Gray Fox wrote:As an advocate of the Eastern strategy, here is what the plan is about...and not about.
1st - Fortify one entrenched mostly militia Division in St. Louis, Cairo, Evansville, Louisville, Cincinnati, Ashland, Parkersburg, Wheeling and Pittsburgh. Use a flatboat to contruct a depot in any of these cities that lacks one. Destroy all other depots west of Pittsburgh and east of the Dakotas. This should be completed in 1861 and would secure those Union states. A reserve stack of Union Divisions would be a reaction force to any Southern army trying to march through the midwest during the winter of '61/'62. The Union should still aim for VP parity, but the real fight is in the east.
2nd - With historical attrition on, small pointless battles all over the map add up to a large hole in your replacement bucket.
3rd - Vacuuming up garrisons seems like an exploit to me. I'd rather aim for the 50 NM value of the CSA capital.
I have an Army ready in the east that can get near Richmond in time, so I don't lose 10 NM for that. By summer 1862, my NM is 100. Also, 2 points of NM over 100 equals one point of increased production, cohesion etc. So 125 NM for the South would be 12.5%, not 25%. The South won't have that lead for long, since Richmond is worth more NM than all the western objectives combined. The eastern strategy concentrates on what is most important to the exclusion of what is not.
Guderian said, "Don't poke it with your finger, smash it with your fist!"
Gray Fox wrote:As an advocate of the Eastern strategy, here is what the plan is about...and not about....
Guderian said, "Don't poke it with your finger, smash it with your fist!"
Cardinal Ape wrote:Maneuvering out west can be great fun. It is one of the only places you can get a chance to use the 'ambush' special order to good effect.
As the CSA if you send Stand Watie those two cavalry brigades of four elements from Virginia as soon as possible you can get a full cavalry division ready for October of '61. Once Forrest gets his own cavalry division and starts to work in tandem with Watie is when the real pain is unleashed.
Gray Fox wrote: So 125 NM for the South would be 12.5%, not 25%.
charlesonmission wrote:In my PBEM AAR on YouTube against Ironclad, I was the CSA and spent a lot of time out west. Taking and holding Tuscon, Denver and the gold mines at Pike Peek. There is a lot there for the CSA just as there was historically. I think the CSA gives it up at their peril.
Gray Fox wrote:That would be true, except that I would have 100 NM by summer 1862 as the Union.
1stvermont wrote:thanks as always, but it unit description it says supply wagon "fast", if i am correct that was same as forrest units i had with him.
Cardinal Ape wrote:Gray Fox is the general the northern press wanted. Onto Richmond with a laser-guided sledgehammer. I enjoyed the All Eastern AAR. To me it proved that such a strategy is rather weak. It may work, but allowing the CSA to focus on one front is too big a boon to them. I prefer many little hammers all across the board - stretch them until they break.
Gray Fox wrote:I don't know who these Union players are that don't attack until 1863, but I certainly am not one of them. I attacked with Grant toward the CSA depot in Strasburg in December 1861. I continued to attack from that point on...in the east.
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