This six-scenario pack revolves around battles of
the German invasion of Fortress Holland and its Blitzkrieg into Belgium.
The scenarios are compatible with MMP's ASL™ System and modifiable to be
used with other miniature Wargaming systems.
Blitzkrieg in the West - Central Campaign' scenarios can be played
separately, or the six scenarios may be linked together to form a
campaign game by playing each scenario in order. At the conclusion of
each scenario, both sides total up their Victory Points (VP); and at the
end of the last scenario these VP are totalled, and the side with most
VP wins.
The
scenarios are designed with replayablility in mind. Each scenario
features a base force and variable attachments to that force. Base
forces and variable attachments are based on historical availability for
that scenario. At the start of each scenario:
Base Force + Variable Attachment = Scenario Order of Battle
BWC-7
The Maastricht Bridges:
The initial goal was to capture the bridges over Maas River intact.
Overhead, gliders laden with engineers silently descended on Fort
Eben-Emael and the bridges across the nearby Albert Canal. The roar of
motorcycles and armoured cars filled the sleepy streets of Maastricht,
as reconnaissance units raced westwards, hoping to capture the bridges
before the Dutch could destroy them.
BWC-8
Rearguard Action:
The Belgians were hoping to fight along the Albert Canal for five or six
days, but found their line penetrated, their defences collapsed, and
ordered the withdrawal back to the Dyle Line. Pressed by the advancing
elements of the German
4.Panzerdivision, the Belgian
7ème
Division d’Infanterie was forced to fight a rearguard action.
BWC-9
Holding the Line:
Throughout the day, the German spearhead poured out of the Maastricht
bottleneck and headed southwest. The Belgian III Corps had withdrawn
from the Liège
fortifications to avoid being encircled. One regiment, the
Régiment de Forteresse de Liège, stayed behind to hold the line and
disrupt the German advance.
BWC-10 Wrong
Position:
The night of 11 May, the British 3rd Infantry
Division, under the command of Major-General Bernard Law Montgomery,
reached its position on the Dyle River at Louvain. However the Belgian
10ème
Division d’Infanterie had arrived the day prior and refused to move,
forcing the Montgomery to place his division under the Belgians command,
despite knowing that when the German shells began to fall the Belgians
would withdraw.
BWC-11
Bala-Tiger Post:
The Germans assaulted into the city of Louvain and initially succeeded
in pressing back some posts of the 2nd Royal Ulster Rifles to the
railyards. Here a tangle of railroad lines, sheds, and warehouses made
it a difficult area to traverse. On the extreme left of the Ulster’s
position a platoon defended a position known as “Bala-Tiger Post” in
honour of the two subalterns who commanded it in turn.
BWC-12 The
Jocks are Here:
The German assault into the city initially succeeded
in pressing back some posts of the 2nd Royal Ulster Rifles to the
railyards. A counterattack by the 1st King’s Own Scottish Borderers
managed to drive the Germans back from the railyards, re-establishing
the British lines and forcing the Germans to halt their assault in order
to bring up fresh troops.
Blitzkrieg in the West - The Central Campaign uses ASL Boards
(1a, 6, 9b, 17, 23, 41, 49, 51, 66), ASLSK Boards (q, y, z); and 5/8"
counters from Blitzkrieg in the West - Northern Campaign.
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