Palmyra
Syria 1941
This is a what-if game assuming the Vichy defenders don`t just give up (be it after holding a vastly superior Allied force for 12 days), but force the Allies to take the airfield and its defences.
Which
consisted of a mix of British motorised units plus some armoured cars and men
of the Arab Legion. They faced Germans and Russians under French officers from
the 6th Foreign Legion Infantry, plus some air-force personnel and Arabs from
3rd Desert Company, commanded by Major Gherardi.
The
Vichy garrison has refused all treaties to surrender, so under pressure from
high command Major General Clark is forced to order an attack.
Allied forces
Elements
of British 4th Cavalry Brigade
HQ
+ light aid detachment
“A” Squadron Household Cavalry
“B” & “C” Companies 1st Battalion Essex Regiment
"B" company
2nd Motorised Company Arab Legion with:
Motorised
company, AC platoon
“A” Battery 237th Royal Artillery
FOO
Gun section 169th Lt. anti-aircraft battery
Reinforcements
(turn 15)
“B”
Squadron Household Cavalry with:
A/C platoon, carrier rifle platoon
Support
Sortee
by a Hurricane fighter bomber which arrives over the table on turn 1d6 + 2 and
will attack any target of opportunity.
Sortee by a RAAF P40 which arrives over the table on turn 10 and can strafe targets of opportunity.
Mixte
Companie 6th Foreign Legion Regiment with:
HQ,
3 infantry platoons, 2 x MMGs, 1 x 80mm mortar, 75mm mle1897
Airforce personnel: 1 ad hoc platoon (small arms only), 25mm DCA
Elements 3rd Lt. Desert Company with:
2
mounted platoons, 1 AC platoon
The Vichy start dug-in in and around Fort Weygard and the old airfield, The French commander has taken away the Desert Company`s horses in an effort to prevent them deserting. The French have wire and sandbagged emplacements and two low density 6x6 mixed minefields!
Battle plan and deployment
The
British decided on an all-round envelopment with “B” Company and the artillery FOO coming in from the East, followed by the force HQ. “C” company would swing around the valley and attack from the West; the
household cavalry armoured cars split and supported both companies. The Arab
Legion was to move in cross country and attack the Vichy airfield from the
southeast.
The French also went for an all-round defence, they sent one platoon from the desert Company to the airfield to support the air force personnel; to protect the northern flank the French sowed mines along the northern side of the airfield perimeter. Reasoning the English would come in from the east, they sent two Legion platoons along with one of the Hotchkiss to dig in among the ruins; they also sowed the other minefield along the road there. Just in case the English swung in from the west, another Legion platoon again reinforced with a Hotchkiss was sent to dig in covering that direction also. The French commander held one Legion and the remaining units of the Desert Company in reserve at Fort Weygand, as a flying column. Both the 80mm mortar and `75 mle 1897 were held centrally to support the all-round defence.
Air assets were diced for – the British Hurricane would arrive early on turn 3, the French would get their D.520 but not until turn 11 (maybe too late to effect the game?)
Turn 1 the three British columns arrived on table
“B” Company from the east
“C” company from the west
Arab Legion from the southeast
“C” company`s lead truck is immediately machine gunned and catches fire,
the platoon on board take casualties!
Turn 2 on the west flank “C” companies 2nd truck tries to drive out of trouble – it was shot to pieces and 2nd platoon take casualties! The Household Cavalry Humber moves to engage the Vichy machine gun machinegun (Unsuccessfully).
The rest of “C” Company arrives and deploys in cover, the CSM moves to rally what was left of 1st platoon
The Vichy `75 drops a shell near the road, shrapnel damages the lead
truck of “B” Company causing a couple of casualties among 1st
platoon also.
Turn 3 the Hurricane arrives over the table-top
On the west side, “C” companies 2” mortar drops smoke to mask the
infantry platoons from the Hotchkiss
The two Household Cavalry A/Cs pour fire into the ruins and wipe-out the
Hotchkiss crew
The Hurricane dives in and delivers its load on the same ruins
Unfortunately for the British the survivors of No2 platoon moving to flank the same Hotchkiss are themselves hit in the flank by Legionnaires and are virtually wiped out!
Over on the east side the arriving British units spread out left and right to create less of a target, the Vichy `75 drops another round but fails to cause any casualties!
Above the airfield the Arab Legion prepare to move to the assault
They take casualties from the Vichy 80mm mortar, but this is wiped out by a strafing run from the Hurricane
Over on the east side the force HQ has arrived and sets up coms with the supporting RA battery
“B” company begins to move through the ruins towards the airfield
Turn 5 the general advance continues, “B” company comes under sporadic fire from the ruins and the odd `75mm shell! Their 2” mortar tries to mask their advance with smoke
The artillery FOO spot the Vichy gun but his ranging shots fall short
The Vichy `75 is wiped out by accurate 25ldr fire
Turn 7 The British artillery switches targets to the ruins to support “B” company, this effectively clears a path to the airfield for them
“C” company continue to advance towards Fort Weygand, it 2” mortar begins
to drop explosive bombs onto the nearest building – the first one kills the
Vichy commander
- Major Gherardi!
The Arab Legion Wagner A/C moves to distract the Vichy 25mm whilst its
infantry work their way around the flank
Over at fort Weygand “C” company have reached the walls and exchange
grenades with defenders – both sides take casualties, another 2” mortar round
lands this time killing the Vichy 2IC!
A 25ldr shell hits Fort Weygand – a warning shot of things to come if
resistance continues!!
At the gate the Laffly A/C is taken out by a splendid shot from a Boyes
AT Rifle (11 to hit followed by a 12).
Turn 10 with the incoming roar of an RAAF fighter, the French 3rd in command lowers his colours and surrenders the fort.
After thoughts
Possibly the British should have concentrated their forces, but this may have allowed the Vichy to slip away as previous games. Using the armoured cars as armour proved costly to the British, but that is the Operation Exporter campaign in a nutshell where you find an R-35 is the most armoured vehicle available!! The main mistake the British made was NOT having their FOO on table observing the field from turn 1. The French deployment was as good as I could do, maybe the flying column should have been concealed somewhere outside Fort Weygand??
Between
June 19th and 29th the Allies slowly moved to surround Palmyra, the Vichy
air-force caused major problems during this period. But finally at the start of
July Palmyra was totally cut-off and faced with overwhelming odds the small
garrison surrendered.
Richard, another interesting what if, well grounded in historic situation. The (low level) armour available makes this quite a different battlefield (historically and as a game). The 'black & white' photos give your intro real bite. As ever you have put a lot into this game and into sharing it. Nice one and many thanks. Carl
ReplyDeleteCheers Carl, comments much appreciated
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