You mean these? Sold in occupied China and laced with opium.Whatever Japanese HQ is smoking, can I have some?
You mean these? Sold in occupied China and laced with opium.Whatever Japanese HQ is smoking, can I have some?
A lot of that depends on how the Japanese react to the failure. I think it's likely the Western Force for the DEI campaign gets diverted to shore up the advance, or at least attempt to delay the retreat.the stick has been put in the bicycle wheel of the Japanese offensive in Malaya....what does this meat grinder do in the longer term to Japanese plans?
From harmless legitimate research I’m sure. 😉The stuff people know on this site
While the soldiers (but more likely generals) on the front (who had already went through the south of Thailand and Northern Malaya) would probably already tried these by now.
Golden Bat cigarettes were produced in two different versions, one that was only sold to the Chinese, which was laced with opiates. The other sold in Japan and to Japanese forces, that wasn’t doped up. As for the Japanese having stuck their appendage of choice in the British meat grinder in Malaya, they are also doubling down right now, and keeping digging in the hole, when they should stop and try something different. It should be noted that this isn’t the first time that they did this, during the Russian Japanese war at the beginning of the century. They repeatedly carried out frontal assaults against the prepared intrenched Russian positions during the siege of Port Arthur. Just as with the British, French and Germans, in WWI, it takes time for the top brass to get the message, and try something different.
RR.
I was thinking more along the lines of Guadalcanal.Underestimating the strength and tenacity of your enemy and feeding your own under supplied troops in piecemeal,but on a larger scale.So basically we have a version of the Kohima and Impahl assaults two years early. When the inevitable Japanese collapse comes they could be chased all the way back to Thailand.
Especially when junior officers might take any 'learning' as treason and lack of true Japanese spirt
So basically we have a version of the Kohima and Impahl assaults two years early. When the inevitable Japanese collapse comes they could be chased all the way back to Thailand.
And now they're learning that the British Imperial forces know how to fight on their terms.Actually the lesson learned was that these tactics worked. After all they did capture Port Arthur. The fact that they did not work on the Western Front in WW1 could simply be passed off as a lack of true warrior spirit amongst the westerners.
Or an Allied offensive from Burma could cut the Imperial Japanese in Malaya off, if the Imperial Japanese front in Burma collapses too fast for the Imperial Japanese...So basically we have a version of the Kohima and Impahl assaults two years early. When the inevitable Japanese collapse comes they could be chased all the way back to Thailand.
Or an Allied offensive from Burma could cut the Imperial Japanese in Malaya off, if the Imperial Japanese front in Burma collapses too fast for the Imperial Japanese...
I think the clue is in the he TL's name. Although everyone loves the Matilda 2 (almost as much as we love the Matilda 1 ITTL) surly after the Matilda's have proven their worth in Malaya the British are going to be packing up as many aging Valiants as they can spare and shipping them out to Malaya, Burma and the DEI. This is a heavy metal tank TL after all! My personal preference would be for Allan to pay homage to Fireflies over Port Stanley and have some inexperienced pencil pusher at the War Office send some prototype Victor's to Malaya by mistake!So, what will be the fate of the Valiant I and I* hulls? They have a ton of utility in multiple rolls: self propelled guns (25pdrs and AA), specialist vehicles, some could go to Russia with the turret designed for the Russian gun... Britain is going to have a lot of 2pdr armed tanks laying around (not killed in North Africa) that they absolutely don't want to take into battle in 1943 or later. Only a couple hundred are needed in the far east. I'd be interested to see the total production figures (and how many were destroyed).