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World War II
I thought the discussion in the "Historical Kalisz-type Scenarios" deserved it's own thread and since Kato isn't about....
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No matter how many Majors, Lt Colonels, and other "lesser" ranks believed, it was the Generals, etc who dictated "how things were". A shame, and one that wasn't corrected until the war was nearly won by the Germans (in other words, around late 1940 to 1941). There always has been, and always will be brilliant tacticians and strategists, but unfortunately because they think "outside of the box" they aren't listened to until hindsight shows them to be correct. Flawed wargames carried out in the 20's and 30's caused the British (and numerous other nations) to implement flawed tactics, strategy and equipment. The Germans (and a few other individuals) basically took a gamble on unproven theories and got it right when it mattered. If the allies had been working from the same book as the Germans, the war may well have been over almost before it started (or possibly turned into another bloodbath as two decades before, something EVERYONE wanted to avoid).
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
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Nice work. That WWII talk in the other thread was getting really dominant. If it stays in this thread at least I'll know where to avoid
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"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli |
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I agree with both of you. Got your point Leg.
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It happens to today. In 2005, I read about a wargame set in the Gulf in which a maverick Marine general controlled Iranian forces against a US carrier battlegroup. He managed to coordinate a massive missile attack and sink the carrier. His tactics? Decentralized control. What did the US team learn? Hit the reset button when it all goes bad.
Webstral |
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Webstral |
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But that's a matter for another thread. Back to the original point, it seems that "fixing" wargame results is one of the worst things military commanders can do. It troubles me that it still happens today.
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An Australian diesel powered sub, all by itself managed to sneak in, sink a US carrier and sneak out again completely undetected (besides the big BOOM and the umpires declaring the carrier sunk) in a wargame in the early 90's.
I think a number of the escort vessels were also "sunk". Makes you wonder how the US can claim to be so superior and unbeatable doesn't it?
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If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
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