Wow!
Another great snippet, Thank you so much RFC!
OTOH, another typo might be the population figures from when RFC shared them with us in that long ago post, IIRC; the Harchong Empire had 194 M, the Temple Lands at 89 M, and the Border States st 102 M, for 385 M; almost half again the 267 M cited in the textev here, unless 2/3 of the Harchong Empire's population is in the south.
Granted they were never textev, so I'm willing to be quite happy with these new hard numbers, or what ever is in the hard copy.
However, if the Union's rate of artillery production averaged about 2 per day for the war's four years, and the Go4 has more than 20 times the population, it would explain why they're presently producing at almost 12 times the Union's average rate, on their way to truly massive numbers, if they can afford it.
Excellent points Don!
Abandoning the offensive to the allies because of their superior maneuverability is bloody dangerous, ie it leans toward ultimate strategic defeat.
While 3 M men might easily cover 2000 miles of trenches, at almost a man per yard, while having at least twice the firepower Lee had at Petersburg, the distance and travel constraints mean someone could punch a 200 mile hole in such a line and the counterattacks would be too late to stop the penetration from wrecking the canal or forward supply dumps causing the flanks of the penetration to crumble.
But then RW may want to preserve the [his] MH for vital Harchong Empire post-war needs, not the jihad's current ones, which is very Harchong of him, because he's taking a much longer view than the Go4.
OTOH, he may merely be hoping to exhaust the allied armies this summer, before unleashing a truly massive blow the next summer ['99].
Or that's what he may be telling the Go4, if Clyntahn lets him get away with it.
Of course it may provoke Green Valley into a great amphibious 'Hail Mary pass' avoiding RW completely to suddenly land near the Zion River, etc, etc.
L
n7axw wrote:Just thinking....
Rainbow Waters is making a big mistake here although given his situation a very understandable one. He is trying to make a virtue out of his lack if mobility by forting up.
Agile allied armies can march rings around him and I wouldn't be surprised if by spring the Alliance isn't able to field over 1.5 million men, particularly as the rate the Protector is able to stand up new regiments continues to increase with the ever more abundant supply of weapons both coming from Charis and locally produced.
I think that it was Confederate General Nathan B. Forrest who is credited with the comment that the winner in a battle is the one "who gets there firstest with the mostest." That is the essence of Rainbow Waters' problem. As badly as his army is spread out, even given the size if his forces, there is no way that he can bring enough men to bear on all of the possible places the allies can strike. This has huge implications, not only for his logistics, but also for the danger that he will find segments of his army cut off and defeated in detail. That, of course, is the vulnerability of any strategy built around a static defense.
Another thought, the odds against the allies population wise have decreased from over 10 to 1 after Darcos Sound to about 1.5 to 1 currently. Just one way to measure progress.
Don
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