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Post by simon darkshade on Jan 11, 2023 15:14:28 GMT
A few interesting things came up when I was doing some 1970 GDP/capitas, now edited into the above post. Firstly, the lack of the oil rich micro-states of the Middle East shore off the top 3 countries in @ (Kuwait, UAE and Qatar); their place is taken by Newfoundland, which has had a boom 15 years from earlier oil discoveries. Secondly, New Zealand’s place as top of the non-anomaly countries, although this was predictable, given where their status was historically. Thirdly, Denmark being out in front of Sweden was interesting.
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stevep
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Post by stevep on Jan 11, 2023 17:55:01 GMT
A few interesting things came up when I was doing some 1970 GDP/capitas, now edited into the above post. Firstly, the lack of the oil rich micro-states of the Middle East shore off the top 3 countries in @ (Kuwait, UAE and Qatar); their place is taken by Newfoundland, which has had a boom 15 years from earlier oil discoveries. Secondly, New Zealand’s place as top of the non-anomaly countries, although this was predictable, given where their status was historically. Thirdly, Denmark being out in front of Sweden was interesting.
Simon
According to your GDP list Sweden is placed
19.) Sweden: 659 (+ 5.8%) and Denmark 36.) Denmark 273 (5.49%)
So why are you saying Denmark is ahead of Sweden or am I totally misreading something?
Also checking again a number of the nations seem to have odd figures for their GDPs - like the two above? In fact most of the figures of the nations after the 1st 11th. i.e. for 11 - 20.
11.) Austria-Hungary 1,233,186,607,912 (+ 10.75%) 12.) Brazil: 1197.2634 (+9.74%) 13.) Benelux: 1119.6642 (+6.23%) 14.) Spain: 947.9694 (+4.98%) 15.) Australia 895,060,886,342 (+ 5.87%) 16.) Mexico: 836 (+ 6.26%) 17.) Argentina: 824 (+ 7.62%) 18.) South Africa: 682,203,607,069 (+ 5.48%) 19.) Sweden: 659 (+ 5.8%) 20.) Turkey: 615 (+ 5.84%)
Shows that I only really looked at the top 10 or so. Looks like most of the amounts got truncated in some way.
Steve
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Post by simon darkshade on Jan 11, 2023 23:53:39 GMT
Steve,
Denmark is ahead on GDP/capita due to its smaller population.
Most of the nations outside of the top 10 GDPs have the rounded/abbreviated versions put up, with the exception of some of the Commonwealth states that I have kept track of separate yearly development for the Imperial Defence storyline. I could put the fleshed out GDPs of 11-20 in, but the data isn’t there for the smallest states.
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stevep
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Post by stevep on Jan 12, 2023 14:36:12 GMT
Steve, Denmark is ahead on GDP/capita due to its smaller population. Most of the nations outside of the top 10 GDPs have the rounded/abbreviated versions put up, with the exception of some of the Commonwealth states that I have kept track of separate yearly development for the Imperial Defence storyline. I could put the fleshed out GDPs of 11-20 in, but the data isn’t there for the smallest states.
Ah thanks for clarifying. Its a feature not a bug. Forgetting for a moment this is data your generating rather than actual information. Also with the Denmark/Sweden issue.
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Post by simon darkshade on Jan 14, 2023 4:00:04 GMT
July July 1: Beginning of the Grommet series of U.S. nuclear tests with the Diamond Mine test at the Nevada Test Site; some attached personnel are heard to comment that patrolling the Mojave makes one wish for a nuclear winter. July 2: British Army scientists test their latest arcane supercomputer by programming a simulated reenactment of the hard fought close victory at the Battle of Isandlwhana with modern weapons, resulting in a much quicker and more decisive triumph in 16 minutes and 24 seconds; a variant featuring close air support cut this to 5 minutes and 32 seconds, but requests to try out a tactical nuclear solution were refused on grounds of being a bit silly. July 3: The Indonesian national election results in a resounding victory for President Sukarno, with over 97.3% of the vote in his favour. July 4: Unveiling of several new US aircraft at the Independence Day air show in Washington D.C., including the North American-Convair F-20 long range interceptor and F-21 fighter-interceptor and the Boeing FB-111. July 5: The British Commonwealth South Atlantic Fleet arrives in Port Stanley on the first stop of an official tour of the Falklands, Prydain, Argentina and Uruguay. Consisting of HMS Hermes, the battleship HMSAS Good Hope, four cruisers, eight destroyers, six frigates, the Royal Navy skyship carrier HMS Leviathan with her squadron of RNAS Hawker-Siddeley Nimrods and the RAF aerodreadnought Solaris, the fleet’s goodwill visits have been bought forward by the recent unrest in Uruguay and the precipitous Argentine naval exercises. July 6: Sir Charles Ratcliffe single handedly slays a monstrous Nile crocodile on Lake Tanganyika with his holy sword, with the beast having been reportedly responsible for eating several dozen people. July 7: The Food and Drug Administration issues an urgent recall for all canned soups produced by the Bon Vivant Soup Company, a total of over 1.5 million cans, after an unknown number were contaminated with botulism and brucellosis in an apparent deliberate mass poisoning. July 8: An earthquake registerring 8.4 on the Richter Scale strikes the Valparaiso region of Chile, destroying several small towns and killing over 800 people. July 9: Scotland Yard’s Vice Squad and Special Branch assists Surrey Police in raids on a number of properties including 22 Acacia Avenue, Little Whinging after a long running investigation into harlotry and suspected links with a Soviet spy ring. They are assisted by a banana-costumed superhero, ever alert for the call to action. July 10: The Royal Palace of Morocco is assaulted by over 1500 rebel army cadets in a coup attempt during the birthday party of King Hassan. The fighting rages on for several hours before loyal troops and the royal wyvern crush the uprising, with dozens of captured officers and other suspected traitors summarily executed throughout the night. July 11: Chile’s Senate approves of Prime Minister Allende’s controversial yet popular copper nationalisation plan, sending the bill to the King for royal assent. July 12: The Wonka Chocolate Company completes the prototype of a medicinal chocolate bar for the British Army, with the 3 oz bar combining enriched minerals, vitamins, fibre and 800 calories of energy with an anti-inflammatory, a pain killer, temperature stabiliser and healing accelerator as well as microdoses of ketamine and D-IX. It is anticipated that the bar will be included in emergency ration packs along with American proton pills. July 13: Establishment of the Pan-Arab Liberation Organisation in Lebanon. The Soviet backed armed guerrilla force is implacably opposed to the presence of Israel, distinct from the general acquiescence that characterises the mainstream Arab governments and political parties in the region. July 14: The US Army begins deployment of reinforced training groups and specialist teams in Central America to assist in combating revolutionary groups in the region. July 15: Transfer of sovereignty of Okinawa back to Japan from the United States under the Okinawa Reversion Agreement July 16: The USAF expands its 'Women in the Air Force' programme, broadening the entry requirements for minimum height, strength and fitness depending on roles, whilst maintaining its exacting grade restrictions and standardised testing requirements. July 17: Jackie Stewart wins the 1971 British Grand Prix, finishing ahead of Jim Clark and newcomer James Hunt. July 18: Christening of White Star’s new super ocean liner RMS Titanic II at Harland and Wolff in Belfast by Queen Elizabeth II in front of a crowd of almost 200,000. White Star’s ultimate response to Cunard’s new generation of superliner dwarfs the previous ship to bear her name at over 240,000 tonnes. July 19: FBI counter intelligence agents arrest a ring of suspected Soviet spies in Ohio and Indiana, with the illegal agents having allegedly taken on the identities of ordinary American suburban families as a cover. July 20: Construction of Southampton Cathedral is completed after 483 years, some 17 years ahead of the informal schedule given in 1488 by master builder Thorin Shattersilver; his son presents Church authorities with the adjusted bill. July 21: The Soviet Union conducts a semi-atmospheric nuclear test at Semipalatinsk in the Kazakh SSR, causing some political consternation in the West as to the most optimal countermeasures to take. July 22: Discovery of very large oil and gas deposits off the coast of Sable Island, Nova Scotia. July 23: England breaks the previous record for the most Test Matches without defeat with a narrow triumph over India at The Oval, taking their streak to 25 Tests. July 24: The President of Uruguay is formally impeached by the Uruguayan House of Deputies over his controversial security measures and suspension of civil rights as a result of the Tupamaros uprising. July 25: Japanese vampire slaying samurai Nakashima Tsuyoshi ends the recent plague of murders in Tokyo by cornering a monstrous vampire serial killer in Ueno Park using a series of cunning traps and destroying it with his enchanted katana. July 26: A USAF SR-71 flight is diverted to its emergency landing base in India after being damaged by some form of unknown missile over North Laos. The matter is further confused by no North Vietnamese SAM batteries being present in the area. July 27: Two officers of Scotland Yard's Flying Squad are commended for successfully preventing a major armed robbery through securing information from one of the criminal's mistresses, or, as they put it "findin' out about the blag from the slag who grassed her old feller, then fangin' down the battlecruiser to find the geezer wiv the motor and comin' in like the Light Brigade yellin' that no _______ move or they'd be brown bread." July 28: Entry into service of HMS Ocean, first of a new series of modern commando carriers designed to carry the Royal Navy's amphibious force into the 1980s and beyond. The Ocean class are designed to operate with the Fearless class amphibious cruisers and the proposed amphibious assault super battleships, with the latter providing the first British Empire counterparts to the USN's Freedom class and the Soviet Slavas. July 29: Rebel groups in Northern Afghanistan begin a new wave of attacks on road and rail traffic, once again seemingly employing Soviet small arms. The King is sufficiently concerned to send an urgent emissary from Kabul to Delhi to discuss expanding current deployments of British and Indian security forces. July 30: Signing of a new treaty of protection and cooperation between Britain and the Trucial States aboard HMS Superb off Sharjah, with the battleship flanked by HMS Gibraltar and the three cruisers of the Royal Navy’s Persian Gulf Station. July 31: Clandestine US Army search and destroy operations fail to track down the reptiles that had escaped from the secret experimental facility in Arizona, leading to fears that the beasts may have made it as far as Nevada.
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Post by simon darkshade on Jan 21, 2023 13:33:04 GMT
August August 1: Installation rates of modern home nuclear fallout shelters in the United States reaches 19%, with new construction suburban homes often including the standardised family bunker pioneered by Shield Home Protection (a subsidiary of the Vault Tech Corporation); many older homes have converted facilities in their existing basements and cellars. In combination with the public shelters provided under the concerted investment in civil defence over the last two decades by Federal, State and local governments, the American people are arguably provided with their best level of potential protection since the advent of the Atomic Age. August 2: A royalist coup topples the government of Ecuador, with the formerly exiled King making a triumphant return to Quito Airport once elements of the Army have seized the capital. Some sources indicate that the Royalist forces were aided by foreign mercenaries. August 3: Introduction of a scent based library cataloging system in Upper Arlington, Ohio, with the "Stick Your Nose in the Card Catalog" featuring 90 different scents, each associated with a subject or genre. August 4: The Bristol group is renamed the British Aircraft Corporation, with English Electric Aviation remaining as the other major independent group within the broader BAC arrangement. August 5: King Hassan of Morocco dismisses his entire cabinet fired as the recriminations from the coup attempt continue to reverberate throughout the country. August 6: Scottish yachtsman Chay Blyth, dubbed ‘Wrong Way Chay’ for sailing around the world in a westerly direction, returns to Hamble-Le-Rice, Hampshire, where he is greeted by a crowd of spectators including Prince Philip, Prince Charles, Princess Victoria and Princess Anne. August 7: Actor and mystic Leonard Nimoy is approached to host a television show on strange phenomena as a cover for investigating them and solving ancient mysteries. August 8: Dissident Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn is stricken gravely ill after consuming poisoned sweets in a KGB assassination attempt in Novocherkassk. August 9: Washington police discover the drained body of a promising young University of Washington psychology student on the side of an isolated road outside of Seattle, the apparent victim of a vampiress stalking the North West; a number of suspicious items in the deceased man’s automobile add an element of confusion to the death. August 10: Publication of the first book in Roger Hargreaves’ Mr Men series, ‘Mr. Tickle’, an extraordinarily long-armed and orange-hued man whose predilection for tickling leads to various mischief until he learns its proper time and place. August 11: A joint operation by the SFPD and LAPD commanded by Commanders Joe Friday and Harry Callahan arrests an infamous drifter known as ‘The Tambourine Man’ for corruption of the youth, child endangerment and possession of a illegal substance, namely black lotus. August 12: Commissioning of the new RAN aircraft carrier HMAS Perth. The RAN is partway through its modernisation programme, with new construction replacing its wartime and late 1940s escort and cruiser fleet. August 13: Archaeologists in Spain discover an ancient tomb filled with antediluvian carvings, with the least damaged seeming to refer to a ‘riddle of iron’ according to the translation magics of one particular wizard. August 14: US inflation begins to rise once again after a brief decline in the second quarter of the year, with low gas prices slightly ameliorating the rising cost of living in other areas. August 15: An Arizona Ranger shoots dead a young would-be outlaw and murderer in Agua Fria, getting the jump on the hoodlum with his sheer speed and the big iron on his hip. August 16: Formation of an experimental British Army unit for testing of new tactics, equipment and operations similar to the successful ‘air cavalry’ employed by the United States in the recent Vietnam War. August 17: The population of Bahrain reaches 300,000, with 110,000 being Bahrainis, the single largest group ahead of Indians, Assyrians, Persians and Europeans. August 18: Soviet authorities are unable to find a cause for the seeming disappearance of rats from Leningrad, with several expeditions into the depths of the sewers failing to find a cause at this time. August 19: An American convicted murderer and former New York businessman escapes from a Mexican prison after a helicopter lands within the prison yard to extract him. August 20: American, British and Canadian land, sea and air forces take part in a joint amphibious exercise in Southern Israel, opposed by units of the Israeli Army and the 10th Marine Brigade. August 21: British heavyweight boxer John “Little John” Smith knocks out Joe Frazier in the third round in a championship bout in London. Smith, a towering 6'8" and 300lb, becomes the new heavyweight champion of the world. August 22: A large killer whale held in captivity in Oregon escapes to the wild with a tremendous leap over a breakwater after being befriended by a disaffected young boy, who is friendless apart from his loyal talking dog, Boomer, and a quiet professor named Ted. The boy is rewarded for his kind deed by a nice old man who was visiting the town for a fishing holiday, who reveals himself to be the former Prime Minister and Governor-General of Canada, Sir William Richardson. August 23: US Space Force satellites detect a double flash over Soviet Central Asia, with USAF airborne sampling aircraft picking up the signature of what is thought to almost certainly be an atmospheric nuclear test. August 24: The New York Times carries a story on increased American space tourism, with the 1960s seeing a 42% rise in tourist travel to the orbiting stations and the moons, as travel to Earth’s immediate satellites gradually shifts from being an extremely expensive luxury to a merely expensive one. August 25: Reverend Elvis Presley and his posse arrive in Indiana on the case of the missing schoolboys, having recently returned from a lengthy trip to Central America, where they foiled two coups, discovered a lost Mayan city and recovered a prize winning pumpkin. August 26: An English tourist, somewhat afflicted by drink, undergoes a horrific experience whilst wandering in the Everglades and enjoying the bright moonlight when he is rushed by …something… from the trees and taken to an unholy place, where he was forced to take part in a ritual dance with the undead. Floridian police, accustomed to their share of strange stories, cable the FBI in Washington for support and paladins. August 27: Eskimo Rangers patrolling the northern reaches of Alaska discover evidence of suspected Soviet infiltration near the Cape Lisburne Air Force Station, an American run installation of the Distant Early Warning Line; a urgent summons is sent to Qikiqtaġruk to call upon Quin the Mighty, the greatest of their number, whose coming, along with his two famed canine companions Buq and Qakuq Siggu, is always the stuff of great joy. August 28: The Royal Mint releases its new British coins, ranging from the farthing and guinea to the newest minting of the gold sovereign, continuing to confuse European and American tourists unaccustomed to such an array of coins. August 29: A photographer is summarily executed by the Prime Minister of Yemen after a tragic incident of crossed telephone wires lead General Al-Amri to believe that he was being pranked and insulted by the hapless Mohsen Al-Harazi. Al-Amri is dismissed by the King for his rash action and flees into exile in Beirut. August 30: Release of The Road to Miklagard, a lavish, action packed historical adventure epic set in the time of the Vikings directed by Francis Ford Coppola and loosely based on the novel by Henry Treece. It stars Robert Redford as Harald Hardrada, Harrison Ford as Harald Sigurdsson, Max von Sydow as Canute, David Hemmings as Hereward the Wake, Richard Harris as King Harold of England and Robert Shaw as William the Conqueror. August 31: KGB agent Oleg Lyalin is arrested in London for drunken driving, beginning a chain of events culminating in his defection and a significant espionage scandal.
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Post by simon darkshade on Feb 5, 2023 9:35:21 GMT
September September 1: In a busy day for the Royal Navy, the new nuclear guided missile super battlecruiser HMS Tiger is commissioned at Portsmouth Dockyard, whilst the name boat of the Sovereign class atomic submarines is commissioned at the Vickers shipyard at Barrow-in-Furness and the DLGs Edinburgh and Dublin at Thames Ironworks and Palmers in Jarrow, respectively. September 2: Chinese scientists discover a strange new species of mushroom in Yunnan that seemingly possesses a prodigious growth and expansion rate. September 3: A Soviet former KGB officer defects to Canada, leaping from his ship in Vancouver harbour. September 4: A large sack of flour falls from the sky into Angel Stadium in the middle of a game between the Los Angeles Angels and the Cincinnati Reds, narrowly missing hitting one of the players. September 5: The United States’ ambassador to the Soviet Union presents the Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko with a note outlining Washington’s concerns regarding the apparent Soviet atmospheric atomic test, which was officially denied. September 6: 105 members of the Tupamaros escape from Punta Carretas prison in Montevideo through a 50ft long tunnel dug into the prison from a nearby house. September 7: The War Office announces that the forward deployed strength of British forces assigned to Middle East Land Forces is to be reduced to a two composite divisions at Suez and Aden and an independent brigade in Kuwait in the light of post Vietnam War rationalisation of deployments. Additionally, the capacity for airborne reinforcement by the Imperial Strategic Reserve, the prepositioning of equipment sets for heavy brigades in the Sinai, Jordan and Aden and the reestablishment of Mediterranean Command as a distinct entity responsible for forces in Gibraltar, Malta, Libya and Cyprus are seen as key factors in the decision. September 8: An abortive prison riot at Attica State Prison is suppressed by use of new electric shock guns and release of the prison’s giant short-faced bear. September 9: Nikola Tesla begins discussions with a number of firms on the commercial employment of his revolutionary new wireless energy technology, despite the apparent opposition of General Electric. September 10: Japan goes on high alert after a maritime patrol airship reports a possible sighting of the Pacific Monster 300nm east of Kyushu. Subsequent US and Japanese air and surface ship patrols can find no sign of the creature. September 11: Scotland Yard Flying Squad detectives ambush a gang of criminals breaking into the Baker Street branch of Lloyds Bank through a tunnel, after being alerted to the plot by an amateur radio enthusiast who had accidentally intercepted their communications. The wretched crooks reportedly took one look at the levelled assault rifles of Inspector Regan and his men and the accompanying police lion and promptly gave themselves up. September 12: An Argentine man awakes at his own funeral and has a heart attack in profound shock in reaction to the situation; as he lays in hospital, his family commences legal action against the doctor who mistakenly pronounced him dead. September 13: MCC wizards complete development of a specialised enchantment to protect the outfield of certain cricket grounds in the event of rain, greatly reducing future potential loss of playing days. September 14: Indian archaeologists discover that a notable hill near Mohenjo Daro is actually artificial and that beneath the outer layer of earth lies a huge pyramid. September 15: West London businessman Arthur Daley’s minder, former Royal Fusilier Terrence McCann, foils an attempted armed robbery at the O.K. Launderette and convinces the criminals to give themselves up to the heavily armed police outside. September 16: An immense pile up of over 300 cars and lorries on the M6 Royal Highway kills 10 and injures 84, sparking calls for road safety reforms, including lowering the speed limit from its current 125mph. September 17: A Honolulu Police Department commanded by Captain Stephen McGarrett operating in conjunction with Carl Kolchak raid the MS Pacific Princess in search of a suspected werewolf. They find no sign of the beast, but coincidentally capture an elusive duo of jewel thieves, who were posing as a pair of married singers. September 18: Signing of the Anglo-Danish Defence Cooperation Agreement, providing for cooperation in weapons development, rolling deployments of British forces to Denmark under the auspices of the Atlantic Treaty and an extensive arms sales agreement. September 19: The Canadian Grand Prix is won by Jackie Stewart in a narrow victory over Steve McQueen, whilst Austro-Hungarian newcomer Andreas Nikolaus Lauder and Jim Clark had an enthralling battle for third place. September 20: SFPD detectives are baffled by a horrific case of strange murder, after the four occupants of a boarding house were found dead without any mark or sign on their bodies; a subsequent autopsy showed that each was missing their heart. September 21: Premier Allende of Chile meets with the high command of the Chilean Army to discuss the possible declaration of martial law, meeting in turn with some reticence to act without an express order from the King. September 22: Indian and Persian physicians report dramatically increased cases of a new strain of Venusian flu in the Baluchestan area that straddles their border. September 23: John Marshall Harlan retires from his position as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. September 24: Muscleman and actor Arnold Schwarzenegger wins Mr Universe for the fifth year in a row, once again dazzling the crowds with his chiseled physique and charming them with his utterly flawless American accent. September 25: St. Kilda defeat Hawthorn 16.9 (105) to 14.11 (95) in the 1971 VFL GF at the MCG in front of a crowd of 148,117 spectators. September 26: 125 Soviet diplomats and assorted consular are declared personae non grata and expelled from Britain in the aftermath of the Lyalin defection. September 27: Emperor Hirohito becomes the first Japanese monarch to travel outside the Empire, flying from Tokyo to Anchorage, Canada in the new Imperial Hawker-Siddeley Concord en route to the United States and Europe. September 28: Sixteen Communists are detained under the emergency detention provisions of the Internal Security Act of 1950 after agents from the FBI and the highly secretive Special Service Group uncover a plot to sabotage a flight of the B-72 atomic powered bomber over the United States. September 28: Parking meters are installed in Paris for the first time in its history; a mischievous wizard proceeds to enspell them all to refuse every modern French coin in preference to American currency, ostensibly as a protest against their introduction. September 29: An Agreement on Measures to Reduce the Risk of Nuclear War is signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China. September 30: American chess prodigy Bobby Fisher defeats Soviet Tigran Petrosian, qualifying for the World Championship title match against Boris Spassky in 1972.
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lordroel
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Post by lordroel on Feb 5, 2023 9:52:31 GMT
SeptemberSeptember 1: In a busy day for the Royal Navy, the new nuclear guided missile super battlecruiser HMS Tiger is commissioned at Portsmouth Dockyard Does she have only guns.
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Post by simon darkshade on Feb 5, 2023 9:57:47 GMT
This is one of those times I wonder whether I made things clear enough. The answer is no, as it literally says in the description of the ship - nuclear powered and equipped with guided missiles, in addition to guns.
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Post by lordroel on Feb 5, 2023 9:59:59 GMT
This is one of those times I wonder whether I made things clear enough. The answer is no, as it literally says in the description of the ship - nuclear powered and equipped with guided missiles, in addition to guns. My apologize, seems i missed the part when reading.
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Post by simon darkshade on Feb 5, 2023 12:13:58 GMT
I absolutely welcome all questions and comments; sometimes, they can just be a little too closed to the point of the answer being there directly.
The Tigers are a mixture of a counter to Soviet and other enemy ships of the same class/kind, as well as a dual role of being close in escorts for the fleet carriers.
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Post by lordroel on Feb 5, 2023 12:53:05 GMT
The Tigers are a mixture of a counter to Soviet and other enemy ships of the same class/kind, as well as a dual role of being close in escorts for the fleet carriers. So Atlantic operations mostly, ore will they also do Baltic trips.
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Post by simon darkshade on Feb 5, 2023 13:28:05 GMT
It doesn’t make a great deal of sense to commit battleships, battlecruiser or carriers to the Baltic, given its proximity to Soviet airpower, so that wouldn’t be a major role.
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Post by lordroel on Feb 5, 2023 13:29:27 GMT
It doesn’t make a great deal of sense to commit battleships, battlecruiser or carriers to the Baltic, given its proximity to Soviet airpower, so that wouldn’t be a major role. Plus i assume the Danish, Norwegians and the Germans have that covered with their own ships.
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Post by simon darkshade on Feb 5, 2023 13:39:56 GMT
Not to mention the Swedes, who have a very competent navy.
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