of the mobile support elements of 49 Motorised with some newly-minted panzer models. Given all the tough assignments (and medals) given to 25 Infanterie Division so far, it's staying in the Corps - those men are legends!
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

8th May 1942

I have some time to provide a report on our plans for our next operation, what Army Group South has described as an opportunity to deliver a decisive blow against the Soviet's offensive in the Ukraine and set the stage for a renewal of our own offensive operations towards the oil fields of the Caucusus. I have noticed that the words "Soviet" and "offensive" are becoming more commonly said in the same breaths of the Conversations between Herr General, Armee HQ and our divisional commanders - it's as if those damned Reds are oblivious to the loss of their capital! I've heard stories that they have used armies of forced labourers and workers to build whole towns filled with nothing but manufactories and worker barracks further east, well behind the front and well out of reach of our bombers and current plans - I wonder how invested those poor souls feel in their "glorious workers' paradise"? Nevertheless, it is not a soldier's job to dwell on rumours of what may or may not be happening a thousand kilometres of more behind the enemy's line - we focus on more immediate concerns.

The Spring has seen men return from leave and commanders take stock of the "meat grinder" battles of last winter. 49 Infanterie Division (Mot) has been effectively disbanded with its two infanterie regiments donated to the Armeegroup reserve; its not-inexperienced support formations have been kept on though and used to form a new Panzer Division alongside two newly-equipped and trained panzer regiments that have been sent to us from Germany. This decision looks sound, as we've been moved back south to the steppe where mobility and the need to take on the considerably-growing numbers of Soviet tanks is paramount. We have also been able to get half-tracks for 25 Infanterie Division, although they haven't been offically re-designated as Panzergrenadiers as of yet.

After getting hold of some new machinery and taking up the long-barreled Pz IV prototype we couldn't support at Moscow, our latest Order Of Battle is set out below. We're particularly comforted by our first trials of the long-barreled Pz Jgr StuG variant, as we've had the bad news that our slowly-dwindling stock of the fearsome prototype Sturer Emil tank killers (note, not mere tank hunters - they have proved themselves time and again to be the dominant force in battles) will never be restored! Why those preening fools in Berlin chose not to commission them into full production we will never know, but we will have to do our utmost to preserve them, as even Soviet KV-units scuttle away in battered disarray when those big guns roar.

3 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 3 (Pz IIIH)
Panzer-Regiment 9 (Pz IVE)
Pioniere-Abt 93 (SdKfz 251)
Schwere-Panzerjaeger-Abt 300 (Sturer Emil prototype)
Aufklarung-Abt 3 (SdKfz 232)
Sturm-Abteilung 203 (StuG IIIB)
Artillerie-Regiment 49 (170mm Sdkfz 7)

10 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 10 (Pz IVF)
Panzer-Regiment 13 (Pz IIIJ)
Pioniere-Abt 100 (mot)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 10 (StuG IIIF)
Sturm-Abteilung 209 (StuG IIIB)

17 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 17 (Pz IVF/2 Prototype)
Panzer-Regiment 27 (Pz IIIJ/1)
Pioniere-Abt 49 (Mot)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 49 (PaK 38SF 50mm)
Aufklarung-Abt 25 (Pz IIF)
Artillerie-Regiment 117 (150mm Sdkfz 7)

25 Infanterie Division:
Infanterie-Regiment 25 (Sdkfz 251)
Infanterie-Regiment 125 (Sdkfz 251)
Pioniere-Abt 25 (Sdkfz 251)
Artillerie-Regiment 25 (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Sturm-Abteilung 225 (StuG IIIB)
Sturm-Abteilung 226 (Flammpanzer II) (in reserve)


JG26:
Gruppe I (Bf 109F)
Gruppe II (Bf 109G)
Gruppe III (Bf 109F)
Gruppe IV (Bf 109F) (in reserve)

ZG 99:
Gruppe I (Bf 110G)
Gruppe II (Bf 110D)
Gruppe III (Bf 110D) (in reserve)

StG 3:
Gruppe I (Ju 87D)

KG 88:
Gruppe I (Ju 88A)
Gruppe II (He 111H2) (in reserve)
Gruppe III (Do 217E)

XIX Corps Assets in support:
Schwere-Artillerie-Regiment "Eiffel" (170mm, Sdkfz 7)
Fi-156 "Storch" Flight
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

11 May 41

The expected onslaught is on its way. Deployments in the end were quite chaotic, as the decision to concentrate our resources in and around Kharkov and Belgorod left us with a lot of men and materiel to cram into not a lot of space. Herr General had also ordered our high value assets to deploy in close proximity to both cities' airfields, with our aircraft given orders to get airborne as soon as the enemy attack front made contact. To summarise, elements of 3 Panzer are stationed in Belgorod, opposite the rest of the division plus the newly-arrived Panzer-Regiment 17 in the north of Kharkov. 25 Infanterie is dug in around the eastern suburbs and the bordering forest. The bulk of 17 Panzer is poised in the south and south west areas of Kharkov and its fringes, ready to break out into open country once the Red offensive has been turned back. 10 Panzer is in the gap between 17 Panzer and 25 Infanterie, with orders to be the first responders should the enemy break through our mixture of reserve, Romanian and Hungarian infanterie defending the woodlands and river crossing SE of Kharkov.

12 May 1941

I regret to report a lack of diary entries to detail the day of the Soviet attack yesterday. Today, however, has brought a clear dawn and a clear picture of where the enemy forces are and where the biggest threats to our positions remain. Today will also bring the beginning of the enemy's defeat.

The veterans of 25 Infanterie exact a heavy toll as they push back into the forest.

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With its SE flank holding securely, 10 Panzer pivots west to directly confront the Cossack division trying to flank the defence. The short-barrelled Panzer IVs of Panzer-Regiment 10 in particular are going to make very short work of that enemy thrust.

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North of Kharkov, our forces reported the surprising sight of British Matilda tanks (with very big red stars painted on them) waltzing slowly towards our lines. Schwere-Panzerjaeger-Abt 300 would spring the trap, coming down from its start point in Belgorod.

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13 May 1941

Local commanders report exemplary performance from the new machines we've been able to give some of our experienced crews. Both the new Bf 110Gs and long-barreled StuG Fs acquitted themselves well in their first engagements.

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In the SW of the operational area, mobile Soviet forces had been allowed to capture Krasnograd with little resistance - the order had been given to our 2nd-line allied forces in the area to retreat to defensible forested positions further south and to await our panzer-led counterattack. This order, so typical of Herr General's allergy to unnecessary wastes of soldiers' lives, might not be in line with the diktats of the Party Pheasants in Berlin but is certainly in line with the "flexible defence" doctrine of Generaloberst Von Manstein, whose command we are assigned to.

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14-15 May 1941

Whilst routine engagements carry on SE and SW of Kharkov and the enemy's impetus there has evaporated, they are making good use of a defended river crossing further north at Volchansk. 3 Panzer, with original orders to outflank this point by means of a temporary bridge set down by our bruckenpionieres, wisely used its forward elements to scout ahead - they identified substantial enemy forces not yet committed east of the river crossing and the decision was taken to bring them back over the river for now and adopt a defensive posture - the enemy could expend that strength in futile offensive efforts for now and 3 Panzer would be able to advance after more enemy attrition.

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17 May 1941

South of Kharkov, our panzers have been able to rely on very solid flank defence from entrenched allied infanterie in strong forested positions; now is the time to move up and smash the Reds' resistance and lay the foundations for the encirclement and elimination of their remaining forces in this sector.

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After successfully keeping a very low profile in the woods and out of sight of the Soviets for the last few days, the mixed allied formation is tasked with supporting the imminent advance of the panzers to liberate Krasnograd.

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19 May 1941

In two contrasting developments, we have been able to form a kettle east of Krasnograd and trapping some enemy units that had the potential to erode our fighting potential - more losses we can now avoid and more potential prisoners for the work crews that we always need away from the front line. However, 3 Panzer reports strafing attacks by a new model of Soviet aircraft - these "flying tanks" stay in the air despite absorbing heavy fire from JG26's fighter patrols and are accounting for more knocked-out panzers than is reasonable. We've been able to destroy almost everything else with a red star on it that's capable of flight in the area.......but not these beasts.

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20 -22 May 1941

Allied infanterie retakes Krasnograd and, with panzer support, takes control of the nearby airbase to close down potential resupply drops by the enemy.

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23 May - 1 June 1941

I have omitted superfluous detail from the reports of operations in the latter days of the battle, as the matter had essentially been decided in previous days with the containment and efficient active defence of the Volchansk bridgehead along with the destruction of the main enemy force south of Kharkov (and entrapment of the remnants). Numerous enemy prisoners were taken, perhaps at the expense of some forward momentum but at little material cost to our forces. Volchansk surrendered on the 25th, Lozovaya on the 29th and Barkenovo on 1 June. Soviet forces at Izyum were on the verge of defeat by 1 June whilst enemy positions east of the waterways in the direction of Luhansk Oblast remained unengaged and beyond the remit of our operational objectives. Given another week and operational freedom, I have no doubt that XIX Panzer Corps could easily reduce and capture all these locations, but an official "halt" has been called for now.

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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

OUT OF CHARACTER UPDATE:

Finally got a chance to play through Sevastapol tonight......some very enjoyable "ebb and flow" to the battle and I honestly felt the tension building as the turns began to tick downwards with ground still to cover! It feels like I spent as much time taking and labeling screenshots as I did fighting the battle this time around, so expect a marathon battle report in the next day or so. OOC findings without spoilers: the Maxim Gorky fortresses and their monster guns feel as dominant as they were made to sound in the memoirs I've read from a division actually at Sevastapol, Schwere Gustav gives just as much central flavour to the battle on the German side and the small force of S-Boots must have been equipped with special homing "come and bomb me" beacons......just as well :-)
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by SineMora »

Good luck with your AAR. I know only too well from experience how tempting it is to play instead when you have some time to spare rather than making sure your AAR is up to date, and I am terrible when it comes to making notes as I play.
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http://www.slitherine.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=596&t=98034 -- Generalissimus AAR (no Trophies / Heroes)
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by Horseman »

What I've done when doing an AAR is to only play a handful of turns and then update the AAR. That way I've not had to overly rely on notes.

I used a word document to type it up and then copy and pasted on to the forum.

Now I have a second computer what I'd probably do is play on my main PC whilst I literally type up the facts as I went on my laptop. I could then go back into it and add the pictures and the story afterwards.

But yes, it can be very hard to stop and update an AAR rather than just play the game.

Many people seriously underestimate how much time writing an AAR takes - I'd say it easily doubles if not more the time you spend actually playing.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

Thanks both - I've now adopted the approach of writing descriptive filenames for the screenshots, which should help me write up the narrative. I don't know if I could take a break from the battle to start writing things up though.....maybe I'll have to as I reach the latter scenarios and need more real-life time per game turn. Update to follow today :-)
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

5 June 1942

Our holiday to the Black Sea Riviera is about to get a lot more interesting. No trips to the beaches for the stalwarts of XIX Panzer Corps, instead we can look forward to hill climbs, dusty roads, marshy wetlands and fortress assaults. The whole area is essentially one big fortress, with strongpoints and gun emplacements - including the formidable armoured coastal gun batteries capable of traversing to fire inland, which have been nicknamed "Maxim Gorky I and II". I doubt Gorky's books had quite the impact that fire from these fortresses and their 305mm battleship guns does. Still, we have our orders - the guns must all be silenced and the fortress city must be captured. The battered formations that had been slogging away here at not insignificant cost since last November have been rotated out of the line. At this point, we should give special mention to our many brave comrades of 132nd and 24th Infanterie-Divisions, for whom this corner of the Crimea has become their final resting place.

We have been able to secure some improved equipment although, as ever, we've had to think carefully about how best to use our limited supply of favours and contacts on the Home Front to maintain a reasonable level of "competitiveness with the enemy" across the full breadth of the Corps and its various attachments. Some obsolete assets have been taken out of our theatre and permanently allocated to reserve or training units back in Germany, but we're very glad to have been able to acquire and quickly introduce veteran crews to meaningful numbers of the new Ausf G Panzer IVs. Herr General has also been able to assume Corps command over 7 Flieger-Division thanks to his lobbying of higher commands for a contingency against delays in forcing any passage beyond Sevastopol to Maxim Gorky II.

Our Order of Battle for this demanding operation is:

3 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 3 (Pz IVG)
Panzer-Regiment 9 (Pz IVE)
Pioniere-Abt 93 (SdKfz 251)
Schwere-Panzerjager-Abt 300 (Sturer Emil prototype)
Sturm-Abteilung 203 (StuG IIIB)
Artillerie-Regiment 49 (170mm Sdkfz 7)

10 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 10 (Pz IVF)
Panzer-Regiment 13 (Pz IIIJ)
Pioniere-Abt 100 (mot)
Panzerjager-Abt 10 (StuG IIIF)
Sturm-Abteilung 210 (StuG IIIB)

17 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 17 (Pz IVG)
Panzer-Regiment 27 (Pz IIIJ/1)
Pioniere-Abt 49 (SdKfz 251)
Aufklarung-Abt 25 (Pz IIF)
Artillerie-Regiment 117 (150mm Sdkfz 7)

25 Infanterie Division:
Infanterie-Regiment 25
Infanterie-Regiment 125
Pioniere-Abt 25
Artillerie-Regiment 25 (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Sturm-Abteilung 225 (StuG IIIB)

7 Flieger Division:
Fallschirmjager-Regiment 7
Fallschirmjager-Regiment 9

JG26:
Gruppe I (Bf 109G)
Gruppe II (Bf 109G)
Gruppe III (Bf 109F)
Gruppe IV (Bf 109F)

ZG 99:
Gruppe I (Bf 110G)
Gruppe II (Bf 110D)
Gruppe III (Bf 110D)

KG 88:
Gruppe I (Ju 88A)
Gruppe II (Do 217E)

XIX Corps Assets in support:
Schwere-Artillerie-Regiment "Eiffel" (170mm, Sdkfz 7)
Bruckenpioniere-Abt 19
Fi-156 "Storch" Flight

Romanian 1st Mountain Division temporarily attached as an auxiliary force, along with 4 units of Goliath remote-controlled tanks.

800mm "Dora" Rail-mounted Gun (and about a thousand men to crew, maintain, operate the shell loading cranes and guard it!)

In reserve:

Infanterie-Regiment 49
Infanterie-Regiment 149
Panzerjaeger-Abt 49 (PaK 38SF 50mm)
Sturm-Abteilung 217 (StuG IIIB)
Aufklarung-Abt 3 (SdKfz 232)
Bruckenpioniere-Abt 12
StG 3 - I (Ju 87D)
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

6 June 1942

Our outline plan for this operation is sketched out below. 25 Infanterie's halftracks have been kept behind the front as the division hasn't been given a lot of ground to cover- although it, as per usual, has been given all the toughest assignments! It is expected that elements of 3 & 17 Panzer will have advanced quickly enough to provide support as needed in the fortified zone east of Maxim Gorky I and the fallschirmjagers will be on standby to provide more boots on the ground too. Having cleared the land east of the Chernaya river, the panzers will rush to the prime bridging location identified at the end of the valley running NE - SW towards the river. We will force a crossing here, as the wetlands around Inkerman are easily-defended and will need to be flanked and isolated to minimise losses. It will be imperative to make that crossing point available as the railway line runs through Inkerman and provides the only route for us to deploy the massive Dora railway gun west of the river. The rail line will also allow us to rapidly relocate 25 Infanterie once matters around Maxim Gorky and Bartenyevka have been settled.

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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

6 June 1942

The assembly area for 10 Panzer was set with a feinted attack on the heart of the Cherkess-Kerman strongpoint line in mind. Without sufficient reconnaissance available to check the territory behind it for enemy concentrations, we are not aware if this was successful or not. Nonetheless, 10 Panzer's plan is to breakthrough below Makensia using Goliaths, isolate the settlement and sweep the area between the strongpoint line and the river.

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Further north, the first action of the main force was to find out what a three-metre-long shell fired by a monstrous 800mm cannon looked and sounded like. The strongpoints outside Kamyschly took a direct hit and were rolled up quickly.

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West, at Belbek, no railway guns were available to support the assault. However, the Goliath remote tanks and their loads of explosives had an equivalent effect allowing the 25th's regiments to roll up the strongpoints guarding the approach to the town.

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7 June 1942

25 Infanterie was able to force a decision at Belbek quickly, thanks to a focused bombardment by its heavy artillerie regiment and StuGs supported by bombers from KG 88.

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The main force has swept through Kamyschly under a rain of artillerie fire of various calibres, with Panzer-Regiment 9 once again demonstrating the ability of the Pz IVE to make short work of exposed enemy soldiers.

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At Makensia, both Goliath units attached to 10 Panzer were needed but one of the strongpoint complexes was completely neutralised by them, allowing our forces to start funneling around the south of the town to start an encirclement maneuver and permit exploitation as per the battle plan.

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8 June 1942

In the Belbek / Maxim Gorky I sector, 25 Infanterie has consolidated around the hills SW of Belbek and is drawing breath ahead of assault operations on the strongpoint network. One of the fallschirmjager regiments has been dropped in this safe area to augment both the offensive power and durability of the infanterie force.

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Near Kamyschly, the Soviets have counter-attacked against our spearhead. However, they have thrown an overmatched array of lighter tanks into this engagement which are proving to be little more than maneuver and gunnery practice for our experienced tankers and, especially in the case of the much-prized Sturer Emils of Schwere-Panjerjager-Abt 300 and the Panzer IVGs of Paner-Regiment 3, much bigger guns.

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Lead elements of 17 Panzer quickly advanced SW to interdict resupply lines to the eastern fortifications and Makensia - they encountered a Soviet heavy tank force, which would have proved a challenging opponent especially if they could get themselves positioned favourably on the nearby hillsides. Our spearhead had secured the rail line around Kamischly and "Big Gustav" - the Dora railway cannon - was brought into range whilst our panzers avoided a direct engagement with the KV1s.

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Panzer-Regiment 17 went over to the attack on the back of the bombardment and the scattered remnants of the Soviet heavy tank regiment was finished of by ZG 99.

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9 June 1942

Perhaps the most important news of the day's actions is that the guns of Maxim Gorky I, which have been taking a constant toll on 25 Infanterie and attached forces, have had the first taste of their own medicine. We are well aware of the range of the Soviet guns, but the reach of Big Gustav is longer. As with all our highest-value (and most vulnerable) assets, fighter cover is always on hand.

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Soviets have been essentially cleared from within striking distance of the massive gun, with higher ground proving irrelevant to the chances of their light tanks that continue to be thrown against us.

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Having penetrated the line at Makensia, exploiting forces from 10 Panzer and the Romanian 1st Mountain Division encountered more lone enemy tank groups of what we'd consider regimental strength. The StuG IIIFs of Panzerjager-Abt 10 were able to cover enough ground to make their own contact and provide a stern riposte to the enemy's local plans.

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The Romanian gebirgsjagers, obviously comfortable in the local landscape, proved they were more than a match for the retreating enemy T26s repulsed at the previous engagement.

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At Makensia, Pioniere-Regiment 100 reported the elimination of the final set of strongpoints, clearing the way for the final assault on the town.

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10 June 1942

The skies over our operational areas had remained blissfully clear, apart from JG 26 providing air cover for Big Gustav, Schwere-Panjzerjager-Abt 300 (we no longer have the spare parts or spare machines to make good any losses it takes) and either our other heavy artillerie regiments or isloated Panzer IVGs. Apparently, the enemy air power has been busying itself hunting down the groups of S-Boots patrolling off the coast and looking in vain for the small pack of coastal U-Boots that we've been told is skulking around. However today, an enemy group of LaGG interceptors raided 10 Panzer's rear echelon - tempted perhaps by the lack of cover afforded to Schwere-Artillerie-Regiment "Eiffel". This proved to be a costly raid for the Reds, as the veterans in the number 1 Gruppen from JG 26 and ZG 99 engaged and destroyed the entire enemy wing.

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Similarly, a flight of Yaks took a run at Artillerie-Regiment 25 at Belbek. And they too were engaged and destroyed, although they proved a little more resilient that the LaGGs had done earlier in the day.

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Nearing the river, the advance elements of 10 Panzer and the Romanians encountered T34s in regimental strength. Panzer-Regiment 13's Panzer IIIJs were overmatched by the enemy tanks so, whilst the supporting StuG IIIFs would serve as an effective deterrent to a direct attack by the Soviet commander, this force lacked the combined punch to fully subdue this threat. Sadly, this contact came outside the limits of ZG 99's Bf 110s, which could have provided the decisive extra firepower needed to wrap matters up promptly.

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11 June 1942

Clearly, the Red air commander has become bored with chasing small boats around - although they have successfully sunk two of the three flotillas along with one of the 3 U-Boots in the wolf pack. A wing of Pe-3 bombers had destroyed a number of tanks from Panzer-Regiment 9 and, having attacked without escorts, this was the chance we had to take to stop any of them returning back to their base. Some of our JG pilots have nicknamed the Pe-3 the "bullet sponge", as the 109's armament - particularly on our 109Fs - is accurate but "lightweight". Still, more and more aircraft were thrown at them as it was considered an essential mission - with many red fighters already downed, this success made the Crimean skies a lot less threatening.

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10 Panzer reported the surrender of almost the entire garrison at Makensia. Corps took their word for it, as no photograph or enemy banner ever made its way to Corps HQ.....neither did any prisoners. Perhaps the Romanians took them?

After bombardment for 3 solid days (albeit at only 3 shots per daylight hour), Big Gustav finally silenced the last of Maxim Gorky I's guns! Now our assault forces can operate without having to fear large-calibre death screaming down out of the heavens.

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With this great boost to morale, 25 Infanterie renewed its advance, calling on the last of the Goliaths to soften up enemy strongpoints.

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A previously uncommitted force of Soviet infantry with heavy weapons support had made its presence felt in the sector, so Panzer-Regiment 9 was called in to cut them down to size.

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The first 6 days of operations had seen XIX Corps accomplish a key objective in eliminating the Maxim Gorky I fortifications, along with the destruction of half the reported Soviet air forces in the theatre. 25 Infanterie, with some support from Panzer elements expected, has reported full confidence in its ability to methodically work through the remaining defences around Bartenyevka. The focus will shift to moving our mobile forces down the valley to the identified bridging point to create, secure and break out from the bridghead whilst the railway gun continues to provide support to reduce enemy fortifications.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

12 June 1942

Now bolstered by the formidable presence of Panzer-Regiment 9's Pz IVEs, 25 Infanterie spent the day closing in on the Bartenyevka airfield - a useful objective, that would allow us to move fighter and zerstorer gruppen up to maintain cover for the advance and deal with ground targets of opportunity. Now that the heavy guns of the Maxim Gorky I have been silenced, the "bleeding" has largely stopped and the division has adopted the methodical yet inexorable pattern of low-attrition assault that it's become renowned for over the last year.

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Still, this wouldn't be possible against the dug-in defenders without the unsung but valuable Sturm-Abteilungs and their short-barrelled StuGs.

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In the air, the Soviets launched sorties desperately from the Bartenyevka airfield as our forces closed in. I'm no geschwaderkommodore, but even I would have strongly considered rebasing what remained of my aircraft to retain at least the threat of surprise attacks and perhaps a decisive intervention to support a later ground counter-attack......regardless, an enemy Pe-2 bomber wing and Yak fighter wing were both engaged and finished off today. They can't have much left and total air superiority is almost ours, which will open up the skies for our heavy bombers.

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13 June 1942

Our assessments of enemy air movements during the operation give us confidence that the last enemy aircraft have been eliminated today. We will continue providing fighter cover for high value formations for now and Herr General has summoned the geschwaderkommodore of KG 88 to a meeting to discuss bombing priorities for the next phases of our operations.

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With our front line now running up from the docks on the north shore opposite Sevastopol, we have been able to eliminate the supply lines to the remaining defenders and fortifications in 25 Infanterie's sector. As there's no route across the Chernaya river yet for them, they still have a few days in the timetable to deal with the remaining defenders.

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Well behind the front, Pionieire-Regiment 49 reports the completion of its mopping-up operations of the cut-off fortifications between Kamyschly and Makensia. It won't take them more than a day and a half of travel to rejoin the main advance.

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Further south, the temporary kampfgruppe formed by elements of 10 Panzer and the Romanian 1st Mountain Division has been steadily eroding the combat potential of the enemy T34 regiment they made contact with 3 days ago. Although the Soviets had clearly worked hard to get damaged vehicles back into service throughout this "chase", their repair crews have been fighting a losing battle and Oberst Hinka of Panzer-Regiment 13 has reported his confidence that matters will be finally decided today.

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Corps' bruckenpioniere have been able to lay down a bridge unchallenged at the intended crossing point over the Chernaya. This simple report is deceptively important, as this is the key to the success of our operation. The opposite bank is undefended here - it's likely that the Soviets remain dug in around Inkerman and the hills south of the town, and in the woods around Sapun Gora. I won't challenge this likely disposition as these are sound defensive positions for infanterie to take, but perhaps it indicates that the enemy has little armoured reserves left?

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14 Jun 1942

The Corps' feldgendarmerie are fully engaged in ensuring that the flow of traffic over the Chernaya bridgehead remains as efficient as possible. Forward observers moving at the tip of the advance reported enemy "katushya" units in advantageous hillside positions and ZG 99 was radioed to provide support. En route to their target, the 110's spotted dug-in enemy artillerie and FlaK batteries. On receiving this additional report, Corps directed the Dora cannon artillerists to work out a firing solution for the enemy FlaK battery and take it under fire.

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Air superiority has allowed KG 88 to undertake bombing of enemy naval assets. A Soviet cruiser had been prowling along the coast shelling our advancing infanterie, but the ability of the JU88 staffel to make accurate low-level bombing runs without having to worry about enemy fighters has enabled us to send this threat to the bottom of the coastal waters.

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25 Infanterie reported the capture of the town centre in Bartenyevka.

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15 Jun 1942

The line continues to close in on the final remaining coastal fortifications and (thankfully lighter) guns north of Sevastopol.

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A large-scale battle has developed all along the front Corps has established west of the Chernaya. The enemy is present in what we would consider to be small Corps strength (no doubt the reds call the command something suitably bombastic, perhaps the "2nd South Crimean Army of the Heroic Defenders of the Motherland" or somesuch) but the fact remains that we lack the ability to form a schwerepunkt on this front and must instead rely on local initiatives, fire support and intelligent re-disposition of forces to establish favourable situations.

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As if to prove the point, Aufklarung-Abteilung 17 had been called on to perform tasks more suited to a full combat regiment on the periphery of the forest near Sapun Gora and had, as we say in England, taken a kicking. The fluid situation had seen divisional boundaries comprehensively ignored with divisional HQs being bypassed as Corps started communicating directly with regimental commanders. Schwere-Panzerjager-Abteilung 300 was directed to move to provide the weight of fire needed to allow the hard-pressed Panzer IIs to retain cohesion.

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At Inkerman, artillerie bombardment augmented by Big Gustav had suppressed the powerful enemy FlaK battery to allow unhindered strafing attacks on the enemy's positions behind the town and river.

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16 June 1942

3 Panzer's Pioniere-Regiment 93 has been tasked with forcing the issue at Inkerman, advancing on the back of a rolling artillerie barrage again augmented by the 3-metre "flying coffins" fired by Big Gustav.

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17 June 1942

Pioniere-Regiment 93 had, on the previous day, forced the retreat of the Inkerman garrison but the Soviets had funelled another rifle regiment into the town before the Pionerie had the opportunity to consolidate their gains. Just as well that they had plenty of fuel for their flammenwerfers.

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However, further south along the ridge line, fresh Soviet rifle divsions had tried to impose themselves on the battle with, it must be reported, mixed results from our perspective. One of the Romanian mountain regiments had been pushed to the verge of collapse and had been extricated just in time.

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Further north, Pioniere-Regiment 25 and Panzer-Regiment 17 report preparations for the final assault on the final remaining defences in the Bartenyevka sector. Later, Oberst Von Barring of Panzer-Regiment 17 would report a large explosion from the main docks at Sevastopol - we established that the remaining U-Boots had stopped lurking about and had slunk into torpedo range of the moored Soviet cruiser following the elimination of enemy naval patrols by our bombers.

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18 June 1942

The enemy continues to invest its reserves into holding Inkerman and the strategically-vital railway line. We continue to invest 3 800mm railway gun shells an hour into the town. The situation remains undecided, although a betting man wouldn't fancy the odds on the Soviets holding for too much longer.

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In the forests near Sapun Gora, Pionerie-Regiment 49 (17 Panzer) has been able to burn through the thinning enemy line and enable a breakthrough, which local commanders have not waited for Corps' orders to exploit.

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19 June 1942

Herr General has decided that the enemy's strength at Inkerman is nearing its end and has ordered the parachute drop of Fallschirmjager-Regiment 9 to secure the freight wharves on the coast west of the town, in conjunction with fire orders for Big Gustav into the centre of the town. After 3 days of constant fighting, Pioneire-Regiment 93 was forced to give ground by yet another fresh Soviet formation.

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Better news from the Sapun Gora area, where Panzer-Regiment 9 (3 Panzer) again proved that the the Soviet rifleman's fear of the short-barreled Panzer IVs is well justified.

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20 June 1942

The beleaguered garrison at Sapun Gora surrendered and, further north, the red Naval Infanterie regiment thrown into action in the wetlands around Inkerman was cut off and eliminated as a coherent force.

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Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Sat May 16, 2020 5:58 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

OOC

I'll update tomorrow sometime with the final stages, but defeating the Soviets in detail west of the Chernaya bridgehead means that the only remaining challenge is the turn counter. Historically, this operation took a bit longer than the turn count:-)

This has been been another "very good" scenario. The pain inflicted per turn by Maxim Gorky I drove a real sense of urgency to get Big Gustav into position (6 hex range vs 5) as soon as possible. The Goliaths have a real purpose too. I admit to being very underwhelmed by the FJ's performance against strongpoints given their +5 against structures, even allowing for them not ignoring entrenchment like Pionieres do.....still, lesson learned and I guess you're paying for the air-droppable flexibility. I'm not disappointed by not using them previously :-) On the other hand, the Romanian MTN inf auxiliary forces have been both historically accurate and damned useful!

The fierce large-scale battle west of the river has been brilliant. I was very pleased indeed to effect a breakthrough in the woods and enable the para drop behind Inkerman - it felt like the culmination of a concerted effort where I felt that I could have let it slip easily with poor play.

Thanks again devs.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by Blagrot »

Thanks for writing this AAR, i really like the 'commanders adjutent' style of it and it's good to see the normal difficulty is doable by a good player with a historically likely force. Good luck with the red tide and I look forward to the next post.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

Blagrot wrote: Sat May 16, 2020 6:28 pm Thanks for writing this AAR, i really like the 'commanders adjutent' style of it and it's good to see the normal difficulty is doable by a good player with a historically likely force. Good luck with the red tide and I look forward to the next post.
I remain the humble servant of you and other readers - seriously, thanks :-)

I'm playing with heroes off, 25% randomness and 3 undos per turn. I have no shame on re-rerolling an attack where I need to finish off a remnant and the original attack roll is worse than the predicted result and allows 1 enemy strength point to survive. Still, at heart I guess I'm more Von Manstein than Guderian and I'm more comfortable with methodical assaults than I am with daring thrusts into the unknown. This all takes time, and I often find myself right up against the turn limit to secure final objectives. I'm tempted to get really historical and try a campaign with mainly infantry and panzergrenadiers - with one full panzer divsion - but I might need to turn off the turn limit for that!

Perhaps that just means that the scenario design has been done by people similar to us, eh?
Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Sat May 16, 2020 10:51 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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