Panzer Grenadier Battles on May 24th:
Fall of France 1 #38 - Before the Stop Order Parachutes Over Crete #23 - All There Is
Fall of France 1 #39 - Swamp Struggle: Day One Parachutes Over Crete #24 - Strong Probe
Fall of France 2 #38 - The Swamps of Bouchain Road to Dunkirk #9 - The Wattrelos Counter Attack
Last Days of May #1 - Before the Stop Order Road to Dunkirk #13 - Parallel Wars
Last Days of May #2 - Ancient Walls Road to Dunkirk #21 - Calais Perimeter
Last Days of May #3 - Trench of Bayonets Road to Dunkirk #22 - The Hell of Boulogne
Nihon Silk #8 - Okinawa: The Giretsu Incident Road to Dunkirk #26 - Reliable Friends
Heraklion #2 - Hielan Laddie Road to Dunkirk #27 - 350,000 Rations
Parachutes Over Crete #22 - Turkish Fort Sinister Forces #13 - Partisan Spring
Errors? Omissions? Report them!
Bialystok Defense
Red & White #15
(Attacker) Soviet Union vs Poland (Defender)
Formations Involved
Poland 15th Antitank Regiment
Poland 9th Mechanized Division
Soviet Union 166th Tank Brigade
Soviet Union 252nd Rifle Division
Display
Balance:



Overall balance chart for ICRW015
Total
Side 1 0
Draw 0
Side 2 0
Overall Rating, 0 votes
5
4
3
2
1
0
Scenario Rank: of
Parent Game Red & White
Historicity Alt-History
Date 1951-10-14
Start Time 15:00
Turn Count 14
Visibility Day & Night
Counters 102
Net Morale 0
Net Initiative 1
Maps 2: 16, 19
Layout Dimensions 56 x 43 cm
22 x 17 in
Play Bounty 224
AAR Bounty 223
Total Plays 0
Total AARs 0
Battle Types
Ambush
Exit the Battle Area
Inflict Enemy Casualties
Conditions
Anti-infantry Wire
Entrenchments
Off-board Artillery
Randomly-drawn Aircraft
Reinforcements
Smoke
Terrain Mods
Illumination
Scenario Requirements & Playability
Cassino '44 Counters
Hammer & Sickle Counters
Red & White Base Game
Road to Berlin Maps + Counters
Introduction

Marshal Anders’ strategy required an elastic defense for the first couple of days to ascertain the units attacking and their primary vectors. Then he planned to hit back hard and make the Soviets think twice about their decision to invade. The Soviet advance on Bialystok split into three prongs as well, with the armor advancing on the plains to the south. That's where Anders laid his trap, just as the sun began to set in the west, blazing into the oncoming tanker's eyes.

Conclusion

Ambushes are tricky business. You have to be ready where the enemy is going to be, which requires him to cooperate. Also, if the jaws of the trap don't close fast enough, sometimes the hunter becomes the hunted. The Soviet has an initial advantage in numbers but the Poles have good ground and firepower. But when the reinforcements show up all bets are off.


Display Relevant AFV Rules


Display Order of Battle


Display Errata (2)

Errors? Omissions? Report them!
Page generated in 0.538 seconds.