Prising the French Snail Out Of His Shell
by Stephen Agar
This is meant to be the first in an occasional series about
alliance play in the opening years of the game. The basic assumption behind this article
is a rock-solid Anglo-German alliance determined to take France apart quickly and cleanly.
Although the Anglo-German alliance takes a little while to get its momentum going, once
the ball is well and truly rolling (by say 1903), then it is a difficult alliance to stop.
The short term goal of the E/G alliance is to penetrate France (getting beyond the Pic-Bur
Maginot Line ASAP) and take her out as quickly as possible, so that Germany can push
armies into Sil and Pru, while English fleets pour into the Mediterranean. However, the
French defensive position is extremely strong and it is possible for a determined France
to hang on for quite a while, during which time there is ample opportunity for England and
Germany to fall out due to the frustrations of slow progress. The allies must stay
together - the MAO will not be forced until A02, so France is unlikely to lose a centre
until A03 at the soonest. The good news is that once France is down to four units his
position becomes untenable and will collapse in on itself under sustained pressure, though
even in the face of a concerted attack a competent France is unlikely to be eliminated
before 1905 and will probably survive into 1906.
Looking through the results from the 1993 National Diplomacy
Championships, out of 31 FtF games, France was only eliminated in seven games (as opposed
to 15 German, 13 Russian, 12 Austrian and 12 Italian eliminations) one French elimination
was in 1904 (poor Rosalind Harvey taken apart by Bob Kendrick and Jeremy Tullett who ended
up with 24 centres between them), two in 1906, one in 1907 and three in 1909. The fact
that Turkey and England, like France, were also only eliminated seven times in 31 games
shows the strength of the corner countries in FtF Diplomacy. Having said all that, it is
noticeable that 85% of Turkeys and 71% of Englands which ended up being eliminated were
out of the game by 1906, as opposed to only 42% of doomed Frances. Without doubt, in FtF
Diplomacy, France is the most resilient Power on the Diplomacy board.
My strategy for E/G being able to knock out France quickly is
based on two assumptions (1) England needs two builds in 1901 and (2) the allies need
three armies bordering Burgundy after A01. My reasoning is that one English fleet will be
tied up in Scandinavia and France will probably build F(Bre) in 1901, therefore England
needs three southern fleets to be able to take on the two French fleets and for that she
needs two builds in 1901. If England can only spare two fleets against the French then MAO
can never be forced. As far as Burgundy is concerned, although it can be taken by stealth,
that is an inherently risky strategy. On the other hand, as France will almost certainly
put one army into Spain or Portugal, it is very unlikely (but not impossible) that France
will have more than two armies available to defend Burgundy in S02 (though if she does, it
will be at the expense of a second fleet, which spells disaster anyway). Other
permutations are described below. In essence, the extra build for England is the more
essential, but if both assumptions are realised than France will be eliminated without too
much trouble.
1. The D-Day Approach
The S01 blitzkrieg on France is fraught with danger, because it
can so easily come apart. However, if England is convinced that F(Lon)-ENG will definitely
succeed and Russia will not open A(Mos)-StP then you can go for the jugular from the first
move.
ENGLAND: F(Lon)-ENG, F(Edi)-NTH, A(Lon)-Wal;
GERMANY: F(Kie)-Den, A(Ber)-Kie, A(Mun)-Ruh;
FRANCE: F(Bre)-MAO; A(Par)-Pic; A(Mar)-Spa
Comment: Despite his initial success, England is still faced with
the old guessing game - should he convoy to Brest and risk being stood-off, thus allowing
France to build F(Bre), or should he convoy to Picardy and risk not getting in. The answer
may surprise you, but I would convoy to Belgium with German support! My reasoning is as
follows: to take France out quickly you must either take MAO or get through the Pic-Bur
defensive line. The only way to be reasonably sure that you can force Burgundy in S02 is
to have armies in Bel, Ruh and Mun. Germany can manage this feat alone by ordering
A(Mun)-Ruh and A(Ber)-Mun and then hoping A(Ruh)-Bel and A(Mun)-Ruh will succeed next
time. The disadvantage with that is Hol is not taken, A(Ber)-Mun signals to France what is
being planned right from the start, and if everything goes wrong Germany only gets one
build. The only other option is for England to contribute one of the three armies needed
to take France by storm by convoying into Belgium, and thus (hopefully) getting the two
builds which will in turn ensure France's downfall at sea. The best German moves at this
stage should really be ambiguous so that France can be strung along for a while - if you
sneak Burgundy all well and good (France will be out by 1904), but if there's a stand-off
over Burgundy, France will get two builds guaranteed, whether England takes the Channel or
not.
If France covers Brest in A01, then France may only get one
build, in which case he can't stop the English fleets or the English and German armies. If
he doesn't cover Brest then he will get two builds but his position will be little better,
as England can have three fleets on MAO by A02 as against his two at most.
However, it is worth remembering that if France orders to ENG in
S01 then his position will be probably be secure in the short term and he will still get
at least one build (assuming Italy is not joining the all out attack). England then faces
the problem that (a) he has committed himself and may be out on a limb if Germany has
second thoughts, (b) England has no prospects of two builds in 1901 and (c) in order to
leave London free for a build he may have to let the French in the Channel in A01! So, the
gains are potentially large, but so are the risks. Having said that waiting until 1902 to
show your hand may not be the answer as then France will probably have made two builds in
1901 and will be able to get those units into a defensive position as quickly as the
allies can attack. Therefore, for all these reasons, I believe it is best for an
Anglo-German alliance to position themselves for the attack on France in A01.
2. A Date for Dinner in Brussels?
The pre-S01 aims of the silent, but deadly-ish A01 attack are (1)
dissuade Russia from opening A(Mos)-StP, (2) dissuade France from opening to the Channel,
(3) or Burgundy. Accomplish the first two and the plan will work, accomplish all three and
you can rest easy.
If all goes to plan a typical set of openings could be something
like this:
ENGLAND: F(Lon)-NTH; A(Lpl)-Edi, F(Edi)-NWG;
GERMANY: F(Kie)-Den, A(Ber)-Kie, A(Mun)-Ruh.
FRANCE: F(Bre)-MAO; A(Par)-Pic; A(Mar)-Spa.
Comment: Now that doesn't look threatening to France at all!
Unless Germany can guarantee Burgundy in S01, it is much better to move to Ruhr to achieve
the triple attack on Burgundy in S02, though it goes without saying that you must also try
to dissuade France from opening to Burgundy. If France knows that Germany is not going to
move to Bur then he is unlikely to open with A(Mar)-Bur, A(Par)-Pic as that may mean he
only gets one build. The problem for the E/G alliance is how do you get into France in the
first place if you haven't sneaked into Burgundy in 1901? In S02 it is likely that France
will order A(Spa)-Gas (or maybe Mar), which can then subsequently offer the crucial second
support into Burgundy, making it safe from subsequent attack. If Germany has taken Belgium
in A01 with A(Mun)-Ruh-Bel then Germany will only have two units on Bur (namely Bel and
Mun) and so he alone cannot guarantee forcing Burgundy in S02. As I said earlier, the only
way to get into France in S02 is to have three armies on Bur in S02 (before French
reinforcements arrive) and this can be best achieved by Germany ordering A(Ruh) S ENGLISH
A(Edi)-Bel in A01. For example:
ENGLAND: F(NTH) C A(Edi)-Bel, F(NWG)-Nwy;
GERMANY: F(Den)-Swe; A(Ruh) S ENGLISH A(Edi)-Bel, A(Kie)-Hol (or
Mun if France is in Bur).
FRANCE: F(MAO)-Por; A(Spa) Std., A(Pic)-Bel.
England builds F(Lon), F(Lpl). Germany builds F(Kie), A(Mun).
England's intentions are clear, but Germany can still keep French hopes alive by dangling
the possibility of a helping hand in 1902.
3. Breaking Through the Line
All this puts France in a real predicament. The only way he can
hold Bur is to build A(Par), A(Mar) - but with only one fleet he can't hold MAO. Consider
the options:
A. France builds F(Bre), A(Par).
ENGLAND: F(Lon) S F(NTH)-ENG, A(Bel) S GERMAN A(Ruh)-Bur, F(Nwy)
S GERMAN F(Den)-Swe, F(Lpl)-IRI.
GERMANY: F(Den)-Swe, A(Hol)-Ruh, A(Mun) S A(Ruh)-Bur, F(Kie)-BAL.
FRANCE: F(Por)-MAO, A(Spa)-Gas, A(Pic) S A(Par)-Bur, F(Bre)-ENG.
Comments: You have Burgundy and the Channel. The difficulty now
is that you only have a two army front, the A(Mun) being a wasted unit except as support
for A(Bur). France will presumably either use A(Gas) to cover Mar or to support an attack
on Bur, so Germany then orders A(Bur)-Gas [retreats to Mar], A(Ruh) S A(Mun)-Bur (probably
better if England doesn't support it as well - the aim is to get the retreat to Marseilles
if France doesn't order A(Gas)-Mar, but if Burgundy is attacked with equal weight from
both sides then A(Bur) would not be dislodged). On the other hand, if France had ordered
A(Spa)-Mar in S02 then the response would be A(Bel) S F(ENG)-Pic, F(IRI) S F(Lon)-ENG,
A(Bur)-Par [retreat to Gas], which will probably annihilate the French A(Pic). The
Anglo-German alliance should then either take Marseilles, or Burgundy and Gascony, or have
Picardy and Burgundy. All spell death for France.
B. France builds A(Mar), A(Par).
ENGLAND: F(Lon)-Wal, F(NTH)-ENG, A(Bel) S GERMAN A(Ruh)-Bur,
F(Nwy) S GERMAN F(Den)-Swe, F(Lpl)-NAO.
GERMANY: F(Den)-Swe, A(Hol)-Ruh, A(Mun) S A(Ruh)-Bur, F(Kie)-BAL.
FRANCE: F(Por)-MAO, A(Spa)-Gas, A(Pic) & A(Mar) S A(Par)
-Bur.
Comment: These builds blunt Germany's offensive, but hand centres
over to England in 1903. There is a potential stand-off over Burgundy, but as England must
take the Channel any support from Picardy can be cut in A02. Thus France must use A(Pic)
to move to Burgundy, in order to be sure of denying Bur to Germany, which leaves open the
possibility of F(ENG) S A(Bel)-Pic. In any event England will have MAO by A02 and France
cannot then defend both Brest and Burgundy as the support of A(Par) will be needed for
both of them.
C. France builds A(Bre), A(Par).
ENGLAND: F(Lon)-Wal, F(NTH)-ENG, A(Bel) S GERMAN A(Ruh)-Bur,
F(Nwy) S GERMAN F(Den)-Swe, F(Lpl)-NAO.
GERMANY: F(Den)-Swe, A(Hol)-Ruh, A(Mun) S A(Ruh)-Bur, F(Kie)-BAL.
FRANCE: F(Por)-MAO, A(Spa)-Mar, A(Par) S A(Pic)-Bur, A(Bre)-Pic.
Comment: The worst set of builds for France in the circumstances.
France will lose MAO this year, leaving the Iberian centres exposed. The allies will take
Burgundy anyway and no combination of moves will allow France to retake it. The French
position is doomed, the English fleets coming through MAO mean that the position will
crumble very quickly indeed.
4. In for the Kill
The permutations run away with themselves into 1903, but with a
minimum of F(IRI), F(MAO), F(ENG), A(Bel/Pic), A(Ruh/Bur), A(Mun), the English fleets can
cut support from Bre, Gas or Pic and thus ensure that Bur must fall or France will lose
Brest. The Spanish centres will be wide open. My best guess is that France will lose at
least one, probably two, centres in 1903 and another two in 1904. Marseilles may last
until 1905. It goes without saying that a single Italian army cutting any support given by
a French A(Mar) will do the job that much quicker.
A fair split of the available centres would be Germany: Hol, Den,
Swe, Par, Mar, while England has Bel, Nwy, Bre, Por, Spa. Five each. England then takes
the dead-end of StP and steams into the Mediterranean, while Germany attacks Russia with a
vengeance.
Of course it's important to take the Tyrolia-Bohemia line before
the Eastern Powers decide to defend the stalemate line.
All this begs the question of if, when and how the two allies are
to stab each other. Such a stab is unlikely to be in either party's interests while France
is still in the game, and by mid-game it may be difficult to arrange a stab as England
will lack the armies for penetrating inland, while Germany may lack the fleets to take
NTH. On balance I think it is easier for England to do the stabbing, as he can justify to
Germany building armies for convoying south, whereas it is difficult for Germany to
justify building fleets. On this note, let me turn to a cautionary tale from Richard
Williams:
"At MidCon last year I had my first solid FtF alliance from
Spring 1901 to around 1907, when I stabbed and went for victory. I was Germany and Chris
Robinson was England, with an inexperienced player as France. We immediately decided on an
alliance, which worked perfectly, culminating in my A(Pie) supporting an English
A(Wal)-Tus! It was at that point that I went for the stab, which wasn't quite perfect. Due
to the alliance and an attack on Russia, my fleets were in Swe and GoB. I agreed not to
border NTH. In the Spring turn the English army, with support, knocked Russia out of StP.
I had just moved into Lvn to take Mos. I had A(Pie) and A(Bur), while everything else, if
my memory is correct, pointed south. England had fleets from TYS round to England, in IRI
onwards, A(Mar) and A(Tus). This had been a near perfect alliance, but I decided I had a
chance of 18, so I kicked England out of StP, walked into Nwy, and took Mar (as his A(Mar)
was convoyed into Rome). I made one miscalculation. I didn't expect him to be able to
build, but gaining Nap and Rom while disbanding the retreating A(StP) meant that he could
build F(Edi) which with only F(Nwy) close by was enough to stop me getting into his
homeland." [The game ended in 1909 with Richard on 14 centres, England on nine,
Austria (James Hardy) on six and Turkey (Lorraine Tullett) on five. Peter Shortall
(France) was eliminated in 1906 and Russia (Neil Duncan) went out in 1907.]
5. The French Letter
Most of you will be familiar with the Hedgehog openings for
Austria, popularised by Richard Sharp, which are designed to give Austria maximum
security. Well, the French position is so secure that an opening as aggressive as the
Hedgehog is not necessary for France. The easiest way to guard against all the tactics
mentioned earlier is to get Germany to agree a stand-off over Burgundy in S01. If A(Mun)
and A(Mar) stand each other off, and France opens with A(Par)-Pic, then you can still pick
up Spain with A(Mar) in the Autumn, but unless Germany lets Russia have Sweden in A01 it
is impossible for England to have a supported attack on Belgium and claim Norway in 1901.
Hence you can prevent England getting two builds and prevent your armies having three
units on Burgundy in S02. Easy isn't it? Maybe the agreed Burgundy stand-off should be
called the French Letter (in that it prevents France from being stuffed early on)?
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