So, I have been working on my Fistful of Tows 3 armies of late, as I have a ton of unpainted micro armor that I kinda want to turn into painted micro armor. (and have been working to do so, I'll have some articles on how that's been going soon!) And, I have been thinking. I've always touted FFT 3 as a great set of rules to do the operational level clashes of the organized phase of the Twilight War (1995-1997, and perhaps even 1998?)
Well, I have a lot of Micro-Mark lists from Mark Bevis lying around my Wargames Vault library, and I wanted to use them to convert to lists I can use for a plain vanilla "Third World War." Well, an idea hit me like a brick through the proverbial window. Why can't I also use them for Twilight War organizations as well? Right?
So, I am embarking on two new projects, one is, of course, to make some headway in reorganizing and painting my FFT 3 armies, and second? To create parallel army lists for FFT 3 so people can game out the Twilight War on the tabletop.
But Jason, what of some of the weirdo vehicles like the M1A2 Giraffe? What do we do for that? Well, I stated those out and have enclosed a link to those items here. So, without further ado, let's discuss my first list, a list for the humble OTK Territorial Defense Units (What most Twilight: 2000 gamers know as the ORMO!)
To quote Wikipedia:
The OTK was founded in 1965 to help defend Polish territory in situations where the Polish People's Army was engaged abroad under Warsaw Pact obligations. Although their primary mission was defending the homeland, the OTK also had the Warsaw Pact mission of transporting Soviet forces and supplies across Poland in wartime. Formed mainly from units shifted from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the OTK went under a new Inspectorate for National Territorial Defense in the Ministry of National Defense. The OTK included the Internal Defense Forces (Polish: Wojska Obrony Wewnętrznej - WOW, the largest unit) and several smaller territorial defense units.
The OTK, thus was the second line militia forces one would see in most communist countries that answered more to the party or a parallel organization, rather than the military itself. The WOW, which was the internal defense forces, will be covered in a different article. Mr. Bevis has them organized into several territorial defense brigades, and he has a decent breakdown of the units in his list. According to him, he has 2 Brigades centered on Warsaw and Katowicka, and 7 regiments centered on the other major cities in Poland. Now, in our timeline, by 1990, the OTK was seen as fairly ineffective, as there was a bit of mission creep, (many social organizations, such as the boy scouts, fell under the perview of the OTK) and many Polish officers saw an assignment to the OTK as a fairly easy assignment before retirement, or even one they could pursue after retirement (aka, they had a lot of dead wood to clear out.) I suspect the situation didn't improve until East Germany fell, and NATO troops were on the Oder-Niesse, but there must have been some improvements to these units, if only to give them a fighting chance?
So, what improvements do we think they made?
- The first change I suspect they made was to get the OTK units trained up under the supervision of perhaps convalescing or otherwise disabled officers and NCOs fresh from the fighting against NATO in Germany. How well this went is up to some conjecture. But I suspect something better than 1940 LDV, and not quite as good as 1943 Home Guard might be a way to evaluate them. They're willing to fight, how well they will fight is an open question.
- Another was to improve the equipment available with whatever the Army was willing to spare (mostly cast-off or perhaps gear captured from the Chinese front! Though, I suspect there wasn't a ton of the latter.) I assume the Polish Army itself upgraded as follows:
- All of the RPG-2s are replaced by RPG-7.
- A limited number of 82mm M37 mortars were issued from reserve stocks.
- All the SMGs are replaced by AKMR or AKMs
- Limited replacement of ZPU-2 with ZU-23-2 as more are made available from new Soviet production.
- The remaining B-10 RCLs are retired for more SPG-9s
- Each battalion is given a battery of 6 M37 82mm mortars.
- And this is my off the wall option, use it at your peril. As the NATO buildup in Germany continued over the winter of 1996-97, the Polish government was deseperate to get any arms they could lay their hands on. One method they came up with was to release obsolete tanks to the OTK. Some 900 T-34/85s were released to the OTK from reserve stocks as other army reserve and WOW units recieved T-55s as hand-me-downs from other army units. The vehicles were in bad shape, and often as not, encased in concrete and used as pillboxes ala the German Panzerturm, but...you could use them on the basis of one company per OTK Brigade or Regiment.
Combat Formations
- Base:
- 1 SPG-9 73mm RCL Stand
- 1 82mm M37 Mortar Stand
- 3 Rifle Companies:
- 3 Stands of Infantry
- Base:
- 1 Traffic Regulation Platoon (treat as normal infantry stand) and 1 Truck
- 1 ZU-23-2 23mm Stand and 1 Truck
- 1 82mm M37 Mortar Stand
- 4-6 Rifle Companies:
- As per the battalion above, but each company has an 73mm SPG-9 stand.
Actually we had our own T 34-85s stockpiled and they were in service until 1986 in Poland.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't considered Twilight War battles in micro scale. That might be something for me to look into down the road, after I work my way through my Cold War battles. Cool idea!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great project. Might have a play about with the 5core Brigade Commander rules.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Pete.