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 »

12th December 1942

Given that we've been set the challenge of forging a link up with the spearhead of "Operation Winter Storm" along the road leading SW whilst establishing a bridgehead at Kalach whilst keeping the enemy from overrunning the two airfields vital for our resupply, Herr General has had to give serious thought to the outline of our plans. The decision has been taken to establish a continuous river to river front, anchored on the northermost suburbs of Stalingrad in the east, which is to be held at all costs by forces from 17 Panzer and 25 Infanterie. 132 Infanterie has been tasked with the securing of a Kalach bridgehead, 10 Panzer has been given operational freedom to act on its own initiative south of the city to both prevent enemy incursions and support the panzer and aufklarung elements of 3 Panzer which have been assigned a primary focus of the road to Krepinskiy and the oncoming relieving forces. The unwavering firepower of the Dora railway gun that accompanied our advance into the city will be, it is hoped, a major asset.

Herr General's thinking is that, if we concede the city without having first established viable routes out of the pocket, our situation would become instantly untenable as the enemy could ferry forces directly over the Volga with impunity.

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The translation of Herr General's plan by the subordinate commanders on day one has been executed with the usual standards of accuracy and with positive results. You will see from the following images from our aerial reconnaissance that:

The soild, north-facing, front protecting the airfields has been established;

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A strongpoint complex SW of the city controlling a route to the main road leading towards Generaloberst Hoth's 4.Panzerarmee was shelled by Big Gustav and conquered by a combination of Pioniere-Abt 132 and Panzer-Regiment 9;

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South of the city, the newly-delivered SdKfz 234s demonstrated considerable combat power against an enemy militia regiment, softening them up for a devastating coup de grace from Panzer-Regiment 13.

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13th December 1942

Today we have received our first progress reports from the forces sent to force open the primary escape route. We have been told that 6 Panzer Division is progressing NE towards Oktybarsky along the main road, whilst Army Group Detachment Hollidt - lacking the mobile units of 6 Panzer - is providing flank security for that advance.

The enemy forces encountered by 6 Panzer on the road today have been light and no real obstacle to their advance.

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However, Hollidt's force has adopted a defensive posture in the face of enemy infantry attacks in division strength.

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In our operational area, it's clear now that the enemy have established a ring of fortifications and strongpoints around us. We have made good use of the 800mm railway gun to soften up the bunker complex east of Kalach, with the shelling followed up immediately by a decisive assault by 132 Infanterie to clear the east / west road.

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10 Panzer has been engaged with enemy blocking forces south of Stalingrad since late yesterday and today has reported the destruction of an enemy "Stalin Organ" formation and the moving-up of Panzerjaeger-Abt 10 to engage enemy T60 and T70 tanks.

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14th December 1942

10 Panzer's running battle has continued, although it's clear that they (with support from the Kampfgruppe formed by the assigned 3 Panzer units) are very much ascendant; Panzer-Regiment 13, for instance, reporting the overrunning of a Soviet rifle regiment.

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After some initial probes, today has seen the Soviets unleash a wave of men and steel against our north-facing line including new T34 variants. The co-ordination, expereince and tactics demonstrated across the piece by the Soviets are clearly improving with time, manifesting in improved overall combat performance. The sensible deployment ordered by Herr General, with supporting depth provided by artillerie and panzerjaeger units and with the StuH 42's clearly illustrating how outclassed any StuG IIIBs would be in this situation, has been justified with the front's overall stability unchallenged despite the size of the assault.

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As expected, the enemy has focused its infantry attacks mainly on the city itself. Herr General has mandated that 25 Infanterie keeps one of its combat regiments in reserve at all times to allow it to rotate and replenish its troops as frequently as possible. However, the enemy has assembled numbers of large-calibre guns on the opposite shore - the largest we've yet seen, with the dud shells laying in the streets indicating a calibre of 203mm - and these are already taking a toll on the division's artillerie and StuH units as well as disturbing the landsers' own logistics. The latest attack towards the city has been supported by heavy KV1s and the division has been grateful for the direct firepower that their new StuHs can provide against such threats.

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On the road to Oktybarsky, in a most pleasing development 6 Panzer's Panzer IIIN regiment was able to sprint forward today and launch a surprise attack on the heavy FlaK battery guarding the town which was caught with their spotters off-guard and its guns pointing skywards!

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This contrasts with today's reports from Hollidt's group, which has now added a cavalry brigade and T34 regiments to the list of enemy combatants pressing against their defences.

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15th December 1942

The air battles over the battlefield appear to show that we, a little surprisingly perhaps, are not outnumbered. However, most enemy aircraft are of their most up-to-date designs including Sturmovik close support planes, La-5 fighters and Pe-3 zerstorer-type aircraft meaning that our 109Gs are - at best - challenged; thankfully these aircraft remain flown by experienced pilots, allowing them to remain competitive. The new and superior Fw 190 aircraft are proving to be slightly more durable in combat, although the inexperience of their pilots means that they are not accounting for any more kills than the 109s at this stage. JG26 has, rightly, focused on the enemy fighters where possible so far and today has reported the elimination of one of the enemy La-5 wings.

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Beneath the focus to the main air combat today, 10 Panzer's running battle with its "mixed bag" of opponents has seen the reds defeated in detail, with value once again being realised from the filled-out roster of assets (pioniere, artillerie, panzerjaeger, Spahwagen as well as the main panzer regiments) that our mobile divisions are able to bring to bear on the situation in their distinct sectors.

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17 Panzer has thrown back the Soviet armoured assault of at least one full division plus additional tank brigades; one T34 regiment has been wiped from the field in full whilst the enemy's attrition across 17 Panzer's front is unsustainable. Tactical support from ZG 99 has also contributed, as it so often does. Both Division and Corps have noticed the increasing tendency for Soviet commanders to avoid confrontations with our Panzer IVGs when we have support from long-barrelled StuGs, although the StuGs are often finding themselves under direct fire instead. On balance, we remain comfortable with this enemy doctrine, as our panzerjaegers are now all sufficientlly armoured and able to "slug it out" on reasonably fair terms with all but the most "elite" of the enemy armoured formations. And, if you'll permit me to be somewhat callous, replacement StuGs are easier to get hold of than replacement Panzer IVs.......

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16th December 1942

Enemy attrition across our north-facing line has continued unabated in another day of non-stop fighting across the whole front. This is now clearly an army-sized assault at the very least, with intercepts and our own reconnaissance clearly indicating substantial enemy forces continuing to stream in our direction from the north. Although the strategic position for 17 Panzer and 25 Infanterie is static, local initiatives and positional adjustments remain essential for maintaining maximum pressure on the enemy assault and to preserve the integrity of the line.

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The enemy has the advantage of hilly terrain on its side of our north-facing front and has been quick to position Stalin Organs at these locations, beyond the range of our own artillerie and most defintely "out of bounds" for our own mobile forces given their explicit orders to Hold The Line. Fair weather today has enabled ZG 99 to deliver a reasonable amount of damage to these points.

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Further east, towards the city itself, our JG gruppen have been active and can now add a wing of Yak-7 fighters to their earlier La-5 tallies. Unless the reds have been keeping other fighters on the ground in reserve, we are confident that air superiority has been achieved and that the enemy bombers and close support wings can be hunted down without challenge. This is just as well, as the enemy have been choosing their targets wisely and we lack the ability to cover all our high value targets.

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132 Infanterie has, after establishing a solid position, commenced its assault on Kalach and the river crossing behind it. At this stage, there is no huge rush and no need to expend unnecessary manpower by forcing a bridge crossing - General Lindemann has explained his preference for "whittling down" the defenders to preserve his own force and Herr General has affirmed his comfort with that approach for now, at least.

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On the "relief front", reports have come in that 6 Panzer has been counterattacked by enemy tank brigades at Oktybarksy and that Group Hollidt continues to hold its own - albeit with some losses - against what has turned into a Corps-sized assault on its positions. 6 Panzer has sent one of its combat regiments to reinforce Hollidt's panzer-less force, but we hear good things about the prowess of the two panzerjaeger regiments fighting against the T34s in that sector.

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17th December 1942

The relative peace in 10 Panzer's sector has enabled it to focus on reducing some of the enemy fortifcations and strongpoints in the area today, with the aim of increasing its freedom of movement and denial of territorial control to the Soviets.

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Herr General's decision to instruct me to insist on the transfer of a battery of 88's into our command from the assorted remnants around 6. Armee has proved wise today, with the battery able to make a substantial impact on the enemy Sturmovik wing that had been roving around at great cost to us. JG 26 was able to follow this bombardment up with a concentrated attack from all its active aircraft, resulting in the total destruction of the entire enemy wing in one afternoon. This news has served to boost morale around all commands as, although enemy Tu-2 and Pe-8 bombers remain active, the fearsome "flying tanks" have become justifiably feared.

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The sheer weight of the enemy's relentless assault on our north-facing line led to a local penetration by a Guards regiment on the borderline between 17 Panzer and 25 Infanterie's respective areas. We are holding this whole front with the full range of fighting vehilces present in our division structures, with about half of these being unsuited to the task of delivering meaningful blows on enemy Guards. 17 Panzer senisbly detailed the Panzer IIINs of Panzer-Regiment 29 to seal off this incursion and, in a rewarding day for this regiment, they advanced out of the line to eliminate the remaining SU-76s of an enemy assault gun unit after the KV1s screening them had been routed by other divisional elements.

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Perhaps unfortunately for the medal candiates in Panzer-Regiment 29 today, Panzer-Regiment 13 (10 Panzer) had a field day amonst the remnants of mixed enemy forces encountered by 10 and 3 Panzer as they fanned out towards Krepinskiy. The regiment claimed final destruction of a motorcycle, Katyusha, T60 and Guards regiments in a rampaging day spent overruning enemies worn down by combined arms attacks.

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18th December 1942

The primary report today is the lull in fighting across our north-facing front, apart from the daily sparring north of Stalingrad and relentless enemy artillery bombardment of the city and its periphery. The enemy tank army has been destroyed in detail apart from a handful of routed vehicles by the unstinting efforts of 17 Panzer supported by 25 Infanterie's Panzer IIs and StuH 42s plus the timely interventions of Big Gustav, although Guards infantry reinforcements have been spotted close to the northwestern fortified area.

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JG 26 has added to the air of relative calm on this front with the interception and destruction of the enemy Tu-2 bomber wing.

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In 4.Panzerarmee's sector, Group Hollidt has been able to inflict a defeat in detail on the enemy combined corps sent against it; the last vestiges of Soviet armour has retreated, the Cossacks bridgades lay dead in and around the woodlands, the last riflemen have been forced to surrender and to top it all a full wing of Pe-3 "bullet sponges" has been eroded and eliminated over the course of the action.

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19th December 1942

Today's reports are led by news from the actions on our western and southwestern fronts, with the grenadiers of Infanterie-Regiment 132 continuing to erode the combat power of the Soviet infantry division holding the Kalach bridge.

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Pioniere-Abteilung 132 has been ordered to support the panzer elements at Krepinskiy, which has also been taken under fire by Big Gustav today.

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The breathing space across our northern front has allowed the adventurous Panzer-Regiment 29 to boldly advance further and destroy the remaining Katyushas still harrasing us from the northwestern hills.

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20th December 1942

The respite for 17 Panzer didn't last long, as a Soviet cavalry division emerged and advanced on its weaker western flank which is being held by a regiment from 132 Infanterie and 17 Panzer's StuGs. Infanterie-Regiment 232 had to fall back in less-than-ideal order as a result but, although the flank has been weakened, there's no breakthrough opportunity available to the Soviets at this stage.

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At Krepinskiy, combined arms attacks have enabled Panzer-Regiment 13 to punch through and wreak havoc amongst the weakened and support elements of the enemy opposition.

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21st December 1942

4.Panzerarmee's operations team continues to report steady, unspectacular but acceptable progress by 6 Panzer towards the capture of Oktybarsky - unspectacular and mundane enough to not need aerial recon confirmation, clearly! Verified reports from Hollidt's detachment further east though illustrate that their operations remain anything but mundane as a further Soviet force of KV1s and SU76s has been replused by the combined efforts of the panzerjagers and direct fire from the FlaK 88s.

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Whilst matters at Krepinskiy move towards a successful conclusion, the elements of 3 Panzer taking part in operations have pivoted east parallel to the river to deal with the strongpoints in the area. A conscripts / militia regiment has been - thanks to orders of the quality sometimes associated with our own supreme command - holding position in disadantageous wetland terrain, exposing it to severe punishement from the cannons of the new SdKfz 234's equipping Aufklarung-Abteilung 3.

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132 Infanterie's plan to continue to reduce enemy stength from their positions overlooking the Kalach bridge supported by their 150mm artillerie appears to be working; the opposing Soviet division appears to be substanially reduced and the time is surely ripe for Lindemann to order an advance in Herr General's view.

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22nd December 1942

Allow me to open today's summary of action with the good news of a positive decision at Krepinskiy and the decision to bring up Big Gustav to provide long-distance "strong-arming" in support of 6 Panzer's stuttering efforts at Oktybarksy. 4.Panzerarmee chose not to provide us with the gory details of the full impact on 6 Panzer of the earlier Soviet armoured counterattack, which has sucked the momentum out of the advance and led to the need for us to take this valuable support away from our northern front to prise open the SW escape route.

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It is with some shame that I must report my lack of consistency in bringing medal awards to the attention of a wider audience, but Herr General has today given a first Ritterkreuz to the brave men of Pioniere-Regiment 49 following their swift resolution of matters in the streets of Krepinskiy - whilst this action itself was no more notable than many of the other assaults they've undertaken, this award recognises the sheer number of such engagements and lower-level medals already given out.

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JG 26 has reported that it's hunt for the last enemy heavy bombers (which had seen ongoing replenishment since the destruction of the other Soviet air forces) has ended with success today.

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As if to provide some balance to all these positive developments, the enemy has brought another wave of fresh cavalry, guards infantry, tanks and support vehicles from its obviously interminable reserve - at least one very full corps is in immediate range of our northern front and we have no reason to expect the enemy to leave it at that! The pressure on 25 Infanterie especially, after 11 days of constant heavy shelling and wave after wave of infantry attacks, is nearing crisis point as readiness levels of both the combat and support formations is wearing down beyond our means to replenish. Of particular concern is the punishing counter-battery fire that were experiencing from across the Volga and how its forced 25 Infanterie's own guns to stay silent in all but the most pressing of circumstances.

(OOC - I have around 11.5k prestige in the pot, but the cost of elite replacements for 25 Inf's StuHs and 170mm guns is substantial and i'm trying to nurse them through to the end of the battle. I'm topping up the infanterie regiments with Elites as often as the situation allows, given that I now can't guarantee a "day off for reinforcement" for a regiment given the enemy strength in play)

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Herr General put an urgent call into the Geschwaderkommodore of ZG 99, demanding immediate and concentrated action to interdict the oncoming tank force before it could make contact at full strength against our line.

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23rd December 1942

Despite the best efforts of ZG 99's crews, the weight on this fresh enemy onslaught fell upon our northern line like a tree falling into a calm lake. Following the earlier cavalry attack on its left flank, 17 Panzer had moved its Panzer IVGs along the line to bolster the position - the Soviets threw a heavily-reinforced T34 regiment directly against Panzer-Regiment 17 overnight, inflicting around 40% losses but not forcing the formation into a retreat. All along the front, our brave crews in their mix of vehicles (several very much unsuited to running battles with large numbers of T34s and KV1s) kept faith in their training, their experience, their machines and their comrades.

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A bitter, brutal day of total war raged across the full length of our northern fron today. Every available armed aircraft was directed against viable targets, every panzer crewman, landser and artillerist strove beyond the limits of endurance. Big Gustav was hurriedly brought along the line to shell a particularly dangerous Guards force that had to the potential to finally unhinge 25 Infanterie's valiant defence in Stalingrad. As the evening closed rapidly in, the enemy horde was - once again - broken by our defence!

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To the south of the city, the sector held by elements of 10 Panzer - quiet for a few days since the destruction of the strongpoints in the area - stirred again as a brigade strength force of lighter vehciles was engaged and pushed back.

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At Kalach, recon overflights revealed that the task facing 132 Infanterie was not going to be solved without panzer support; Stalin Organs were spotted overlooking the bridge from a distance and two T34 regiments were in reserve - one very close by indeed.

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Fighter sweeps over Group Hollidt's positions revealed that the tide of enemies had exhausted itself, and that there was nothing to prevent them using what mobility they had to capture the nearby - undefended - airfield and move up on the other airfield further north.

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24th December 1942

Lindemann has finally ordered the advance across the bridge at Kalach, without perhaps the means to make it stick. Sturm-Abteilung 132's StuH 42s have followed the seizure of the bridge by the division's grenadiers and have established a blocking position ahead of them, to prevent the T34s and remaining enemy infantry taking the bridge under direct fire. The StuHs will bear the full brunt of the enemy counterattack, but Big Gustav has been wheeled into firing range with orders to shell the Soviet 76mm gun position directly facing the StuHs whilst our aircraft strafe the Stalin Organs, armoured cars and nearest T34s. Panzer-Regiment 17, somewhat recovered from the beating dished out by the reinforced T34 regiment the previous day, reported that it would be crossing the bridge in support tomorrow.

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The link-up with 6 Panzer at Oktybarksy has neared completion, with the encirclement and surrender of the remaining T34s outside the town and the destruction of the strongpoints overlooking the nearby bridge.

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However, alarm bells are ringining for the 10 Panzer forces not supporting the link-up as a strong division-plus force chock full of T34s (slightly older variants, but in very considerable numbers) has emerged onto the field south of Stalingrad! There's no alternative but to fall back for the units we have out there.

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25th December 1942

Although Herr General gave a traditional Christmas message to all in our Order Of The Day, he also set out plans for what Christmas in the Corps would look like once we were freed from the clutches of the Volga and the pockets of the Soviets. We all fervently hope to see what that looks like in reality.......

If one looks to the west, Christmas isn't far away - we now have Panzers and grenadiers over the river along with the StuHs and Big Gustav is raining hellfire down on the enemy T34s.

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If one looks north, and especially north east though, Christmas for 25 Infanterie looks some way off. Although yet another tank division and guards division have been seen off, the line is creaking and many units are in varying states of near-exhaustion and damage levels. The enemy is making another concerted push towards the city and both Division and Corps are now feeling much less confident in our ability to keep them out.

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

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

26th December 1942

We have been given express assurances from commanders at Kalach that the situation there is fully under control and that Corps (and by extension, 6.Armee) is free to break out across the bridge should it choose to do so. This is despite a last-gasp combined arms assault on the grenadiers of Infanterie-Regiment 132, who remained steadfast.

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The preferred break out / escape route from the pocket remains SW and in the direction of Von Manstein. Here too, Herr General has been given express assurances of the impending success of operations where the reported strength of Oktybarsky's Guards garrison is next to zero.

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The substantial threat to the "soft underbelly" of our static defence beyond the airfields - the T34 division pushing up from the SE - has thankfully been contained by 10 Panzer with support from Panzer-Regiment 3. Key to this success was the blunder made by the Soviet commander, who rushed one of the T34 regiments up into the woods in an attempted flanking attack....where Pioniere-Regiment 100 was lying in wait; the ambush accounted for 70% of the enemy regiment!

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However, a small force of light vehicles was able to slip past 10 Panzer and into the southern suburbs of Stalingrad, to the horror of our staff - after all their effort, was 25 Infanterie's heroic defence of the city going to undone from the rear at the very last?

27th December 1942

The answer to that final question from yesterday was "no, but only just". Emergency action dealt with the Soviet mobile FlaK vehicles that had snuck into the city and a final day of intense fighting against the enemy's infantry petered out before sunset. Herr General knows full well the value of Grassner's hardened warriors to the Corps and made his gratitude clear to his subordinate general during a surprise evening visit to the division's command post that had been established in part of what was left of the central station.

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To the south, the attacking T34 division was broken with its last remnants either close to destruction or being chased down by Panzer-Regiment 13.

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With the link up with 4.Panzerarmee achieved with the opening up of the main SW road, with the Kalach crossing secure, with our airfields still intact for supply drops and with the enemy clearly now devoid of any remaining offensive potential in the short term, there remains a chance for the remaining men and materiel of 6.Armee to be salvaged from the debacle by the Volga. I wouldn't call this a victory as opposed to the prevention of utter defeat - still, the many thousands of our comrades who will continue the war instead of dying needlessly (or being sucked into the Soviet POW system) will thank us for our efforts here.
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

OOC

That was a tough battle, all right. The constant artillery pounding from across the Volga wore me down as much as it did my units! I don't know what my options would have looked like without the sheer volume of units I was able to field in this battle thanks to my General's traits (Both Infantry and Panzer General plus Industry Connections and Deadly Grasp at the cost of No Overstrength, Trench Slog and Slow Upgrades); was I foolish to hold Stalingrad despite not "needing" to according to the objectives? The timing of the waves in the north felt good - I was able to get some breathing space now and again and only felt things getting "creaky" towards the end of the scenario, which is perhaps as it should be? The unexpected T34 charge from the SE near the end caught me out completely though, but I was able to scramble some sort of defence thanks to those Pionieres skulking in the woods and smacking 7 points of the T34s that thought driving through the woods would be a great idea :-)

I had prototype Panther D and A models open for purchase in this scenario but decided against them as I (rightly) expected an attritional slugging match and I could have burned through a lot of very costly replacements only to see the regiments dip below 10 strength without any more replacements available.

I was glad that I replaced the old Stuggies with StuH 42s - mutilrole and with competitive armour, they proved to be essential stop-gaps in the main line with the ability to contribute reasonable amounts of damage. The new 234 armoured cars are essentially light tanks and proved to be excellent anti-infantry vehicles.

My next battle is in 1943 (and I note that this 1942 scenario had plenty of 1943-variant T34s) and I understand that all infantry units have 1943 versions. That is going to be a complete sod for me with my 3 upgrades a mission and the need for numerous aircraft upgrades as well as potential upgrades to the primary panzer regiments........
Horseman
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by Horseman »

That looked like a very fun scenario! Nicely done though, and entertaining :D

Only 3 upgrades per mission? Yeah that's gonna be a pain! All infantry gets a 43 upgrade and its almost mandatory really to keep them competitive (everyone gets the same - HA gets quite a boost, small CD and I think GD as well but can't remember exactly)

And I'm sure you'll be wanting to upgrade some tanks as well! This is going to be fun to watch!
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by SineMora »

Holding Stalingrad is probably not a great idea if you're not going to shut down the artillery on the other side of the Volga as you end up being pounded the entire scenario, but it's certainly more of a challenge than going with my solution. The assault guns are really quite lovely -- I dislike the Sturmtiger though, as it has the same GD as the Brummbär while taking up an additional slot -- having comparable or even better armour than German tanks until the Tiger is available, making them a cost-efficient way to hold a line, and even with Trench Slog two of them (or one if you split them, which is my preference) can bring down any unit to base entrenchment level.

Faction-specific infantry don't receive upgrades (so Soviet Guard are practically only fancier Regulars post '43), but seeing as you run such an infantry-heavy core Slow Modernization is bound to hurt.
Mildly pretentious Swede. Goes by Path on most platforms, including Steam.
http://www.slitherine.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=596&t=98034 -- Generalissimus AAR (no Trophies / Heroes)
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

SineMora wrote: Thu Jun 04, 2020 8:26 pm Holding Stalingrad is probably not a great idea if you're not going to shut down the artillery on the other side of the Volga as you end up being pounded the entire scenario, but it's certainly more of a challenge than going with my solution. The assault guns are really quite lovely -- I dislike the Sturmtiger though, as it has the same GD as the Brummbär while taking up an additional slot -- having comparable or even better armour than German tanks until the Tiger is available, making them a cost-efficient way to hold a line, and even with Trench Slog two of them (or one if you split them, which is my preference) can bring down any unit to base entrenchment level.

Faction-specific infantry don't receive upgrades (so Soviet Guard are practically only fancier Regulars post '43), but seeing as you run such an infantry-heavy core Slow Modernization is bound to hurt.
It's funny how I just learned to life with the bombardment - why I didn't think to pummel those 203mm guns with Big Gustav......well, next time :-) I was busy using him for other fire missions - it would definitely have been more cost efficient to use him against the enemy arty :-(

Having just seen the Kharkov 43 briefing, I have a feeling that I'll be recruiting a new Panzer division and rotating the infantry out. I might add a '43 grenadier to one or two of the existing panzer divisions. Tigers are now available along with those oh-so-tempting Panther prototypes......it might take me most of an evening's gaming time to work out my new OOB!
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

18th February 1943

Thankfully we have had a few weeks to repair vehicles and nurse the walking wounded back to health; it has been easy for my staff and I to slip back into the routines and procedures of Von Manstein's command. The ease of getting things done with our command structure, however, is outweighed by the ongoing difficulties we have with what passes for "service to the front line" by the bureaucracy we need to deal with to get new materiel. If we want to get new equipment for our experienced, long-ago-formed, regiments and luftwaffe gruppen, the hoops that must be jumped through appear endless - however, newly-called-up formations that are even now still being raised in Germany are sure to be equipped with the latest weapons! What is that all about?

I have had to "play" this system to our advantage, even if it has meant that one or two reasonably-experienced formations have had to be given up into central reserves for reassignment. The only formations I was able to engineer upgraded kit for in the last 6 weeks have been:

Panzer-Regiment 9 - traded Panzer IIINs for pre-production Panthers (ostensibly for "battle evaluation" to help us get our hands on them!)
Schwere-Panzer-Abt 300 - handed over the last existing examples of the Sturer Emil panjzerjaeger, which have proved dominant time and again in the past but our inability to replace losses is a logistical hindrance we can no longer accept; instead, we have pre-production "Elefant" vehicles which are akin to (semi) mobile fortified gun emplacements.
I Gruppe, ZG 99 - delivery taken of brand new Me 410 zerstorers

Given the briefing for our latest round of travels in the Kharvov and Krasnograd area, Herr General has decided that we need to field as mobile a force as possible. 132 Infanterie has been designated as the Corps Reserve (although its artillery will be needed) and two of 25 Infanterie's combat regiments have been rested; likewise, the 800mm Dora railway gun has been moved to the rear safely distant from the marauding Soviet tank armies. Having reviewed the terrain of the operational area, Herr General directed me to organise the reassignment of whatever jager infanterie I could locate - we have combined a mixture of understrength jager companies languishing in various reserves and the remnants of the proven Romanian 1st Mountain Division into what's been designated Gebirgsjaeger-Regiment 25. According to all the latest rules, this is a brand new regiment and the Reich had no qualms about ensuring delivery of a full suite of modern equipment for it!

We have also welcomed the newly-minted Panzer-Regiment 29 and its long-barrelled and easy to maintain Panzer IIIMs - this formation will give 17 Panzer more flexibility in exchanges with the numerous Soviet T60 and T70 types and free up Panzer-Regiment 17's Panzer IVs for engagements against T34s. 3 Panzer reassigned its StuG IIIBs to central reserves for redeployment and we "worked the system" to replace it with a fresh unit of StuH 42s, to which we promptly gave their predecessors' unit designation. More quad-20mm FlaK units have been acquired to help us deal with the improving quality of Soviet aircraft. Finally and with thanks to my opposite number in the Armeegruppekommando, we have been able to expand 10 Panzer with the addition of Schwere-Panzer-Abteilung 501 and its brand-new "Tigers"!

Following this reorganisation, Corps' Order Of Battle is:

3 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regimenr 3 (Pz IVG)
Panzer-Regiment 9 (Panther D Prototype)
Grenadier-Regiment 93 ('43 variant)
Pioniere-Abt 93
Artillerie-Regiment 49 (170mm Sdkfz 7)
Schwere-Panzerjaeger-Abt 300 (Elefant Prototype)
Sturm-Abteilung 203 (StuH 42)
Aufklarung-Abt 3 (SdKfz 234)
Flak-Abteilung 93 (20mm Flakvierling 38)

10 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 10 (Pz IIIN)
Panzer-Regiment 13 (Pz IVG)
Schwere-Panzer-Abt 501 (Tiger)
Pioniere-Abt 100
Panzer-Artillerie-Abt 10 (Hummel Prototype)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 10 (StuG IIIF)
FlaK-Abteilung 100 (20mm Flakvierling 38)

17 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 17 (Pz IVG)
Panzer-Regiment 27 (Pz IIIN)
Panzer-Regiment 29 (Pz IIIM)
Pioniere-Abt 49
Artillerie-Regiment 117 (150mm Sdkfz 7)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 49 (StuG III/8)
Sturm-Abteilung 217 (StuH 42)
Aufklarung-Abt 117 (SdKfz 234)
FlaK-Abteilung 117 (20mm Flakvierling 38)

25 Infanterie Division:
Gebirgsjaeger-Regiment 25 ('43 variant)
Pioniere-Abt 25
Artillerie-Regiment 25 (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 25 (StuG III/8)
Sturm-Abteilung 225 (StuH 42)

Infanterie-Regiment 125 _ RESERVE
Infanterie-Regiment 225 (G) - RESERVE
Aufklarung-Abt 25 (Pz IIF) - RESERVE

JG26:
Gruppe I (Bf 109G)
Gruppe II (Bf 109G)
Gruppe IV (Fw 109)

Gruppe III (Bf 109G) - RESERVE

ZG 99:
Gruppe I (Me 410)
Gruppe II (Bf 110G)
Gruppe III (Bf 110G)

StG 3:
Gruppe I (Ju 87D)

Attached:
Schwere-Artillerie-Regiment "Eiffel" (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Artillerie-Regiment 132 (150mm Sdkfz 7)
Bf-109PR Flight x2


132 Infanterie Division - RESERVE
Infanterie-Regiment 49
Infanterie-Regiment (G) 132
Infanterie-Regiment 149
Pioniere-Regiment 132
PaK-Abteilung 132 (50mm PaK 38 horse-drawn)
Sturm-Abteilung 232 (StuH 42)

KG88 - RESERVE
Gruppe I (Ju 88A)
Gruppe II (Do 217E)

XIX Corps Assets - RESERVE:
800mm "Dora" Railway Gun "Schwere Gustav"
88mm/36 FlaK-Abteilung
Bruckenpioniere-Abt 19
Sturm-Abteilung 210 (StuG IIIB)
Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Mon Jun 08, 2020 10:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

19th February 1943

I am pleased to report Herr General's plan for our initial dispositions and objectives. As all available intelligence points to an army-sized armoured thrust towards Dnepropetrovsk, consolidation by 17 Panzer around the hills on 10 Panzer's flank has been ordered with the latter division moving to directly engage the expected attack with the express goal of not allowing the enemy to cross the river and take the city. 3 Panzer will advance to Krasnograd, with the twin objectives of securing the town and pushing SE to link up with 10 Panzer to support the destruction and / or encirclement of the expected enemy forces. The elements of 25 Infanterie (referred to simply as 25 Infanterie from here on in this report for ease) will occupy defensive positions around our northern holdings in case of enemy probes from Kharkov, with orders to gradually advance to Kharkov as reconnaissance permits.

The second operational phase - not mapped out to preserve visual clarity - calls for 17 Panzer to secure Izyum and reinforcement routes, 3 Panzer and the attached additional artillerie from Corps and 132 Infanterie will pivot north to secure the city with 25 Infanterie who will have advanced from the west. 10 Panzer will retain some operational freedom to support either of these two core objectives as required and "bridge the gap" between these two prongs for security purposes.

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Our spotter aircraft were up with the dawn and their photographs indicate that the core enemy force is not directly on our doorstep.

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10 Panzer implemented its orders and moved up towards Dnepropetrovsk, engaging the advance scouting forces of the enemy with deadly - but not quite catastrophic - results for the reds.

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20th February 1943

Despite the relatively benign picture painted by yesterday's photographs, the enemy are definitely approaching in force and with serious intent. 17 Panzer's orders are to secure 10 Panzer's flank and not charge into any sort of meeting engagement, so they have given ground and deployed in good order in and around the hills to the east of 10 Panzer's position.

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Part of the enemy spearhead diverted to wheel NW and threaten 3 Panzer near Krasnograd. Local maneuvers and initiatives allowed the division to set up the first direct engagement by its new Elefant prototypes, which went along similar lines to the many overpowering engagements Schwere-Panzerjaeger-Abt 300 had delivered in previous operations with their Sturer Emils.

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21st February 1943

With enemy forces still present on 3 Panzer's SE-facing front, the Elefants carried on where they had left off from the previous day. The primary tank of the Red Army is hopelessly outmatched by the range and power of the 88mm L/71 gun, with the T34s unable to get anywhere near any sort of competitive firing range without taking unsustainable losses. Allied with the experience of their crews, this formation is well set to carry on the traditions of the heavy panzerjaegers established in the Russian campaign to date.

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Alongside the brute "stomping power" of the Elefants, 3 Panzer's other new arrivals have demonstrated their own prowess. The veteran crews of Panzer-Regiment 9 have adapted quickly to their new Panthers and it appears that its nominally smaller 75mm L/70 main gun is no less powerful than the Elefant's, although it perhaps can't match its extreme-range accuracy. Nonetheless, 3 Panzer has arguably become the most powerful Panzer-Division on the Eastern Front with the addition of these pre-production prototypes, which were delivered with demands for full reports on their performance as they are both slated for ongoing production.

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East of Dnepropetrovsk, a tidal wave of Soviet vehicles has crashed upon and - to some degree - flowed around the defensive positions of 17 Panzer. Unlike our force, the Soviet support elements are almost exclusively mechanised or fully armoured and large numbers of SU-76 and SU-122 types (broadly similar in role to StuG IIIF and StuH 42, but the SU-122 has a longer indirect fire range) are present, as they were in our escape from Stalingrad. The addition of Panzer-Regiment 29 to 17 Panzer Division with its 50mm L/60 armed Panzer IIIMs, was done with this specific threat in mind; the Panzer IIIM isn't suitable for combat with T34s and KV1s except when there is no alternative but they are well-suited for successful engagements against the SU-type vehicles.

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Close to the city itself, the Stukas of StG 3 - so often loaned out to other Corps in recent months - made a decisive intervention today by destroying the remaining battalion of enemy BA-class armoured cars opposite 10 Panzer's front, which allowed the inexperienced but determined Tiger crews to advance and put themselves in position to test themselves against T34s.

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22nd February 1942

With spotter flights indicating their positions in the north were not under immediate threat, 25 Infanterie began its advance towards Kharkov today with the motely assortment of light infanterie forming Gebirgsjaeger-Regiment 25 moving from hillside to hillside, aided by their experienced cadre of officers from the Romanian 1st Mountain Division. An enemy Cossack regiment has been spotted in the distance - we have learned the hard way how mobile these horsemen are, so wise unit disposition to ensure protection of artillerie-regiment 25 is essential.

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3 Panzer has firmly blunted the prong of the enemy spear turned against it SW of Krasnograd, with burned-out wrecks and overrun positions littering the battlefield.

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As the weather deteriorated into a snowstorm, 17 Panzer also began to shift onto the offensive with more SU-76s falling prey to its new Panzer IIIMs which allowed the experience Panzer IV crews of Panzer-Regiment 17 to move up and overrun the remnants of a previously-battered Cossack regiment.

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23rd February 1943

The dawn spotter flights have given us this overview of the battlefields east of Dnepropetrovsk; the enemy assault has flowed largely around 17 Panzer with our easternmost division accounting for a fair number of knocked-out enemy vehicles in the process. The Soviets still retain some offensive momentum towards Dnepropetrovsk, but 10 Panzer has the matter well in hand with air support. The SE flank of 3 Panzer is not too far away either and the potential for some sort of encirclement - assuming 10 Panzer doesn't destroy the enemy in detail first - is clear.

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17 Panzer, having stood firm in the Red Tide, is now fully commited to the advance and has reported the seizure of an airfield - although not before the enemy IL-2 and La-5s using it as a forward base got airborne and avoided destruction on the ground.

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Close by, enemy KV1s were forced to retreat into woodland by the StuG IIIs of Panzerjaeger-Abt 49. This retreat proved to be their undoing, as 17 Panzer's pioniere - despite their ageing equipment - stormed the woods and eliminated the remaining Soviet heavy tanks in close combat with explosives.

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3 Panzer's operations around Krasnograd moved nearer to conclusion today, with the Panthers of Panzer-Regiment 9 overunning a worn-down T34 contingent and cutting the town off from resupply and reinforcement.

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

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

24th February 1943

The skies around Krasnograd were full of warring aircraft today as enemy IL2s and their La-5 escorts werre directly challenged by our supporting air power, still following air superiority orders and leaving the strike aircraft alone. Previous attrition enabled the new Me 410s of ZG 99 - I Gruppe to finish off one wing of La-5s whilst 3 Panzer's new FlaK-Abteilung and aircraft from JG26 tore chunks out of the other fighter wing - it clearly won't be long before we can start hunting down the bombers without challenge.

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Away from this large air battle, our spotter flights over Kharvov and towards Izyum revealed the extent of defences in those areas; Kharkov is defended by a mixed infantry division and what looks like an example of the Soviet's new artillery divsions (just invert the ratio of soldiers and heavy guns from a normal division to get the idea) is dug in along the road from Kharkov to Izyum.

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25 Infanterie had been able to bring the lone, but potentially problematic, enemy cavalry unit facing it to battle with our new GbJg regiment demonstrating Herr General's wisdom in his order to me to create a formation suited for hilly terrain.

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10 Panzer, ably supported by Stukas and 110s and without risk of flanking due to the work of 17 Panzer, has successfully brought the Soviet attack on Dneprepetrovsk to a complete halt and is moving over to offensive operations.

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Their offensive actions today turned the situation on its head, with the aggressors now either smashed or reeling and the defenders advancing. Our new Tigers delivered a coup de grace of their own, bringing the final encirclement of the surviving remnants closer.

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25th February 1943

All possible routes of retreat for the last survivors of the Soviet tank army originally unleashed against us have now been closed off. We can now start implementing the second phase of the operation and move on Kharkov....once again.

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26th February 1943

There has been, unsurprisingly, next to no fight left in the remaining scattered Soviet tank elements trapped in the kettle. Whilst we are aware that some other Corps across the wider Eastern Front have leaned on captured T34s to fill out their ranks, we have steadfastly maintained our faith in the superiority of German engineering. With our logistics networks fully stretched as they are, now is not the time for us to be attempting the mass capture of enemy troops - we of course will never refuse an honourable surrender, but our primary focus remains the defeat of the enemy in the field. Still, there remains a clear line between a battle and a massacre so orders were given to allow as many remaining Soviets as possible to preserve their lives and give themselves up today.

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It seems that the enemy IL-2s and their remaining fighter escorts must have rebased to Kharkov as they hit 25 Infanterie's positions in the half-light of the early morning, with artillerie-regiment 25 taking a pounding. Payment for this attack was exacted from the Soviets, with what we confidently assess as their last fighters in the sector being shot out of the sky.

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The tallies for ZG 99 increased further when the enemy strike wing turned for home and flew right into an ambush!

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27th February 1943

A monumental rainstorm broke overnight and - as of this report - continues to lash down all over the area, turning the last winter snow covering into what can only be described as a mudbath. This has added an extra dimension to the Corps' traffic management challenges, compounded by our location of a very isolated enemy assault gun unit which had obviously fled the earlier carnage and kept itself it out of the kettle that we'd formed and closed. The weather means we can't bomb it into oblivion so we will need to re-route forces away from our intended advance to deal with this issue.

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Further north and in line with the "second phase" implementation directive, 25 Infanterie has moved up to the western outskirts of Kharkov, where the enemy has dug in FlaK and 76mm guns. Perhaps the Soviet divisional command had envisaged a panzer-led assault with air support from the west? Without screening ground troops, these gun batteries are going to be easy targets for the jaeger and pioniere regiments we have leading the way.

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28th February 1943

Most of JG 26 and ZG 99 had been rebased near Krasnograd yesterday ahead of the advance on Kharkov. 25 Infanterie's advance had provided our air wings with the definite location of the enemy Il-2 "flying tank" wing at the Kharkov airbase orders were given for the proverbial kitchen sink to be thrown at it. Without our own FlaK support though, this very substantial kitchen sink didn't quite succeed in totally eliminating the enemy strike planes - unbelievably! That would, no doubt, happen tomorrow.

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To make this air assault possible, Pioniere-Regiment 25 had launched a dawn assault on the heavy FlaK battery covering the airbase, with powerful support from the division's artillerie and assault guns.

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3rd March 1943

After a couple of days spent moving forces up through the mudbath towards Kharkov and Izyum, today sees Corps in position to attack in earnest. Pioniere-Regiment 25 was in the vanguard of the assault on the northern districts of Kharkov.

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Further east at Izyum, 17 Panzer's artillerie - plus the gun regiment attached from 132 Infanterie - had laid the ground work for the daring river crossing by Pioniere-Regiment 49 and subsequent assault by them on the Soviet 76mm gun batteries positioned west of the town. Without bruckenpioniere in tow, the main body of 17 Panzer was slowly crossing the Donets river a way to the east of Izyum, too far from the town for its garrison to take the crossing points under fire.

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4th March 1943

The flanking maneuver by 17 Panzer at Izyum has continued today. The two artillerie regiments are keeping up their shelling of the town's defenders, which in turn is allowing the (by current standards) poorly-equipped Pioniere-Regiment 49 to maintain their position with relative comfort facing the town. Behind them, the StuH 42s of Sturm-Abteilung 217 are crossing the river safely so they can provide fire support should the Izyum garrison decide to launch an attack.

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The enemy division defending Kharkov - obviously with the sort of "hold to the last man and bullet" orders that were now not unheard of on our own side, if the rumours one hears through their connections with other Corps 1As are to be believed - isn't yet surrounded but its last supporting guns have been silenced today by a devastating assault by the veterans of Pioniere-Regiment 25. I suppose a 1939 vintage flamethrower is hardly less effective than the latest versions in the right hands?

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The complete destruction of this last gun position enabled us to secure the Kharkov supply depot and seal the fate of the three enemy combat regiments still in place within the city.

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5th March 1943

Actions to reduce and either eliminate or force the surrender of Kharkov's beleaguered defenders are expected to continue for the next couple of days. We have already issued orders to move up to Belgorod and leave the final assaults to 3 Panzer's grenadier and pioniere regiments. Between 25 Infanterie, 3 Panzer and the Corps-level batteries, we have the equivalent of three full regiments of 170mm gun batteries on hand to support the final urban assaults of our operation - plus the StuH 42s of both these divisions.

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After a lot of hard slogging over muddy terrain, 17 Panzer's main force has crossed the road bridge NE of Izyum and completed its flanking maneuver. The FlaK and 76mm gun batteries in place "behind" the town are incapable of anything but token resistance especially given the non-stop shelling being laid down all over the town area by our two regiments' worth of 150mm guns.

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6th March 1043

Today has seen the end of resistance in Kharkov, with the last elements of the defending division surrendering to Grenadier-Reigment 93.

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7th March 1943

Our initial advances on Belgorod have encountered moderate resistance in the form of enemy cavalry and a regiment of T60s - neither of which presents more than a "time sink" at this stage of the operation for whichever elements are detailed to overpower them. Pioniere-Regiments 25 and 93 have been given traffic priority whilst Artillerie-Regiments 25, 49 and the "Eiffel" formation from the Corps-level command are moving towards advantageous firing positions ahead of the final assaults on Belgorod.

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At Izyum, the town's garrison had routed from its positions and fled to the riverside. Any hope for respite they might have had was quickly dashed as they were taken under fire by 17 Panzer's Panzer IIINs and then Pioniere, with no survivors making it across the river to freedom.

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9th March 1943

Although we have had to contend with a sudden dumping of snow atop the mud, operations to reduce and capture Belgorod have run in parallel with the mopping up of the trapped enemy gun batteries on the Izyum road and are now successfully concluding in line with the operational timetable set for us. We have been able to keep our own casualties to a minimum during this second phase. Divisional HQs report total confidence in the final elimination of defenders in line with tomorrow's nominal "halt" deadline.

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Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Mon Jun 08, 2020 10:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

OOC

Pay attention to the briefing. Pay attention to the briefing. PAY ATTENTION TO THE BRIEFING! Remember this is 1943 and the Soviet Union has essentially unlimited industrial capacity, manpower reserves and stomach for casualties.

I would have been in all sorts of trouble if I'd advanced from my initial start positions east of Dneprpetrovsk, given the amount of Soviet armour that rolled through in the first days of the operation. I'm also glad that I brought my Stukas out of reserve - I have kept them out of the way in recent missions due to their "squishiness", but I reasoned that I'd need as much anti-armour capability as I could muster. I wonder if allowing the Soviets over the river to take Dneprpetrovsk would enable a monster encirclement.....but I simply couldn't allow that to happen and enjoyed the tank battle and challenge of managing damage levels.

From a "learning the game" perspective, I've certainly learned to value the 1-slot 20mm quad FlaK batteries and wish I'd been using them from the start! Also, veteran pilots in Me410s provide essential value and I am offically wedded to my twin-engined workhorses.

I personally like the synergy between the Industry Connections and Slow Modernisation traits; you can choose to get early access to a limited supply of very useful units, but you can't simply upgrade your whole force to the latest overall quality level. There's no doubt that my Elefants (first mission I could have chosen them) and Panther Ds (which were available in the previous mission but not used) were overpowered compared with their opposition, but I had to work to keep them out of harm's way as much as possible whilst making the most efficient use I could of my "cheaper" tanks. It also feels more "realistic", given that only the most elite of the elite formations could expect to be fully equipped with the latest tech. Also, why would you want to burn your precious single Panther attack of the day on an SU76 that can be efficiently handled by Panzer IIIMs or slightly overpowered by Panzer IVs?

I feel slightly dirty about the amount of artillery I had in this mission, although I can just-about justify it internally as it boiled down to one regiment per division plus the Corps-level guns (allowing for the fact that 132 Infanterie was in reserve and "loaning" its guns for the greater good). I didn't need Big Gustav though and rightly so - this was a mobile operation and not an essentially static mass assault or outright defence.

Leading with infantry types from the northermost start points was definitely the right choice. In a world of unrestricted upgrades, I would ensure that I'd leveled up a jager division in earlier missions......I did Norway South in this campaign so didn't recruit any birgsjaegers.

I made about 5k prestige (from turn zero after expenditure on new units) without any overt farming or heroes, so thanks Devs for the design to enable this after the meat grinders at Stalingrad!
Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Sun Jun 07, 2020 10:08 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

So, next steps and a community question.....Kursk and eventual collapse towards Berlin or a change of scenery and Sicilly / Normandy / The Ardennes?

Obviously as a wargamer and WW2 nerd I want to out-do history at Kursk. One would argue that German operational success in Operation Zitadelle could have prolonged the war (I personally think the Germans finally "lost" at Kursk, rather than Stalingrad, but that's just my opinion). On the other hand, the same WW2 nerd wants to out-do history in December 1944 in the Ardennes and perhaps turn the tide on the Western Front? There's certainly food for thought for alternative missions for avid devs branching out from either of these "what if" scenarios!

I will definitely be starting a new campaign once this one is done to play through the mission choices I eschewed this time around. From an AAR perspective, would reporting on the battles vs the Allies make a change?
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by Danger »

Hiya. I like reading your AAR and enjoy the narration style.

I'm pretty sure if you wish to do both Kursk & the Ardennes you will be able to do so. The late war allows you to switch back & forth between the two fronts. I'm not sure how you would fit it in the narrative though. High command transfer maybe?

Kursk, Bagration & Wacht am Rein are challenging scenarios, each with their own quirks so you can't go wrong with those.
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by Horseman »

Danger wrote: Tue Jun 09, 2020 2:45 pm Hiya. I like reading your AAR and enjoy the narration style.

I'm pretty sure if you wish to do both Kursk & the Ardennes you will be able to do so. The late war allows you to switch back & forth between the two fronts. I'm not sure how you would fit it in the narrative though. High command transfer maybe?

Kursk, Bagration & Wacht am Rein are challenging scenarios, each with their own quirks so you can't go wrong with those.
As the best of the best I could certainly see high command sending his forces back and forth trying to stem the tide!
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

Thanks both - I'd gone as far as replaying the final turn from the last mission so I could take a "turn zero" look at Sicily! The OCD gamer in me would want to have played through a full campaign with one or two experienced Jager Divisions (probably 2x GBJ, 1 Pio plus Pak, Arty and Flak) before embarking into all those mountains :-)

I'm reassured that I could get the chance to compete at both Kursk and the Ardennes in the same campaign, so Kursk it is. Bagration though......no idea what that would look like apart from trying to save as many units from annihilation as possible!

@ Danger - I accept the narration challenge ;-)
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

4th July 1943

After a springtime of furloughs that could scarcely be more deserved, settling-in of replacements, ensuring the good organisation of our replacement infrastructure, overhauls of worn-out machines and straining to learn of high command's plans for the summer on the Eastern Front, I now find myself compiling the traditional pre-operational Order Of Battle report for XIX Panzer Corps. There has lately been fevered talk about the planned summer operation to defeat the enemy in the Ukraine (again?), shorten our front in the meantime and put the Soviets back onto the strategic defensive into the bargain. "Operation Zitadelle" is now confirmed to be most definitely going ahead, with our reports confirming some of our fears that all the procrastination and delay has allowed our enemy to indeed turn the intended operational area into a veritable "zitadelle" of fortifications and defence in depth. All intelligence points to the Soviets moving their main armoured force further east into massive reserve formations. I recall my studies in officer school, where the Macedonians would soak up the advance of their opponents on the anvil of their pikemen, pin them in place and then crush them with an irresistible heavy cavalry charge from the flank or rear. It is an image that lingers as I compile our Order Of Battle for the record.

XIX Panzer Corps, Army Detachment Kempf, Army Group South

3 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regimenr 3 (Pz IVG)
Panzer-Regiment 9 (Panther D)
Grenadier-Regiment 93 (1943 standard)
Pioniere-Abt 93
Artillerie-Regiment 49 (170mm Sdkfz 7)
Schwere-Panzerjaeger-Abt 300 (Elefant)
Sturm-Abteilung 203 (Brummbar - newly formed)
Aufklarung-Abt 3 (SdKfz 234)
Flak-Abteilung 93 (20mm Flakvierling 38)

10 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 10 (Pz IIIN)
Panzer-Regiment 13 (Pz IVG)
Schwere-Panzer-Abt 501 (Tiger)
Pioniere-Abt 100
Panzer-Artillerie-Abt 10 (Hummel)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 10 (StuG IIIF)
FlaK-Abteilung 100 (20mm Flakvierling 38)

17 Panzer Division:
Panzer-Regiment 17 (Panther D - upgraded equipment)
Panzer-Regiment 27 (Pz IIIN)
Panzer-Regiment 29 (Pz IIIM)
Pioniere-Abt 49
Artillerie-Regiment 117 (150mm Sdkfz 7)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 49 (StuG III/8)
Sturm-Abteilung 217 (StuH 42)
Aufklarung-Abt 117 (SdKfz 234)
FlaK-Abteilung 117 (20mm Flakvierling 38)

25 Infanterie Division:
Gebirgsjaeger-Regiment 25 (1943 standard)
Infanterie-Regiment 25
Pioniere-Abt 25 (1943 standard - upgraded)
Artillerie-Regiment 25 (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Panzerjaeger-Abt 25 (StuG IIIG - newly formed)
Sturm-Abteilung 225 (StuH 42)
FlaK-Abteilung 25 (20mm Flakvierling 38 - newly formed)

Infanterie-Regiment 125 _ RESERVE
Grenadier - Regiment 225 (G) - RESERVE
Aufklarung-Abt 25 (Pz IIF) - RESERVE

JG26:
Gruppe I (Fw 190A - upgraded)
Gruppe II (Bf 109G)
Gruppe IV (Fw 109A)

Gruppe III (Bf 109G) - RESERVE

ZG 99:
Gruppe I (Me 410)
Gruppe II (Bf 110G)
Gruppe III (Bf 110G)

StG 3:
Gruppe I (Ju 87D)
Gruppe II (Hs 129 - newly formed)

Attached:
Bf-109PR Flight
800mm "Dora" Railway Gun "Schwere Gustav"
Bruckenpioniere-Abt 19

132 Infanterie Division - RESERVE
Infanterie-Regiment 49
Infanterie-Regiment (G) 132
Infanterie-Regiment 149
Pioniere-Regiment 132
PaK-Abteilung 132 (50mm PaK 38 horse-drawn)
Sturm-Abteilung 232 (StuH 42)

KG88 - RESERVE
Gruppe I (Ju 88A)
Gruppe II (Do 217E)

XIX Corps Assets - RESERVE:
Schwere-Artillerie-Regiment "Eiffel" (170mm, SdKfz 7)
Artillerie-Regiment 132 (150mm Sdkfz 7)
88mm/36 FlaK-Abteilung
Sturm-Abteilung 210 (StuG IIIB)
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

OOC

Bear with me - up to turn 13 at Kursk so still plenty of time needed, let alone the time to write up an average of 4-5 screenshots per day :-)

I'm worried that things are going too well. I'm containing the big reserve force in the NE beyond Orel and am probably close to being able to encircle what's left of it and I've discovered the "light tank and infantry" reserve east of the forests near Belgorod and am eroding that down. Lots and lots of enemy wrecks around Prokorhova (and lots and lots and lots) and there's a potential encirclement I could form around Oboyan but I need to do more recon of the spaces between Oboyan and Kursk before committing to that. In the north, Ponyri isn't encircled but won't hold for more than 3 more days and I've destroyed everything between Ponyri and the big NE reserve force.

If there are no other - or off map - big reserves I need to worry about, I've got this if I can keep an eye on the clock and don't forget to take all the victory hexes in Kursk itself.

Loving the scenario so far and loving the sheer amount of carnage! I probably need to do some encirclements as I'm about 1k prestige down from the battle start and the price tag for elite replacements per front line unit is getting ridiculous....
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

4th July 1943

Whilst the overarching strategic plan is for the two pincers to join up east of Kursk and kettle both the city and everything between it and edge of the salient, much will depend on the true extent of enemy defences and the intentions of Stavka with regards to the various tank armies they have been reported as preparing for interventions. Our comrades from Lemlesen's XLVII Panzer Corps, 9th Army (consisting of 2 Panzer, 9 Panzer, a small 20 Panzer and the 6th Infanterie Divisions) are the northern force. I've looked somewhat jealously at their order of battle, although their preponderance of the latest Panzer IV variants, Elefants and Nashorns is perhaps slightly offset by their lack of Panthers, paucity of air support and relative lack of long-range artillerie compared with our disposition.

Feel free to digest our combined plans and - if you are an interested student - compare them with your own thoughts about how you would approach this most vital of engagements with the forces at our disposal.

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

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

5th July 1943

And so it begins. On realising that the advance route north from our own starting positions was held by an enemy Guards division, 17 Panzer's initial direction of attack was shifted subtly to allow it to work with 25 Infanterie to clear the way forward.

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Crossing the bridge east of Belgorod would have caused immense traffic problems for the entire Corps, which is why the Corps' Bruckenpioneie had been attached. Potentially-problematic enemy guns were allocated to the 800mm railway gun and aircraft from ZG 99 for destruction to remove obstacles to 3 Panzer's initial advance.

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XVLII Panzer Corps' initial deployments found themselves faced to the south by a mixture of light tank brigades and Guards in the main, obviously prompting Lemlesen to direct a broad-front initial advance by his panzers.

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Perhaps the most concerning report from the day's initial operations was from 6 Infanterie, who identified an enemy force of perhaps small corps strength already established in good defensive positions NE of Mtsensk and - due to the presence of bridge layers - presenting an immediate danger to both Lemlesen's flank and the fundamental premise of our entire mission! I noted our partner's decision to detach some elements of 9 Panzer to bolster 6 Infanterie's efforts.

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The scale of this problem for XLVII Corps was only exacerbated by debriefings of the pilots who collaborated to destroy an enemy Yak wing (oddly enough, adorned with French identifiers as well as Soviet). Their reports of intense logistical movements - supplies, fuel and misc. equipment - appears to indicate that this material Soviet force is still preparing and not yet ready to start offensive operations.

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6th July 1943

In order to broaden the front near Mtsensk and give the enemy more to think about, 6 Inf has set to work clearing the minefields at the SE tail end of the trench line.

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Remaining with reports from XVLII Panzer Corps, the enemy has responded to the broad-front deployments facing south with substantial force including what appears to be a new SU assault gun variant mounting a faintly ludicrously large gun of around 150mm. The unit fielding very large numbers of these very threatening vehicles has charged to the forefront of the enemy's attack and will no doubt be giving commanders in its vicinity cause for serious concern.

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In our sector around Belgorod, Panzer-Regiment 27 has overrun a Guards regiment and moved onto some militia, whilst units from 25 Infanterie are making the most of the hilly terrain where possible.

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As seems usual, the first few days of an operation are always the most hotly-contested in the air; thanks to our increased compliment of quad-20mm towed FlaK batteries, the engagements by our own fighters are becoming less costly in terms of machines and skilled pilots. Once again, we are finding our new Me 410s to be adept in any role they are assigned to - today they delivered the final blows to an enemy La-5 wing in support of JG 26. The pilots of II Gruppe, JG 26 - still flying 109Gs - have added to their considerable reputation, too.

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7th July 1943

The air battle around Belgorod continues to rage today, thankfully our potential losses in the air and on the ground have been substantially mitigated by our FlaK batteries once again. If I had the chance to start the Corps' history from scratch, I would certainly have lobbied Herr General more stridently for the inclusion of these low-maintenance / high-utility units much earlier than I have done in reality!

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3 Panzer's activities to clear the enemy from the forests east of Belgorod has - so far - been routine and not worthy of detail in the Corps' report. Today however, reconnaissance reports to us from the division which highlighted the spotting of a definite reserve force going through formation and re-organisation further east still. No enemy response has so far been reported by 3 Panzer, so their operations continue for now although with half a mind on the threat forming within a couple of days' march.

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In the north, XLVII Corps has organised a skilful local operation to target the powerful force of extra-heavy SU assault guns which, according to intercepts, are under the command of a certain Major Sankovsky. Despite the enemy having clear numercial advantage over their sector with at least 3 fighter wings roving the skies (indeed, the Stukas attached to Lemlesen's Corps have already been shot from the sky), fighters were directed to strafe the towed guns providing Sankovsky's reinforced regiment with support whilst the HS-129 gruppe attacked the assault guns directly. This daring raid enabled the Elefants of Schwere-Panzerjaeger-Abt 301 (9 Panzer) to take the enemy behemoths under direct fire in advantageous circumstances - the threat posed by this elite enemy unit has now been reduced to more "normal" dimensions.

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Last edited by BaronVonWalrus on Mon Jun 15, 2020 9:14 pm, edited 3 times in total.
BaronVonWalrus
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Re: Postcards from the OstFront - a General-Level AAR

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

8th July 1943

3 Panzer has continued according to its orders to sweep the enemy out of the forested areas east of Belgorod. Whilst its assault regiment was busy flushing out enemy militia, its FlaK-Abteilung raked a roving La-5 wing which made it easy prey for JG 26 which cleared it from the sky.

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North of the city, earlier attacks had opened up a seam for Panzer-Regiment 27's Panzer IIINs to get in between the hills and bring its formidable soft-target armaments to bear. Over the course of the day it overran two enemy infantry remnants as well as a 122mm gun position, proving that not every panzer regiment needs to be filled with the latest and greatest models.

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XLVII Corps today reported that its forces had secured the important trench line on its NE front, near the town of Mtsensk, but that the enemy had responded by counterattacking with KV1s. The situation is not considered overly concerning given the assault guns 6 Infanterie has at its disposal along with the elements of 9 Panzer that have been moved up to support it. The concerns will start for this group as and when the Soviets finish re-organising and give the order to release their reserves that we know are preparing beyond the airfield.

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Elsewhere in the norther area of operations, over the seam between 2 Panzer and the other elements assigned to push south, new Fw 190f fighter-bombers were used to down a wing of Yak-7s; given the vulnerability of our ageing Ju 87D strike force, the performance of these new aircraft for our comrades is proving insightful.

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Late in the day, probes by our north-facing advance units towards Prokhorova gave some credence to the briefings we had received about expect enemy concentrations of mobile response forces in this area. 110s from II Gruppe, ZG 99, were called in to unload on enemy T70s which are among the primary targets for anything that isn't a Panther, Tiger or Elefant given their high volume of fire.

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9th July 1943

As you will no doubt see for yourself from our spotter images, 17 Panzer sits at the tip of the spear that has stirred up the hornets' nest at Prokhorova. 17 Panzer is acting as our Phalanx here, allowing 3 Panzer to bring its Panthers and Elefants to bear on the flank of the enemy force with freedom to manuever whilst Schwere-Panzer-Abt 501's Tigers may get called upon to add some extra resilience.

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Along the line from Prokhorova towards Oboyan, 25 Infanterie combined with Panzer-Regiment 17 to flush out and overrun an enemy heavy weapons-augmented rifle division with the regiment using its new Panthers effectively to mop up some T34s.

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The new Fw 190a aircraft of I Gruppe, JG 26, accounted for a wing of IL2 strike aircraft today.....the skies above our sector are rapidly emptying of enemy aircraft, although the skies further north continue to be contested.

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In the northern sector,, dispatches mentioned a brave assault by Infanterie-Regiment 206 of 6 Infanterie, which apparently had advanced from a secure defensive position to take advantage of an opportunity to attack a heavy FlaK battery in the knowledge that the assault would leave them exposed to a nearby enemy tank regiment and without any artillerie or PaK support. This daring attack virtually destroyed the entire battery and its support teams in one afternoon.

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10th July 1943

Yesterday's exemplary action by Infanterie-Regiment 206 has enabled 6 Infanterie and the supporting Hummels and Brummbars from 9 Panzer to seize the initative NE of Mtsensk and throw back the enemy from the majority of the trench line east of the town and advance beyond it in force. Reports from XLVII Corps refer to intelligence gained from prisoners, explaining that two enemy tank divisions are definitely in the area and that they have almost finished their preparations for offensive action.

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After a couple of days of intensive fighting, XLVII Corps' southern force has weathered the red storm (and 152mm-calibre assault guns) and the reports shared with us give every indication that a local decision in our favour is imminent. The initially-troublesome unit of Major Sankovsky has been reduced to little more than the HQ support company and much of his supporting forces have been smashed or are reeling.

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Around Prohkorova, 3 Panzer has yet to be needed as - with 10 Panzer's Tigers and timely interventions from Big Gustav - 17 Panzer has defeated the first echelon of enemy vehicles handily; orders are for it to remain cohesive and not advance rapidly at this time so that the panzers and assault guns can remain in close contact.

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This success has enabled us to maintain 3 Panzer's pressure on the enemy forces still holding out in the Belgorod forests.

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The skies are almost free of enemy planes now, with successes reported in XLVII Corps' area as well as near Oboyan.

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

Post by BaronVonWalrus »

11th July 1943

Dawn air strikes by ZG 99 revealed that the enemy's tank forces around Prokhorova remain formidable. Confidence in our tactics, equipment and men remains very high despite this, however, given the relative ease with which our hardened veterans have dealt with their opponents so far.

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The enemy's resistance in the forests has now been largely eliminated by 3 and 10 Panzer although they remain constantly vigilant for movement from the uncommitted force of infantry and light tanks further to the east.

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Even though most of the engagements in this area have been in terrain not well suited to our panzers, judicious use of artillerie and our ability to easily maneuver into positions to sever supply lines has frequently allowed our panzers to attack suppressed and demoralised opponents with little risk of meaningful return fire.

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On the Mtsensk front, 6 Infanterie has wisely pulled back into strong positions on the trench line rather than risk being caught in the open should the enemy divisions known to be assembling further north receive their "marching orders" and go to the offensive. Whether or not permission was given by XLVII Corps for the panzerjaegers operating with this force to detach and destroy the remnants of a Soviet heavy tank regiment is something we will never know, but the end result was destruction for the KV1s.

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12th July 1943

6 Infanterie's defensive disposition yesterday was fully vindicated by today's developments, as some forces from the Soviet armoured reserve in the Mtsensk sector advanced from its staging areas and confronted XLVII Corps' northernmost forces. Lemlesen has clearly also instructed 9 Panzer to send its Elefants up to bolster the line although they hadn't arrived on the scene in time to defend against this initial assault.

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9 Panzer has been able to spare this formidable unit given the firm hand that's been taken by the division - with some support from 20 Panzer - against the divisions it has been duelling since the outset of the operation; there is very little enemy strength left facing them now.

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In other reports from XLVII Corps today, there was confirmation that 2 Panzer's grenadiers had secured the town on Maloarkhangelsk.

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Allow me to open today's report on our activity at Prokhorova with a high-altitude image from our spotter flight, showing both sides' dispositions across this battlefield. Indications are that the enemy is down to about a division's worth of strength and that our solid front and effective local initiatives have matters assuredly under control despite the size of the localised battle. Able support from ZG 99 and devastating salvos from Big Gustav are no doubt helping us keep the pressure on.

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One of these "local initiatives" today was led by Panzer-Regiment 17, perhaps emboldened by the combat power of their new Panthers.....? Despite the risk of their contact with the rest of their division being pressurised by other enemy forces in the vicinity, they seized the opportunity to overrun the remnants of two enemy assault gun units before they could resupply and carry out field repairs to their damaged vehicles.

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13th July 1943

As the battle around Prokhorova continues to rage, local permission was given to Schwere-Panzerjager-Abt 300 to break from doctrine and directly engage an unfortunate unit of SU-76 assault guns. Standing orders for our Elefants are to provide defensive fire and / or deterrence by their very presence and to reserve direct offensive action for enemy T34s, KV1s and Su-122s - this has been expanded to include the new 150mm-variant SU vehicles first encountered in recent days; SU-76, T60 and T70s are to be left to our Panzer IIIIs and IVs or assault guns.

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Nearby, 3 Panzer's other primary striking force - the Panthers of Panzer-Regiment 9 - overran what was left of a T34 regiment after it had been softened up by a raid by StG 3's new HS-129 gruppe.

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Beyond the eastern forests, orders have been assigned to the elements of 3 and 10 Panzer in this sector to bring the enemy mixed reserve of infantry and light tanks to battle and remove them as a looming threat to our overall strategic goals for the operation. The doctrine I explained earlier in today's report was ably demonstrated by this kampkgruppe, as the StuGs of Panzerjaeger-Abteilung 10 delivered the coup de grace to a Soviet T60 unit.

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On the Mtsensk front, 6 Infanterie has held the trench line with reasonable comfort against the enemy's tank force. The Soviet commander appeared reluctant to order his tanks to launch a full-throated assault on the line and withdrew them, perhaps due to the large volume of supporting defensive fire they would have had to advance through before making contact with the entrenched defenders. The enemy had moved 76mm guns into advantageous hillside positions NW of 6 Infanterie's positions and a local initiative was enacted for a regiment to move out of the line and assault these guns directly before they could provide potenitally useful fire support for a renewed assault on the trench line.

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14th July 1943

The plains around Prokhorova have become a graveyard for the Soviets over the last few days, with today seeing some of the last enemy light tanks in the area mopped up by Panzer-Regiment 9. The ferocity of the fighting here has by its nature not seen many prisoners taken, but some wounded Russians have been brought in by our own recovery and repair teams; our forces have effectively crushed the whole Soviet 5th (Guards)Tank Army at little relative cost to our own fighting capacity! As one would expect, the effect on morale - already high as it was - is noticeable as a result of this news, which illustrates the scale of our triumph in this phase of the wider operation! Our decisive victory here and advance beyond the town itself has enabled us to surround and compel the surrender of the Prokhorova garrison.

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Given the comprehensive defeat we have handed the Soviets at Prokhorova, we have been able to funnel more elements of 3 and 10 Panzer east through the forests to the front forming against what we've learned is the Soviet 7th Army assigned to their "Steppe Front" armeegroup. This enemy force is ill-equipped to deal with the amount of fighting vehicles now facing them, and once again commanders are maximising the value of their Panzer IIINs and SdKfz 234s - leaving the enemy T60s, T70s and BA-type armoured cars to our heavier vehicles. However, spotter flights further south have identified signs of more 7th Army componsents further south, which have the potential to envelop the southern flank of our force and advance behind it through the forests towards Belgorod.

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North of Kursk on XLVII Corps' southern front, all traces of viable enemy armour have been "cleared from the board" around Maloarkhangelsk and points to the east of the town. An advance towards Ponyri has begun, which has led to the capture of the local airfield today. The skies have been cleared of enemy aircraft across the entire operational area now although the Stukas and HS129s operating with XLVII Corps have sadly been lost.

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15th July 1943

XLVII Corps has reported that it has ordered the entirety of 9 Panzer to the Mtsensk front to provide mobile striking power in addition to the existing defensive support being offered by the assault guns already working in conjunction with 6 Infanterie. The obvious plan for the Soviets to attempt a bridging assault towards Orel - bypassing Mtsensk completely - is not one XLVII Corps our ourselves are blind to, but this latest deployment will give the Soviet commander cause to consider that such an assault opens his forces up to a powerful flank attack by panzers, not infanterie, which could allow us to isolate and encircle the Soviet force if the regiments and strongpoints west of the river can hold the line long enough.

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In an attempt to underline this threat, erode enemy combat power and further delay any westward thrust, a fighting advance in force NE from the trench line jumped off at midday.

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In the absence of enemy resistance (and in the absence of reliable intelligence about enemy dispositions between Ponyri and Kursk, to point out a possible oversight by XLVII Corps here), forces from 2 and 20 Panzer have started moving to surround Ponyri. I overheard Herr General exhorting Lemlesen to redploy some of the panzers in use here towards Orel before the Soviets launched their obviously-imminent river crossing.

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With the destruction of the Soviet 5th Guards Tank Army at Prokhorova complete, 17 Panzer has drawn up outline plans to encircle Oboyan from the east with 25 Infanterie continuing its advance from the south. Once again, dispatches from the division HQ report the ongoing rampage of Panzer-Regiment 17 through a retreating and disorganised enemy - it has reportedly accounted for the HQs of a further 3 enemy regiments today!

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Despite a joint initiative between Schwere-Panzer-Abt 501 and Panzer-Regiment 3 to eliminate a Guards unit and smite the Katushyas behind the enemy line, the Soviet deployment on our eastern flank is increasing by the hour and there is now a clear risk that 3 and 10 Panzer's forces on this front could be flanked and prevented from stopping a thrust by our opponent back through the forests and on to Belgorod. With 10 Panzer fully committed, we have no strategic reserve to call on although both 17 Panzer and 25 Infanterie have been told to prepare contingency plans for operations around Oboyan to be conducted at the same time as emergency reployments of mobile forces back towards Belgorod should the need arise.

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16h July 1943

With our eastern forces now extending their line as far to the SW as possible to avoid the turning of their flank, a very urgent action was needed to prevent fast-moving enemy scouting units from making this feared maneuver a reality. With support from ZG 99 and 10 Panzer's Hummels, Pionerie-Regiment 93's assault proved decisive and the enemy unit was destroyed.

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However, the overarching operational objectives remain paramount in Herr General's thinking and developments to the east remain "divisional problems needing divisional solutions". 3 Panzer's Panthers and Elefants have advanced north from Prokhorova to secure the vital airbase and logistics hub the Soviets are using to run their supply operations through; capturing these sites are pivotal to the planned encirclement of Kursk itself and any follow-up aimed at eliminating the enemy forces dug in further west along the heavily-fortified edge of the salient.

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Reports from 25 Infanterie this afternoon confirm that they have cut Oboyan off from the forces stationed on the salient perimeter and that 17 Panzer has maneuvered around the north of the town, sealing the encirclement.

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Our daily update from XLVII Corps HQ was later arriving today. When we read it, the reasons for the delay were all too clear - Soviet bridgelayers had indeed got to work NW of Mtsensk to establish viable crossings for tanks and the feared thrust towards Orel was at hand.

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