There Will Be A Welcome In The Hillsides

After a year of failed dates for another get together I managed to join my good friend Gareth Lane in the Shed of War for an Soviet Afghan extravaganza on his superb purpose built terrain.

Our game was a snapshot from Operation Panjshir VII when Soviet forces attempted to root out the Mujahedeen of Ahmad Shah Massoud from Panjshir valley. I commanded the Afghans and Gareth took the Soviets. The rules were the Bolt Action Modern supplement which work really well for this level of mass skirmish.

To simulate the leaky ship that was the Soviet military command the Afghans know that the motorised infantry elements would be approaching along the road from the south via the bridge and/or across the shallow river and also knew that airborne detachments would be landing at the northern end of the road at some point. To add to this advantage the Afghan player could be pretty flexible about his deployment; the table length was split into 3 zones and the Afghans had to deploy at least two elements in each zone plus the captured T55’s had to be in the southern zone, the rest could be in any zone of the player’s choice, BUT those elements weren’t in any specific place so the Afghan player could declare their presence from anywhere in the zone – once declared off course they were on table and couldn’t disappear. This idea was very different from the usual hidden deployment were you have marked on a map the exact building a unit is in and simulated the Mujahedeen ‘owning the ground’ very well.

Troop deployment noted off we went and what a game we had!

The Soviets started cautiously by sending a dog & handler over the bridge to sniff out any mines – I had anti tank & anti personnel planted so not wanting the one at the foot of the bridge discovered up popped one of the snipers and no more dog team! The RSPCA have been informed 😂 Undeterred the Soviets sent their scout element forward and the unfortunate BRDM went up quite spectacularly. Game on!

A blow by blow description of the game would be a bit of a bore so I’ll reduce to the high points.

The early turns were taken up with the Afghans attempting to block the Soviets on the bridge which they had rather obligingly used as their main thrust of attack. The first T55 was revealed utilising the cover of a building to shoot at the first T64 onto the bridge (there were 3 all with tank riders) but although it hit there was no damage, fortunately the return shot missed. Foolishly the T55 stayed in place to duke it out with the T64 and although it did have the desired effect of creating a traffic jam and some tank riders were machine gunned to death ultimately it lost the fight and brewed up.

On rolled the Soviet advance with tank riders spilling into the dust and the second T55 manifested itself with a point blank shot on the lead T64. AND MISSED!

The T64 didn’t miss and that was the end of the Mujahedeen armour. “oh well” said I “we never had to pay for it”

As the armour rolled down the road the first Mujahedeen fighters declared themselves in the buildings flanking the road off the bridge and made the Soviets pay a high price in a gun battle which saw the tank rider squads virtually wiped out before the Afghans finally succumbed.

At the other end of the table the thwack of rotors heralded the deployment of the airborne elements who proceeded along the valley floor and onto the high ground but all was quiet except for some long range sniper fire from the town. But as they advanced heavy machine gun fire opened up from a hillside building; the airborne had a fight on their hands!

Initially the airborne weathered the storm despite some losses but finally had to resort to an artillery strike to silence the HMG position but no sooner was that silenced than the Afghan mortar team opened up dropping shells into the valley; they would have to be silenced too.

Frustrated by the slow progress, Soviet command radioed in for the big stuff and after a slight delay on came the HIND……..

And up popped the man with the (very expensive) STINGER and he bloody well missed! Gales of laughter from Gareth and the HIND hovered on station…….

But the Mujahedeen were not done and from it’s hidden position in a back alley the technical with the mounted quad revealed itself and sent streams of heavy calibre fire into the great bird….

What a catastrophe! The HIND took several critical hits and crashed to the ground narrowly missing a T64 and blocking its progress. Highlight of the game for me but there was definitely more to come.

Back at the northern end of the valley the airborne had some success in locating the mortar teams and opened up but were obviously rattled by the demise of the HIND and inflicted limited casualties but it did look like curtains for the mortar guys.

Not so! The valiant technical roared out of it’s alley and up onto some high ground with a clear field of fire on the airborne section and shredded them. The mortars were saved and continued to drop rounds on the other airborne sections in the valley albeit at a reduced effect. The technical team were definitely the men of the match 😃

Back in the town the one remaining complete Soviet infantry section moved further into the town knowing damm well it was risky but having no real choice and obligingly another Mujahedeen section popped up for another gunfight. Despite being in the open the Soviets performed well and did have the support of a deployed HMG of their own further back on the roof of one of the captured buildings from the earlier firefight.

While small arms fire and the screams of the dying filled the air the now somewhat vulnerable T64 column continued it’s cautious advance down the road seeking to link up with the battered airborne but another mine and another burning hulk put paid to that. It was all looking a bit dire for Soviet command.

Back down in the valley there wasn’t much of the airborne left and shit was still coming in, forward progress was definitely not an option. Time to radio for extraction.

And we were done. The Soviets were down to two T64’s and a BMP1 with virtually no infantry support and Mujahedeen were still popping up. It was time to get back over that bridge. A crushing defeat.

What a great day we had. Many thanks to Gareth for hosting and the beer and bangers & mash. Hopefully we wont leave it a year until next time 😀

Afghanistan Rescue

The quiet before the storm

This game was born out of wanting to use our new toy, a Cougar MRAP, and to get back into playing Spectre Operations again with a ‘small game’ to re learn the rules. We would have put it up on LAF but the archaic rules about post 2000 conflicts and our last interaction with the site put us off even trying.

3D print

Our basic scenario was an Afghan police station is under attack by increasing numbers of Taliban who have infiltrated the town disguised as civilians. The police are a small squad with their own leader but happen to have a senior leader in the building which will help with their command roles. The Taliban comprise three battle groups of around ten men each spread in a crescent through the town and already in small arms range.

The cop shop

Due to the presence of civilians senior command has rejected a danger close airstrike and opted for calling in two nearby SAS teams to effect a rescue.

The hard men

After dicing for random entry points for the SAS we got underway; Red team approached on foot from the east and immediately sent Trooper Winner off with the FN Minimi to find higher ground, Sgt Phillips, Cpl Firmin & Trooper Horsfall, headed for the rendezvous point at the central market, motioning civilians to go home (ironically); Blue team approached from the south in the Cougar with Cpl Curry manning the HK GMG.

Red team

The opening firing was solely between the police and Taliban; to the north of the town Hajji Barri’s group manoeuvred from the buildings they were occupying towards the hesco barriers, exchanging shots with Pvt Berri who was covering the side door and who managed to seriously wound Barri – realising their leader would bleed out the group left him to be with god and pressed their attack.

Barri’s group

Almost directly opposite the police, Rezza Jaffar Abbas and his fighters were getting themselves into better positions with a sniper and RPG on resident’s roofs as the citizenry cowered inside, covering this positioning with AK fire from the rest of the group.

Abbas’ team get into position

To the south west Ahmed Ali and his group moved out of the compound toward the market place, planning to flank west and around the side of the station – this didn’t go well.

Ahmed Ali urges his men out into the market place

Although the air was fairly thick with AK fire casualties were at a low level so far, the police station walls proved effective and Captain Gul urged the small police team on (in other words his command level prevented them becoming suppressed and rallied them if they did); all this changed however as the Cougar nudged its way into the open.

Cougar appears as Ahmed Ali’s group advances out of their compound

Seeing a group of armed insurgents at nine o’clock Cpl Curry let rip with the grenade machine gun (we’d never used one of these before – bloody hell!)

First salvo from the GMG

The firing wasn’t entirely accurate but the drift took out the sniper team on the roof of the compound (pure luck) and dropped a couple more fighters at the compound gates; Ali and several of his lieutenants took cover at the water trough by the market stalls and hoped their RPG guy would take out the metal monster.

RPG fighter gets ready just before the first salvo

Unnerved by the barrage the RPG fighter missed his shot and sent the rocket into the building behind the Cougar killing a man and his son with the falling masonry.

collateral damage

While mayhem reigned in the market place the other two groups pressed their attacks, avoiding losses from police RPG fire…

RPG miss

but not missing themselves when they put a shot into the room containing Sgt Alamyar, killing him outright.

death of Sgt Alamyar

Fighters from Ali’s group reached the south west corner of the police station giving a clear shot at the soldier defending the sandbagged front entrance…

flanked

and the fighters from Barri’s group had reached the hesco barriers, pouring more fire into the police station.

fighters closing in

The SAS teams were acutely aware that the battle was moving away from them so another salvo from the GMG went in on the market place with slightly better grouping, taking out Ali and his lieutenants behind the stone trough and effectively finishing off that group. At the same time Sgt Lane and Trooper got out to lend their small arms weight to Red Team.

death of Ali

With the soldier at the front entrance down, Captain Gul realised that every gun now counted so picking up the discarded weapon he joined the fight only to be picked off by Abbas’ sniper on the opposite roof.

Captain Gul

More pain for the police followed, their lmg man went down to concentrated AK fire and an RPG into the front entrance took out the police RPG guy just as he steadied himself for a shot.

Afghan fighter narrowly avoids becoming collateral damage

Cpl Curry now turned his attention to the Abbas group on the building ahead who also realised there was a big noise behind them they needed to do something about. However better training won out and Curry got his shot in first, raining death on the building.

“stop shooting at my house!”

Abbas, one other fighter and the sniper died in the barrage but Curry was out of effective targets now and the market place was more congested than aerial reconnaissance had suggested so it was over to the foot sloggers.

Red Team

Despite the loss of three leaders the Taliban were still very much in the fight and with the fire from the station ending (morale had collapsed and everyone was either dead, bleeding out or stunned) closed in on their prize.

victory in their grasp

In the town the wisdom of dispatching Winner to find higher ground paid off when a sneaky Taliban RPG fighter in a side alleyway revealed himself for a side shot on the Cougar but, again, superior training won out and Winner cut him half.

Winner

Despite the losses it couldn’t be denied that the Taliban had achieved their objective and the SAS had not. The police station was set on fire as the Taliban pulled out leaving behind a dead senior Afghan officer and a brave police section who had died fighting to a man. The SAS had barely fired a shot other than the mayhem wrought by the GMG and although the Taliban losses were around the 50% mark that didn’t matter in terms of the propaganda victory.

endgame

We had great fun with this game, we got back into the rules a lot quicker and easier than we thought we would and managed to operate 6 different ‘factions’ with relative ease. The GMG is a monster and in a different game we would need to beef up the Taliban with more serious firepower – recoilless rifles etc.

Looking back over the game we didn’t actually play that many turns but in the average Spectre turn a lot can happen in the phases and each ‘faction’ gets a full go so there’s more going on than you think. Overall it seemed to capture the kinetic energy of up close modern contact without too much bookwork so we came away happy.

We hope you enjoyed our AAR, please feel free to comment. Thanks. Ian & Dave.

Sicario Part IV

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This project is taking way longer than it should be and the main reason is buildings. Over a year ago when we started it all seemed so simple, use the Sarissa South Of The Border range plus some from the City Block, bang them on some 2′ x 2′ mdf boards and away we go! We even spoke to Sarissa at the last Deby show and ideas about modifying the city blocks to look more ‘south of the border’ were discussed but time moved on, they were busy expanding their ranges we got sidetracked by other projects, blah, blah, blah.

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3D Printing Experiment

I’m sure everyone knows what 3D printing is but for the uninitiated; you create a 3D CAD model of whatever it is you want to make, you then make a tool path of the model for the molten plastic to follow, then you send the tool path program to a specialised printer add some molten plastic and hey presto! If it was that simple of course we’d all be doing it but that isn’t the point of this post.

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