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Published byBrandon Greer Modified over 9 years ago
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There are many things that influence strategies for war. Such influences are: Chess Sports Marbles Previous Wars and Battles
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Since most of the land in the Pacific is islands, most of the fighting became “island-hopping” or more like playing checkers. Strategy – Take the corners and move in War was primarily conducted using planes against ships in the sea. Strategy – Battleship – Find and destroy biggest ones first and don’t let them find your big guys
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Retaliation for Pearl Harbor Attack Direct bombing on Japanese soil Little material damage done Most of the Americans returned home, sooner or later Point – Use small offense to destroy opponent’s main offense and gain mental advantage Aggressive advances with pawns as a decoy Quick, short, decisive strikes Still need to protect, whether it be through a main piece or staggering Little damage but can win game with King
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Japanese focused on controlling New Guinea, north of Australia Attack both sides of island U.S. sneaks navy in and surprises Japanese Heavy losses for both U.S. stopped Japanese advance and forced retreat Point is to wipe out their main offensive forces with little to no loss Need to be ready to lose value Trade equal or ensure the opponent has heavier losses Need a hidden attacker, such as a Queen
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Turning point of the Pacific Theatre Japanese tried to lure American ships into a trap Codebreakers turned the tide Heavy losses Ineptitude of Japanese forces U.S. now on offensive Point is to make opponent think he has you in a trap but you are setting them up in a trap of your own Willing to lose pieces Must protect most important pieces Must do significant damage to their main offensive pieces
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Land Battle Infiltrate Lines and hold position Take main part of island and force the Japanese into a bad position Naval Battle U.S. tried to cut supply lines and harass Japanese could never make a substantial breakthrough and were choked Point – Open a fight on both sides of the board and set a trap for the opponent up the middle Must be willing to lose on both sides but stay patient for the trap One of the sides must be held to a virtual stalemate and the other must receive action to keep diversion secret
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Most popular battle of Pacific Theatre and first battle on Japanese soil U.S. got behind Japanese lines and slowly decimated the Japanese forces Advantage in numbers and tactics Point – Sucker the opponent into bringing offensive pieces with limited movement to front, then get behind Must use a decoy Keep opponent’s offense limited while you capture the main weapons
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Close island to Japanese mainland Last stand of Japanese forces Deadliest battle of the Pacific Theatre “Violent wind of guns” U.S. spread out the Japanese forces and “cherry-picked” Point – To make the match purely offensive while holding on the key pieces for the capture Stack the line Order of capture is important Careful to show plan Must have 2 back row pieces left plus King Must capture opponent’s offense or you fail
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Know when to surrender. Japanese were beat and basically only held their homeland. Should’ve surrendered but their pride wouldn’t allow it. In chess, if one of the strategies fails and your opponent is left with obvious offensive advantage, go for stalemate or lay down. No point in prolonging the match. Preparation is the key Know your enemy Execute
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