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Manchuria, China, and the Far Eastern Front
Hello all,
I was thinking about Soviet/Pact forces in the Far East (Mongolia, China, Siberia, Sakhalin & Kuriles) and I've been musing about the possibility of a Soviet-backed Manchurian People's Republic. Canon sources mention that the Soviets have a series of cantonments in the area, and have at least 10 divisions in Manchuria itself. The possibility of a Soviet-backed MPR is also supported by the existance in 2300AD of Manchuria. To start things off, I've written an order-of-battle for Manchuria. Manchurian People’s Army (Mǎn rénmín jūn) Order of Battle as of January 1, 1999. Manchurian People’s Guard Corps 1st Niánqīng de mǎnzhōu People’s Guard Tank Division 101st Guards Tank Regiment 102nd Guards Tank Regiment 103rd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment 1st Guards Artillery Battalion 2nd Dà quán People’s Guard Motorized Rifle Division 201st Guards Tank Regiment 202nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment 203rd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment 2nd Guards Artillery Battalion 3rd Tiě chuí People’s Guard Motorized Rifle Division 301st Guards Tank Regiment 302nd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment 303rd Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment 3rd Guards Artillery Battalion 38th National Pacification Army 113th Motorized Rifle Division 501st Motorized Rifle Regiment 502nd Motorized Rifle Regiment 113rd Tank Battalion 1061st Artillery Battalion 114th Motorized Pacification Rifle Division 901st Motorized Rifle Regiment 602nd Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 603rd Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 1062nd Artillery Battalion 116th Motorized Pacification Rifle Division 904th Motorized Rifle Regiment 605th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 606th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 1063rd Artillery Battalion 39th National Pacification Army 117th Motorized Rifle Division 503rd Motorized Rifle Regiment 504th Motorized Rifle Regiment 117th Tank Battalion 1063rd Artillery Battalion 119th Motorized Pacification Rifle Division 905th Motorized Rifle Regiment 607th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 608th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 1064th Artillery Battalion 120th Motorized Pacification Rifle Division 906th Motorized Rifle Regiment 609th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 610th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 1065th Artillery Battalion 42nd National Pacification Army 124th Motorized Rifle Division 505th Motorized Rifle Regiment 506th Motorized Rifle Regiment 124th Tank Battalion 1066th Artillery Battalion 125th Motorized Pacification Rifle Division 907th Motorized Rifle Regiment 611th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 612th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 1067th Artillery Battalion 126th Motorized Pacification Rifle Division 908th Motorized Rifle Regiment 613th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 614th Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiment 1068th Artillery Battalion Niánqīng de mǎnzhōu : Young Manchuria Dà quán : Great Fist Tiě chuí : Iron Mace Tank Divisions, Regiments, and Battalions are organized along Soviet lines. Guards Tank Regiments are equipped with older model T-72 Ural MBTs. Motor Rifle Division Tank Battalions are equipped with T-54/55 or Type 59 MBTs. Motorized Pacification Rifle Regiments are truck-borne light infantry. Motorized Rifle Regiments in the Motorized Rifle Divisions are mounted on BMP or Chinese-equivalent Tracked APCs. Motorized Rifle Regiments in the Motorized Pacification Rifle Divisions are mounted on BTR or Chinese-equivalent Wheeled APCs. Additional material will be posted as I come up with it. Feedback, recommentdations, and suggestions are invited.
__________________
I'm one of the ones they warned you about. . . |
#2
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I can't say anything but good post, because I haven't thought about that theater of the Twilight War much -- it's was one of the most cataclysmic theaters of the Twilight War, yet almost no development of it was ever done by GDW or later on online.
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I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#3
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Thanks
Thanks for the good word.
I'll see what other goodies I can come up with. A Soviet-Pact based game in Manchuria would certainly be an interesting scenario. 9th Company meets Red Dawn. . .
__________________
I'm one of the ones they warned you about. . . |
#4
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My turn to thank you
Good work and very nice idea. I had the same idea in my game but failed to come up with anything like you have done. I'll use yours and this will be of a great help. I can't wait for your next post. Anything on airforce and naval elements?
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#5
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Air Force follow-on
Glad to see the response, and I'm working on it.
On a related point, does anyone have any good information about the Chinese People's Liberation Army and the PLA Air Force in the '90s.
__________________
I'm one of the ones they warned you about. . . |
#6
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Oh hey! I happen to have just bought a handy book on that. I covers the PLAAF from 1951 to Present (and the date of the book is 2003). What do you need to know?
__________________
I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#7
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Just the thing
If it has an order-of-battle and a list of major airbases, that would be perfect. I have a book on world air forces, unfortunately its dated from the 1970s and it's PLAAF data reflects both a lack of hard information and China's Maoist military thinking of the day.
Let me know what you have there. I may have to snag a copy for myself. . . Thanks
__________________
I'm one of the ones they warned you about. . . |
#8
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Lots of hard work in there. Thanks for contributing.
__________________
“We’re not innovating. We’re selectively imitating.” June Bernstein, Acting President of the University of Arizona in Tucson, November 15, 1998. |
#9
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Quote:
Where exactly do all of these armored vehicles come from? A look at the Soviet troops in the area reflects the scarcity of armor. It wasn't long before 1999 that much of Chinese army was leg mobile. Would it not be more realistic to have all of these units light infantry with perhaps only small armored force as a operational maneuver group for the Corps. |
#10
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Great stuff! I had thought of coming up with something for the Far East front around 2000, the farthest I had gotten was using Merc's Gazetteer as a road map for remaining Chinese factions that would be fighting the Soviets and/or each other.
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#11
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I'm not suggesting it isn't worth pursuing, but didn't the Soviets engage in saturation nuclear bombardment? Is there anything left there or is it just a massive no-man's land of mile-wide craters and fallout, dotted with enough skulls to build a few tens of thousands of Giza Pyramid sized mounds?
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#12
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Quote:
Most of the motorised rifles would be straight-leg, and even so-called tank units would likely have armored cars instead of tracks. As far as I've imagined (work in progress disclaimer) the Manchurian People's Republic, and its Army are largely public relations exercises and an attempt to make up for a shortage of Soviet troops. As for the "pyramids of glowing rubble" notions, my thinking is that most of the tactical nukes in the east were aimed at pursuing PLA formations, airfields, railyards, etc. I expect that the Beijing and Shanghai regions would be serving as a nightlight for the Australians, though.
__________________
I'm one of the ones they warned you about. . . |
#13
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We don't really have an accurate count of strikes or megatonnage used against China. My impression from reading the v1 chronology is that China got hit harder than the US. I don't know how much harder, though.
__________________
“We’re not innovating. We’re selectively imitating.” June Bernstein, Acting President of the University of Arizona in Tucson, November 15, 1998. |
#14
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- USSR Challenge article |
#15
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"Well who is on our side?" "The British...they won't be in it much longer. Them and four hundred million screaming China men." "I thought there were a billion screaming Chinamen." <tosses cup of bourbon into fire> "There were." |
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Quote:
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#17
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__________________
I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#18
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OK, reading through this book, it's more the Chinese aircraft industry than anything else; there's nothing like ORBATs or lists of units. Picking through it, I can get an idea of which aircraft the PLAAF had on hand at a particular time, but that'll be the best I can do with this particular book. Will that help?
__________________
I'm guided by the beauty of our weapons...First We Take Manhattan, Jennifer Warnes Entirely too much T2K stuff here: www.pmulcahy.com |
#19
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Iiiinnteresting. . . . . . . . . .
That could actually be very helpful. Aircraft types and knowing their main manufaturing centers would be most helpful.
I've noticed that many of the posts are concerned with just how brightly China glows in the dark in Tw2k. All available information suggests that they were well plastered in the war. However, China is a big country, with a vast selection of potential targets. The idea that the Soviets would turn most of Manchuria (at least) into radioactive glass strains things a bit. Can anyone figure a list of theatre nuclear targets in China. Also, is there any additional information on exactly what the Soviets had managed to take before they feigned a retreat leading up to the main nuke exchange. And, on a silly note "In the Day, when China will make attempt to solve their overpopulation problem at the expense of Russian territories, our Strategic Missile Forces will solve China's overpopulation problem." Russian Army folklore.
__________________
I'm one of the ones they warned you about. . . |
#20
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My favorite lines from the movie! I thought it was 500 million screaming Chinamen though. |
#21
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"AVENGE ME!" |
#22
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lol, fusilier's right
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#23
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It certainly would be interesting to know what being blasted back to the Middle Ages means. Of the nuclear-armed powers in 1997, China is probably in the best condition to endure a major nuclear attack. This is not to say that China would get herself back into the war anytime soon. Still, it would be interesting to have some ideas about what various parts of China look like in 2000.
__________________
“We’re not innovating. We’re selectively imitating.” June Bernstein, Acting President of the University of Arizona in Tucson, November 15, 1998. |
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#25
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I guess the first steps would be digging up a OOB for the PLA, and coming up with a target list for what was hit with nuclear weapons....hmmm....
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#26
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I thought I had some kind of Chinese OOB hanging around somewhere, had trouble finding it.
It also has some data about China's Air Force as well. I was trying to remember where I found it.....I think it was here LOL |
#27
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Quote:
__________________
“We’re not innovating. We’re selectively imitating.” June Bernstein, Acting President of the University of Arizona in Tucson, November 15, 1998. |
#28
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If we dont find one, Im starting work on one now.
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#29
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First draft. Sources from www.globalsecurity.org.
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#30
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Quote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ports_in_China (Granted some ports listed there may not have been large enough to warrant a nuke in 1997, but my understanding was also that China was hit harder than any other country, so I think even a moderately large port could well be a target). Also, it's not on the wiki list, presumably because of its status as a Special Administrative Region rather than part of the PRC proper, but I'd expect Hong Kong to be targetted at some point, either in July or November / December, (handover from the UK to the PRC was slated for 30 June 97 - I think it's reasonable that in the Twilight War timeline that could have been delayed, and am inclined to think that if HK was still a Crown Colony the Soviets might avoid targetting it in July as doing so would be an escalation of the nuclear exchange. Obviously that becomes a moot point from November onwards...)
__________________
Author of the unofficial and strictly non canon Alternative Survivor’s Guide to the United Kingdom |
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