Produktbeschreibung
February 1, 1943
Stalingrad has been freed, five fascist armies nave been swept from the map, and before the tired Red Army looms a hole in German lines as big as the entire Western Front in 1918. Just over the horizon lies the industrial Donets Basin, the wide expanses of Ukraninian farmland, and, to the south, the possibility of encircling two German Armies against the Sea of Azov. True, the troops are tired, the ranks depleted, the equipment worn and supplies are low, but just one more push before the spring thaw seems possible. But against the flanks of the drive are looming ten German panzer and motorized divisions that are not in retreat but rather maneuvering to Duel for Kharkov !
Errata : From Designer Jack Radey, 5.10.2002:
1. Can German Divisions and Soviet Corps be switched (i.e. reattached)
between different Armies and Groups at leisure, or is there any
restraint? Are they reattached at the start of the turn?
No restraint, at the start of the turn is correct.
2. On what column of the German Command Track should the SS Corps and
Division Formation markers be placed?
I don't remember, check the historical commentary. Whichever army
commands the Kharkov region commands Liebstandarte and Das Reich, I
believe they are under the SS Corps HQ at that time or shortly
thereafter.
3. Can SS Divisions be reassigned to Wehrmacht Corps or Armies, and
viceversa?
Yes. And were historically.
4. What's the place of German HQs like Cramer, III, XL, XLVII, LVI in
the command hierarchy?
Subordinate to armies, commanding divisions.
5. Can they, once deployed on the Command Track, be reassigned at
leisure amongst the different German armies?
Yes, and were historically. |