Christmas at Yarkshire Gamer is Mesopotamia time, each year we try and get the WW1 in the East collection out and recreate the battles which occurred in modern day Iraq. So far we have followed the British and Empire Forces (most troops in the "British" army where actually from the Indian Sub Continent) up the river Tigris through various adventures up to the Battle of Ctesphion where they fell short of the glittering prize that is Bagdad. If you want to follow our previous Mesopotamian excursions click on the 28mm WW1 in the East tab on the right of this post.
Arabs in Turkish Service waiting for the signal to go over the top |
Below is the map of the action, I used the top right of the sketch as the guide for our tabletop recreation.
Figures are 28mm rules are If The Lord Spares Us by toofatlardies.
And some pictures of our general table set up,
View across the table showing Turkish Trenches and troops waiting to enter the system |
View from above the Turkish trenches looking towards the Fort |
Queue in the Turkish trenches |
View from the Fort looking towards the Turkish Lines |
View from the Tigris to the Turkish position. |
The Turkish Force was now under command of the German General Von der Goltz and he had determined that Kut would be dealt with by way of a siege, trenches were dug and the general tedium of such warfare began.
There were still just over 9,000 Empire troops in the City and they would prove impossible to supply over the coming months. However there was one serious assault made during the 24th December into the early hours of Xmas Day.
The German Commander was away in Kermanshah at the time of the attack and you have to think that the Turkish Officers took advantage of this to enable the attack, while the Cats away !
Turkish Artillery |
The afternoon was relatively quiet but at 8pm as the moon was rising behind the clouds the second attack and our game began.
Waiting for the Signal for the attack to begin. |
It’s 8pm on the 24th December 2015, an important day for some, but today it’s important for the Turkish Armed Forces.
Following the Battle at Ctesphion we have pushed the Empire troops back again and again. The Empire has stopped retreating and has decided to stand against us here at the ancient town of Kut Al Amara.
First wave approaches the wire, the orange markers signify damage |
An attack earlier in the day was repulsed but it is now 7.55pm and our troops are ready to attack again, the first wave goes over the top at 8pm.
The attack on the right stalls at the wire under heavy fire from the Fort. |
You have 3 Battalions of Arabs in Turkish Service each with a 2 Fig HQ and 4 x 6 figure Company and 1 regular Turkish Infantry Battalion as above but with 8 figure companies in the right hand side of your trenches.
In the left side of the trenches there are 4 regular Turkish Infantry Battalions with 8 figure companies. All have 1 MG bases.
The MG bases for the front line units are set up in the trench and can support the attack, the other MG bases are at the rear of the battalions.
The next wave is ready as the casualties mount up on the first wave, still pinned down |
Night – it is a dark moonlit night, all direct firing die is at a -2d6 modifier unless the target is lit by a flare.
Flares – each Art piece can fire 1 flare per turn with a -1d6 on any other firing or fire two flares and not fire normally. Pick spot at random, place yellow chit, roll 1d10 and random, flare covers 12”. Flares are removed on the drawing of the Artillery card. Units are visible if flare covers them or is 6” behind, no blinding.
Fort Walls – are mud brick, they are vulnerable to Artillery, 6 kills will knock down 1 6" section.
Barb Wire – Each section is 4pts strong and is impassable when un damaged. 2 pts damage and it becomes bad going. 1 Art kill or 1 Section stationary next to wire removes 1 pt. Counts as soft cover.
Turkish Artillery – must check comms if they want to change target / ammo, 2d6 8 or more to change.
Your Commander is classed as Young Turk - d6 – 1 command pips, 2 signal bases Your Turkish Infantry are Morale 2.
Tea old boy, Yarkshire of course. |
It’s 8pm on the 24th December 2015, the day before Xmas and one was hoping for a bit of peace on Earth but old Johnny Turk has different ideas. General Townsend has decided to stand against the Turks here at Kut Al Amara and await a relief column which is heading North from Basra.
You are in Command of an ancient mud brick walled Fort on the North Eastern side of the town adjacent to the river. An attack earlier in the day was repulsed but it is now 7.55pm and there is activity in the Turkish trenches.
British Officers oversee the Indian Troops on the Fort |
You have one British Battalion the Ox Bucks Lt Infantry with a 2 Fig HQ and 4 x 8 Fig companies and an MG base, set up two companies and the MG in the trenches between the Fort and the river and two Companies by the Observation Tower.
There is also an Indian Battalion the 119th with the same organisation as the Ox Bucks but with an extra MG base set up in the Fort Walls and bastions.
You are Supported by 1 Artillery Base (4 dice), one Indian Mountain Gun (3 dice) and a Jam Jar chucker, all set up in the Fort.
British Signallers direct Artillery from the Observation Tower |
Flares – each Art piece can fire 1 flare per turn with a -1d6 on any other firing or fire two flares. Pick spot at random, place yellow chit, roll 1d10 and random, flare covers 12”. Flares are removed on the drawing of the Artillery card. Units are visible if flare covers them or is 6” behind, no blinding. Your Jam Jar chucker will only fire flares.
Fort Walls – are mud brick, they are vulnerable to Artillery. You have dug a line of trenches behind them you are that confident of their strength.
Your Commander is classed as Eton - d6 command pips, 2 signal bases Your British Infantry are Morale 0, Your Indian Troops 2, you may raise your Indian to 1 if you split up a British section and have at least 2 British figures with an Indian Section.
Historical Result
A close run thing, the smoke and dust made targets hard to see even with the aid of flares. For nearly an hour the troops of both sides traded hand thrown bombs around the stockades and rubble of the Fort. Casualties were heavy on both sides and around 11pm a reinforcement of British Pioneers arrived just in time for the gallant Turkish attack to be halted. A third and final attack was made around 2.30 am but it didn't gain any momentum and the attack was called off. Estimates of Turkish losses are around 2,000 whilst the Empire troops lost 315.
As the second wave gets to the wire a breach opens in the wall, yellow marker is a flare |
From the pictures above you can see that the first wave especially on the Turkish right got bogged down under heavy fire, most of the damage done by the Machine Guns on the Fort Wall, the attack on the left fared a little better having the advantage of being further away and therefore under less effective fire.
The focus of the game changed when the breach in the wall occurred, the Empire had a real hole to fill ! Artillery fire drove the Indian defenders away from that section of the wall and the Oxfords who had split up a unit to boost Indian morale had to reconstitute it to plug the gap.
The Turkish attack gravitated towards the gap the British in their trenches were able to cause casualties on the Turks as they past their front but not enough to stop them.
But then some rather spectacular dice throwing and some fortunate unit activation wiped out a large portion of the 2nd Turkish wave as it tried to enter the Fort.
The Turkish Player had managed to get all their Mgs onto the trench line and the British Commander decided to withdraw to the inner line of defences in the Fort.
Personally I thought the game had a bit more in it, the British would soon have to make big choices about abandoning their trenches which would have released another line of attack for the Turks. The Turkish Artillery would be less effective inside the Fort and the accuracy of the British Artillery would increase. It would have been a close run thing. Unfortunately there had been a few cancellations of sessions due to short numbers and when a game has been on the table for a while it can be hard to keep it going.
So the Mesopotamia collection leaves the table for another year, next Xmas we will start on the attempts to break the siege.
Great looking game Ken. You should do this more than nonce per annum. Glad to see the tea survived.
ReplyDeleteWould live to Peter but sadly time and numbers of collections prevent it. It can be a couple of years before some stuff gets player and we have added Italian Wars and Crusades recently.
DeleteReally impressive AAR. I think the Turks are a very underappreciated army in WW1. Enjoy seeing something not Western front trenches.
ReplyDeleteThanks, this theatre has much more going for it in my opinion.
DeleteSuper game and AAR.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much 👍
DeleteGreat action report, and scenery. I think the Mesopotamian theatre has a lot of gaming potential, not just in WW1 but the immediate aftermath.
ReplyDeleteMost definitely AJ, one of my favourite Gaming Periods
DeleteGreat game!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the Bat Rep!
:-)
Thanks very much 👍
DeleteOutstanding game an AAR. Beautiful collection!
ReplyDeleteCheers,
JB
Cheers 👍
DeleteWonderful looking game, figures and terrain - great looking fort! We did a WW1 Palestine game last year and couldn't agree more - the campaigns against the Turks and their German and Arab allies are fascinating to play - the Turks are a very tough army!
ReplyDeleteCheers Doc, the "Fort" was cobbled together with some 4ground walls and buildings one of our regulars loaned YG for the game. Very under apprechiated period.
DeleteThanks again for bringing this game to Steel Lard 2022 in Sheffield. I just received notification from Naval & Military Press about the following cut price deal: The Mesopotamia Campaign and the Siege of Kut: Two excellent books covering an episode that was one of the British Empire’s worst defeats of the Great War. Originally published at a full £25 each, now both titles are available at the remarkable 'cost-of-living Price Buster' offer of just £3.00 each!
ReplyDeleteBETRAYAL OF AN ARMY Mesopotamia 1914-1916
Hardback, 300 pages with maps and photographs
A well-written and compelling chronicle of political and military ineptitude. The guilty men walked away and, as ever, it was the soldiers who paid the price.
Published at £25 – Now £3
https://www.naval-military-press.com/product/betrayal-of-an-armymesopotamia-1914-1916/
KUT The Death of an Army
Hardback, 323 pages
This title recounts the siege from the British perspective of the officers and men trapped inside Kut, revealing shortfalls in logistics and planning that sealed their fates.
Published at £25 – Now £3
https://www.naval-military-press.com/product/kutthe-death-of-an-army/
Thanks very much for the heads up, I will pop over to the site and have a look 😀
Delete