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
Korean War: Counter-Attack, scenario #44: Highway to Seoul
Author JayTownsend
Method Solo
Victor North Korea
Play Date 2017-05-19
Language English
Scenario KWCA044

Korean War: Counter-Attack, scenario #44: Highway to Seoul

I thought to myself, there is no way the North Koreans could beat dug-in Marines but I remember it is about the victory conditions of eliminating four steps for a victory and they didn’t have to run blindly into the Marine lines as they did historically. But with that said, I setup my Marines on the outlining town hexes and adjacent terrain in a defensive line with great hopes of an easy victory.

The North Koreans have read the history books and decide not to repeat it, sending their Infantry units forward just over a cresting hill overlooking the Marine positions and send the two platoons of T34/85 tank flanking, as not to run head on into dug-in M26 Pershing tanks. The Marines roll awful against the closing NKPA Infantry units and they are able to pull pretty much adjacent to the Marine lines with little damage and their leadership not caring about their casualties in the first place only the Marines casualties matter to them. The luck was favoring the North Koreans, as this is the only scenario with NKPA airpower, one strike but a IL-10 with a 2 AT dice roll factor is what was drawn and used against the American M26 tanks, hitting it with one six dice roll, destroy one Pershing step and demoralizing the other. Not a great start for my Marines.

As the NKPA continued with the hot dice, the two T34/85 units pulled adjacent to dug-in Marines Infantry, destroying an assaulting Bazooka Team and activating first on the next turn to roll an 11 on the dice against adjacent dug-in Marine Infantry, destroying one step. Across the line, assaults and adjacent combat was happening and the yes the NKPA were taking some licks and step loses but the American took a couple more as well giving the NKPA a victory by turn 12, where I stopped play, as it didn’t matter how many steps the North Korean lost at this point, they had already won the scenario, very much to my surprise but with five American steps lost, there was no denying it. I certainly want to replay this one as the NKPA dice rolls early on and the rarest of air-strikes gave them the early advantage.

Interesting side note, my Introduction and Conclusion are a little different to the published version:

Introduction: During the advance so far the 5th and 1st Marines had followed the Inch’on-Seoul highway with the 5th Marines on the north side and the 1st Marines on south side. The 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines occupied a position commanding the Seoul highway. In the forward position at about 0600, D Company saw the dim outlines of enemy tanks and infantry, with some Infantry riding on the tanks. The enemy force moved within 75 yards before the Marines open up on them.

Conclusion:

The North Korean force never saw the Marines until it was too late. Rockets from a bazooka set one tank on fire and the Pershing tanks and recoilless rifles destroyed five more T34s. Over 200 N.K. infantry were also killed out of an estimated 250. Later in the day, from General Smith’s command post to the 2nd Battalion 5th Marines positions were twelve destroyed T34 tanks which seemed to the Marines as a good omen for the future.

On a side note, Yak planes made bombing runs on the Rochester lying in the Lnch’on harbor causing minor damage and three casualties with one plane being shot down out of two.

But Mike does a better job writing the published version, so I have no complaints!

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