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
Well Wadi Y'Know ! - Never Say Never
Author vince hughes (Italy)
Method Dual Table Setup + Email
Victor Italy
Participants unknown
Play Date 2010-10-04
Language English
Scenario AfKo041

A Fascinating Desert Scrimmage

The Report Title is a kind of reference to the previous AAR that placed this as a rather poor unbalanced scenario that the Italians could not win. My game was played PBEM with my overseas friend, John Legan living in Illinois. Our game certainly was not anything like the previous AAR and was what I would say a very exciting encounter. This scenario come heartily recommended as it has soooo many variables and with this is very replayable by the same person. Play It !

Object - Inflict Most Step-Losses : Tied Step Loss Count Gives Italians The Win

The Italian Bersaglieri, not aware of any impending attack, were situated just outside the wadi, but did have one entrenched position set in the wadi’s edge. Meanwhile, the Australian attack set-off at 0700 hours and was supported by some British tanks. From the outset, this attack was dogged by a dreadful run of luck. A sandstorm was blowing and should have covered the initial advance leaving the Italians little time to react. But almost immediately, the Australians blew this cover as in their haste their lead advance elements got ahead of the storm and revealed the impending assault! With a forward Italian OP spotting the enemy and reporting this back, the Italian Maggiore, knowing how his men were susceptible to surrendering, wasted no time in ordering his troops into the relative safety of the huge wide wadi. The Bersaglieri to a man followed these wise orders and at a stroke were to negate the allied armour advantage as they would not be able to overrun the infantrymen but instead, only be able to fire at them from outside the wadi and at long range.

But this gets ahead of ourselves. Around 0730, the British tanks became confused in the sandstorm and loosed a few long-range shots at what they thought were Italian L3/35’s. Fortunately these tankers missed as the ‘enemy’ turned out to be Australian bren-carriers! Other British tanks became disorientated in the storm and began heading the wrong way? Eventually order was restored amongst these British tanks and they followed on after the Aussie infantrymen. As the Australians closed on their enemy, the Italians had already ensconced themselves within the wadi in a long defensive dug-in line and at some range let loose some AP shells from their 47mm AT platoon. Two A13’s from one of the Cruiser platoons were stopped dead as some of the Italian shots fell spot on and despite the range, these shells cleaved through the A13’s armour. Obviously feeling their job was done, the AT crews, who were now being bombarded by some light Allied OBA, soon slunk away from their positions leaving their guns behind. Closing in on the wadi, one Australian platoon took some casualties from Italian OBA and as they tried to close with the Italians in the difficult wadi terrain, another platoon was horribly cut up by Italian rifle fire. The attack was not going well.

Despite the adversity, one high moraled well-led Allied platoon did manage to close with a reduced enemy Bersaglieri platoon in the wadi and commence a close assault. These attackers were being backed up by the coy.MG platoon. A short but vicious close range fight followed, where initially, the Aussies got the advantage on outnumbered Italians. But seeing a chance to over-power the attackers, the Italian Maggiore threw in two more platoons to assist the out-numbered reduced platoon. The move was a success. Between them, the now more numerous Italians destroyed the attackers including the Captain in charge of the attack. However, the victory celebration for winning the assault was very short lived. With no friendly troops nearby to stay their hand, the supporting Aussie MG’s let loose numerous belts of ammo at very close range on the bunched up Italians and cut down many of them where they stood. As other allied OBA and AFV fire piled in on this target, the Italians lost near 50 men of their own. They too called in OBA support as they tried to extricate themselves, and as well as this artillery causing some Allied casualties, their 77mm artillery battery also knocked out a few over-confident bren-carriers that had gotten too close to the action.

By 1100 hours the battle had definitely gone the Italians way even though promised reinforcements to them had never arrived in time to fight. The Australians simply had no more infantrymen to throw at the enemy positions and their armour simply could not assist with an enemy hiding in the rocky depths of the wadi. In the dying stages of the battle, the Italian Artillery crews ran from their guns as the enemy MG Coy fired at length from close range at the gunners entrenched position. But no sooner had these machine-gunners seen off the artillerymen, they themselves were horribly targeted by Italian OBA reducing them to half their number The Commonwealth troops were counting some 140 casualties, 2 x A13 tanks and a number of Bren –carriers as casualties (9 steps total). The Italian list of losses included 75 infantrymen, and a platoon each of AT guns and Artillery. (5 steps total).

The move to the wadi had probably proved to be the saving factor in this encounter, though this would never had happened had the Allies stayed behind the sandstorm at the outset of the advance.

And there you have it. In this case an Italian victory! Plenty of different things can happen in this scenario, and the Maggiore sending his men into the Wadi wiped out anything the British tanks could do against them. The Italian reinforcements never showed up and attention was paid to rallying Italians as a priority in order to avoid surrender chances against enemy infantry.

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