New Command scenario: Give Them Hell

December 8, 2013 · Posted in Command · Comment 

Database – DB3000
Author – CMANO PdL Design Team (David Perez, Juan Ramón Paniagua, Miguel Molina)
Email – iosefcmsf@gmail.com BlasdeLezomail@gmail.com meroka37@yahoo.com

NATO vs. Russia (Fictional)
Date/Time: 5th October, 2008 / 00:00:00 Zulu
Location: Black Sea, Aegean Sea
Playable Sides: NATO

In the last days of summer of 2008 the war in Georgia was getting more and more complicated for the Russians, somehow the Georgians had been able to resist the push of the Russians armed forces. Now the international public opinion was clearly favorable to the Georgian side and voices claiming for an international intervention were starting to be heard.

In this situation, Turkey saw an opportunity to increase its influence in the volatile Caucasus region and started lobbying to force a NATO intervention in the area. Intervention that was not approved by the rest of the NATO member. Finally, forced by the public opinion and the political maneuvers of Turkey, the North Atlantic Council decides to send a humanitarian convoy to Georgia with a token escort.

Russia has announced that the convoy is clearly a contribution to the Georgian war effort and as such the Russian Armed Forces were going to stop it before reaching the Georgian port.

The convoy is under sail and the world is holding its collective breath remembering the day of the Cuban missile crisis…

To Naples Allied Joint Commander:

By NAC order 1741 you were designed as operational commander for Operation “Assured Delivery”, whose main movement was the transit of a convoy to the Georgian port of Batumi.

Since the convoy departure of Marseille, situation in the Black Sea is worsening rapidly, the convoy just cleared the Bosporus and it is clear the Russian are not going to let it go undisturbed…

You orders have no change at all: you will take the convoy and its escorts and set course to Batumi in the South of Georgia. Expect heavy harassment by the Russians, but analysts don´t think they will go beyond that.

Just to play in the safe side the SNMG-1, paying a visit to the Bulgarian port of Varna, has been chopped to you and now they are under your command. This four frigate strong group, is fully ready to leave port.

Turkey has transferred to your Command two  maritime air patrol aircrafts from Cengiz Topel NAS, and you can expect more Turkey forces to be put under your command if the situation keeps worsening.

Two NATO AWACS have been deployed to Aviano AB in Italy, you have full tasking authority over both of them.

Finally the USS Enterprise Strike Group is in the Eastern Mediterranean, and has been also put under your Command, but remember that under the Montreaux Convention, the aircraft carrier cannot cross the Bosporus…

Italia is ready to transfer to you a KC-767 tanker to support the CAW of the Enterprise.

Use all these assets to protect the

convoy transit and download operations. If things go sour, you should have enough power to force your way in…

Huge political efforts are being made to defuse this situation, so the last thing needed is any incident involving your forces and the Russian’s, so make sure you avoid any operation in, under or over the Russian sovereign territory, airspace or waters. You are under a strict weapons tight ROE, do not fire unless in self defense…

The Russian have declared several maritime and air exclusion zones in the Black Sea area, so civilian traffic is starting to diminish, but expect a lot of small uncontrolled civilian vessels. Avoid civilian casualties.

INTEL reports that all Naval Air Regiment in the Black Sea Fleet have been put in high readiness status. Most of the surfaces vessel of the Black Sea Fleet have left port and are operating south of the Crimea peninsula. All but two of the Black Sea Fleet submarines are accounted for in their berths… their whereabouts are unknown but the Russian have been keeping an ELINT outpost close to the port of Poti.

The Black Sea Fleet flagship “Moskva” is still deployed in the Eastern Mediterranean with the “Admiral Kusnetsov” group. This group, as three days ago, is in the port of Latakia paying a “good will visit” to the Syrian Government. Normal portside operations are been observed so far, but HUMINT indicates that not port leave has been granted to the crews, so it is believed that they are ready to be under way with a really short notice.

The Russian Air Force is heavily involved in the ongoing Georgian operations, so they already were in high readiness, in any case an operational increase has been observed in bases housing fighters. An increase of readiness has also been observed in the Air Defense forces, and several SAM regiments have left their garrisons and are expected to be deployed around the coast.

EMCON: use your electronic assets as needed, but consider that trying to squeeze the convoy in the Black Sea unnoticed is going to be quite difficult, if not impossible.

Designers note: the aircrafts that are going to be transferred to you are shown in the game with huge ready times, those ready times are the time left to be put under your command, please do not change those times.

China ADIZ Again

December 6, 2013 · Posted in Command · Comment 

The speculation about the new ADIZ declared by China continues. After Tim Robinson at the RAS, Kyle Mizokami at War Is Boring has also played out a hypothetical hot episode based on this new issue, using Command. But he added a twist: USAF F-22As covertly joining the rumble.

China plans to ambush one of Japan’s air patrols—a P-3C Orion maritime surveillance aircraft and an accompanying pair of F-15J Eagle fighters—as it makes its daily flight through the Ryukyu and Senkaku islands, hundreds of miles south of mainland Japan. […]

If the attack on the Orion is successful and the opportunity presents itself, the Chinese could also shoot down an E-2C Hawkeye airborne early warning aircraft orbiting southwest of Okinawa. The destruction of four planes and the deaths of as many as 21 aircrew would be a great loss for Japan.

The Chinese air force plans to send up three groups of planes. The first, with four J-11B fighters, will try to take out Japan’s F-15 escorts, leaving the Orion patrol plane defenseless.

The second Chinese group, composed of four J-10 multi-role fighters, will then dart in and shoot down the Orion—and potentially also the Hawkeye.

Providing radar coverage and command and control will be the third group, with a KJ-2000 airborne early warning aircraft flanked by fighter escorts. The early warning group will stay out of the battle zone, instead holding off the coast of China.

So how did this clash play out? Interestingly, to say the least. Read the full AAR-style account HERE.

China vs Japan over the new ADIZ, using Command

December 4, 2013 · Posted in Command · Comment 

Tim Robinson at the Royal Aeronautical Society used Command to simulate a potential AAW conflict between Japan and China over the latter’s declaration of a new ADIZ over the East China Sea:

For this test, I elected to create a simple test. What would the result of two overlapping air combat patrol zones (representing the Chinese and Japanese ADIZs) be? Would forces automatically engage? Who is likely to come out on top? Can I command my forces to minimize losses?

In the game I was able to set up reference points for both China and Japan, which would give the computer-controlled AI aircraft the boundaries to patrol. For China I gave the Chinese Air Force four J-11 (Su-27) Flanker Bs, an AEW aircraft (Y-8W/KJ-200 Balance Beam) and a reconnaissance aircraft (HZ-5 Beagle). Meanwhile the Japanese Air Self Defense Forces (JASDF) would get four F-15J+s, and a E-767 AEW aircraft for support. Each side was set to see the other as ‘unfriendly’ and would be allowed to fire on unidentified contacts breaching their ADIZ. No civilian air traffic was included in the scenario this time and the patrolling CAPs would not be allowed to investigate contacts outside their ADIZ. I would be taking the role of JASDF commander. The scenario takes place in early evening, but all times are in Zulu(GMT).

Read the comprehensive AAR-style article HERE.

Updated DB image & description packs available

December 2, 2013 · Posted in Command · Comment 

Aircraft_1024Updated image & description packs for the DB3000 and CWDB databases are now available on our Command Downloads page: 
http://www.warfaresims.com/?page_id=1876

The CWDB pack is now 80MB in size, while the DB3000 pack has grown to 780MB, with over 6000 images!

Credits: stormridersp, fab94, renders, alkiap, sstrong, RoyHarper, Runibl, bradinggs, Steven Lohr, Jeff Leslie, Meroka37, conforoa, OldPascas, SilentHunter, snowburn, baskreuger, Henry Morgan, fool12342000, Papa_Hausser

Big thanks to Steven Lohr (CV60) for painstakingly collecting, consolidating and normalizing all known image packs released!

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