#31
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Quote:
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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 |
#32
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Speaking of Canada, does anyone have any TO&E information on them? Didn't see them represented in the NATO guide (can't say I looked hard ), and I know later in the Alaskan Campaign they team up with American stragglers to hold the border, so I can see them counter-attacking back into Alaska, full force.
Not that that information is needed now, but I was curious. |
#33
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There is a Challenge Magazine article I havent seen on Canada (Canada 2000 in issue 30) - does anyone have that?
Other than that there is only the one entry I have seen on Canada in Going Home with the unit that is stuck in Poland. I know there are other mentions too in Challenge Magazine but I havent seen them either - i.e. Red Maple and Native Canadian Ranger Regiment |
#34
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The Canadians on this board can provide much better info that what is in the 1st edition. It left out most of the Canadian militia (US National Guard/Reserve equivalent). There is also a Challenge T2k article floating around about Canadian Rangers, which is a reserve force that serves as guides and scouts when mobilized. A good number of Canadian Rangers are First Nation people (Native American/Indians in American speak). Oh and the Anglo German brigade comprised of British and German units stationed in Canada. -bdd |
#35
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Keep in mind that the US troops in Alaska were making attacks into Siberia before the Soviets invaded Alaska
if you look at the US Army Vehicle Guide those weekend warriors were pretty darn good troops i.e. 1ST INFANTRY BRIGADE (Arctic Recon) An Alaskan National Guard Brigade. The brigade came into federal service on 7/3/96 and assumed responsibility for local security and long range recon patrols along the Bering Straits. Throughout the last half of 1996 and the first half of 1997, the brigade mounted aggressive deep patrols across the Bering Strait into Soviet territory and fought numerous small actions with Soviet arctic forces. In June of 1997 the brigade repulsed a number of Soviet commando raids across the strait but was forced to withdraw westward after Soviet arctic mechanized units crossed to the U.S. side. Now if you are talking about the weekend warriors of the 47th that is a different issue i.e. 47TH INFANTRY DIVISION A National Guard Division consisting of the 1st (Minnesota NG), 34th (Iowa NG), and 66th (Illinois NG) Brigades. The division came into federal service on 11/1/96 and began deploying by air and sea to Fort Richardson, Alaska where it relieved the 6th Infantry Division (Light) of internal security duties. In July of 1 997 outposts of the division were attacked by Soviet Spetznaz units and shortly thereafter by elements of two arctic mechanized brigades. |
#36
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You are right about the NATO guide - missed that in my first search. One thing is that it mentions Canadian troops in action against the Soviets on the Pacific coast but then has them in the Maritimes and not the Pacific.
I think that they meant to put them in British Columbia and not the Maritimes. |
#37
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They just decided "Hell with this war!" and boogied on out.
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#38
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Actually I think they just messed up when they edited it - if I remember correctly those units they said were in the Maritimes are mentioned in other canon areas as being the units that engaged the Soviets in the Pacific.
if they did boogie thats a heck of a boogie - cant go much further unless you grab a trans-Atlantic ship. |
#39
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http://forum.juhlin.com/showthread.p...ght=Canada+OOB
http://forum.juhlin.com/showthread.p...ght=Canada+OOB
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************************************* Each day I encounter stupid people I keep wondering... is today when I get my first assault charge?? |
#40
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For a mech squad, the previously mentioned 47th ID is a more likely source -- at least for the vehicle. Of course, after the nukes and the fighting in theater, you could easily have some or all of one of 47th ID's mechanized battalions cut off with the rest of X Corps instead of withdrawn to the Pac Northwest.
Also, the T2K 10th Mountain Division was supposed to have one light motorized infantry battalion, which includes a company of LAV-25s, so that's an option. Or go with the idea that said battalion or the division's also-TK world light tank battalion got some M113s during reconstitution after the fighting in Norway. Quote:
Of the two divisions, 10th Mountain was the more capable option at the time when they needed troops for AK. That said, I question the idea of taking 6th ID(L) out of Alaska at all -- in a universe where the Soviets were actually capable of pumping a couple Armies across the Pacific into Alaska and Pacific Canada, I'm increasingly skeptical about the logic of having less than a Corps or so to meet them there. My personal order of battle for the region I've been pushing around on my hard drive for a while is X Corps made up of 6th ID(L), 47th ID reinforcing on mobilization, with 207th Infantry Group (Scout) and 208th Infantry Group (Lt Motorized) from the AK National Guard and 2nd Canadian Division. AK National Guard notes: In real life, the AK ARNG at the height of the Reagan years had six infantry battalions. One was a round-out unit for 6th ID (in addition to 205th Infantry Brigade, USAR). Another one (maybe even two) were mechanized formations (taking over the heavy role back in the day, I think, when 171st and 172nd Brigades reroled from mechanized to light in the early 70s. The remainder were very light organizations with a special MTOE for the "Scout" status. The six battalions are where I think GDW got their "1st & 2nd Infantry (Arctic Recon) Brigades," based on a list somewhere showing six battalions under 207th Inf Gp. Personally, I sort of split the difference between GDW and reality and posit the post-1991 continued military buildup in the T2K timeline (1st ed) you get 6th ID(L) replacing the AK ARNG round-out battalion with 1-172nd Infantry (Mtn) out of Vermont. With six battalions to work with, the AK ARNG fields 207th Infantry Group (Scout) as a true light infantry brigade, and 208th Infantry Group (Lt Motorized) basically filling the armored cavalry role for the the 6th ID + 47th ID corps sized formation that US Army Alaska (USARAL back then, USARAK nowadays) would field on full mobilization. 208th has a specialized MTOE consisting of two SUSV-mobile light motorized infantry battalions (AK NG) and a light armored/assault gun battalion and artillery battalion out of the Minnesota NG (the armor battalion, 2-94 AR is fictional, but the artillery battalion is one of the ones on the Nato 1989 orbat which doesn't seem to otherwise have a home anyway). Quote:
207th had an airborne reconnaissance unit (what would today be a LRSC, but back then I think they were called the 207th Light Recon Company (Abn) -- though by '95 "Long Range Surveillance" as a unit type might have been in the works) as well. |
#41
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Hmmm...that's a lot to mull over. I'll have to dip a little deeper and stir something up.
Worse comes to worse, everyone is Inuits! Dugouts versus Soviet Mechanized Divisions go! (Granted, that just be the 207th Scouts, but whatever) |
#42
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Inuit are Canadian, technically. Alaska eskimos are Inupiat (norther/northwestern part of the state) or Yupik (western Alaska). Both are very well represented in the modern day AK ARNG and the 207th back in the day, as well as Aleuts, Tlingits, and Athabascans (plus whatever other groups I'm maybe forgetting).
Lot of stories from back in the day about guys out in the Bush communities taking stuff home from drill -- like M60 machineguns -- just in case the Russians showed up unexpected. (And probably because if you could take a light machinegun home and keep it in your closet, wouldn't you?). Also some stories floating around about when they started reorganizing the AK ARNG after the end of the Cold War and shutting down some of the armories in smaller Bush villages (some stayed open even if not needed because they doubled as town hall, the local jail, community centers, or the local school's gym). I'm told they found a half dozen M14s in one that no one seemed to have paperwork on anymore, have heard similar stories about a BAR being found in the same sort of circumstances. No idea if that's real or mythology, but it is definitely a whole different world out in that part of Alaska, for the National Guard and everything else. |
#43
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Most definitely. Just in case y'know? You can never be too prepared.
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