Aurelin wrote:Johnston may of been a better commander than history shows. But, he didn't drive Lil Mac away from Richmond. He didn't save Vicksburg. He did hold Sherman from Atlanta, but sooner or later he would of lost the city anyway. And he didn't win his last battle either.
As a Field Marshall would say some 80 years later, "I'd rather lose a city than an army." I'm fairly certain Joe thought like that. Lincoln, Grant, Sherman thought that destroying the enemy army was far more important than taking a city, but that isn't the way the war was thought of by most.
But really, it's all academic anyway. Leader ratings, among other things, are subjective. I'm sure Runyon didn't just throw dice when deciding on the ratings. He did the research, and made the decisions.
Can two people look at the same research and come to two different conclusions? Sure they can. Damn, for all I know Joe Johnston may be one of his favorites.
But to cut the ramble short. Use his mod, don't use it. I doubt he'll lose sleep over it. But to attack him because you don't agree with how he rated one general is beyond contempt.
The best thing to do is rate him in your own game the way you want.
Actually, Johnston did stop McClellan's drive on Richmond. From most accounts, the Battle of Seven Pines convinced McClellan to stop his advances and he moved completely into a defensive posture. This battle was planned and run primarily by Johnston. Lee took over after G Smith broke down. Lee began this campaign after Johnston's actions. Who is to say what Lee would have done at the beginning? The fact is, Johnston retreated, and built up the strength of his force to equal that of his opponent, then he attacked.
Johnston planned to do so at Vicksburg, but, Pemberton refused to follow the plan. How can Johnston defeat Grant's army when he had a force equivalent to a weak Corps? Who could have done that? Seriously, Johnston never had a unified command as versitile as the Army of the Tennessee or Army of Northern Virignia when they were at their peak of efficiency.
The problem is, if you look at generals purely by what happened (ignoring the actual situations, and actual reality) we over-estimate some, and under-estimate others. That is what is truly being done here. We assume that Lee would have been more successful in all of Johnston's campaigns, ignoring the fact that Lee, for the bulk of his successful career, had the 'best' Confederate army under his command. Johnston was always in command of ad-hoc formations, which were quickly cobbled together from other commands (which never worked together before), or forces which had been demoralized from an eariler defeat. Lee's actions in the Peninsula were no better than Johnston's, and in some ways much worse (never before would Lee have such numbers, and his casualty lists were exceptionally higher than those of the Union). In fact, the Union 'won' the battle of the Peninsula while Lee was in command, except that McClellan retreated (Lee was lucky).
Hood also couldn't stop Sherman from taking Atlanta, yet, Hood is rated as a better commander than Johnston after the changes in the Leader Mod... Hmm... Makes me wonder why a BAD general is rated BETTER purely because he was more aggressive? Johnston kept his army together, and caused significantly more casualties (even based on ratio) than he recieved. His strategy was sustainable (Lee caused more causalties, but, his losses were not proportionately favourable). Johnston could win a war of attrition, Lee could not. Also, this is totally unfair, as Johnston was removed from command on the eve of one of HIS planned attacks! Totally unfair to say he was unaggressive, given that when he saw the time being correct, he WAS aggressive!
Johnston was balanced, not timid. Lee, Bragg, Hood were all reckless and extremely aggressive. In comparison, if you see Lee, Bragg and Hood as balanced, of course Johnston is timid. However, Johnston reminds me as someone as aggressive as General Meade. He attacks when he believes it is prudent, but defends when the situation calls for it (unlike the aformentioned Confederate leaders who attacked when they should have defended).