Assorted Africa Corps

Just a quick post today as I am getting ready to run a game of Silver Bayonet tonight.

Some “stuff” came in today for the Africa Corps 1200pt army I am putting together. The long awaited for infantry and my last Opel Blitz

Command group to accompany the 250/1 all from the Warlords box set that just arrived.

A Wargames Atlantic sniper team from their Panzergrenadier set.

Warlord Games resin Panzreshreck

Extra Wargames Atlantic squad figures carrying panzerfausts if I choose to use them

Three squads of 12 men (mainly for the Warlords box that just arrived). Twelve to cater for the option of a second LMG should I wish,

Now all I need to do is put them together and paint them!

Paws and Portals in print today!

Another offering from the Guru that is aimed at the young and young at heart. What better way to determine if dogs are better than cats! Personally I don’t think so, but hey I am biased.

Paws & Portals: The Deck of Destiny is a fast, dice-free tabletop skirmish game where bold Dogs, devious Cats, and one very opinionated deck of cards decide how the battle unfolds. There are no turns, no dice, and no guarantees — only momentum, timing, and the constant risk that everything will go wrong at once.

Fight across dining rooms, billiard tables, and bedrooms turned battlegrounds. Surge forward in reckless Overdrive, snatch victory at the perfect moment, or watch the round end just as your plan finally made sense.

Easy to learn, quick to play, and full of chaotic stories, Paws & Portals is a game about daring plays, sudden reversals, and the absolute certainty that the deck is laughing at you.

Shuffle the cards. Claim the room. Accept the chaos.

For the next few days the rules can be downloaded here.

For those interested here is the Designers notes:

Paws & Portals: The Deck of Destiny started with a simple question: what if the game didn’t pretend to be fair?

Most tabletop games carefully balance turns, probabilities, and outcomes so that control feels evenly shared. This game does the opposite. It hands authority to a deck of cards and asks players to react, adapt, and occasionally laugh when plans collapse. The goal was not randomness for its own sake, but visible momentum — moments where pressure builds, breaks, and resets in ways players can feel immediately at the table.

Removing dice was a deliberate choice. Cards are familiar, readable, and dramatic. When a high card wins a fight, everyone sees it. When Overdrive spirals, it’s exciting because it might end at any moment. When it does end, it ends cleanly. That rhythm — surge, pause, reshuffle — is the engine of the game.

Cats and Dogs were chosen not just for charm, but because their personalities naturally support asymmetry. Cats reward speed, timing, and audacity. Dogs reward durability, cooperation, and commitment. Neither side is “better”; they simply thrive under different kinds of pressure. The campaign scenarios were written to explore those pressures in different ways: speed, control, and endurance.

Finally, the setting — a house turned battlefield — exists to lower the barrier to play. Furniture becomes terrain. Cushions become objectives. The game works just as well on a kitchen table as it does on a carefully built board.

If this game does its job, you won’t remember who won. You’ll remember why things went wrong, when the deck betrayed you, and the exact moment everyone realised it was already too late.

That’s not a flaw.

That’s the point.\

Opel Blitz truck (2) with squad and MMG with crew.

The Opel Blitz was a key truck used by the German Wehrmacht in World War II. Made by Opel, a part of General Motors at the time, this 3-ton vehicle played a vital role in German logistics because of its reliability and adaptability. Initially, the German military depended on horses for transport, but the Blitz showcased their shift to mechanization.

Its strong design allowed it to perform well in tough conditions on the Eastern Front, but it struggled in the deep mud and freezing winters of the Soviet Union.

The Blitz was essential because of its adaptability. Its chassis was used for many special vehicles, such as ambulances, workshops, command posts, and fuel tankers. One well-known version was the Maultier (Mule), which had tracks instead of rear wheels to handle muddy conditions.

Despite Allied bombings at the Brandenburg plant, production kept going throughout the war, securing the Opel Blitz’s reputation as a highly effective utility vehicle of its time.

Truck with squad

Two truck complete. One more to go.

More Africa Corps tomorrow,

Australian Frontier Wars and Contemporary Conflict: Lessons in Escalation, Legitimacy, and Restraint

I have been conducting an extensive examination of my current project on the Australian Frontier Wars and have been profoundly struck by the significant alignment that exists with both current and recent conflicts. The same missteps have recurred repeatedly, thereby underscoring a troubling pattern in human history, and we have demonstrably failed to learn from them. This contemplation compelled me to engage in a more rigorous historical analysis and to consider the broader implications of these persistent errors. How is it that, despite the advancement of knowledge and the instructive lessons of history, we persist in navigating our conflicts with such disregard for prior failures? This inquiry sparked considerable reflection, and this short essay is the resultant product. Its objective is to explore these parallels, draw connections between the past and the present, and to cultivate a deeper understanding of the cyclical nature of conflict, with the hope that, one day, we may successfully disrupt this detrimental cycle.

Australian Frontier Wars and Contemporary Conflict: Lessons in Escalation, Legitimacy, and Restraint

Abstract
This article employs the Australian Frontier Wars as a comparative lens for understanding contemporary armed conflict. It argues that dynamics often described as characteristic of modern warfare—such as asymmetric power, civilian entanglement, and escalation without resolution—were central features of frontier conflict in colonial Australia. Using historical scholarship alongside case studies from Afghanistan, Ukraine, and urban asymmetric warfare, the article demonstrates the limits of coercive force in achieving durable political outcomes. It emphasises the role of legitimacy, restraint, and local knowledge, and frames escalation as a cumulative process rather than a singular event. The Australian Frontier Wars are thus presented as a valuable framework for interpreting why many contemporary conflicts persist despite military superiority.

Keywords: Australian Frontier Wars; asymmetric conflict; escalation; legitimacy; colonial warfare; contemporary conflict

Introduction

Contemporary armed conflicts are often discussed as unprecedented crises shaped by new technologies, ideological extremism, or failures of leadership. Drone warfare, information operations, urban combat, and hybrid war are frequently presented as novel challenges requiring novel solutions. Yet many of the underlying dynamics that characterise modern conflict are neither new nor unfamiliar. They include prolonged violence without decisive resolution, asymmetry between opponents, civilian entanglement, the erosion of legitimacy, and the difficulty of translating military superiority into political stability.

The Australian Frontier Wars offer a valuable comparative framework for understanding these dynamics. Spanning more than a century and occurring across diverse environments, the Australian Frontier Wars were not a single conflict but a series of overlapping struggles shaped by geography, power imbalance, and competing claims to land and authority. Despite overwhelming material and organisational advantages, colonial forces repeatedly failed to secure durable control without generating cycles of violence that undermined their own objectives.

This essay argues that the Australian Frontier Wars illuminate enduring patterns of conflict that remain relevant today. By examining what worked, what failed, and why escalation proved so difficult to control, we can better understand contemporary conflicts in Afghanistan, Ukraine, Gaza, and elsewhere. The value of this comparison lies not in drawing direct equivalence, but in recognising structural similarities: the limits of coercion, the importance of legitimacy, and the long-term consequences of unresolved violence.

The Australian Frontier Wars as a Patterned Conflict

The Australian Australian Frontier Wars were characterised by their longevity, fragmentation, and uneven intensity. Rather than unfolding as conventional campaigns, they consisted of countless local encounters: patrols, reprisals, ambushes, dispersals, and periods of uneasy coexistence. These interactions were shaped by local conditions, including terrain, climate, patterns of Indigenous land use, and the shifting priorities of colonial authorities.¹

Crucially, the Australian Frontier Wars were not driven by a unified strategic vision. Colonial violence often emerged from local anxieties, economic pressures, and misunderstandings rather than from centrally coordinated plans. As John Connor has argued, frontier conflict should be understood as warfare, but warfare of a dispersed and improvised kind, in which escalation occurred incrementally and often unintentionally.²

For Aboriginal groups, resistance took many forms. It included direct attack, harassment, avoidance, sabotage of stock and infrastructure, and the strategic use of mobility and concealment. These methods exploited the vulnerabilities of colonial forces, whose assumptions about decisive engagement, visibility, and control frequently failed in unfamiliar Country.³

The result was a pattern of conflict in which neither side achieved clean resolution. Colonial authorities could punish and displace, but not fully pacify. Aboriginal groups could resist and survive, but at enormous cost. Violence became normalised, authority fragile, and peace provisional.

What Did Not Work: The Limits of Force

One of the most striking lessons of the Australian Frontier Wars is the limited effectiveness of force in producing lasting outcomes. Punitive expeditions, mass reprisals, and shows of overwhelming power were common colonial responses to resistance. These actions could clear areas temporarily, disrupt Indigenous lifeways, and deter open confrontation. However, they rarely resolved the underlying causes of conflict.⁴

Instead, violence often generated new grievances and adaptive resistance. Aboriginal groups adjusted their tactics, avoided direct confrontation, and targeted colonial vulnerabilities. The use of indiscriminate force also undermined colonial claims to lawful authority, replacing them with reliance on fear and coercion. Over time, this eroded the legitimacy that colonial governments sought to establish.⁵

Equally important was the psychological and organisational toll on colonial forces themselves. Frontier patrols operated under constant strain, facing uncertainty, isolation, and fear of ambush. Escalation often occurred not because it was strategically planned, but because exhausted or frightened individuals made decisions that spiralled beyond control.⁶

These dynamics challenge the assumption that superiority guarantees success. Material advantage enabled colonial expansion, but it did not provide an easy or humane path to stability. The costs of coercion accumulated over time, leaving legacies of trauma and division that persist today.

What Sometimes Worked: Legitimacy, Predictability, and Restraint

Where relative stability emerged on the frontier, it was rarely the result of decisive violence. Instead, it often depended on the establishment of predictable authority, negotiated arrangements, and the reduction of arbitrary force. In some regions, relationships between settlers, officials, and Aboriginal groups developed that limited open conflict, at least temporarily.⁷

These arrangements were deeply unequal and often coercive in their own right, but they demonstrate an important principle: legitimacy mattered. Authority that was perceived as consistent and comprehensible proved more sustainable than authority enforced solely through punishment. Restraint, whether intentional or imposed by logistical limits, reduced escalation and allowed space for adaptation.

Local knowledge also played a critical role. Colonial actors who relied on Indigenous guides, intermediaries, or negotiated access to Country were often more effective at avoiding conflict than those who attempted to impose control unilaterally. Conversely, failures to understand or respect local conditions frequently led to disaster.⁸

The lesson is not that the frontier could have been managed benignly, but that violence was a blunt instrument ill-suited to the political realities of contested land and authority.

Contemporary Parallels: Afghanistan

The war in Afghanistan illustrates many of the same dynamics observed on the frontier. International forces possessed overwhelming technological superiority and won numerous tactical engagements. Yet these victories did not translate into durable political outcomes. Control of territory shifted repeatedly, and legitimacy remained fragile.⁹

As in the Australian Frontier Wars, reliance on force produced short-term gains but long-term instability. Civilian casualties, night raids, and association with corrupt local actors undermined trust. Insurgent groups adapted, avoided direct confrontation, and framed resistance as defence of local autonomy against foreign intrusion.¹⁰

Ultimately, the collapse of the Afghan government demonstrated that military superiority cannot compensate for the absence of legitimate authority. The frontier experience reinforces this conclusion: control imposed without consent is expensive, unstable, and easily undone.

Contemporary Parallels: Ukraine

The war in Ukraine highlights a different but related lesson. Here, conventional military operations coexist with questions of legitimacy, occupation, and endurance. Control of territory has not guaranteed political authority, and resistance has remained resilient where populations reject imposed rule.¹¹

Like frontier conflicts, the war has become a contest over morale, narrative, and endurance rather than decisive battle alone. Escalation carries political and international consequences that constrain action, and restraint is shaped not only by ethics but by strategic necessity.¹²

The Australian Frontier Wars remind us that occupation without legitimacy generates resistance, and that the costs of holding contested ground often exceed the benefits.

Contemporary Parallels: Urban and Asymmetric Conflicts

In densely populated conflict zones such as Gaza, the entanglement of civilian life with political and military objectives mirrors frontier conditions in important ways. Violence applied in such contexts rarely remains contained. Tactical success can deepen strategic failure by hardening resistance and eroding international legitimacy.¹³

The Australian Frontier Wars demonstrate that when civilian identity, land, and resistance are inseparable, coercive force struggles to achieve lasting outcomes. Escalation produces cycles of grievance that outlast immediate operations.

Escalation as Process, Not Event

A key insight from the Australian Frontier Wars is that escalation is rarely a single decision. It is a process shaped by repeated encounters, misjudgements, and accumulating pressure. Small actions—patrols, arrests, reprisals—can have disproportionate consequences when trust is absent and fear is high.¹⁴

This perspective challenges narratives that locate responsibility for violence solely in moments of crisis. Instead, it highlights the importance of structural conditions and everyday decisions. Contemporary conflicts exhibit similar dynamics, where escalation emerges gradually and becomes difficult to reverse.

Memory, Trauma, and Unresolved Conflict

Perhaps the most enduring lesson of the Australian Frontier Wars is that conflict does not end when violence subsides. Memory, trauma, and grievance persist, shaping identities and politics across generations. The unresolved nature of frontier violence continues to influence debates over sovereignty, law, and reconciliation in Australia.¹⁵

Modern conflicts are likely to leave similar legacies. Failure to address underlying grievances risks reproducing cycles of violence long after formal hostilities cease.

Conclusion

The Australian Australian Frontier Wars offer no simple prescriptions for contemporary conflict. What they provide is a cautionary framework. Superior force can disrupt but rarely resolves. Legitimacy, restraint, and local understanding matter more than decisive action alone. Escalation is easier than de-escalation, and unresolved violence leaves enduring scars.

In an era where many conflicts resist clean endings, the frontier experience remains deeply relevant. Studying it does not tell us how to win wars, but it helps us understand why so many wars fail to end.


Endnotes

  1. John Connor, The Australian Australian Frontier Wars, 1788–1838 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002), 1–15.
  2. Connor, Australian Australian Frontier Wars, 8–12.
  3. Ray Kerkhove, How They Fought: Indigenous Tactics and Weaponry of Australia’s Australian Frontier Wars (Brisbane: Boolarong Press, 2018), 55–78.
  4. Henry Reynolds, The Other Side of the Frontier (Sydney: UNSW Press, 2006), 187–210.
  5. Reynolds, Other Side of the Frontier, 210–230.
  6. Nicholas Clements, The Black War (St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 2014), 3–20.
  7. Connor, Australian Australian Frontier Wars, 140–165.
  8. Kerkhove, How They Fought, 101–120.
  9. Carter Malkasian, The American War in Afghanistan (New York: Oxford University Press, 2021), 421–445.
  10. Malkasian, American War in Afghanistan, 310–340.
  11. Lawrence Freedman, Ukraine and the Art of Strategy (London: Allen Lane, 2019), 97–118.
  12. Freedman, Ukraine and the Art of Strategy, 145–170.
  13. Mary Kaldor, New and Old Wars, 3rd ed. (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2012), 145–169.
  14. Clements, The Black War, 45–60.
  15. Henry Reynolds, Law of the Land (Ringwood: Penguin, 1987), 1–25.

Bibliography

Clements, Nicholas. The Black War: Fear, Sex and Resistance in Tasmania. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 2014.

Connor, John. The Australian Australian Frontier Wars, 1788–1838. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002.

Freedman, Lawrence. Ukraine and the Art of Strategy. London: Allen Lane, 2019.

Kaldor, Mary. New and Old Wars: Organised Violence in a Global Era. 3rd ed. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2012.

Kerkhove, Ray. How They Fought: Indigenous Tactics and Weaponry of Australia’s Australian Frontier Wars. Brisbane: Boolarong Press, 2018.

Malkasian, Carter. The American War in Afghanistan: A History. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021.

Reynolds, Henry. Law of the Land. Ringwood: Penguin, 1987.

Reynolds, Henry. The Other Side of the Frontier. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press, 2006.

Guru’s Comment about the rules:

The rules that are being written are not neutral abstractions. They are designed to echo the historical condition described in the accompanying essay: a form of conflict that rarely resolved cleanly, escalated unevenly, and left long aftereffects that mattered as much as moments of violence. As a result, the system privileges pressure, exposure, and consequence over decisive engagement. Victory conditions are deliberately narrow, fragile, or absent, because the historical reality being explored rarely offered clear endings or symmetrical outcomes.

Core mechanics such as Pressure, constrained movement, and limited recovery are intended to mirror how agency narrowed over time. Early decisions shape later possibilities, but do not guarantee control. The rules discourage constant action and reward restraint, withdrawal, and survival as meaningful outcomes. This is not a game about maximising force; it is a game about enduring conditions imposed by Country, by escalation, and by prior choices.

The scenario sequence follows the same logic as the essay: escalation without resolution. Early scenarios still contain space for maneuver, choice, and partial control. As the campaign progresses, scenarios increasingly remove clarity rather than adding complexity. Terrain becomes less generous, information less reliable, and interaction more costly. This reflects the historical pattern in which violence fractured authority and certainty, rather than producing settlement or dominance.

Later scenarios, particularly the final bands, are intentionally quieter and more constrained. They are not climaxes in a conventional wargaming sense. Instead, they represent living with the aftermath—altered movement, persistent fear, disrupted relationships with Country, and the absence of clean conclusions. The rules tighten here not to punish players, but to ensure the experience remains aligned with the historical condition being represented.

Taken together, the essay, rules, and scenarios form a single argument. The essay explains the historical reality; the rules translate that reality into pressure and limitation; the scenarios provide structured spaces in which players experience those constraints. The aim is not reenactment or simulation, but understanding through play—by forcing players to confront how conflict reshapes possibility, rather than how it produces victory.

These rules are therefore the way they are because the history demands it. Anything more permissive, heroic, or decisive would break the link between what the campaign says and what it allows players to do. Will they sell outside of an education environment – not sure, but that is not their purpose. Hopefully they will change the way some people think about conflict and what works and what doesn’t.

More late arrivals from Santa.

I needed to buy some more flocking/basing materials which I normally get from Temu as they are significantly cheaper. There were some on sale so I decided to stock up on them – giving me enough for the next few years!

I also had some vouchers which I to buy some more figure cases.

Some cheap Post Apocalyptic barriers caught my eye and I through them in the trolley as well.

The flocking/basing materials.

Exploring the 28mm Model of the Sd.Kfz. 250 Alte

This Warlord Games 28mm kit is another addition for my 1200pt Africa corps army. I was debating about reproducing Rommel’s “Greif”, but decided a small reconnaissance force was not the ideal place for the General!

The Sd.Kfz. 250 was commonly used by Panzer and Panzergrenadier units for reconnaissance. Instead of carrying whole infantry squads, it transported small teams or specialists, which made it effective for command, liaison, artillery observation, and escort tasks. Its open-top design enhanced visibility and communication but also made it more vulnerable to artillery and air attacks.

The vehicle served in North Africa with the Afrika Korps from 1941 to 1943. It was useful for reconnaissance and command, able to keep up with armored units and cover long distances. However, the open terrain revealed its weaknesses: it had limited armor, an exposed fighting area, and was vulnerable to air attacks. Because of this, crews depended more on mobility, spacing, and being aware of their surroundings than on protection.

A variety of models increased the Sd.Kfz. 250’s usefulness. The standard 250/1 was a light personnel carrier, while other versions included command vehicles, radio units, observation platforms, mortar carriers, and reconnaissance models with a 2 cm autocannon. The well-known 250/3 command vehicle was linked to senior commanders and became a symbol of German mobile headquarters at the front.

Production changed over time, leading to two main hull types. Early “alte” vehicles had a complex, multi-angled hull that was unique but slow to produce. Later “neu” versions used fewer armor plates, making production faster without greatly impacting performance on the battlefield. Both types were used at the same time, showing Germany’s effort to meet battlefield demands while managing industrial capabilities.

Another Opel Blitz in the next few days.

Panzer IV: A Fresh Lid for an Old Warhorse

A while ago I finished off a Panzer IV X for my Konfikt 47 army.

This model is basically the standard Warlord’s Panzer IV with an extra resin Schwerefeld Projektor turret stuffed in the box.

This left the original Panzer IV turret unused.

I have been meaning to put it together and paint it up so that the model can be used in a standard Bolt Action game as well.

I would need to stick with the K47 painting scheme so they turret and chassis matched, but a small price to pay for a more flexible model.

More DAK tomorrow.

Review – The Scrap Iron Flotilla.

The Scrap Iron Flotilla by Mike Carlton is an engaging and easy-to-read account of an important but often overlooked achievement of the Royal Australian Navy during wartime. The book narrates the journey of five old destroyers—Stuart, Vampire, Vendetta, Voyager, and Waterhen—sent to the Mediterranean at the start of the Second World War. Although these ships were seen as outdated and referred to as “scrap iron” by Nazi propaganda, Carlton illustrates how their crews transformed this insult into a source of pride through hard work and bravery in some of the most perilous seas of the war.

Carlton’s writing style is key to the story’s success. He uses clear and simple language, which helps keep the narrative engaging. Naval warfare can be confusing or too technical, but Carlton avoids this by explaining events in straightforward terms and highlighting their importance. He describes battles, patrols, and convoy escorts in an easy-to-understand way, even for readers who know little about naval history. The focus is always on clarity and keeping the story moving, rather than unnecessary technical details.

A key strength of the book is its focus on people, not just ships and operations. Carlton uses letters, diaries, and personal stories to depict life aboard destroyers. He describes the cramped conditions, tiredness, and constant danger that crews faced, helping readers grasp the human cost of long months at sea. His vivid yet reserved descriptions allow small details—heat, noise, fear, and exhaustion—to illustrate the pressure on sailors.

Carlton’s background as a journalist shines through in the book. His writing is clear, engaging, and aims to reach a broad audience. However, this can also be limiting. At times, the text uses familiar themes from Australian war history, such as dry humour, stoicism, and the underdog’s triumph through resilience and friendship. While these elements resonate and are often true, they can come across as predictable, glossing over the more complex or uncomfortable realities of the war and fostering admiration instead of deeper thought.

There are times when the writing rushes through uncertainty or disagreement. While it mentions strategic mistakes, poor decisions, and overall Allied failures, it doesn’t always delve into them deeply. Carlton usually draws clear conclusions instead of focusing on doubt or moral complexities. Readers seeking a more questioning or analytical style might feel that some issues are resolved too simply.


Despite these limitations, the book has many strong points. Carlton understands his audience well and writes purposefully throughout the narrative. His clear style makes a complex naval campaign easy to understand for a wide range of readers while still being thought-provoking. The balance he maintains between action, detailed explanations, and personal experiences keeps the story interesting from start to finish. Additionally, his use of historical context and vivid descriptions of the sea enhances the reader’s understanding, helping them fully engage in the intense world of naval warfare. This approach encourages readers to think about the larger impacts of the events and connects them to the personal stories of those involved.


Overall, The Scrap Iron Flotilla is a strong and compelling history book that draws readers in with its focus on a lesser-known part of Australia’s naval heritage. Its clear language, steady pace, and attention to human experiences make it a great introduction to Australia’s naval war in the Mediterranean. The book combines factual details with personal anecdotes that create emotional resonance. Although the writing style is straightforward and does not explore complex themes, it effectively presents the importance of these naval operations. Additionally, it honors the ships and crews, emphasizing their bravery and sacrifice while fostering a greater appreciation for their contributions during wartime. Ultimately, the book serves as a powerful reminder of how naval warfare shapes national identity, ensuring the legacy of the Scrap Iron Flotilla continues to be remembered.

I am not a fan of Mike Carlton s writing, but found this was one of his better ones. As a book it is not one I would read again, but it citations, bibliography and extensive index make it a good source for early naval warfare in the Mediternean.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.