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Ambush at Azbi
Conquest of Ethiopia #6
(Attacker) Italy vs Ethiopia (Defender)
Formations Involved
Display
Balance:



Overall balance chart for COOE006
Total
Side 1 3
Draw 0
Side 2 2
Overall Rating, 6 votes
5
4
3
2
1
3.33
Scenario Rank: 536 of 913
Parent Game Conquest of Ethiopia
Historicity Historical
Date 1935-11-12
Start Time 11:30
Turn Count 32
Visibility Day & Night
Counters 85
Net Morale 0
Net Initiative 0
Maps 0: 90
Layout Dimensions 43 x 28 cm
17 x 11 in
Play Bounty 162
AAR Bounty 165
Total Plays 5
Total AARs 2
Battle Types
Exit the Battle Area
Conditions
Reinforcements
Terrain Mods
Scenario Requirements & Playability
Conquest of Ethiopia Base Game
Introduction

During the march toward Macallè, a Colonial troop column received the task to cover the right flank of the Eritrean Corps’ advance. During their march along the dry bed of the Enda River they ran headlong into an ambush set by the Degiac Cassa Sebhat force, equipped with several heavy machine guns. This would be the last major engagement before Marshal Badoglio replaced De Bono.

Conclusion

The Ethiopians managed to stop the enemy column for an entire day. Both sides suffered heavy losses, and during the night Degiac Cassa Sebhat retreated his forces. The following day the Italian column sat in place suffering from logistical difficulties and recovering from the battle. However, the Regia Aeronautica managed to perform one of the first parachute re-supply operations in military history. Another day passed, and the column resumed its march.


Display Order of Battle

Ethiopia Order of Battle
Ethiopian Imperial Army
Imperial Irregulars
  • Foot
Italy Order of Battle
Regio Corpo di Truppe Coloniali
Regio Esercito
  • Foot
  • Towed

Display AARs (2)

Taking the long way around
Author wleonard1
Method Solo
Victor Ethiopia
Play Date 2020-11-06
Language English
Scenario COOE006

Four battalions of Italian colonial infantry enter in the center of the long north edge of a single board. One battalion arrives on each of the first four turns, if they make their die rolls. They have all day to cross a 40/60 meter Amba NW to SE ridge and exit ¾ of their units off of the west edge. A battalion of Ethiopian Imperial Irregulars, with a small stiffening of regulars are in the way.

The Italian forces begin to enter, see a dug-in Ethiopian force on the all-Amba ridge in the most direct path, and decide to take the long way around the ridge rather than try a full-on frontal assault. After two hours, the first Italian units are starting to crest the southeast portion of the ridge, but there are a fair number of stragglers who haven’t made their climbing rolls. An attempt to close with the Ethiopian defenders in the center of the ridge loses a few Italian steps and generates lots of disruptions and demoralizations. And the fourth battalion of Italian forces is an hour late and nowhere in sight. Ethiopia has thinned out the defense line on the northwest end of the ridge to redeploy troops to stop the Italian end-around.

The next hour sees one Italian battalion cross the southeast corner of the ridge and begin to slip past the Ethiopian line. But the Eritrean battalion tasked with pinning the center of the Ethiopian line has collapsed, losing eight steps to adjacent direct fire and ill-fated assaults; the survivors are mostly morale-impaired. And the last battalion of reinforcements still has not arrived.

Halfway through, the Lost battalion has finally arrived, and closes up to the left side of the Ethiopian line. A half battalion of Bande has slipped past the right flank, but there are a lot of troops still hung up trying to get across the Amba. And Italy has already lost twelve steps and dropped initiative to zero, while inflicting no more than a single disruption on the Ethiopian defenders. The end-around continues in the next hour, and a firefight with Ethiopian forces moving to the right flank actually inflicts an Ethiopian step loss. But the lost battalion’s attempt to pin down the center and left flank fails badly with heavy losses to direct fire and assaults.

As darkness begins to fall, the outcome is not in doubt. Italy will be able to exit about two battalions of troops off of the west edge, but that is well short of their victory conditions. The Ethiopians remain dug in and nearly unassailable on the crest of the Amba ridge. Although it is not part of the victory conditions, what remains is nevertheless an interesting tactical problem for both sides. Italy needs to rally and exit the stragglers, keeping enough of a flank guard to deter the Ethiopians from coming down off the ridge, and keeping a mobile rear guard that will still be able to exit by the end of the game. For Ethiopia, they are looking to pick off any stragglers, while not risking unnecessary losses. And with two Italian battalions headed for the west behind Ethiopian lines, it might also be a good idea to start securing their own retreat route – they don’t want to stay on the Amba forever. The last hour goes as expected. Italy exits about a battalion and a half; which was less than half of what they needed for a victory. Another battalion was on the way, but too many early Fog-of-War rolls kept them on the board. Both sides lose some stragglers to assaults. Ethiopia has a massive edge in losses – 27 Italian steps lost to 5 Ethiopian. It’s an Ethiopian victory.

Thoughts: This was the battle the Ethiopian army wanted to fight. If I played again, I might make some setup tweaks, but wouldn’t change the strategy. Lessons learned for Italy? Even with a 4 to 1 advantage, it is better to use maneuver rather than try a stand-up fight against a dug-in enemy in Amba. It would also be useful if I could have applied all of those failed Amba climbing rolls to morale checks, and applied all of those failed morale check rolls to Amba climbing instead.

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Waves of Italian Colonials crash against the amba
Author scrane
Method Solo
Victor Italy
Play Date 2021-02-14
Language English
Scenario COOE006

This was a fun scenario. A reinforced battalian of Ethiopian Imperial Irregulars, stiffened by a company of regulars, hold a long steep amba ridge that stretches from NW to SE across the map. Ethiopians deploy in 2-platoon dug in strong points along the NE-facing slope, irregulars on the lower slope and regulars holding a few places behind them on the higher slope.

The Italians have four battalions of colonials, 2 each regular and irregular. Their goal is to enter from the north and fight their way to the west edge, exiting 35+ units. They have 8 hours.

The Italian irregulars enter first over two turns, with a battalion of regulars following 15 minutes later and the last battalion delayed by about an hour. One battalion of irregulars demonstrated against the west-central face of the amba while the 2nd irregular and 1st regular battalion headed farther east before turning south and assaulting the hill mass at a spot where Ethiopian forces were slightly thinner.

The battle was defined by the slow struggle to climb the amba in enough strength to assault the local strongpoints held by the Ethiopians. They held their positions, inflicting some losses and many morale effects on the Italian troops as they swarmed at the base of the amba. Almost simultaneously, assault forces of two platoons of colonial irregulars managed to get into assaults at both the western and eastern ends of the battle, inflicting unexpected step losses in both places. What had looked like a secure Ethiopian position was suddenly weakening. Over the next two hours the Ethiopians continued to take losses, to such a degree that the regulars pulled together a counterattacking force of infantry to try to relieve the pressure. Unfortunately, this force impulsively committed to another assault and suffered heavy losses. This essentially spelled the end of the Ethiopian position.

For the remainder of the battle the Italians painstakingly climbed the amba, bringing their full force into action all along the length of the amba. The Ethiopian positions were overrun everywhere except the far western end, which was bipassed and isolated, lacking effective leadership. The Italians, very slowly, managed to descend the southwest facing slope and take to the flat ground beyond, exiting more than 35 units with time to spare.

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