Saturday, February 28, 2004
Allies holding the line strong, even in off-peak. Why?
Allied Headquarters :: View topic - Allies holding the line strong, even in off-peak. Why?
It's the 10/60 rule.
No supply after a town is captured for 10 minutes.
Full supply takes 60 minutes.
Meaning once a town falls no one is attacking OUT of it for an hour at LEAST, and a quick counter attack within 5 minutes can RETAKE the town.
This all means that cascade failure's don't happen. Key towns falling dosn't automaticalty mean all the towns near by also fall, giving defenders more TIME.
Time is what is slowing the map.
ALSO, the 20 minute timer to TAKE a city means a lot more attacks are pushed to attriton of ALL armour, where as before 15 minutes you might still have a lot of armour left after the town falls. Hecko, any town under attack can now get armour resupply to it BEFORE THE TABLE COMES UP, paerticvaly the french with the Sturt and Panhard! Not to mention ar support.
The ONLY city I've seen to fall from overwelm,ing panzer numbers with allied air overhead was Namur the last time, because there was so many airplanes in the sky from both sides, the 64 limit meant you couldn';t see the 20 panzers in each AB. Attacks THAT big from both sides are very rare.
Thursday, February 26, 2004
Got this off the aviation newsgroup.
Musings of a helo driver...
Anything that screws its way into the sky flies according to unnatural
principals.
You never want to sneak up behind an old, high-time helicopter pilot
and clap your hands. He will instantly dive for cover and most likely
whimper...then get up and smack you.
There are no old helicopters laying around airports like you see old
airplanes. There is a reason for this. Come to think of it, there are not
many old, high-time helicopter pilots hanging around airports either so the
first issue is problematic.
You can always tell a helicopter pilot in anything moving: a train, an
airplane, a car or a boat. They never smile, they are always listening to
the machine and they always hear something they think is not right.
Helicopter pilots fly in a mode of intensity, actually more like "spring
loaded", while waiting for pieces of their ship to fall off.
Flying a helicopter at any altitude over 500 feet is considered
reckless and should be avoided. Flying a helicopter at any altitude or
condition that precludes a landing in less than 20 seconds is considered
outright foolhardy.
Remember in a helicopter you have about 1 second to lower the
collective in an engine failure before the craft becomes unrecoverable. Once
you've failed this maneuver the machine flies about as well as a 20 case
Coke machine. Even a perfectly executed autorotation only gives you a glide
ratio slightly better than that of a brick. 180 degree autorotations are a
violent and aerobatic maneuver in my opinion and should be avoided.
When your wings are leading, lagging, flapping, precessing and moving
faster than your fuselage there's something unnatural going on. Is this the
way men were meant to fly?
While hovering, if you start to sink a bit, you pull up on the
collective while twisting the throttle, push with your left foot (more
torque) and move the stick left (more translating tendency) to hold your
spot. If you now need to stop rising, you do the opposite in that
order.Sometimes in wind you do this many times each second. Don't you think
that's a strange way to fly?
For Helicopters: You never want to feel a sinking feeling in your gut
(low "g" pushover) while flying a two bladed under slung teetering rotor
system. You are about to do a snap-roll to the right and crash. For that
matter, any remotely aerobatic maneuver should be avoided in a Huey.
Don't push your luck. It will run out soon enough anyway.
If everything is working fine on your helicopter consider yourself
temporarily lucky. Something is about to break.
Harry Reasoner once wrote the following about helicopter pilots: "The
thing is, helicopters are different from planes. An airplane by its nature
wants to fly, and if not interfered with too strongly by unusual events or
by an incompetent pilot, it will fly. A helicopter does not want to fly. It
is maintained in the air by a variety of forces and controls working in
opposition to each other, and if there is any disturbance in this delicate
balance the helicopter stops flying; immediately and disastrously. There is
no such thing as a gliding helicopter. This is why being a helicopter pilot
is so different from being an airplane pilot, and why in generality,
airplane pilots are open, clear-eyed, buoyant extroverts and helicopter
pilots are brooding introspective anticipators of trouble. They know if
something bad has not happened it is about to."
Having said all this, I must admit that flying in a helicopter is one
of the most satisfying and exhilarating experiences I have ever enjoyed:
skimming over the tops of trees at 100 knots is something we should all be
able to do at least once.
And remember the fighter pilot's prayer: "Lord I pray for the eyes of
an eagle, the heart of a lion and the balls of a combat helicopter pilot."
Many years later I know that it was sometimes anything but fun, but
now it IS something to brag about for those of us who survived the
experience.
[un]official WWIIOL Player Made Movies
WWII Online :: View topic - [un]official WWIIOL Player Made Movies
maigrey
WWIIOL BUILDER
Joined: 04 Feb 2003
Posts: 8740
Location: Maryland, USA
Posted: 26 Feb 2004 02:54
Post subject: [un]official WWIIOL Player Made Movies
Anyone have WWIIOL Movies? Post em here. I'll start with the ones that I have hosted.
>232 Traning (by 14th MID EU)<
>2nd Infantry Brigade Recruiting Movie (by White Falcons)<
>DKM Killer (by Killer)<
>Dirty Harry (by White Falcons)<
>Armee<
>Assault Trailer<
>Brothers In Arms (by Lafayette Federation)<
>Chariots On Fire (by White Falcons)<
>DHE Recruiting Movie (by DHE Japan)<
>Entry1<
>Feature (by Feature)<
>A Day in the Life of a French Officer<
>Jap1 (by DHE Japan)<
>Promo-Contest1 (by Vanner)<
>Reserved<
>Stayin' Alive (by White Falcons)<
>Unforgotten (by Flakii)<
>Woo Hoo (by Vanner)<
Added:
>The Vanguard (by Nickdow)<
>Dunkirk (by Flea)<
>A Leisurely Jog (by Tonynerd)<
>Stuka Symphony (by Vanner)<
Monday, February 23, 2004
This is too easy
OKW / German High Command Forums :: View topic - Camping depots:
von Ick wrote:
WHERE ARE THE RULES THAT FORBID US TO DENOUNCE ALLIED CAMPRS AND TAKE ACTION AGAINST THEM ?
I'll just point out that you had TWENTY FIVE panzers camping Asshort yesterday....though with only one inf at a time trying to get the spawnable (I was the SMG who killed the first 2 from the inside), and after the camping panzers blew up the Diest flag building, it was never going to work.
Though to be fair, because we couldn't get OUT of the Diest depot due to the 6 or so PZ's around it, we were going to camp the depot from the inside if you ever managed it. It was either stay IN the depot or run outside and get shot. So we mostly stayed in.
3CD Gallery :: A Newbie Guide to WWIIOL :: 8
3CD Gallery :: A Newbie Guide to WWIIOL :: 8
The rest of the alphabet is at WillyT's newbie page.
Sunday, February 22, 2004
WWII Online :: View topic - Gembloux: OUTSTANDING example on why the ALLIES can win!
WWII Online :: View topic - Gembloux: OUTSTANDING example on why the ALLIES can win!
I'm confused. Sounds like you guys are discussing two different battles.
The inital allied attack that took it.
A later german failed attempt at taking it.
I wasn't at the 2nd one, but I lead the armour that camped the AB in the first one.
Here's the play by play replay:
We had so many tanks avilable after Jogidne fell we were able to get 10 tanks (4 crusanders, 4 matties, 1 a13, 1 vicky) to move to attack Gelmoblx. The infantry and a few tanks (there was only 4 vickies and 4 a13's avilable) came from Wavre and attmpted to take the North Xroad depots.
During all this, RAF units cirleced the town and acted as recon.
The armour coloum arrived at the AB. All good. 88's are IN the AB when we arrive, so I deploy the armour to surrond the AB on all sides. RAF and French DB7's and Bell's preocded to bomb the bejezzes out of the AB.
The TWO infatry we brought from Jogdine (which because we had just taken, didn't have much inf avilable) took the South namur Depot. There was no enemty defenders reported. The original plan was for the infantry to come down from the north to take the Namur depot, but the lack of axis defenders meant we could go for it now.
MEANWHILE....the infantry and light armour attack at the N Xroads ends in failure 4 times. Infantry commander reports to me that his men are drunk (I guess taking Jogdine got them all happy).
So we set up camp OUTSIDE the AB and our 2 inf guard the S depot to watch out flank. Allied air totally owns the AB, though odd relays of 109's show up after 5 minutes. The luftwaffe is cleared from the sky outnumbered 3-1.
FIANNLY the Xroads are secured so I order in the tanks to enter the AB. A 38t hiding under a tree kills a few tanks (me included) but is unable to stop the avalance into the army base. The AB is secured by about 10-15 allied tanks.
Aprox 10 minutes later (and about 40 minutes into the attack), the AB falls. Axis Panzer counter attacks from Samberville are seen by allied air and bombed to pieces. A few panzers arrive in the south end of town just before I ordered the armour in to the AB, but are swiftly dispacted by crusaders and/or allied air.
After that, we went and took the N AB Charleoi, and 4 hours later, allied honor was restored when Chareloi was captured by BEF units.
I'm not surprised that allied air stopped the german counter attack. Brussels is quite close (even if it is missing it's CAS Havocs right now) as is Mauberge. However, what's really hurting the axis right now is the Luftwaffe deciding to go on holiday. *I* arranged fro RAF CAP and CAS before we went near the city. Appenrtly this isn't possible with the Luftwaffe these days eh?
Saturday, February 21, 2004
Honor? The GHC and axis do not know the meaning of the word!
Allied Headquarters :: View topic - Charleroi caped by bottom-hats while server down
wdwm
BEF Lt. General
Joined: 05 Jan 2004
Posts: 15
Posted: Sat Feb 21, 2004 1:02 pm
Post subject: My apologies to the ALlied player base.
You guys acted with honour and paitience, not that I would expect anything less. Unfortunatley we was all betrayed by the ranking Axis officer at the time.
I will never again be able to trust anything from GHC. I just feel like kicking myself now, the worst thing was listening to thier "compromise" for Charleroi.
They actually wanted us to take just two West depots and the two AB's. But then we let them recap the SAB. So we would never of owned the town back and would of had to fight just as if we had never had it. All they had to do is retake NAB to be able to spawn there! But we couldnt even do this because of the Axis cowards who kept killing our cappers.
On top of this they blew 2 of our FB's and lined up Pzrs on West side of town ready for when we did cap!
Sorry this has left a bad bad taste in my mouth. Again I apologise to the Allies especially the officers who stopped easy caps on Kalmthout, Jodoigne and Chimay.
We kept our honour and integrity at least. Maybe one day it will rub off on the Axis players who need it the most.
_________________
Regards,
wdwm
Whinemarch in full swing
WWII Online :: View topic - VIDEO PROOF OF 20mm PORKAGE II:
"Where the heck where all you whiners during the last THREE YEARS of bugged HE? Where were your movies? You're proof? You're ability to get something 'fixed' in 2 weeks?
You guys have no credibility with me. None. You had three years to show up and you did not care. You didn;t care about 109s out turning hurricanes. You didn't care about bugged HE.
Somethings bugged? Fine, it'll get fixed in the normal course of time. Rembemer, it's the pilot, not the plane after all. You drilled THAT into the allied players heads often enough."
Friday, February 20, 2004
WWII Online :: View topic - relax guys it could be worse. (pic inside)
WWII Online :: View topic - relax guys it could be worse. (pic inside)

GHC goes on power hungry insanity trip
Allied Headquarters :: View topic - Results of a Summary Court-Martial
!S All
It is my duty to inform the Kriegsmarine that Kapitan zur See CMC has been found guilty by a Summary Court-Martial of the following offenses:
1. Treason
2. Espionage
3. Willful and Deliberate Disobedience of the OKW Code of Conduct
4. Willful and Deliberate Disobedience of the KM Code of Conduct
5. Aiding and Abetting the Enemy
6. Conduct Unbecoming an Officer of the Kriegsmarine
It was brought to the attention of the Admiralstab that KzS CMC on Sunday, 15 Feb 2004, while under an OKW Red Alert, did spawn as an allied pilot and did attack members of the Kriegsmarine engaged upon missions deemed vital to operations of the KM, specifically KzS Bluedry. Upon reviewing his CS&R, this is not the first time he has done such.
Having been found guilty on all counts by a Summary Court-Martial, it is my duty as Oberbefehlshaber der Marine to pronounce sentence.
KzS CMC, you are sentenced to be stripped of all rank, badges and insignias distinguishing you as a member and officer of the Kriegsmarine.
You will forthwith be escorted to the Dachua Military Prison, where you will be shot.
May God have mercy on your soul.
_________________
Großadmiral Utcloud
Oberbefehlshaber der Marine
Oberkommando der Wehrmacht
My reply is...
JEZZEZE!!
You mean to tell me the GHC WANTS side locking? That's it's an offence to play ALLIED during code red? That'll you'll be kicked out of the GHC for DARING to ATTACK a SINGLE GERMAN UNIT??!?!?
Quote:
I have no tolerance for traitors, nothing can make me more lividly irate then a back-stabber. But that is just my own idiosyncracy. Each of us is certainly welcome to his/her own opinion, though. In fact, have 2 opinions! They're cheap!
Not so. CRS has givin you, as a member of the HC's a role, duty and POWER. You opionions may be cheap...you're action in this case seems to be very very expensive.
Is this the point I can demand CRS REMOVES CODE RED?
----------------------------
utcloud wrote:
In this particular case, a member of the KM actively and aggressively, with knowledge a forethought, attacked his shipmates.
And what pray tell, is a non-active attack going to BE? Dropping bombs on you're prodcution facilties and hope no EA is over head? Only allowed to spawn allied if he DOSN'T kill ANY axis units?
"knowledge and forethought"?? What, you mean you can attack something in WW2OL accidently?? Cool, when did the rats put THAT into the game???
Quote:
Now, you may be beholding to the Machiavellian tenet that "all's fair in love and war" but I wonder how many members of a rugby team would condone a member of their squad to score 194 points for the opposing teams, while scoring only 14 for their own? not to mention while scoring such points for the other team, passes along the play book of his supposed "teammates"?
Did he use knowlage gained from secure GHC commincations and tell ALLIED PLAYERS of an operation? Did he listin in you're in game radio or TS and then go allied for the express purpose of stopping that attack? If so, fine, he's a spy we can all agree on, and people like that should not be in command postions on ANY HC.
BUT TO STOP SOMEONE PLAYING FULLY 1/2 OF THE GAME BECAUSE YOU'RE IN "CODE RED" IS NOT VALID.....in my opinion.
Quote:
I agree, it is, after all, just a game; but then again, so is rugby and football.
He pays the same money as you do. Only CRS has givin YOU power and responibility over HIM.
Was this power used in a respobile manor in this case?
Currently I don't have all the facts of this case, but cases like THIS seem to me WHY some people are very worried about Brigade Deployment. CRS has stated repeatly you'll get 9 'personas' with deploylment, though if you're an officer you won't be able to be an officer for BOTH sides.
This does not seem be the case here. An officer of one side choose to play on the other side and get some kills. If that is the case, it should NOT be grounds for pemenemnt dismissel this seems to be.
Allied OR Axis.
Thursday, February 19, 2004
WWII Online :: View topic - Geebus another cute one!
WWII Online :: View topic - Geebus another cute one!
Dunno where they came from, but darn, that's CUTE.
Asia Times Online - The trusted news source for information on Japan
Japan builds Super Dimensional Fortress in Iraq
It's been almost a month since Japanese troops went to the southern Iraqi city of Samawah on a humanitarian mission that is taking place in a dangerous country where guerrillas target troops allied with the United States. So far so good for Japan, despite a couple of mortars fired downtown - although fortunately not at Japanese troops. Yet, in order to protect them, Japan will confine many soldiers to one of the most high-tech and expensive military camps ever constructed, one that includes a karaoke bar, massage parlor and gymnasium. Some of the facilities and gadgets in the ultra-advanced base will rival those used by the fictional hero Superman in his futuristic hideout, the Fortress of Solitude.
Click on above link to see full story.
The pitch
Scene: HUMMEL has used his l33t photoshop skills to shoot down all the other allied pilots in his Soopermarine Spitfire XXIV.
Hummel: BHWHAHHA, I am l33T! I have PROVEN the Spitfire is overmodeled and must be nurfed immidalty!
ZOOM.
Shot of: DOC flying a Ta152 is watching from on high.
NEXT SCENE: Hummel is doing acrobatics.
DOC: lines him up with the 4(?) cannons on the top of the line Fulk Wulf,
DAKKA DAKKA DAKKA DAAKA.
Hummel: WHAT?! NO! IT CANNONT BE!?! WHERE THE **** did DOC get a 1945 model FW190!?!?
DOC: I *made* this world smartass. Don't play with the bigboys.
HUMMEL does down in flames.
------------
Hmm, need a better last line for DOC.
Elf Only Inn - Friday, October 11, 2002
Elf Only Inn - Friday, October 11, 2002
For some reason, this comic game me the idea of doing a webcomic based on the WW2OL fourms.
Characters include Hummel (he of the bad photoshop), okiemoe (naive german wanker), DEADLOCK (comander Capslock himself), del369 (allied propoganda), Hathchicken (no one calls him by his real name). shilling (axis propoganda and evil bad guy), tarrif (clueless axis troll), ireg (axis aremennts ministr and man in charge of runing allied equimpent), ring (man who proves axis equiompent is supriori to 21st century US Army/Ait Force), THE FAMOUS BILTON (50,000 kills, and counting, no deaths yet), caine007 (his cries of Allied pilot armour are never heard), osasis (real life israli commando and special; operations soper spy, killed by a REAL memmber of the militry such as kk or richo), bushman (why DID he stop making movies?) and of course, the rats (rickb the phycists always bemoaning having to talk to people way over thier heads, hatch who must moniter the boards, iller and other others.
Elf Only Inn
Elf Only Inn
Amazing, Penny Arcade gives out a good link for once. I think I saw it a long time ago but didn't bother to read the background.
I've now read the last year or so and it's now going on my list of daily webcomic links to read (updates 3 days a week but I'll be clicking daily).
I cured myself of my IRC addiciton during Uni...which is one of the reasons I failed uni I might add. This comic makes me want to go back dammit.
It needs a sim player...and I'm not talking about THE Sims. Someone who can tell the difference between the F-16 in Falcon 4.0 and the real F-16 C Block 52 with XXXX engine.
8/10.
More from Dubbya
"More from the mouth of George W Bush, president of the largest nation in the free world ...
'One of the most meaningful things that's happened to me since I've been the governor ... the president governor ... president ... ex-governor. I went to Bethesda Naval Hospital to give a fellow a Purple Heart, and at the same moment I watched him get a Purple Heart for action in Iraq and at that same right after I gave him the Purple Heart, he was sworn in as a citizen of the United States a Mexican citizen, now a United States citizen.'
Washington, D.C., Jan. 9, 2004
'The best way to find these terrorists who hide in holes is to get people coming forth to describe the location of the hole, is to give clues and data.'
Washington, D.C., Dec. 15, 2003
'This very week in 1989, there were protests in East Berlin and in Leipzig. By the end of that year, every communist dictatorship in Central America had collapsed.'
Washington, D.C., Nov. 6, 2003
'The ambassador and the general were briefing me on the vast majority of Iraqis want to live in a peaceful, free world. And we will find these people and we will bring them to justice.'
Washington, D.C., Oct. 27, 2003
'See, free nations are peaceful nations. Free nations don't attack each other. Free nations don't develop weapons of mass destruction.'
Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 3, 2003
'I glance at the headlines just to kind of get a flavor for what's moving. I rarely read the stories, and get briefed by people who have probably read the news themselves,'
Washington,D.C., Sept. 21, 2003
'We had a good Cabinet meeting, talked about a lot of issues. Secretary of State and Defense brought us up to date about our desires to spread freedom and peace around the world.'
Washington, D.C., Aug. 1, 2003
'Security is the essential roadblock to achieving the road map to peace.'
Washington, D.C., July 25, 2003
'Our country puts $1 billion a year up to help feed the hungry. And we're by far the most generous nation in the world when it comes to that, and I'm proud to report that. This isn't a contest of who's the most generous. I'm just telling you as an aside. We're generous. We shouldn't be bragging about it. But we are. We're very generous.'
Washington, D.C., July 16, 2003
'It's very interesting when you think about it, the slaves who left here to go to America, because of their steadfast and their religion and their belief in freedom, helped change America.'
Dakar, Senegal, July 8, 2003
'I'm also not very analytical. You know I don't spend a lot of time thinking about myself, about why I do things.'
aboard Air Force One, June 4, 2003
'I've got very good relations with President Mubarak and Crown Prince Abdallah and the King of Jordan, Gulf Coast countries.'
Washington, D.C., May 29, 2003
'First, let me make it very clear, poor people aren't necessarily killers. Just because you happen to be not rich doesn't mean you're willing to kill.'
Washington, D.C., May 19, 2003
'We ended the rule of one of history's worst tyrants, and in so doing, we not only freed the American people, we made our own people more secure.'
Crawford, Texas, May 3, 2003
'You're free. And freedom is beautiful. And, you know, it'll take time to restore chaos and order. But we will.'
Washington, D.C., April 13, 2003
'The war on terror involves Saddam Hussein because of the nature of Saddam Hussein, the history of Saddam Hussein, and his willingness to terrorize himself.'
Grand Rapids, Mich., Jan. 29, 2003
'One year ago today, the time for excuse-making has come to an end.'
Washington, D.C., Jan. 8, 2003"
For those of you who haven't seen the structural damage yet...
QuaserX hadn't seen the damage model until now. He took a Pic.
That IS part of the wing headed towards his windscreen....
Tuesday, February 17, 2004
And now, for some political comment
Lean Left: Iraq War Refresher Course
Or in other words, The Total Obliteration of Bush's Justifications.
WWII Online :: View topic - Excellent job in the North!
WWII Online :: View topic - Excellent job in the North!:
rommel76 wrote:
Hehe, rolling thru Namur last night was some big fun.
Yes, having the abillty to CAMP a 2 AB town AND HAVE ENOUGH PLANES IN THE AIR SO ALLIED BOMBERS CANNOT SEE ANY GROUND TARGETS must be a wounderful....feeling.
I was on the ground at the N AB when the panzers rolled in, and saw the 15 or so.
5 minutes later I was in the air above it in a Hurri trying to act as a FAC for incoming bombers. I could not see ONE PANZER in the AB due to the 64 limit. Neither could the bombers. They dropped on the AB anyway, and did nothing.
Tactical Surpiority my ass :(
WWII Online :: View topic - Great Job Axis Frankforce DESTROYED
WWII Online :: View topic - Great Job Axis Frankforce DESTROYED: eggert wrote:
Even before that, several British infantry came within rifle range of Vnkruger's 88 before I advised Ltforce that I could no longer guarantee the 88's safety. In the meantime, Vnkruger scored several kills on Matildas while the British infantry declined to open fire on him.
AFAIK, No British Infantry SAW the 88's. I saw one being towed at long range. As I moved towards it, the 88 dissapered, though I could see the half track.
Can you think of ANY REASON WHATSOEVER WHY WE WOULDN'T SHOOT AT AN 88!?!?!?!?! EVERY one of us knew our primary targets were 88's above any other consideration.
See my Grassy Knoll post. :("
Monday, February 16, 2004
Cute trick.
WWII Online :: View topic - Fun things for infantry to do...Please list yours.:
"tooky
Joined: 30 Jun 2001
Posts: 1029
Location: Texas! It's a whole 'nother state of mind!
Posted: 16 Feb 2004 00:52
Post subject: Fun things for infantry to do...Please list yours.
Find a quiet front line town with a Forward Base opened and no missions posted. Post a squad mission from the FB to the city flag building.
Take your mission and spawn a sapper. By foot sneak into the town. It is best to get into a hiding place within about 300m of a depot to set of the Early Warning System. Wait till the enemy has a chance to check the flag buildings for you and then they will leave.
By using the red pointer on the map find your way to the city flag. Be careful of the A.I. gunners. Once you find the city flag building place a charge on it. Go and hide and say 'fire in the hole' to your buddies. After city flag building blows up you find a good sniper positions and wait.
Find a sniper position in a tree or building looking down on the table in the flag building. When they try to recapture the flag you shoot them.
It is always a good idea to switch sniper positions after each kill.
If you get several of your buddies to help you this can be a real blast. It can be a lot fun especially if you are using a voice com system.
Please list the things you like do as infantry in this game."
Allied Headquarters :: View topic - BEF cannot advance witout Osstmalle
Allied Headquarters :: View topic - BEF cannot advance witout Osstmalle
I'd post this in the BEF staff fourms...if I had access.
The BEF cannot advance without Osstmalle.
You cannot hold Namur (we just lost it) without Andenne.
You cannone hold Andenne without St trudien/Hannur/Boiultout AND Huy.
You cannot hold Engezze without St Trudien because you cannot stop the 30 panzers from Hannut.
You cannot hold St T with the rest of the iron triangle.
You cannot hold the Iron trinagle without Diest.
You cannot hold Diest without Paal.
You cannot hold Paal without Geel.
You cannont hold Paal without Turnout, or at least a FB to Turnout that stays open most of the time.
You cannot hold Turnout without Osstmale being allied first.
You cannot hold Wurstwesel without Osstmale.
You cannot ATTACK Osstmale without Grob, Shilde, Wustwesel.
You cannot hold Kalthout without Wustwesel.
In fact the ONLY town you CAN hold is BOZ, but only if you hold Kalmouth to keep Rossendale busy.
In Summary: Unless we take and hold Kalmouth, Wurstwesel, Grobendonk AND OSSTMALLE, the BEF cannot advance anywhere ELSE.
FrankFARCE followup.
WWII Online :: View topic - Great Job Axis Frankforce DESTROYED
sprouto wrote:
Perhaps the most intetesting observation I can make about the scenario is that the Allies seemed 'timid'. It was over 30 minutes into the scenario before we saw the first enemy unit. By that time we were able to control a ridgeline, just outside of Arras, that we fully expected the Allies to be in total control of. Instead, the Allies seemed to be concerned with defending Arras, setting up ATG and AA on the edge of town, and not with commanding the approaches to the objective zone. Perhaps this is just the 'mindset' of many of the players, and I can understand that.
Ahem. Unlike the german set up, OUR tanks started at a rear town and took 45 minutes to GET to Arras. We HAD to defend the Bridges to prvent the overwelming panzer attack (12 panzers vs 2 AT guns and 1 truck!) we all feared...which never happened. You seemed to be more concenred with defending the Xroads timdly rather than doing any recon in force that would have spelt disatser long before the matties would have arrived. Perhaps it was you're mindset.
There weren't any vickies avilable either, so the only recon forces avilable to the allies were the infantry, which DID move south of Arras. 2 of my platoons did so, one to the hill S and one on the south side of Arras. Both took caustiles from panzers south of Arras, and having no way to reply, fell back into the south side of Arras. Thier job was to warn us if there was to be any enemy attack on Arras. We had pretty good recon reports on all the german panzers near Arras because of that...but AFAIK, no one ever saw a deployed 88, we just saw the matties blow up for no particaly reason.
I do give credit, with only 2 88's they were used quite well. I would have liked to see them in action though. We thought it was 8 88's from the ammout of matties killed by them.
Sunday, February 15, 2004
Here's what I would have done for Frankfarce
Here's what *I* would do should you ever allow a player run event to happen.
2 platoons (8) vickies plus 2 battalions (10+10) of matties and 2 battalions of infantry (20+20) plus 8 AT guns and 8 beddys spawn IN ARRAS.
2 battalions (20+20) of German infantry and 8 PAK GUNS + 8 opels ONLY spawn at the SE forward base (the W and S FB are down and/or non-spawnable).
12 German Panzers (4 PZIII, 4 38t, 4 PZII) spawn in the town to the SW and must DRIVE to the Xroads (with 1 company (10) of infantry)
8 German 88's and 1 battalion (20) of infantry + 6 1/2 tracks and 4 251's spawn at the town SOUTH of the Xroads and must drive to the Xroads. Prefby this infantry unit will only be allowed tyo open up when the Xroad defenders are at least 1/2 full.
The event goes for 3 hours.
This will result in the allied armour initally overwelming the german Xroad defence (possiblu) before the german counter attack from 2 different directions arivve to possibly crush the allied defence.
Both sides get to attack AND defend. Both sides need to use recon units.
What killed the event for me was ther 64 limit that means my battalion could NEVER SEE the 88's, little lone shoot them. The above solution would hopefully prevenet that sort of thing from happening.
BTW, the event web page is down. I wish to sign up for the next event.
WWII Online :: View topic - Great Job Axis Frankforce DESTROYED
WWII Online :: View topic - Great Job Axis Frankforce DESTROYED: "vnkruger wrote:
I wish we could see some AARs from the Allied Royal Tank guys. If this was, indeed, what happend, that goes a long way to explain why they didn't react when they came under fire from my 88.
I'd also like to know why the dismounted infantry didn't scout forward of the tanks. Had they done so, mine and the other 88's could have been forced to move.
I am of course, restricted by megadeath from saying much, but my AAR for the infantry battalion that was with the 7th Armoured is here.
There was 2 problems.
The matties ran out of time. One squad was with them but got killed as they advanced into the enemy lines SW of ther Xrossroads. They never saw what hit them. The battle was ending in 20 minutes and they needed to advance 100 meters to get near enough the crossroads. It was decided to move them in before the infantry could sweep in front of them.
I arrived with the rest of ther battalion a few minutes later, there was aprox 6 matties still alive. Every one bar one was deestroyed in front of my eyes, and I never saw what hit them. They just despawned and blinmked out (I saw one flame).
A litle while later I *DID* see a half track towing an 88. As he got closer, the 88...dissapered. I thought at the time it wasd detatched, but it's obvious now that it dissapered due to the 64 limit :(.
Oh, and abiout the comment about 'shame they had to camp the FB'....The FB was BEHIND the matties. I HAD to detach people to watch it. I would have LOVED to destory it, but I didn't have enough sargents able tp spawn sappers! So it was either camp it or let enemy units spawn in behind the matties. I was somewhat surprised to see no enemy units were defending it (though the matties had JUST passed it at that point, so perhaps they destroyed the defenders?). I only had 11 people out of 20 show up, and 2 AT guns out of 4 to support me. The original orders said I would have 3 sappers, so I always assumed I would have to camp the FB, rather than blow it. Ended up there was *5* sappers avilable, but I couldn't spawn them all in at once.
I HAD sent ONE man to the SW town to cap the Arras spawnable to cut supply. It took him 90 minutes to discover it was uncappable :(.
WWII Online :: View topic - Frankforce: The grassy knoll
WWII Online :: View topic - Frankforce: The grassy knoll
Well I had a good time.
Deployed the battalion to Arras west bridge and the south side with recon squads. They took some causlaties to panzer fire so pulled back to the buildings.
Moved SW as orded by command because the armour was arriving. Slid SW on foot for 2km while under enemy observation. The atatched 2 pounders fired a few ineffective shots.
I sent the scout platoon off to see if they could revendaous with 7th armoued (they did). Took a risk because time was short and got everyone on the truck and raced South.
Overran the SW Forward Base and arrived on the back of 7th armoured.
Just one small problem. I saw 4 matties blink out (1 flamed, the rest just despawned)...and never saw anything kill them. I was standing within 15 feet and were looking directly at 2 of them when they died.
The 64 limit I presume? It was wierd. I tell the battalion "OK, GUARD THIS TANK". We surrond it, and it dies. Move onto next tank, say the same thing, and it dies. We die, respawn, get in a truck, come down to the Xroads, and it happens again. Surrond the Matty, see no enemy fire whatsoever, and the matty despawnes in front of my eyes.
Perhaps I carried bad luck, 'cause every tank I deployed to protect, died from a sniper on the gassy knoll.
I am no one way shape or form do I wish to ciritizize or complain to the the SET team, Megadeath, the axis forces, the allied forces, mother nature, Muphy or God*.
It was just weird. Havn't seen something like that happen on the regualr server for a long long time.
I did have fun, and will be attending the next event. The command and control was exxcelent, and the way everyone in my battalio MOVED and acted was above repoach and some of the best I've ever seen in WW2Ol. It was a great pleasure commanding and seeing you all. Thank you, members of 150th Brigade.
-------------
* - Because to do so means you will not be allowed to play in any other scenerio's. Rembemer this quote:
Quote:
f you signup for this scenario, its under the understanding that you accept the premise and the rules. Public complaints about the scenario, personal attacks on the SET team, or other unpleasant behaviour will result in you not having access to future SET events.
Friday, February 13, 2004
Allied Headquarters :: View topic - Real men of Genius: Havok Pilot
Allied Headquarters :: View topic - Real men of Genius: Havok Pilot: "dusek
Joined: 08 Aug 2003
Posts: 40
Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2004 7:03 am
Post subject: Real men of Genius: Havok Pilot
Today we salute you Mr. Havok Pilot.
Some people go for the fast and sleek fighter planes, but not you. If it doesn't have twin engines and a load of bombs, it's not your plane.
Today, you get a special treat, the Visual Damage system for allied aircraft was only applied to your plane.
That's right, foget about the hundreds of other friendly aircraft in the air, all the enemy fighters are comming for you.
Fat chance buddy, your not fast and sleek like the others. No sir. The enemy will be flying behind you and shooting at various parts of your aircraft and oooohhh and aaawwwweeeeing at the pieces that fly off.
Forget it, your fighter cover is to busy chasing the Bf110 with the visual damage model shooting off parts of it.
Opps, haven't implemented that yet. Your stuck in the flaming wingless plane all the way to the ground.
Today we salute you Havok pilot, without you we wouldn't get to see a plane fall apart in the air.
James Dusek"
Geekist Fark discussion, ever
FARK.com: Comments Thingee (831238)
The attacker obviosuly was only level 2 or so, as he seems to be missing the Point Blank Shot feat. With only a +2 to his attack role (assuming he dosn't have higher dex) it was always going to be tough to hit a high level (10?) US General, although he was able to not worry about -4 for firing into a close combat.
I disagree on a savings throw ruling, a RPG is an aimed, targted weapon with little to no blast raidis (it's designed to punch a hole, not explode like a grenade), though if the general was in a drivin vechile at the time, the driver would need to make a reflex save to keep control of the vechile.
Don't even START trying to calculate this in GURPS though, or we'd be here for half an hour.
-----------------------------------------
And to complete my geekiness, if he's using the new IG codex, he must be wearing a refractive +5 invunrable field (avilable to officers only, so as a Heroic Senior Officer he's entilited to it), the RPG would count as a Missle Laucncher, and it was obviosuly firing a Krak Missle.
--------------------------------------------
If Fark ever wanted to draw out all the gaming geeks to eliminate them in one swoop, this threas did it. I applud that headline.
What DOES this guy want?
WWII Online :: View topic - well, what can i say?:
"What the heck IS the 'North Central AO' anyway? Sounds like Diest and St Trudien.
Or are you talking about Namur/Prof/Anhee?
Or mabye Geel?
Not that you actually come out and SAY whatever it is you're accusing whoever it is wherever it is of doing whatever it is you think they did or did not do at some point in time, at some place, on one side or the other.
Mabye you should ask George W Bush for HIS records at the time? Mabye he's the one responsible.
Personlly it sounds like to me you're not taking towns with the IIIH like you expected would happen?"
Thursday, February 12, 2004
1.12 damage model explained
vdm.swf (application/x-shockwave-flash Object)
The worlds SLOWEST flash movie goes into excruatinging detail of the new damage model.
Interesting. VERY interesting.
WWII Online :: View topic - German Numbers Superiority Exacerbated by Speed Advantage
WWII Online :: View topic - German Numbers Superiority Exacerbated by Speed Advantage:
"This is too easy.
mariness wrote:
-Stuka isn't superior over the DB7 or Havoc
Which is of corse why you're now supporting the immidate introduction of the Welligton to match the He111 I presume?
Quote:
-German fighter (109) is a better climbing fighter; the 110 is NOT superior.
The stat's show it's is superior, slighty over the Spitfire. The Hurriance is slighty better than the 110, but completly outmatched by the 109.
Quote:
-Yes, only we have cannons, but obviously not for long. PS: Your MG fire is pretty destructive against axis planes -- cannons will only improve it.
Yes, you have cannons, and you won't be able to kill allied armour with them in a grossly unmatched unhistortical and unlegel fashion.
And I'm glad you support the removal of the Stuka's Gunner armour, Gunner's dead body and pilot armour.
Quote:
The S35, H39, and R35 is not much slower than Pzs, and the Char is a Char....
HA HA HA HA he he he he he HA HA HA HA HAR HAR HARDY HAR HAR!
The R35!?!??!!?!? You can WALK faster than that thing!
Quote:
Without RDP, the Germans have a speed advantage, but not an air advantage.
Ahaha, so you DO support the total elimination of the Stuka! WTG!"
Wednesday, February 11, 2004
Non-Standard Units of Measurement
Non-Standard Units of Measurement:
"Non-Standard Units of Measurement
(Handy Engineering Conversions)
* Ratio of an igloo's circumference to its diameter: Eskimo Pi
* 2000 pounds of Chinese soup: Won ton
* 1 millionth mouthwash: 1 microscope
* Speed of a tortoise breaking the sound barrier: Mach Turtle
* 365.25 days of drinking low-calorie beer because it's less filling: 1 lite year
* 16.5 feet in the Twilight Zone: 1 Rod Sterling
* Half of a large intestine: 1 semicolon
* 1000 aches: 1 megahurts
* Weight an evangelist carries with God: 1 billigram
* Basic unit of laryngitis: 1 hoarse power
* Shortest distance between two jokes: A straight line
* Time between slipping on a peel and smacking the pavement: bananosecond
* 10 cards: 1 decacards
* 1 kilogram of falling figs: 1 Fig Newton
* 1000 grams of wet socks: 1 literhosen
* 1 million microphones: 1 megaphone
* 1 million bicycles: 2 megacycles
* 500 millinaries: 1 seminary
* 2000 mockingbirds: 2 kilomockingbirds
* 1/2 lavatory: 1 demijohn
* 1 millionth of a fish: 1 microfiche
* 453.6 graham crackers: 1 pound cake
* 1 trillion pins: 1 terrapin
* 100 rations: 1 C-ration
* 10 rations: 1 decoration
* 1 million billion piccolos: 1 gigolo
* 10 millipedes: 1 centipede
* 3 dents: 1 trident
* 3 1/3 tridents: 1 decadent
* 2 monograms: 1 diagram
* 8 nickels: 2 paradigms
* 105 dollars = 1 Millicent
* 1012 antellas = 1 tarantella
* 109 antics = 1 gigantic
* 100 tics = 1 hectic
* 10 aides = 1 decade
* 1000 female sheep = 1 milieu
* 2 doctors = 1 paradox
* 100 Senators: Not 1 decision
* 2.4 statute miles of intravenous surgical tubing at Yale University Hospital: 1 I.V. League
* 365.25 days: 1 unicycle
* Time it takes to sail 220 yards at 1 nautical mile per hour: Knot-furlong (say it out loud)
"
WWII Online :: View topic - Prayer to the great Biltonshakalaka
WWII Online :: View topic - Prayer to the great Biltonshakalaka:
"Bilton, O great one, steady my aim,
so that my bullets may find my enemy,
the evil Shillingbooboopow,
and destroy him swiftly.
May I be forever invisible to the evil gray metal beasts,
with their powerful telescopes,
that they may not find me behind my grassclump,
and strike me down with their laserbeams.
I ask this in the name of the Great One,
the One who roams the battlefield unseen,
and keeps me under his great wings,
the Great Biltonshakalaka."
The Gamer's Nook - I'll need a fortitude saving throw, please!
The Gamer's Nook
Try this at home, the office, or on the train
Posted by Scott
Via Teresa Neilsen Hayden comes this neat little stumper:
This is kind of dumb, but fun. While sitting in your chair, lift your right foot slightly off the ground and move it in clockwise circles. Now draw the numeral “6” in the air with your right hand. Your foot will involuntarily reverse direction.
Found via Boing Boing as well.
Filed under Weird
08:38 AM | Comments (4) | Followups (0) | Link me, Seymour!
Weird. It works too.
Tuesday, February 10, 2004
This is well writtin
I did not write this of course, but very amusing.
----------------------------------------------
To The Barricades!
The Ultimate Defense of Marriage Amendment
Draft of a Constitutional Amendment to Defend Biblical Marriage:
1) Marriage in the United States of America shall consist of a union between one man and one or more women. (Gen 29:17-28; II Sam 3:2-5.)
2) Marriage shall not impede a man's right to take concubines in addition to his wife or wives. (II Sam 5:13; I Kings 11:3; II Chron 11:21)
3) A marriage shall be considered valid only if the wife is a virgin. If the wife is not a virgin, she shall be executed. (Deut 22:13-21)
4) Marriage of a believer and a non-believer shall be forbidden. (Gen 24:3; Num 25:1-9; Ezra 9:12; Neh 10:30)
5) Since marriage is for life, neither the US Constitution nor any state law shall permit divorce. (Deut 22:19; Mark 10:9-12)
6) If a married man dies without children, his brother must marry the widow. If the brother refuses to marry the widow, or deliberately does not give her children, he shall pay a fine of one shoe and be otherwise punished in a manner to be determined by law. (Gen. 38:6-10; Deut 25:5-10)
7) In lieu of marriage (if there are no acceptable men to be found), a woman shall get her father drunk and have sex with him.(Gen 19:31-36)
8) Congress shall have the power to enforce this Amendment by legislation.
(Thanks to my friend Anita)
Posted by Stephen at 04:11 PM | Comments (5)
---------------------------------------------------------
VERY amusing WW2OL movies. Rat Approved.
A leisurely jog, found from HERE.
Judge and Gerry. Found from here. Based on the old Sheep Dog and Wolf Warner Brothers cartoons. Best of the 3 IMHO.
Dances with Lone Wolves. Found from HERE Another one based on Loony Tunes, but I thinj the 2nd one was the best.
They are low detail to be small to download, so you might need to crank up the gamma to see them correctly. Ther're each about 2-3 minutes in size, and not large to download.
I give them 9/10, they got me to laugh out loud.
Keep the FB's open.
Keep the FB's allied.
Sure it means some blue tags will take a Crusader and waltz into the AI and die.
But it ALSO means some blue tage will wzltz into the DEPOT and take the spawnable.
And if the FB's are german, they do EXCATLTY the same thing.
Which do you prefer, germans taking our spawnable depots, or our guys taking thiers?
The answer is obvious. Keep the FB's allied and you FORCE the germans to attack only 1-2 towns while WE are free to do WHATEVER WE WANT.
Freedom to attack and freedom FROM needing to defend wins you the game. It's that simple, and you cannot argue aginast this.
_____________
Monday, February 09, 2004
WWII Online :: View topic - Iraq and the hidden euro-dollar wars by F. William Engdahl
No link to the original articale, but a VERY interesting read.
When I make my Dues Ex III, this will be my plot.
WWII Online :: View topic - Iraq and the hidden euro-dollar wars by F. William Engdahl
Despite the apparent swift U.S. military success in Iraq, the U.S. dollar has yet to benefit as safe haven currency. This is an unexpected development, as many currency traders had expected the dollar to strengthen on the news of a U.S. win. Capital is flowing out of the dollar, largely into the Euro. Many are beginning to ask whether the objective situation of the U.S. economy is far worse than the stock market would suggest. The future of the dollar is far from a minor issue of interest only to banks or currency traders. It stands at the heart of Pax Americana, or as it is called, The American Century, the system of arrangements on which America's role in the world rests.
Yet, even as the dollar is steadily dropping against the Euro after the end of fighting in Iraq, Washington appears to be deliberately worsening the dollar fall in public comments. What is taking place is a power game of the highest geopolitical significance, the most fateful perhaps, since the emergence of the United States in 1945 as the world's leading economic power.
The coalition of interests which converged on war against Iraq as a strategic necessity for the United States, included not only the vocal and highly visible neo-conservative hawks around Defense Secretary Rumsfeld and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz. It also included powerful permanent interests, on whose global role American economic influence depends, such as the influential energy sector around Halliburton, Exxon Mobil, Chevron Texaco and other giant multinationals. It also included the huge American defense industry interests around Boeing, Lockheed-Martin, Raytheon, Northrup-Grumman and others. The issue for these giant defense and energy conglomerates is not a few fat contracts from the Pentagon to rebuild Iraqi oil facilities and line the pockets of Dick Cheney or others. It is a game for the very continuance of American power in the coming decades of the new century. That is not to say that profits are [not] made in the process, but it is purely a byproduct of the global strategic issue.
In this power game, least understood is the role of preserving the dollar as the world reserve currency, as a major driving factor contributing to Washington's power calculus over Iraq in the past months. American domination in the world ultimately rests on two pillars -- its overwhelming military superiority, especially on the seas; and its control of world economic flows through the role of the dollar as the world's reserve currency. More and more it is clear that the Iraq war was more about preserving the second pillar -- the dollar role -- than the first, the military. In the dollar role, oil is a strategic factor.
American Century: the three phases
If we look back over the period since the end of World War II, we can identify several distinct phases of evolution of the American role in the world. The first phase, which began in the immediate postwar period 1945-1948 and the onset of Cold War, could be called the Bretton Woods Gold Exchange system.
Under the Bretton Woods system in the immediate aftermath of the World War, the order was relatively tranquil. The United States had emerged from the War clearly as the one sole superpower, with a strong industrial base and the largest gold reserves of any nation. The initial task was to rebuild Western Europe and to create a NATO Atlantic alliance against the Soviet Union. The role of the dollar was directly tied to that of gold. So long as America enjoyed the largest gold reserves, and the U.S. economy was far the most productive and efficient producer, the entire Bretton Woods currency structure from French Franc to British Pound Sterling and German Mark was stable. Dollar credits were extended along with Marshall Plan assistance and credits to finance the rebuilding of war-torn Europe. American companies, among them oil multinationals, gained nicely from dominating the trade at the onset of the 1950's. Washington even encouraged creation of the Treaty of Rome in 1958 in order to boost European economic stbility and create larger U.S. export markets in the bargain. For the most part, this initial phase of what Time magazine publisher Henry Luce called 'The American Century', in terms of economic gains, was relatively 'benign' for both the U.S. and Europe. The United States still had the economic flexibility to move.
This was the era of American liberal foreign policy. The United States was the hegemonic power in the Western community of nations. As it commanded overwhelming gold and economic resources compared with Western Europe or Japan and South Korea, the United States could well afford to be open in its trade relations to European and Japanese exports. The tradeoff was European and Japanese support for the role of the United Sates during the Cold War. American leadership was based during the 1950's and early 1960's less on direct coercion and more on arriving at consensus, whether in GATT trade rounds or other issues. Organizations of elites, such as the Bilderberg meetings, were organized to share the evolving consensus between Europe and the United States.
This first, more benign phase of the American Century came to an end by the early 1970's.
The Bretton Woods Gold Exchange began to break down, as Europe got on its feet economically and began to become a strong exporter by the mid-1960's. This growing economic strength in Western Europe coincided with soaring U.S. public deficits as Johnson escalated the tragic war in Vietnam. All during the 1960's, France's de Gaulle began to take its dollar export earnings and demand gold from the U.S. Federal Reserve, legal under Bretton Woods at that time. By November 1967 the drain of gold from U.S. and Bank of England vaults had become critical. The weak link in the Bretton Woods Gold Exchange arrangement was Britain, the 'sick man of Europe'. The link broke as Sterling was devalued in 1967. That merely accelerated the pressure on the U.S. dollar, as French and other central banks increased their call for U.S. gold in exchange for their dollar reserves. They calculated with the soaring war deficits from Vietnam, it was only a matter of months before the United States itself would be forced to devalue againstgold, so better to get their gold out at a high price.
By May 1971 the drain of U.S. Federal Reserve gold had become alarming, and even the Bank of England joined the French in demanding U.S. gold for their dollars. That was the point where rather than risk a collapse of the gold reserves of the United States, the Nixon Administration opted to abandon gold entirely, going to a system of floating currencies in August 1971. The break with gold opened the door to an entirely new phase of the American Century. In this new phase, control over monetary policy was, in effect, privatized, with large international banks such as Citibank, Chase Manhattan or Barclays Bank assuming the role that central banks had in a gold system, but entirely without gold. 'Market forces' now could determine the dollar. And they did with a vengeance.
The free floating of the dollar, combined with the 1973 rise in OPEC oil prices by 400% after the Yom Kippur War, created the basis for a second phase of the American Century, the Petrodollar phase.
Recycling petrodollars
Beginning the mid-1970's the American Century system of global economic dominance underwent a dramatic change. An Anglo-American oil shock suddenly created enormous demand for the floating dollar. Oil importing countries from Germany to Argentina to Japan, all were faced with how to export in dollars to pay their expensive new oil import bills. OPEC oil countries were flooded with new oil dollars. A major share of these oil dollars came to London and New York banks where a new process was instituted. Henry Kissinger termed it, 'recycling petrodollars'. The recycling strategy was discussed already in May 1971 at the Bilderberger meeting in Saltsjoebaden, Sweden. It was presented by American members of Bilderberg, as detailed in the book Mit der Ölwaffe zur Weltmacht.[1]
OPEC suddenly was choking on dollars it could not use. U.S. and UK banks took the OPEC dollars and relent them as Eurodollar bonds or loans, to countries of the Third World desperate to borrow dollars to finance oil imports. The buildup of these petrodollar debts by the late 1970's laid the basis for the Third World debt crisis in the 1980's. Hundreds of billions of dollars were recycled between OPEC, the London and New York banks and back to Third World borrowing countries.
By August 1982 the chain finally broke and Mexico announced it would likely default on repaying Eurodollar loans. The Third World debt crisis began when Paul Volcker and the U.S. Federal Reserve had unilaterally hiked U.S. interest rates in late 1979 to try to save the failing dollar. After three years of record high U.S. interest rates, the dollar was 'saved', but the entire developing sector was choking economically under usurious U.S. interest rates on their petrodollar loans. To enforce debt repayment to the London and New York banks, the banks brought the IMF in to act as 'debt policeman'. Public spending for health, education, welfare was slashed on IMF orders to ensure the banks got timely debt service on their petrodollars.
The Petrodollar hegemony phase was an attempt by the United States establishment to slow down its geopolitical decline as the hegemonic center of the postwar system. The IMF 'Washington Consensus' was developed to enforce draconian debt collection on Third World countries, to force them to repay dollar debts, prevent any economic independence from the nations of the South, and keep the U.S. banks and the dollar afloat. The Trilateral Commission was created by David Rockefeller and others in 1973 in order to take account of the recent emergence of Japan as an industrial giant and try to bring Japan into the system. Japan, as a major industrial nation, was a major importer of oil. Japanese trade surpluses from export of cars and other goods was used to buy oil in dollars. The remaining surplus was invested in U.S. Treasury bonds to earn interest. The G-7 was founded to keep Japan and Western Europe inside the U.S. dollar system. From time to time into the 1980's various voices in Japan would call for three currncies -- dollar, German mark and yen -- to share the world reserve role. It never happened. The dollar remained dominant.
From a narrow standpoint, the Petrodollar phase of hegemony seemed to work. Underneath, it was based on ever-worsening economic decline in living standards across the world, as IMF policies destroyed national economic growth and broke open markets for globalizing multinationals seeking cheap production outsourcing in the 1980's and especially into the 1990's.
Yet, even in the Petrodollar phase, American foreign economic policy and military policy was dominated by the voices of the traditional liberal consensus. American power depended on negotiating periodic new arrangements in trade or other issues with its allies in Europe, Japan and East Asia.
A Petro-euro rival?
The end of the Cold War and the emergence of a new Single Europe and the European Monetary Union in the early 1990's, began to present an entirely new challenge to the American Century. It took some years, more than a decade after the 1991 Gulf War, for this new challenge to emerge full-blown. The present Iraq war is only intelligible as a major battle in the new, third phase of securing American dominance. This phase has already been called, 'democratic imperialism', a favorite term of Max Boot and other neo-conservatives. As Iraq events suggest, it is not likely to be very democratic, but definitely likely to be imperialist.
Unlike the earlier periods after 1945, in the new era, the U.S. freedom to grant concessions to other members of the G-7 is gone. Now raw power is the only vehicle to maintain American long-term dominance. The best expression of this argument comes from the neo-conservative hawks around Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, William Kristol and others.
The point to stress, however, is that the neo-conservatives enjoy such influence since September 11 because a majority in the U.S. power establishment finds their views useful to advance a new aggressive U.S. role in the world.
Rather than work out areas of agreement with European partners, Washington increasingly sees Euroland as the major strategic threat to American hegemony, especially 'Old Europe' of Germany and France. Just as Britain in decline after 1870 resorted to increasingly desperate imperial wars in South Africa and elsewhere, so the United States is using its military might to try to advance what it no longer can by economic means. Here the dollar is the Achilles heel.
With creation of the Euro over the past five years, an entirely new element has been added to the global system, one which defines what we can call a third phase of the American Century. This phase, in which the latest Iraq war plays a major role, threatens to bring a new, malignant or imperial phase to replace the earlier phases of American hegemony. The neo-conservatives are open about their imperial agenda, while more traditional U.S. policy voices try to deny it. The economic reality faced by the dollar at the start of the new Century, defines this new phase in an ominous way.
There is a qualitative difference emerging between the two initial phases of the American Century -- that of 1945-1973, and of 1973-1999 -- and the new emerging phase of continued domination in the wake of the 9.11 attacks and the Iraq War. Post-1945 American power before now was predominately that of a hegemon. While a hegemon is the dominant power, in an unequal distribution of power, its power is not generated by coercion alone, but also by consent among its allied powers. This is because the hegemon is compelled to perform certain services to the allies such as military security or regulating world markets for the benefit of the larger group, itself included. An imperial power has no such obligations to allies, and not the freedom for such, only the raw dictates of how to hold on to its declining power -- what some call 'imperial overstretch'. This is the world which neo-conservative hawks around Rumsfeld and Cheney are suggesting America has to dominate, with a policy of pre-emptive war.
A hidden war between the dollar and the new Euro currency for global hegemony is at the heart of this new phase.
To understand the importance of this unspoken battle for currency hegemony, we first must understand that since the emergence of the United States as the dominant global superpower after 1945, U.S. hegemony has rested on two unchallengeable pillars. First, the overwhelming U.S. military superiority over all other rivals. The United States today spends on defense more than three times the total for the entire European Union, some $ 396 billion versus $118 billion last year, and more than the next 15 largest nations combined. Washington plans an added $ 2.1 trillion over the coming five years on defense. No nation or group of nations can come close in defense spending. China is at least 30 years away from becoming a serious military threat. No one is serious about taking on U.S. military might.
The second pillar of American dominance in the world is the dominant role of the U.S. dollar as reserve currency. Until the advent of the Euro in late 1999, there was no potential challenge to this dollar hegemony in world trade. The Petrodollar has been at the heart of the dollar hegemony since the 1970's. The dollar hegemony is strategic to the future of American global predominance, in many respects as important if not more so, than the overwhelming military power.
Dollar fiat money
The crucial shift took place when Nixon took the dollar off a fixed gold reserve to float against other currencies. This removed the restraints on printing new dollars. The limit was only how many dollars the rest of the world would take.
By their firm agreement with Saudi Arabia, as the largest OPEC oil producer, Washington guaranteed that the world's largest commodity, oil, the essential for every nation's economy, the basis of all transport and much of the industrial economy, could only be purchased in world markets in dollars. The deal had been fixed in June 1974 by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, establishing the U.S.-Saudi Arabian Joint Commission on Economic Cooperation. The U.S. Treasury and the New York Federal Reserve would 'allow' the Saudi central bank, SAMA, to buy U.S. Treasury bonds with Saudi petrodollars. In 1975 OPEC officially agreed to sell its oil only for dollars. A secret U.S. military agreement to arm Saudi Arabia was the quid pro quo.
Until November 2000, no OPEC country dared violate the dollar price rule. So long as the dollar was the strongest currency, there was little reason to as well. But November was when French and other Euroland members finally convinced Saddam Hussein to defy the United States by selling Iraq's oil-for-food not in dollars, 'the enemy currency' as Iraq named it, but only in euros. The euros were on deposit in a special UN account of the leading French bank, BNP Paribas. Radio Liberty of the U.S. State Department ran a short wire on the news and the story was quickly hushed.[2]
This little-noted Iraq move to defy the dollar in favor of the euro, in itself, was insignificant. Yet, if it were to spread, especially at a point the dollar was already weakening, it could create a panic selloff of dollars by foreign central banks and OPEC oil producers. In the months before the latest Iraq war, hints in this direction were heard from Russia, Iran, Indonesia and even Venezuela. An Iranian OPEC [un]official, Javad Yarjani, delivered a detailed able of how OPEC at some future point might sell its oil to the EU for euros not dollars. He spoke in April, 2002 in Oviedo Spain at the invitation of the EU. All indications are that the Iraq war was seized on as the easiest way to deliver a deadly pre-emptive warning to OPEC and others, not to flirt with abandoning the Petro-dollar system in favor of one based on the euro.
Informed banking circles in the City of London and elsewhere in Europe privately confirm the significance of that little-noted Iraq move from petro-dollar to petro-euro. 'The Iraq move was a declaration of war against the dollar', one senior London banker told me recently. 'As soon as it was clear that Britain and the U.S. had taken Iraq, a great sigh of relief was heard in London City banks. They said privately, "now we don't have to worry about that damn euro threat"'.
Why would something so small be such a strategic threat to London and New York, or to the United States that an American President would apparently risk fifty years of alliance relations globally, and more to make a military attack whose justification could not even be proved to the world?
The answer is the unique role of the petro-dollar to underpin American economic hegemony.
How does it work? So long as almost 70% of world trade is done in dollars, the dollar is the currency which central banks accumulate as reserves. But central banks, whether China or Japan or Brazil or Russia, do not simply stack dollars in their vaults. Currencies have one advantage over gold. A central bank can use it to buy the state bonds of the issuer, the United States. Most countries around the world are forced to control trade deficits or face currency collapse. Not the United States. This is because of the dollar reserve currency role. And the underpinning of the reserve role is the petrodollar. Every nation needs to get dollars to import oil, some more than others. This means their trade targets dollar countries, above all the U.S.
Because oil is an essential commodity for every nation, the petrodollar system, which exists to the present, demands the buildup of huge trade surpluses in order to accumulate dollar surpluses. This is the case for every country but one -- the United States which controls the dollar and prints it at will or fiat. Because today the majority of all international trade is done in dollars, countries must go abroad to get the means of payment they cannot themselves issue. The entire global trade structure today works around this dynamic, from Russia to China, from Brazil to South Korea and Japan. Everyone aims to maximize dollar surpluses from their export trade.
To keep this process going, the United States has agreed to be 'importer of last resort' because its entire monetary hegemony depends on this dollar recycling.
The central banks of Japan, China, South Korea, Russia and the rest all buy U.S. Treasury securities with their dollars. That in turn allows the United States to have a stable dollar, far lower interest rates, and run a $ 500 billion annual balance of payments deficit with the rest of the world. The Federal Reserve controls the dollar printing presses, and the world needs its dollars. It is as simple as that.
The U.S. foreign debt threat
But, not so simple perhaps. This is a highly unstable system, as U.S. trade deficits and net debt or liabilities to foreign accounts are now well over 22% of GDP as of 2000, and climbing rapidly. The net foreign indebtedness of the United States -- public as well as private -- is beginning to explode ominously. In the past three years since the U.S. stock collapse and the re-emergence of budget deficits in Washington, the net debt position, according to a recent study by the Pestel Institute in Hanover, has almost doubled. In 1999, the peak of the dot.com bubble fury, U.S. net debt to foreigners was some $ 1.4 trillions. By the end of this year, it will exceed an estimated $ 3.7 trillion! Before 1989, the United States had been a net creditor, gaining more from its foreign investments than it paid to them in interest on Treasury bonds or other U.S. assets. Since the end of the Cold War, the United States has become a net foreign debtor nation to the tune of $3.7 trillion! This is not what Hilmar Kopper could all 'peanuts'.
It does not require much foresight to see the strategic threat of these deficits to the role of the United States. With an annual current account (mainly trade) deficit of some $500 billion, some 5% of GDP, the United States must import or attract at least $1.4 billion every day, to avoid a dollar collapse and keep its interest rates low enough to support the debt-burdened corporate economy. That net debt is getting worse at a dramatic pace. Were France, Germany, Russia and a number of OPEC oil countries to now shift even a small portion of their dollar reserves into euro to buy bonds of Germany or France or the like, the United States would face a strategic crisis beyond any of the postwar period. To pre-empt this threat, was one of the most strategic hidden reasons for the decision to go for 'regime change' as it is known, in Iraq. It is as simple and as cold as this. The future of America's sole superpower status depended on pre-empting the threat emerging from Eurasia and Euroland especially. Iraq was andis a chess piece in a far larger strategic game, one for the highest stakes.
The euro threatens the hegemony
When the euro was launched at the end of the last decade, leading EU government figures, bankers from Deutsche Bank's Norbert Walter, and French President Chirac went to major holders of dollar reserves -- China, Japan, Russia -- and tried to convince them to shift out of dollars at least a part of their reserves, and into euros. However, that clashed with the need to devalue the too-high euro, so German exports could stabilize Euroland growth. A falling euro was the case until 2002.
Then, with the debacle of the U.S. dot.com bubble bursting, the Enron and Worldcom finance scandals, and the recession in the U.S., the dollar began to lose its attraction for foreign investors. The euro gained steadily until the end of 2002. Then, as France and Germany prepared their secret diplomatic strategy to block war in the UN Security Council, rumors surfaced that the central banks of Russia and China had quietly began to dump dollars and buy euros. The result was a dollar free-fall on the eve of war. The stage was set should Washington lose the Iraq war, or it turn into a long, bloody debacle.
But Washington, leading New York banks and the higher echelons of the U.S. establishment clearly knew what was at stake. Iraq was not about ordinary chemical or even nuclear weapons of mass destruction. The 'weapon of mass destruction' was the threat that others would follow Iraq and shift to euros out of dollars, creating mass destruction of the United States' hegemonic economic role in the world. As one economist termed it, an end to the dollar reserve role would be a 'catastrophe' for the United States. Interest rates of the Federal Reserve would have to be pushed higher than in 1979 when Paul Volcker raised rates above 17% to try to stop the collapse of the dollar then. Few realize that 1979 dollar crisis was also a direct result of moves by Germany, and France, under Schmidt and Giscard, to defend Europe together with Saudi Arabia and others who began selling U.S. Treasury bonds to protest Carter Administration policy. It is also worth recalling that after the Volcker dollar rescue, the Reagan Administraion, backed by many of today's neo-conservative hawks, began a huge U.S. military defense spending to challenge the Soviet Union.
Eurasia versus the Anglo-American Island Power
This fight over petro-dollars versus petro-euros, which started in Iraq, is by no means over, despite the apparent victory of the United States in Iraq. The euro was created by French geopolitical strategists for establishing a multipolar world after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The aim was to balance the overwhelming dominance of the U.S. in world affairs. Significantly, French strategists rely on a British geopolitical strategist to develop their rival power alternative to the U.S., namely Sir Halford Mackinder.
This past February, a French intelligence-connected newsletter, Intelligence Online, wrote a piece, 'The Strategy Behind Paris-Berlin-Moscow Tie'. Referring to the UN Security Council bloc of France-Germany-Russia to try to prevent the U.S.-British war moves in Iraq, the Paris report notes the recent efforts of European and other powers to create a counterpower to that of the United States. Referring to the new ties of France with Germany and more recently with Putin, they note, 'a new logic, and even dynamic seems to have emerged. An alliance between Paris, Moscow and Berlin running from the Atlantic to Asia could foreshadow a limit to U.S. power. For the first time since the beginning of the 20th Century, the notion of a world heartland -- the nightmare of British strategists -- has crept back into international relations.'[3]
Mackinder, father of British geopolitics, wrote in his remarkable paper, 'The Geographical Pivot of History' that the control of the Eurasian heartland, from Normandy France to Vladivostock, was the only possible threat to oppose the naval supremacy of Britain. British diplomacy until 1914 was based on preventing any such Eurasian threat, that time around the expansion policy of the German Kaiser eastwards with the Baghdad Railway and the Tirpitz German Navy buildup. World War I was the result. Referring to the ongoing efforts of the British and later Americans to prevent a Eurasian combination as rival, the Paris intelligence report stressed, 'That strategic approach (i.e. to create Eurasian heartland unity) lies at the origin of all clashes between Continental powers and maritime powers (UK, U.S. and Japan) ... It is Washington's supremacy over the seas that, even now, dictates London's unshakeable support for the U.S. and the alliance between Tony Blair and Bush.'
Another well-connected French journal, Reseau Voltaire.net, wrote on the eve of the Iraq war that the dollar was 'The Achilles heel of the USA'.[4] That is an understatement to put it mildly.
Iraq was planned long before
This emerging threat from a French-led Euro policy with Iraq and other countries, led some leading circles in the U.S. policy establishment to begin thinking of pre-empting threats to the Petro-dollar system well before Bush was even President. While Perle, Wolfowitz and other leading neo-conservatives played a leading role in developing a strategy to preserve the faltering system, a new consensus was shaping which included major elements of traditional Cold War establishment around figures like Rumsfeld and Cheney.
In September 2000, during the campaign, a small Washington think-tank, the Project for a New American Century, released a major policy study: 'Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategies, Forces and Resources for a New Century'. The report is useful in many areas to better understand present Administration policy. On Iraq, it states, 'The United States has sought for decades to play a more permanent role in Gulf regional security. While the unresolved conflict with Iraq provides the immediate justification, the need for a substantial American force presence in the Gulf transcends the issue of the regime of Saddam Hussein.'
This PNAC paper is the essential basis for the September 2002 Presidential White Paper, 'The National Security Strategy of the United States of America'. The PNAC's paper supports a 'blueprint for maintaining global U.S. pre-eminence, precluding the rise of a great power rival, and shaping the international security order in line with American principles and interests. The American Grand Strategy must be pursued as far into the future as possible.' Further, the U.S. must, 'discourage advanced industrial nations from challenging our leadership or even aspiring to a larger regional or global role.'
The PNAC membership in 2000 reads like a roster of the Bush Administration today. It included Cheney, his wife Lynne Cheney, neo-conservative Cheney aide, Lewis Libby; Donald Rumsfeld; Rumsfeld Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz. It also included NSC Middle East head, Elliott Abrams; John Bolton of the State Department; Richard Perle, and William Kristol. As well, former Lockheed-Martin vice president, Bruce Jackson, and ex-CIA head James Woolsey were on board, along with Norman Podhoretz, another founding neo-con. Woolsey and Podhoretz speak openly of being in 'World War IV'.
It is becoming increasingly clear to many that the war in Iraq is about preserving a bankrupt American Century model of global dominance. It is also clear that Iraq is not the end. What is not yet clear and must be openly debated around the world, is how to replace the failed Petro-dollar order with a just new system for global economic prosperity and security.
Now, as Iraq threatens to explode in internal chaos, it is important to rethink the entire postwar monetary order anew. The present French-German-Russian alliance to create a counterweight to the United States requires not merely a French-led version of the Petro-dollar system, some Petro-euro system, that continues the bankrupt American Century, only with a French accent, and euros replacing dollars. That would only continue to destroy living standards across the world, adding to human waste and soaring unemployment in industrial as well as developing nations. We must entirely rethink what began briefly with some economists during the 1998 Asia crisis, the basis of a new monetary system which supports human development, and does not destroy it.
***
References:
1 Engdahl, F. William, Mit der Ölwaffe zur Weltmacht, edition steinherz, Wiesbaden, 2002. Chapter 9-10 detail the creation and impact of the Petrodollar recycling and the secret 1973 Saltsjoebaden meeting in preparing the oil shock.
2 Radio Liberty/RFE press release, Charles Recknagel, 'Iraq: Baghdad moves to Euro', November 1, 2000. The wire was picked up for about 48 hours by CNN and other media and promptly vanished from the headlines. Since William Clark's article, 'The real but unspoken reasons for the upcoming Iraq war' appeared in the Internet on February 2, 2003, a lively online discussion of the oil-euro factor has taken place, but outside occasional references in the London Guardian press, little in mainstream media has been said of this strategic background factor in the Washington decision to go against Iraq.
3 Intelligence Online, no.447: 20/02/2003. 'The Strategy Behind Paris-Berlin-Moscow Tie'. Intelligence Online Editor, Guillaume Dasquie, is a French specialist on strategic intelligence and has worked for French intelligence services on the bin Laden case and other investigations. His reference to French Eurasian geopolitics clearly reflects high-level French thinking.
4 Reseau voltaire.net, 'Suprematie du dollar: Le Talon d'Achille des USA', appeared April 4, 2003. It details a French able of the vulnerability of the dollar system on the eve of Iraq war.
WWII Online :: View topic - Frankforce sign-up closed, even if not full?
WWII Online :: View topic - Frankforce sign-up closed, even if not full?: "Quoting from Megadeath's post. I *assume* he won't mind that's it's public, can't see any harm coming from it...I hope. Corse, if I want to play, I (and everyone else who signed up) am now bound by it. I didn't see in mentioned when I bought the event tickets, but who read's those EULA's anyway?
Quote:
If you signup for this scenario, its under the understanding that you accept the premise and the rules. Public complaints about the scenario, personal attacks on the SET team, or other unpleasant behaviour will result in you not having access to future SET events.
Thanks
I hope this posting of it does not count as...'unpleasant behaviour'...whatever that means. It is not intended as such."
Sunday, February 08, 2004
WWII Online :: View topic - Frankforce sign-up closed, even if not full?
WWII Online :: View topic - Frankforce sign-up closed, even if not full?: "would say something about it, bit megadeath posted in the allied planning fourms that any comments would mean you accept the signup....terms and any 'negative' comments would mean you would be removed from the event AND all future events.
Therefore, I have nothing to say about."
Saturday, February 07, 2004
The Geopolitics of Australia
The Geopolitics of Australia
The Geopolitics of Australia
Dec 02, 2002
Summary
For much of the past generation, Australia has been dominated by a sense that it was irrelevant in the grand international scheme -- and could remain a geographic backwater untouched by outside events. But following the Bali bombing and other recent terrorist attacks, this thinking is beginning to change.
Friday, February 06, 2004
For future reference.
WWII Online :: Read message
Well, err..
We DON"T have any Vickies, just 2 matty units? SO much for historical accuracy (the Vickies in real life acted as the recce and radio units).
How can I POSSIBLY know what we have if you won't tell us the plan or Orbat before the meeting?
But lets talk meetings shall we, which is what you insist we do.
You have no agenda posted, meaning ecven if I show up, I don't know what you'te going to talk about or ask help for, except it's going to be a "planning" meeting. Presuably you will speak for 20 minutes or so on WTF the setup IS that you know of, what the orbat is (how many tanks, trucks and 2 pounders we have), where's everyone spawning, what you know of the German orbat (if you looked), where the Germans will spawn and what you think the'll do.
THEN and only THEN, presuably, every single person on TS will get a chance to go through with thier indervdiaul view (and I hope they took notes, because stopping and asking you will take more time again). Then you go BACK to you to either comment ("No that's a bad idea, we'll do it my way" or a "Yes that's a good idea, we'll do that"), with again, every single person able to comment on it.....again.
At least, I would hope your're Reginmental commanders CAN comment, and if you let you're battalion CO's talk that's another 10 people...so asuming everyone DOES show up (unlikly in the extreme) you'll have at least 20 people on ONE CHANNEL.
And as a experienced member of the AHC, 20 people on one channel is EXTREMLY hard to manage, particvaly if it's planning meeting!
HOWEVR, in your case it seems you don't WANT anyones input, have already made up you're mind on the plan and I don't understand why you can't just POST you're plan in the first place! IF you DO want people's inpuit but ONLY at the "planning session" why are you limiting to a 1-3 hour TS session only???
As CinC it IS in you're power to ignore everyone and do whatever it is you want to do. You want to post a plan and ignore our comments? Go right ahead, we can't stop you. But you're not even doing that, but actiavly threatening to DELETE our comments.
As commander of 150th Brigade, 2nd Battalion I will do whatever the plan says, but whatever the plan is, and I don't agree with it, don't expect me to like it. Hell, I may well very LIKE the plan, but I DO NOT KNOW WHAT THE PLAN IS. You seem to be assuming the Germans won't be defending the corssroads!?!?! Whatever, my thoughts and idea's are immatriral to the planning, and results.
[quote]Its not broke im not fixing it, megadeath gave me the same talk and he was right.[/quote]
WHAT's not broke!?! I havn't seen any plan, but the map you did post shows that we waltz into the crossroads with little to no oppoistion and set up a secure perimiator which the panzers will bash thier heads in from totally predictable directions!
And megadeath's a shmuck, which I thought was demoenstarted in the LAST 4 events, if not Sealion, so using him as a reference is not a particlay strong case.
[quote]Secondly, learn to understand words, the word Someone does not mean ONE as in single person, I hope to have LOTS of people attend.[/quote]
See Above. 20+ people on TS ussualy breaks an indervidual BEF TS server channel, with distortion occuring from 15-25 (depending on the night).
[quote]Third the reason for TS is so missinformed people like your self can be educated with out me posting 4 million times the same thing; you can understand context and hashin out a plan in short time on TS.[/quote]
See Above. WTF are you talking about, you post, we comment, you reply, at you're own and our time.
[quote]Fourth, in regards to your plan, it is not know if the germans spawn early to set up defence, NEVER ASSUME. For example, You Assume we have vickers tanks......Hey if you find some where that we do let me know!!! Cuz right now we have none. [/quote]
What, now you're assuming that we can TAKE THE XROADS WITH NO OPPOSTION!?!?!? That's totaly AGIONAST the historical background! Also, see above re Vickers comment. I see megadeath is at his best form as usual.
[quote]Your plan is not one for delay, if the germans attack with dissarray they can pick off the matties with side shots and thats all they have to do. We must guard them and force the germans to attack our weak assets to delay the final attack on our tanks. [/quote]
And who pray tell gets to be the bunny? I presume it's the I&II infantry battalions, with no AT to protect them? 2 Pounders in combinded arms defence with infantry are NOT "weak assets" if deployed correctly, but thet are VERY hard to use in an attack, and very slow without big target trucks. So either the infantry's leading the attack, or the tanks are. Infantry leading is fine, so long as some tanks are close by. 1 LMG could wipe out an entire squad of 8, and I have a total of 4 squads, with no reserves. The "weak assets" won't be around for long without support.
[quote]Finally, do not send me berated messages about my command or my intentions. You have lots of opportunity to voice opinion(s) just because they are not to your liking doesn’t mean I’m going to roll over and lay down. If you think you can do better or do not like me there is nothing keeping you from exiting this event or selecting CinC next event.[/quote]
Well, I'm NOT ALLOWED to post ideas on the plan in the FOURMS AM I?? YOU'RE the one who thretended to DELETE any posts there, so what was I supposed to do, use the Force to contact you? The ONLY other "opportunity to voice opinion" is a TS meeting at 3am my time! Or would you prefer I post my complaints and thoughts on the PUBLIC fourms? Of course not.
It was either this or a email.
I bought a ticket, I'm in the event. I have as much right to comment on the plan as every other person who brought a ticket on the allied side. As CinC you are free to ignore such comments. But as CinC you should listin before turning a blind eye, rather than ignore completly.
It IS possible to be a CinC and still listin to you're commnaders, soldiers and fellow PAYING PLAYERS. Previouis events have done so, and future events will do so.
Trust is not something to have, or lose, lightly.
Thursday, February 05, 2004
WWII Online :: View topic - Destroying Spawn Lists By Destroying Structures
WWII Online :: View topic - Destroying Spawn Lists By Destroying Structures
killer wrote:
Nothing of the sort. In this war, at this time Stukas WERE this powerful. They DID fly low, high and everywhere in between and rape everything in sight.
But Killer, Historicaly the Stuka's DIDN'T hit indervidual TANKS or GUNS or MEN. At the breakthrough on the Musue river, they COULDN'T hit the inderviual weapons pits, it was the TERROR that slowed down the fire of the French Artiallry, NOT the inderviual bombs. Even up to the 1980's CAS planes didn't do it, except for dedicated Anti-Tank planes with Anti-Tank guns.
But what about TOBRUK?. Probably the ONLY town or city on the westeren front/desert that EVER acted LIKE WW2OL cities. Situtrated 5 minutes flight time from multiple axis airfields, surronded on 3 sides under constant attack, with little to no air cover!
AND THE STUKA"S DISCOVERED THEY COULDN"T WIN THE BATTLE ANMYMORE. In fact the bofers gunners found it was EAISER to shoot them down after they dropped from thier dive! They even had great diffcvulctuy BOMBING STATIONARY SHIPS in the habour when unloading (done under camofalurge it must be admitted).
Which in your game, they do , in fact that's ALL they do!
They SHOULD be hitting Troop concentrations, they SHOULD be hitting railway lines, depots and cities. They SHOULD be reducing the spawn list from sustainced and continues INTERDICTION, not lone A13's or matties that may or may not be on a road thier patrolling (which currently 110s and 109's do due to the HE bug).
Attacking the front line towns WOULDN'T do much damage, the front line troops KNOW about stuka's and dig in! But the back lines, THEY are vunrable. THEY are where you interdict the enemy lines of commincation, not at the FEBA!
Interdiction IS eaiser than CAS, because CAS should you get shot down, a lot. Interdiction may not have the immidate effects of a CAS strike on the front line, but in the long run it is much much more effective and efficent.
And it would mean the RAF and FAF with thier light bombers would be more useful!
Deployment WITHOUT interdiction is a chair missing a leg.
Mabye it will become googlewacked
Rules for Being a Republican: "Rules for Being a Republican
1.
Being a drug addict is a moral failing and a crime, unless you are millionaire conservative radio jock, which makes it an 'illness' and needs our prayers for your 'recovery'.
2.
You have to believe that those privileged from birth achieve success all on their own.
3.
You have to believe that the US should get out of the UN, and that our highest national priority is enforcing UN resolutions against Iraq.
4.
You believe that government should stay out of people's lives but it needs to punish anyone caught having private sex with the 'wrong' gender.
5.
You have to believe that pollution is ok, so long as it makes a profit.
6.
You have to believe in prayer in schools, as long as you don't pray to Allah or Buddha.
7.
'Standing Tall for America' means firing your workers and moving their jobs to India.
8.
You have to believe that a woman cannot be trusted with decisions about her own body, but that large multi-national corporations can make decisions affecting all mankind with no regulation whatsoever.
9.
You have to believe that you love Jesus and Jesus loves you, and that Jesus shares your hatred of AIDS victims, homosexuals, and Hillary Clinton.
10.
You hate the ACLU for representing convicted felons, but they owed it to the country to bail out Oliver North.
11.
You have to believe that the best way to encourage military morale is to praise the troops overseas whilecutting their VA benefits.
12.
You believe that group sex and drug use are degenerate sins that can only be purged by running for governor of California as a Republican.
13.
You have to believe it is wise to keep condoms out of schools, because we all know if teenagers don't have condoms they won't have sex.
14.
You have to believe that the best way to fight terrorism is to alienate our allies and then demand their cooperation and money.
15.
You have to believe that government medicine is wrong and that HMO's and insurance companies only have your best interests at heart.
16.
You have to believe that providing health care to all Iraqis is sound government policy but providing health care to all Americans is socialism personified.
17.
You believe that tobacco's link to cancer and global warming are 'junk science', but Creationism should be taught in schools.
18.
You have to believe that waging war with no exit strategy was wrong in Vietnam but right in Iraq.
19.
You have to believe that Saddam was a good guy when Reagan armed him, a bad guy when Bush's daddy made war on him, a good guy when Cheney was doing business with him, and a bad guy when Bush needed a 'we can't find Bin Laden' diversion.
20.
You believe that government should restrict itself to just the powers named in the Constitution, which includes banning gay marriages and censoring the internet.
21.
You have to believe that the public has a right to know about the adulterous affairs of Democrats, while those of Republicans are a 'private matter'.
22.
You have to believe that the public has a right to know about Hillary's cattle trades but that Bush was right to censor those 28 pages from the Congressional 9/11 report because you just can't handle the truth.
23.
You support state rights, which means Ashcroft telling states what locally passed voter initiatives he will allow them to have.
24.
You have to believe that what Clinton did in the 1960's is of vital national interest but what Bush did decades later is 'stale news' and 'irrelevant'.
25.
You have to believe that trade with Cuba is wrong because it is communist, but trading with China and Vietnam is just dandy."
Killer Admit's Stuka's too powerful
WWII Online :: View topic - Destroying Spawn Lists By Destroying Structures
Well if the Stuka's wen't able to fly as low as they DO, perhaps that wouldn't be a problem would it Killer?
Or the fact that only the Axis have the Artiallry (Gun) systems able to do it (The Char dosn't count, and neither does 40mm HE).
This SHOULD be possible, at least, if you lose some depots, you lose some supply, even if they have to be captured in the process.
Or have depots cut RESUPPLY (As the Breda Fiasco of last night demonstarted the need for).
It would be far better to make it so Stuka's CAN'T GET AWAY WITH IT.
And in other news, Killer admits that Stuka's are unhistoricaly powerful!. If the reason to not do this is BECAUSE of Stuka's, I'll be glad to know CRS is imperlmenting Policy so they can't bomb resuppling allied armour too! It's EXCATLY the same problem! Either you should be able to interdict enemy supplies, or you can't.
WWII Online :: View topic - The TRUE strength rankings of the starter AFV spawn lists
WWII Online :: View topic - The TRUE strength rankings of the starter AFV spawn lists
SPORIN Calculates...
French Army armoured starter spawn list lethality vs. all ground units
R35 -- 1.64 x 3 = 4.92
H39 -- 3.05 x 5 = 15.25
Pan -- 1.99 x 6 = 11.94
S35 -- 3.63 x 4 = 14.52
Char -- 4.89 x 2 = 9.78
French starter set average units killed per full spawn list = 56.41
British Army armoured starter spawn list lethality vs. all ground units
Vick -- 1.77 x 9 = 15.93
A13 -- 1.66 x 10 = 16.60
Mat -- 7.10 x 1 = 7.10
British starter set average units killed per full spawn list = 39.63
German Army armoured starter spawn list lethality vs. all ground units
Sk232 -- 2.11 x 6 = 12.66
Pz2c -- 1.85 x 4 = 7.40
Pz38t -- 1.86 x 4 = 7.44
Pz3f -- 2.28 x 3 = 6.84
Pz4d -- 1.98 x 2 = 3.96
Stug -- 1.19 x 1 = 1.19
German starter set average units killed per full spawn list = 39.49
French Army armoured starter spawn list, AFV v. AFV
R35 -- .39 x 3 = 1.17
H39 -- 1.21 x 5 = 6.05
Pan -- 1.03 x 6 = 6.18
S35 -- 2.06 x 4 = 8.24
Char -- 3.57 x 2 = 7.14
French starter set average opposing AFVs killed per full spawn list = 28.78
British Army armoured starter spawn list, AFV v. AFV
Vick -- .16 x 9 = 1.44
A13 -- .94 x 10 = 9.40
Mat -- 7.89 x 1 = 7.89
British starter set average opposing AFVs killed per full spawn list = 18.73
German Army armoured starter spawn list AFV v. French AFV
Sk232 -- .40 x 6 = 2.40
Pz2c -- .18 x 4 = .72
Pz38t -- .59 x 4 = 2.36
Pz3f -- .55 x 3 = 1.65
Pz4d -- .74 x 2 = 1.48
Stug -- .97 x 1 = .97
German starter set average opposing French AFVs killed per full spawn list = 9.58
German Army armoured starter spawn list AFV v. British AFV
Sk232 -- .60 x 6 = 3.60
Pz2c -- .33 x 4 = 1.32
Pz38t -- 1.00 x 4 = 4.00
Pz3f -- 1.00 x 3 = 3.00
Pz4d -- .59 x 2 = 1.18
Stug -- .52 x 1 = .52
German starter set average opposing British AFVs killed per full spawn list = 13.62
British average opposing AFV kills per 100 AFVs spawned:
A13 spawned 55.7% of 100 spawns at .94, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 52.36.
Vickers spawned 33.6% of 100 spawns at .16, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 5.38.
Matilda spawned 11.7% of 100 spawns at 7.89, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 92.31.
So, on average, every 100 British AFVs spawned will kill 150.05 German AFVs.
French average opposing AFV kills per 100 AFVs spawned:
Panhard spawned 45.7% of 100 spawns at 1.03, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 47.07.
S35 spawned 20.4% of 100 spawns at 2.06, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 42.02.
H39 spawned 16.5% of 100 spawns at 1.21, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 19.97.
Char spawned 10.3% of 100 spawns at 3.57, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 36.77.
R35 spawned 7.1% of 100 spawns at .39, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 2.77.
So, on average, every 100 French AFVs spawned will kill 148.60 German AFVs
German average British AFV kills per 100 AFVs spawned:
Sk232 spawned 27.6% of 100 spawns at .60, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 16.56.
Pz38t spawned 26.3% of 100 spawns at 1.00, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 26.30.
Pz3f spawned 18.3% of 100 spawns at 1.00, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 18.30.
Pz2c spawned 11.4% of 100 spawns at .33, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 3.76.
Pz4d spawned 10.5% of 100 spawns at .59, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 6.20.
Stug spawned 5.9% of 100 spawns at .52, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 3.07.
So, on average, every 100 German AFVs spawned will kill 74.19 British AFVs.
German average French AFV kills per 100 AFVs spawned:
Sk232 spawned 27.6% of 100 spawns at .40, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 11.04.
Pz38t spawned 26.3% of 100 spawns at .59, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 15.52.
Pz3f spawned 18.3% of 100 spawns at .55, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 10.07.
Pz2c spawned 11.4% of 100 spawns at .18, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 2.05.
Pz4d spawned 10.5% of 100 spawns at .74, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 7.77.
Stug spawned 5.9% of 100 spawns at .97, average # of opposing AFVs killed equals 5.72.
So, on average, every 100 German AFVs spawned will kill 52.17 French AFVs.
Tuesday, February 03, 2004
WWII Online :: View topic - What squad took steenburg?
WWII Online :: View topic - What squad took steenburg?: "As the divisional officer in charge at the time, I have some knowlage of the events last night in the village (it's 2 depots, a church and the AB) of Hoogstraton.
We had 10 RAAF fighters locking down BOTH Glitz AND Eindhoven for the first 10 minutes of the attack. AXIS AIR STILL GOT THROUGH AND BOMBED MY TANKS.
That's with fighters over the 2 closest airfields AND the town AND having a Barcap NE of it!
Anyways, I watched BOTH of the depots as we took the flags. No ei came out to stop us taking either of them.
You had 20 minutes! We had the AB locked down in 4, so you eaisly had time to get 232's from Breda (not that would have worked though, as we had A13's blocking the road). You did not AFAIK.
Not many infantry spawned in anyway. I was the LMG covering the north exit of the barracks, and I only got 5 kills in 16 minutes.
Anyways, this was a BEF attack, with units of the 2nd AND 1st Divsion involved, mostly 2nd Div. It had about 40 people involved, 10 or so Air, 15 or so tanks and 15 or so infantry initally. It was combined arms, and the defenders were panwed.
I'm sure the axis will attept to do excatly the same thing using the SIXTY panzers avilable in Breda.
See YOU in Willimsetad tonight...."
Monday, February 02, 2004
Gawdamkm Netspace
Ok fine, they didn't give me the job. Fair enough,.
But I rang up on FRIDAY 4:30 to ASK and they said they hadn't made a call yet!
LIARS. BLOODY GAWDAMM LIERS. Made me wait all weekend and Monday to get a letter they sent on FRIDAY long before I rang up.
Christ, at least have the guts to TELL ME THE TRUTH.
Big deal they say.
At least I won't be buying a ADSL account of the bastardes.
WWII Online :: View topic - LOTR as writtin by other people. Write a WW2OL version!
WWII Online :: View topic - LOTR as writtin by other people. Write a WW2OL version!
Which got me to thinking, what would LOTR be like if it was set in WW2OL?
----------------------------------
Frodo looked around. Ever since his compass had been broken ever since he got wounded at weathertop airfield by a stuka bomb.
"It no use Sam. We're lost".
Sam moved his head left and right. These moutains in the Alps were Huge compared to the flat plains of Belgium of his home. With no towns nearby and no roads on the map, he didn't have a clue where he was either. He wished yet again TPGO would release a map with the alps on it. The Lat and Long didn't tell him anything either.
---------------------------
The Orc commander sneered at the Corsair Freighters arriving at the Gondor docks. Late as usual.
His expression changed when the first person to hope off the Freighter was a French Rifleman who grinned, drew his gun up and fired.
Bilton smiled. With 32 matilda's brought from Dover, they should be able to kill all the axis infantry around the city with ease.
---------------------
Ok, so I'm not THAT good a writer. Someone write something better!
Teemings - Extras - If "The Lord of the Rings" had been written by someone else ....
Teemings - Extras - If "The Lord of the Rings" had been written by someone else ....
This section of Teemings Extras features what has probably become the most popular thread ever on the Straight Dope Message Board. Fingolfin started a thread asking a simple question : what would "The Lord of the Rings" sound like if it had been written by someone else. The thread started out slow, got bumped a few times, made Threadspotting, and then got slashdotted and all hell broke lose. We decided to feature it here for two reasons: firstly to take some of the load off of our brand new server. Secondly, and more importantly, some of the writings that people came up with were just brilliant. To be sure, it is a hit or miss proposition. Some pieces fell flat and some felt incomplete. But mostly it was a work of genius by the Teeming Millions and all of the newer people that just drove by to visit and contribute.
A *wounderful* collection. I shall know I am famous if my works are ever used in such a way.
Sunday, February 01, 2004
Well THAT idea was a fiasco
WargamerAU | Forums: "3 games, 3 annilations. Only reason the 3rd game didn't end in a complete wipeout was because we both knew who won and it was time to pack up.
So mabye a all foot guard army ISN'T such a crash hot idea. I made many an elementary mistake (not shooting the short range weapon unit first, leaving my CHQ out in the open), but the list itself is fundermently flawed.
Moters are fluffy and 30 points overpriced. Dump them.
The l33t Phyker with 3 strengh failed to wound ANYTHING in 3 games. Dump him.
The inf squads mostly failed to hit much with thier lasguns, dump a squad.
6 Rough Riders mean 2 kills per SINGLE charge, not enough. Need to increase the size of the unit to 8 at least.
The rough rider vet with powersword isn't much use either, because everyone strikes before he does and he still needs 5s to wound. Demoted.
The 2 Stormi units deepstriking IS worth it, though they need someone to come rescue them 1-2 turns after they arrived.
The 3xMissle Launcher AT squad was pretty ineffective, dump them too.
Which gains me a LRMBT, Hellhound and a lascannon armed Sentinal. I figure the Sentinal will either soak up a heavy weapon ment for the LRMBT/Hellhound, or get ignored for a turn and snipe with it's lascannon for flank shots.
Not sure on keeping the vet Stormie sargents, they didn't do too good either....
251st Infantry Company1500 Pts - IG: Basic Regiment Army
Command Platoon (HQ) @ 238 Pts
1 Command Squad @ [128] Pts
Lasguns (x1); Frag Grenades; Vox Caster
1 Heroic Senior Officer @ [81] Pts
Laspistol; Power Weapon; Frag Grenades
Carapace Armour [5]
1 Veteran #2 @ [17] Pts
Close combat Weapon; Laspistol; Frag Grenades; Standard Bearer
Carapace Armour [5]
1 Veteran #3 @ [17] Pts
Lasgun; Frag Grenades; Medic
Carapace Armour [5]
1 Veteran #4 @ [7] Pts
Close combat Weapon; Laspistol; Frag Grenades
6 Anti Tank Squad #1 @ [110] Pts
Lascannon (x3); Lasguns
1 Commissar (HQ) @ 76 Pts
Plasma Pistol; Power Fist
Frag Grenades [1]
Carapace Armour [5]
1 Priest (HQ) @ 70 Pts
Eviscerator
Carapace Armour [5]
9 Storm Troopers (Elites) @ 146 Pts
Deepstrike Ability; Hellguns (x7); Meltagun (x2); Frag Grenades; Krak
Grenades; Vox Caster
1 Storm Trooper Veteran Sergeant @ [22] Pts
Deepstrike Ability; HellPistol; Power Weapon; Frag Grenades; Krak
Grenades
7 Storm Troopers (Elites) @ 124 Pts
Deepstrike Ability; Hellguns (x5); Plasma Gun (x2); Frag Grenades; Krak
Grenades; Vox Caster
1 Storm Trooper Veteran Sergeant @ [22] Pts
Deepstrike Ability; HellPistol; Power Weapon; Frag Grenades; Krak
Grenades
Infantry Platoon (Troops) @ 330 Pts
4 Command Squad @ [88] Pts
Lascannon; Lasguns (x1); Grenade Launcher (x1); Plasma Gun (x1)
1 Junior Officer @ [45] Pts
Storm Bolter
9 Infantry Squad #1 @ [83] Pts
Missile Launcher; Lasguns; Grenade Launcher
1 Sergeant @ [6] Pts
Laspistol and CCW
9 Infantry Squad @ [83] Pts
Missile Launcher; Lasguns; Grenade Launcher
1 Sergeant @ [6] Pts
Laspistol and CCW
9 Infantry Squad @ [76] Pts
Heavy Bolter; Lasguns; Flamer
1 Sergeant @ [6] Pts
Lasgun
20 Conscripts (Troops) @ 98 Pts
Flamer (x2)
1 Sentinel (Fast Attack) @ 56 Pts
Lascannon
Searchlight [1]
8 Rough Riders (Fast Attack) @ 88 Pts
Hunting Lances
1 Hellhound (Fast Attack) @ 118 Pts
Inferno Cannon; Hull Heavy Bolter
Smoke Launchers [3]
1 Leman Russ Battle Tank (Heavy Support) @ 156 Pts
Battle Cannon; Hull Lascannon
Searchlight [1]
Models in Army: 99
Total Army Cost: 1500"







