GIA TAHGC N "FAUGH A'BALLAGH"

Updated 061210


SINAGOGA ITALY, May 16, 1944: The approach to Monte Cassino was agonizingly slow. The commanding heights gave the Germans superb observation and fire positions. In the valleys, small rearguard groups ensured that each hamlet had is blood price. For the Allies, the very narrowness of the battlefield ensure the maximum support for each assault. The Iris Brigade attack on Sinagoga was preceded by a full divisional bombardment. In the thunder of the barrage, many of the small stone housed of the picturesque village were quickly destroyed. The defenders were not.

VICTORY CONDITIONS: To win, the Irish must either establish a favorable 3:1 ratio of unbroken full squads on the board at game's end OR solely occupy any five of the seven buildings that contain stairways. The German player winds by avoid the Irish victory conditions.

BOARD LAYOUT:

NORTH
10

SCENARIO SEQUENCE:

German sets up first
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
END
British moves first

AMERICAN FORCES:

SPECIAL SCENARIO RULES:

AFTERMATH: Soon after the barrage lifted, the "Faughs" (so called for their battle cry "Faugh a Ballagh") stormed the shattered village. The bombardment had knocked out all the mines and fixed anti-tank weapons but had left the German troops and armor unaffected. Their fire, and the piles of rubble, so slowed the Irish assault that it was more the orderly German retirement rather than the Allied advance which left Sinagoga in Irish hands.