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When World War II goes ridiculously wrong

 
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Joseph Nebus

External


Since: Jun 23, 2006
Posts: 17



(Msg. 1) Posted: Fri May 04, 2007 2:31 am
Post subject: When World War II goes ridiculously wrong
Archived from groups: comp>sys>mac>games>strategic (more info?)

I thought I'd take out Hearts of Iron for the first time in
months and see how I was at it anymore. Since I know I'm rusty I took
the easy path, playing the United States from the Grand Campaign,
starting in 1936. My basic itinerary was straightforward: build up my
industry and try to lay in a head start on science needs.

Then I got to thinking, what could I do to better position my
United States for the war I know full well is coming? Military access
with the United Kingdom, for example, didn't rile up the isolationists,
and replacing Henry Morgenthau with Henry Kaiser gave me a nice little
industrial boost without obvious other ill effects.

*Then* I got to thinking, is it possible to use my diplomatic
influence to break up the Axis before it really gets going? So I got
to casting my influence on Italy and Japan, and got them drawn closer
to the Democratic side of things, comfortably away from the Fascist
side. I imagined it likely there are enough preprogrammed events in
1939-1940 to pull them towards Germany, but the diplomatic points
were just going to sit around otherwise anyway.

So. March 1939 rolls around. Germany annexes Austria. In
short order it demands territory from Czechoslovakia, and indeed the
state dissolves into the Czech republic, annexed, and Slovakia, an
independent regime. Come the end of the month Germany demands more
territory from Lithuania, which caves to the pressure. Poland,
refusing a German demand for territory, aligns with the United Kingdom,
which guarantees Polish independence. France allies with the United
Kingdom as well.

April 4, 1939: unaligned nation Italy declares war on Albania
for some reason. Albania quickly signs a military access agreement with
Yugoslavia and has bombers ready for Venice in record time. The next
day, the United Kingdom declares Italy's war to be an infringement of
its sphere of influence, and goes to war on Albania's behalf. Albania
joins the Allies, and that's where the game got to tonight. Germany is,
so far, completely uninvolved in this.


--
Joseph Nebus
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Joseph Nebus

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Since: Jun 23, 2006
Posts: 17



(Msg. 2) Posted: Mon May 14, 2007 11:50 am
Post subject: Re: When World War II goes ridiculously wrong [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

Simon Slavin <slavins.delete.these.four.words DeleteThis @hearsay.demon.co.uk> writes:

>On 04/05/2007, Joseph Nebus wrote in message <nebusj.1178258826@vcmr-
>86.server.rpi.edu>:
>
>> April 4, 1939: unaligned nation Italy declares war on Albania
>> for some reason. Albania quickly signs a military access agreement with
>> Yugoslavia and has bombers ready for Venice in record time.

>Hysterical. Keep us informed.

I will; I just haven't had the chance to carry on. It's been a
busy week.

--
Joseph Nebus
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Joseph Nebus

External


Since: Jun 23, 2006
Posts: 17



(Msg. 3) Posted: Thu May 17, 2007 11:10 pm
Post subject: Re: When World War II goes ridiculously wrong [Login to view extended thread Info.]
Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)

Simon Slavin <slavins.delete.these.four.words.DeleteThis@hearsay.demon.co.uk> writes:

>On 04/05/2007, Joseph Nebus wrote in message <nebusj.1178258826@vcmr-
>86.server.rpi.edu>:
>
>> April 4, 1939: unaligned nation Italy declares war on Albania
>> for some reason.

>Hysterical. Keep us informed.

Here goes. The War on Italy goes through 1939 fitfully. While
neither the Allies nor Italy can get much of anywhere in Europe, the
United Kingdom and France made a neat sweep of Ethiopia. Italy charges
daringly in North Africa, though, briefly seizing coastal Egypt and
Tunisia, but is pushed back from Port Said on the east and from a neat
attack from the south by France. By the end of the year Italy's African
empire is, apart from a bit of interior Ethiopia, is in Allied hands.

Over the course of the summer I make treaties for military
access with France (also have the United Kingdom), and anticipating some
fun, I have a naval division steam into Calais for mid-August, when,
in response to the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact and the German demands over
Danzig, a Poland already at war in the Mediterranean ... folds, giving in
to the territory demands. (In consequence, we soon stop hearing from the
Poles in Italy, a there's really no way to get more troops out there.)

I shift over to building more heavily in aircraft, and start
putting in for some ground forces to hold my Pacific islands when, I'm
sure, trouble starts there. (Japan has conquered the eastern half of
China at this point; National and Communist China aren't fighting one
another that hard, but aren't making any progress holding Japan back.)
But so far neither Germany, Japan, nor Italy are allied with the other;
the Axis consists of Germany and Slovakia.

Along the way, the Soviet Union demands territory from
Lithuania several times, until finally annexing all the territory. It's
not clear to me if there's a government in exile.

January 8, 1940: Germany declares war on the Allies. It's not
allied with Italy or anyone who was previously at war, and there's not
in the events log any report of particular disputes.

--
Joseph Nebus
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