John Sedgwick wrote:I'm a bit paranoid about losing control of the Mississippi.
John Sedgwick wrote:Also, about winning against the AI vs a human opponent, maybe you could elaborate on that? I'm guessing that's because the AI is easier to outsmart in the wide open west, while a human player will be much more of a threat in the east?
John Sedgwick wrote:@Jim: I think I'll try an embargo in my next campaign, right now I'm playing conservatively with the assumption that luck is not on my side. Seems like a lot of money to throw away on a maybe.
John Sedgwick wrote:As for bonds, I will probably switch to 8% from now on.
No need to worry about that. The AI rarely follows along the lines of the Anaconda plan. For example: In all my campaigns I have only once seen the AI conduct an amphibious assault on New Orleans. It was a lacklustre attempt with insufficient forces and aggression. If you get amphibious operations in the 61 campaigns it will most likely happen in the east (on the Peninsula, Norfolk or in North Carolina).
John Sedgwick wrote:Well, I started my campaign over again to apply some lessons learned, just finished that today. Boy, that was way too easy! The AI presented very little challenge at all, gonna have to crank up the difficulty I guess. I was pretty well prepared for Athena's seaborne invasions in NC and FL. Without really having planned on doing so, I went on the offensive in MO and KY and managed to take over most of the latter. And even on low aggression settings, the AI sent the Northeastern Virginia Army on a foolhardy romp behind my lines in VA, which allowed me to march on Washington almost unopposed, shattering Union morale and winning the war by late Nov, 1861. The CSA never even broke a sweat - only partial mobilization (in response to full Union mobilization), only 2-3% inflation, and I spent a ton of money on a navy I never got to use (actually I lost my entire Chesapeake Squadron in an attempt to blockade Fort Monroe)
Oh well, I guess PBEM is where it's at anyway.
So you used the strategic defensive to lure the enemy into over-reaching, while using your concentrated force to deliver a decisive counterthrust. How very Clausewitzian
John Sedgwick wrote:Well, I started my campaign over again to apply some lessons learned, just finished that today. Boy, that was way too easy!
Oh well, I guess PBEM is where it's at anyway.
John Sedgwick wrote:Oh, and I'll have you know that according to the Japanese army at least, the bayonet charge didn't become obsolete until 1945![]()
John Sedgwick wrote:Ah yes, I think I will try the '63 campaign next. '64 sounds almost masochistic - is a CSA victory still possible, do you think? Starving doesn't sound very fun but I'll certainly give it the old college try![]()
John Sedgwick wrote:Clausewitz' On War is not exactly an easy read, it's true, but there's a much deeper current of thought beneath the better known (and often misinterpreted) quotes. I suspect it has something to do with the German language? I've always found German literature of the period (with the notable exception, perhaps, of Goethe) is often convoluted and pedantic. But I wouldn't say Clausewitz was outdated, I mean much of his theory remains relevant today, for the same reasons we still read Sun Tzu. Put another way, you could say he was the least outdated military theorist by the mid 19th century?
Oh, and I'll have you know that according to the Japanese army at least, the bayonet charge didn't become obsolete until 1945![]()
OneArmedMexican wrote:As for Clausewitz, I believe he was already outdated during the civil war. It just took a lot of time until commanders realized that the time of bayonette charges and open field-battles was coming to an end and started digging trenches.
Anyways, the man's book is hardly digestible today and I suspect it never really was. It offers some nice quotes, though. And admittedly, a coherent theory on warfare during the Napolenic Age.![]()
Ace wrote:64 Campaign is still winnable, but only on 64´ elections event, do not aspect a total victory.
John Sedgwick wrote:Thanks for the replies. Fired up the '63 campaign and having a blast, haven't gotten very far yet but it looks like my original strategic concept will be much better suited to this scenario.
Cromagnonman wrote:Clausewitz isn't even outdated now, much less in the late 19th Century.
Cromagnonman wrote:Despite the advantages of defending an entrenched position, the rebels were able to win a large number of offensively-fought battles on their home turf, largely due to moral and intelligence advantages derived therefrom.
OneArmedMexican wrote:How did you manage to save your troops from starving? More often than not, I had to abandon positions simply because of pending starvation.
OneArmedMexican wrote:My original statement was intended to get a rise out of people (which it achieved). I believe however that the deeper thought behind it is valid: Due to the increase in firepower of rifles and guns, Clausewitz' concepts had - at least in part - become obsolete. I agree that many of his general thoughts on warfare (friction, defence, nature of war) kept their validity. But at the same time, Clausewitz's more concrete lessons had become a dangerous trap. The time of advances across open fields in closed formations was over. Defence in trenches, or behind stonewalls (see Fredericksburg) was a lot more powerful and man-power preserving.
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Sure, Lee and his Lieutenants won an astonishing series of battles in the East. But those were Phyrric victories. With few exceptions (most notably Fredericksburg which used a stonewall as ad hoc trench), they came at a price the South couldn't afford. Warfare à la Hood was a luxury that eventually doomed the South.
OneArmedMexican wrote:How did you manage to save your troops from starving? More often than not, I had to abandon positions simply because of pending starvation.
I truely like that scenario, too. My personal, favorite is the '62 campaign, though. If I want a bigger challenge, I switch to '63.
Defending Mississippi and Louisiana is tough. In Texas I usually switch to hit-and-run tactics. It is very satisfying to see the tide turn eventually.
My original statement was intended to get a rise out of people (which it achieved). I believe however that the deeper thought behind it is valid: Due to the increase in firepower of rifles and guns, Clausewitz' concepts had - at least in part - become obsolete. I agree that many of his general thoughts on warfare (friction, defence, nature of war) kept their validity. But at the same time, Clausewitz's more concrete lessons had become a dangerous trap. The time of advances across open fields in closed formations was over. Defence in trenches, or behind stonewalls (see Fredericksburg) was a lot more powerful and man-power preserving.
As concerns, Clausewitz in todays world. I really can't agree. More than twenty years ago, van Creveld wrote a whole book explaining why Clausewitz' view on armed conflict is outdated vis-à-vis modern warfare. The framework just doesn't fit anymore. War is no longer war between states on open battlefields, but counter-insurgency operations and low-intensity conflicts.
Sure, Lee and his Lieutenants won an astonishing series of battles in the East. But those were Phyrric victories. With few exceptions (most notably Fredericksburg which used a stonewall as ad hoc trench), they came at a price the South couldn't afford. Warfare à la Hood was a luxury that eventually doomed the South.
As concerns, Clausewitz in todays world. I really can't agree. More than twenty years ago, van Creveld wrote a whole book explaining why Clausewitz' view on armed conflict is outdated vis-à-vis modern warfare. The framework just doesn't fit anymore. War is no longer war between states on open battlefields, but counter-insurgency operations and low-intensity conflicts.
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