Author Topic: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)  (Read 1567 times)

Offline ghostdancer

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FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« on: November 21, 2010, 07:36:58 AM »
Adventure in the Dodecenes
Operation Accolade (1943)

PLAYBILITY NOTES
Several non-historical adaptations have been made to this campaign to make it playable for 400+ players.

1) Obviously the both sides had more planes involved in the battle than were historical available and involved in the battle for Dodecanese campaign in 1943.

2) British air assets were based out of Cyprus and later Kos. British Carriers were not involved in the scaled campaign of just invading the Dodecanese instead of the Dodecanese and Crete. British CVs have been added to the event to allow for flexibility and increase the theater of operations.

3) We do not have the appropriate British Carrier dive bomber so the SBD will be subbing for it.

4) Historically the Italian air assets in the Dodecenes and Greek theater were SM.79s, Cant.Z1007s, CR.42, and M.200s. For playability sake the Italians will be given
M.202s, M.205s, and Ju87s; all of which they operated at the time of their capitulation but in a different theater.

5) The theater of operations has been widen to the original goals of Accolade, which were Crete, the Greek Islands, and the Dodecenes islands.

6) The B26 and Mossie have been added to the British side. The British did not have bombers involved historically in this campaign except 3 days in October and 2 days in November. Beaufighters were used so the Mossie should be a decent replacement.

7) I have given the Germans 110G2 for balance purposes.

8) Historically P38s were involved in the campaign but only to cover the British withdrawal from the Dodecenes. So they will be available in frame 3


DESCRIPTION
With the defeat of Axis forces in North Africa in spring 1943, Winston Churchill advocated that the Allies should strike German forces in the Aegean next. He envisaged an operation to capture the Dodecanese and Crete which would not only deprive the Axis of excellent forward bases in the Mediterranean, but also apply pressure on neutral Turkey to join the war. In addition, this would also provide a supply route through the Dardanelles to Russia as an alternative to the current Arctic Convoys and route through Iran in use. At the Casablanca Conference, the initial go-ahead was given, and Churchill ordered his commanders to lay out relevant plans on 27 January 1943.

The plans, codenamed "Operation Accolade," called for a direct attack on Rhodes and Karpathos, with three infantry divisions, an armored brigade, and relevant support units. Landings at Crete were dropped because it was too well fortified and had a strong German garrison. The main problem faced by the planners was the difficulty of countering the X Fliegerkorps of the Luftwaffe because of a lack of air cover, since the allied aircraft were based in Cyprus and the Middle East. Demands for aircraft, supplies, ships, and troops for the upcoming invasion of Sicily further exacerbated operational planning for Accolade. The United States was also skeptical about the operation, which they regarded as aiming mostly at post-war political benefits for Britain, and an unnecessary diversion from the main front in Italy. Ultimately, the U.S. refused to support Operation Accolade and warned the British that they would have to go on alone.

As an Italian surrender became increasingly possible, in August 1943 the British started preparations to take quickly advantage of a possible Italian-German split, in the form of a scaled-down "Accolade". A force based on 8th Indian Division started being assembled, and America assistance in the form of P-38 Lightning long-range fighter squadrons was requested. As a result of the Quebec Conference however, and the American refusal to assist the British plans and the forces and ships earmarked for "Accolade" were diverted to other fronts, barely a week before the surrender of Italy on 8 September.

On the announcement of the Armistice, the Italian garrisons on most of the Dodecanese Islands either wanted to change sides and fight with the Allies or just return to their homes. However, in anticipation of the Italian surrender, German forces, based largely in mainland Greece, already had plans in placed to counter this and rushed to block the British from taking control of the islands as they launched operation Accolade.



PLANESET FOR THE FSO

BRITISH (Allied)
B-26B
Mosquito MK VI
P-38G (limited and only in Frame 3)
Spitfire V
Spitfire IX
Seafire II
SBD

ITALIAN (Allied)
C.202
C.205
Ju87D-3

GERMAN (Axis)
Bf 109G-2
Bf 109G-6
Bf 110G-2
Ju87D-3
Ju 88A-4
 
COUNTRY PERCENTAGES
The sides will be divided into roughly 49% Allies and 51% Axis, do to the Axis historically turning out slightly less than the allies in events.

 
SCORING

AIRCRAFT
05 pts - Single Engine AC with 1 crew
10 pts - Single or double engine AC with 2 crew
15 pts - Double Engine AC with 3+ crew

BASES
288 - Small Airfield
396 - Medium Airfield
572 - Large Airfield
219 - Vehicle Base

SHIPS
CV - 120 points
CA - 60 points
DD - 30 points

NOTE: When a base is attacked the attacker gets the points for objects destroyed at the base while the defender gets the points for all objects not destroyed at the base.

 
ARENA SETTINGS
- Greece
- Fuel 1.00
- Icons --> Friendly and Enemy 3K at all altitudes
- .5 Ack
- Radar: none
- Fighter and Bomber warning range 26,000 (about 5 miles)
- Tower range set to 26,000 (for display only to match the above setting)
- Clouds / visibility
  Frame 1, 11 miles
  Frame 2, 7 miles
  Frame 3, 8 miles
- Radar off
- Friendly collisions off
- Enemy collisions on
- Kill shooter off
- Calm winds
- Time: 11 AM
 
 
SPECIAL RULES
 
NOTE: special rules sent out with the objectives trump these special rules.

1. Nobody gets a second life.

2. Bomber formations are enabled for B26s and JU88s.

4. Partial damage is awarded for CV damage. If the a CV suffers 2000 lbs of damage  40 points are awarded. If a CV suffers 4000 lbs of damage another 40 points are awarded for a total of 80. If the CV is sunk the full amount of 120 points is awarded (the last 40 points is added to the previous 80).
 
5. A minimum and maximum number will be assigned to each aircraft type. The CiC of each side must deploy the designated minimum per aircraft type and can not more than the maximum per aircraft type. Outside of that the CiCs can deploy the aircraft types anyway the want (i.e. can have squads fly 2 aircraft types and in split they wish as long as squads are assigned same objective).

6. If both CiCs agree they may have the setup CM end the frame early. This is usually done if one side wipes out the other side (i.e. 60 versus 5).

7. Dead pilots may gun bombers. They may not man the guns of airfields or ships.

8. Ships can maneuver by the their side during the frame as long as they stay in their containment area. Ships must stay in containment area defined in the objective orders. If they go outside of the containment area a penalty will be assessed.

9. All targets must be attacked within the first hour of the event. Both CiCs should include sending their battle plans to me so that I have proof that they planned to attack their targets by T+60.

10. All attack targets assigned must be attacked by a credible force. I define a credible force to be at the very least 2 x 4-6 squads (so 8-12 planes) or 1 7x10 squad. Obviously CiCs can deploy a larger force per target as their plan dictates but no defending or attacking with just 1 x 4-6 squad.

11. All defense targets must be defended by a credible force. I define a credible force to be at the very least I define a credible force to be at the very least 2 x 4-6 squads (so 8-12 planes) or 1 7x10 squad.Obviously CiCs can deploy a larger force per target as their plan dictates but no defending or attacking with just 1 x 4-6 squad.

12. Bombing calibration will be MA norm.
« Last Edit: November 21, 2010, 07:39:06 AM by ghostdancer »
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Offline TUK

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #1 on: November 21, 2010, 10:56:03 AM »
Hey Ghostdancer. What is the Fso schedule gonna be like, as far as the dates go?   :salute
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Offline ghostdancer

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #2 on: November 21, 2010, 11:04:32 AM »
The FSO dates are:

FR1 - 12/3
FR2 - 12/10
FR3 - 12/17

So we are smack dab between the two holidays.
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Offline Ghosth

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #3 on: November 21, 2010, 10:43:52 PM »
Question, how can you include the Spit 9 for the allies and not have a German 190? Granted it should be a 190a3 or 4.

But wasn't the spit 9 developed as a direct result of the German deploying the 190A5?

Offline ghostdancer

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #4 on: November 22, 2010, 06:03:54 AM »
Ghosth I am doing that basically because that was what historically deployed. Remember this was not a major theater for the Germans. Their more advanced stuff was deployed in Italy, Russia, and France at this time. Greece only became active because Italy surrendered. The British also made the mistake of only deploying 2 Squadrons to the campaign. The other planes that became involved on their side were deployed to help cover their withdrawal.

X Fliegerkorps has 109G2 and 109G6 during the campaign. The British deployed two squadrons from Cyprus to Kos, 7th Squadron SAAF in Spit Vs and 74th Squadron RAF in Spit IXs. The frame setups will have more Spit Vs and Seafires required than Spit IXs to reflect that the older models were more available than the Spit IX in theater (with more Spit IXs going to Italy than Greece).

Now with all of this said I have already made some playability changes so I will see how frame 1 goes and reserve the right to readjust things if I deem it necessary.
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Offline Viper61

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #5 on: November 22, 2010, 03:03:11 PM »
So a mid war set up with early war AC..... so to speak.  Should be fun as long as the set ups remain pretty evenly divided and we all trust you on that GD.

I'm surprised the British didn't employ some Hurri's?  If so they would have been early war versions I am sure.

Offline Der Jude

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #6 on: November 22, 2010, 03:08:20 PM »
Your goin down Allies! :banana:
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Offline Dantoo

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #7 on: November 22, 2010, 08:09:02 PM »
Dodecanese.  Dodecene reminds me too much of organic chemistry back in the day.
« Last Edit: November 22, 2010, 08:13:12 PM by Dantoo »
I get really really tired of selective realism disguised as a desire to make bombers easier to kill.

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Offline Ghosth

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #8 on: November 23, 2010, 07:23:01 AM »
TY Ghostdancer for the explanation.

Seems like an unbalanced plane set but if that's what was there, ok.

Offline ghostdancer

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #9 on: November 23, 2010, 09:46:19 AM »
No problem Ghosth and as I said after I see actual results for frame 1 I will tweak if I deem necessary. And no, the Axis don't have enough Scotch to offer to get a 262 into the plane set. ;)
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Offline AKKuya

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #10 on: November 25, 2010, 09:24:03 AM »
I'm always curious as to why the Stuka is part of a planeset and never mandantarily used by the CM's.  Earlier this year, I had to privately PM the CM at the time to reduce the Ju-88's mininum to include the Stuka.  Any Early War set-up would handle the Stukas quite well and Mid War set-ups are still doable for the Stukas. 

Once a planeset is established, shouldn't all planes be required?
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Offline 007Rusty

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #11 on: November 25, 2010, 09:35:11 AM »
 :aok looks good  :salute  :cheers:
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Offline ghostdancer

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #12 on: November 25, 2010, 09:55:08 AM »
Depends on the designer. Sometimes planes are added just for flavor. Say in the case of 109G2 or 109F4. From my perspective as a designer it doesn't really change the balance of a frame if everybody goes with say an F4 over a G2. Of course this doesn't apply to Dodecenes.

In the case of this FSO I could have also included the F4F (Martlet) as well as the Seafire. Personally I would have been good if the Allies used mainly one or the other and if I included the Martlet it would just have been for flavor. I didn't because I decided not to muddy things up, so to speak.

As for the Ju87 their will be minimum requirements for both sides on its use. Plus, it is the only bomb carrying aircraft for the Italians.
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Offline RSLQK186

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #13 on: November 25, 2010, 10:14:48 AM »
Fond memory of a Stuka NOE that went well. Got in and tore the stat up. On the way out we fought I-16s. They were split up for scouting and came in pairs. The bulk of the defenders in newer AC had high 88s to contend with. We had the advantage of mass on the deck. Chewed them up and most of us got out with our airframes. There were landing points to be had and the long return flight negated a second strike.
But, we stayed in the air longer than usual, devastated the target and had a long drawn out dog fight. :aok
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Offline AKKuya

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Re: FSO December: Adventure in the Dodecenes (1943)
« Reply #14 on: November 25, 2010, 10:40:05 AM »
Just illuminating the fact that if there was a high contender for a bomber hangar queen for FSO, that the Stuka would be numero uno.
Chuck Norris can pick oranges from an apple tree and make the best lemonade in the world. Every morning when you wake up, swallow a live toad. Nothing worse can happen to you for the rest of the day. They say money can't buy happiness. I would like the opportunity to find out. Why be serious?