Panzer Grenadier Battles on April 26th:
Afrika Korps #28 - "Meet Me at the Pass" Edelweiss: Expanded #13 - Spring Offensive
Army Group South Ukraine #1 - A Meaningless Day First Axis #20 - End Game in Italy
Army Group South Ukraine #4 - Beyond the Prut Parachutes Over Crete #39 - Corinith
Edelweiss #10 - Spring Offensive Road to Berlin #71 - Horst Wessel's Last Verse
Edelweiss IV #19 - Spring Offensive
Brilliant Plan, sir. Who can execute it?
Author Matt W
Method Solo
Victor Slovak Republic
Play Date 2011-06-06
Language English
Scenario FiAx014

Before I dove into PG my main focus for wargaming was the American Civil War. It's kind of an occupational hazard for those who live in Richmond, Virginia. As a Civil War gamer, I was required to read through and understand the campaigns of RE Lee. If you do you become aware that Lee's first campaign, in the hill country of West Virginia was marvelous... on paper. Unfortunately it was spectacularly bungled as its intricate nature was beyond the ability of his subordinates to control. I now know truly how it feels.

If one doesn't look at the terrain this one appears pretty easy for the Slovaks. They have nearly double the force of the Soviets and they only have to clear a road. In the end, however, their ability to do so is highly limited by two factors; their 7/6 morale and the intensely hilly terrain (this is after all in the mountains near the Black Sea). The Soviet commander accurately noted that this would lead the Slovaks to have to assault in large numbers each time they met up with Soviet troops. So rather than a single large position in the center of the board with smaller forces near the rear the Soviets set up in company sized delaying posts as follows; 1 in the town on the first board, 2 in the hill top town on the second board and one in the forest on the third board. If you are counting along you have hit four and the Soviets have five companies.

The last, my piece de resistance, held a flank position to the west with the idea that it would become a Hail Mary attempt to control the road if the second town was taken by the Slovaks. If nothing else, the flankers would have to be either attacked or shadowed by a substantial Slovak force, thus denying their use in any final actions.

This strategy was based on watching the Slovaks become totally disorganized time and again when they had to attack any fixed position. By forcing them to do so multiple times the Soviet commander expected to benefit from this Slovak tendency and the need to take TIME to recover. The strategy, then was to delay and disorganize, not to defeat the Slovaks.

A brilliant plan with carefully considered positioning... and not a single morale modifier amongst the Soviet leaders, not one. The Slovaks had four, including one Porocik with a "2".

The Slovaks required 9 turns to dispatch the defenders of the first town, most of whom perished in double demoralizations when they could not recover from an M2 demoralization in assault combat. Still almost a third of the way into the battle it would seem that the Slovaks were behind schedule. There was still 4/5 of the Soviet force on the board and a very strong position in the center board that would have to be rooted out.

Here, however, the vast numbers of Slovaks (probably the only time in PG history anyone will ever mention "vast numbers of Slovaks") permitted them to send substantial forces beyond the current battle to invest and begin DF and artillery combat with the next defended position. So even while the final Soviets were running away from the first town the Slovaks were already demoralizing and disrupting Soviets in the second town. By the time the Slovak HMGs and engineers arrived to do the dirty work of assaulting, many of the defending troops had already run away. The second town fell by turn 22.

Time for the Hail Mary pass by the Soviets. The Slovak cyclists had become entangled with the final Soviet position on the reverse slope of the final hill so the Soviets had to consider that the Slovak spearhead might actually reach the end of the road and clear them off. The flanker company moved briskly towards the town on the first board.

The Slovaks had seemed to rush right by during their assault but suddenly seemed to have quite a number of troops available to blunt this thrust. You see, the Slovaks knew that they would have plenty of disrupted and demoralized troops as a result of their assaults and Soviet artillery fire on advancing troops. They placed two leaders with morale modifiers to the rear of their advance who scooped up the stragglers, placed them into good order one at a time and ordered them into a central reserve. When the Hail Mary movement began the Soviets were confronted by nearly twice their number of Slovaks. Then, when spotted by the Slovaks in a forest, the Soviets were hit by artillery and their lone leader double demoralized and, leaderless, the company became toothless as well.

Meanwhile in the main battle, the Slovak spearhead was dealing with Soviet stragglers from the hill town on their way up the final slope and the Soviets were assaulting the Slovak cyclists who had made it to the reverse slope. A disastrous assault on the cyclists and a spirited counterattack by those peddling fiends resulted in the destruction of the Soviet reserves and when a DF attack eliminated the stragglers on the front slope the Soviets were no longer able to threaten the road.

Lest one think that the Soviet strategy was doomed from the start one need only hear that the ultimate action happened on turn 28 of 30. The Slovaks had taken few losses but had a string of recovering troops along the road as once the Hail Mary went forward the leaders who had been assisting recoveries had to turn over to organizing a defense. If the Soviets had only had one leader worth any consideration a victory would have been within reach.

Great terrain, interesting forces, good suspense. What more could you want? I give it a 4.

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