Battle of Oliv

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Battle of Oliv
Part of Prodavan War
The Relief of Ladysmith by John Henry Frederick Bacon.jpg
Lord Rachdale leading 3rd Corps meets Brigadier McManaman on the outskirts of Oliv.
Date3rd - 6th April 1991
Location
Oliv, Earldom of Agrea
Result Imperial Victory
Belligerents

Flag of Castile-La Mancha.svg Vionna-Frankenlisch

Grand Ceasian Flag.png Imperial Ceasia
New Prodavan Flag.png Prodava
Commanders and leaders

Major General Lord Rachdale

Brigadier Colum McManaman

General Rasseed Salahe

General Idrees el-Akram
Units involved
Third Corps 2 Corps (Operation-Group Oliv)
Strength
31,000 19,000
Casualties and losses

1,671 killed, 3,512 wounded

approx. 400 captured

4,910 killed and wounded

3,000 captured

Between 1,000 and 2,500 civilians killed

Heavy damage to the eastern half of Oliv

The Battle of Oliv was an engagement of the Prodavan War occuring during the Prodavan Oliv Offensive. It took place within the city of Oliv in Agrea, Vionna-Frankenlisch, and around the River Achola. The battle was fought over three days from 3rd to 6th April 1991 between Imperial forces under the Viscount Rachdale and Brigadier Colum McManaman and 19,000 Prodavans under the command of General Rasseed Salahe. The Prodavans were in the midst of a counter-offensive in the region of Agrea, intended to seize the city of Oliv and destroy a significant portion of the Imperial Army in southeastern Vionna. Operation-Group Oliv was made up of forces from Prodavan 2nd Corps and, at the begining of the battle, vastly outnumbered the 4,000 defenders of the city.

Operation-Group Oliv, after taking the Imperial airbase at Kavarres, spent 3rd and 4th April in rest and prayer while their artillery shelled Imperial positions across the River Achola. The Prodavan assault on the city began on the 5th and the delay gave time for Lord Rachdale's hastily formed Third Corps to march east from Octan. After making considerable gains in Oliv and causing heavy casualties to Brigadier McManaman's defenders, Prodavan forces were surprised and forced back by the sudden arrival of Rachdale's corps. Fierce fighting regained the city for the Imperial forces and General Salahe withdrew his remaining forces on 6th April.

Defeat at Oliv was a critical failure for the Prodavans who, until that point, had looked ready to inflict a decisive blow against Vionna-Frankenlisch. By failing to take the city, and then withdrawing, Salahe handed the initiative back to the Imperials who he had kept on the back-foot. A counter-attack by Rachdale's Third Corps inflicted a further defeat on Salahe's retreating forces, retaking Kavarres on 9th April. A breakout effort by the encircled Imperial Second Corps on 6th April succeeded, bringing an end to the Battle of Hill 451. A further victorious action was fought at Elerio on the 11th by Second Corps and they were united with Imperial Third Corps on the 12th.

Background

Opening of the War

The Prodavan War was declared on 14th March 1991. Following the death of Sultan Abu Taiseer al-Shahid, Prodava had fallen into a period of civil anarchy known as Black February which was marked by open fighting between the two paramilitary units that served the Prodavan government: the monarchist Mameluk Guard and the nationalist Bedouin Guard. The Pomeron Revolution and the Greenshirt Coup saw Prodava transition violently into a republic led by Aisha Bardour. After a short build-up of tensions, Vionna-Frankenlisch declared war on Prodava with the stated aims of retaking territory formerly belonging to Imperial Ceasisa and restoring the Prodavan monarchy.

Operation Towton saw the first major action of the war when the city of Loukussa in northern Prodava fell to an Imperial offensive. A second offensive, Operation Teuton, failed to breakthrough the heavily-defended Ramulani Line. Despite this failure, the capture of Loukussa was a significant victory and swung the tide of war decisively in favour of Vionna-Frankenlisch.

Oliv Offensive

In response to these early movements, the Prodavan General Staff planned to launch a counter-offensive in the west against the southermost part of Vionna-Franenlisch - the county of Agrea. Forty-thousand men were organised into the 2nd Corps and placed under the command of General Rasseed Salahe. The offensive began on 27th March and quickly acheived one of its objectives by completing the encirclement of Hill 451, an important Imperial position, at the Battle of Elerio. An Imperial counterattack at the Second Battle of Elerio was beaten back and 19,000 Imperial troops had become trapped in the Hill 451 pocket. The encirclement prevented the arrival of supplies and reinforcments and communication was possible only by a semaphore at the peak of the hill which was put out of action by artillery fire early in the battle. From the airfield at Kavarres, IAS pilots flew mission to drop supplies via parachute.

Salahe continued his victorious campaign on 1st April by attacking Kavarres. The town held out until night, allowing the aircraft to escape and the garrison to slip away in the darkness. Two regiments of cavalry and the IAS ground personnel at Kavarres escaped to Oliv and news of the approaching Prodavans - 19,000 strong under Salahe; was passed on to the Duke of Cunaris at Octan, the capital of Agrea. After taking the abandoned Kavarres on the morning of 2nd April, Salahe moved against Oliv. Operation-Group Oliv arrived on the east bank of the River Achola on the evening of 3rd April.

Opposing Forces

Imperial

Garrison
The Imperial garrison of Oliv was not strong. Under the command of Brigadier Colum McManaman, 4,000 Imperial troops were in the city when the Prodavans arrived on 3rd April. Much of this force was cavalry or rear-echelon troops, along with several hundred combat troops which had become separated from their units over the course of the campaign. Brigadier McManaman was a cavalry officer of some experience who had been in the city on administrative duties and took command of the garrison on 2nd April when a more senior officer could not be found. His forces consisted of:

around 600 troops from various units - organised into 3 companies of roughly 200

Third Corps
Imperial Third Corps was a hastily-arranged formation which numbered 27,000 men and came under command of Major General the Viscount Rachdale. Third Corps was formed on 2nd April and marched east from Octan that day. Forces of Third Corps did not arrive in Oliv until the afternoon of 5th April but were able to intervene in time to turn the tide of battle and save the city. Third Corps consisted of:

Two siege batteries (the 101st and 98th) of the Royal Artillery were also part of the corps and were equipped with heavy mortars. During the battle, the Margrave of Grunicza led an ad-hoc brigade of grenadiers numbering 2,000.

Prodavan

General Rasseed Salahe's Operation-Group Oliv was a force of 19,000 troops drawn from Prodavan 2 Corps. The group was focused around three infantry brigades of the Republican Army but included other supporting units. A more detailed breakdown is:

  • 20th Brigade - 6,000 men in 4 battalions - Brigadier Hajid Askoy
  • 23rd Brigade - 6,000 men in 4 battalions - Brigadier Binay el-Sattar
  • 25th Brigade - 6,000 men in 4 battalions - Brigadier Abdul Cevik
  • 1st Armoured Car Detachment - 1,000 men in 4 companies - Colonel Alexander MacEllem
  • 16th Artillery Regiment - 12 guns, 500 men in 3 batteries
  • 17th Artillery Regiment - 12 guns, 500 men in 3 batteries

The twelve infantry battalions of 20th Brigade, 23rd Brigade, and 25th Brigade made up the bulk of Operation-Group Oliv. Support came in the form of Colonel MacEllem's 1st Armoured Car Detachment and the 16th and 17th Artillery regiments, each with three batteries of howitzers.

Battle

Imperial Defensive Preparations

With only 4,000 defenders, including only a single battalion of front-line infantry, Brigadier McManaman's preparations were centered around getting the best out of his limited forces. He established his headquarters at St Ademois Church on the Plaza of the Faiths, the central square of Oliv. The other two places of worship were taken over for the use of the defenders: the Central Mosque of Oliv became a munitions dump and the Christian Church of Oliv became a casualty clearing station. The Mosque, in particular, was chosen as McManaman did not believe the (mostly) Islamic Prodavans would shell it. The Plaza was fortified with sandbag barriers and makeshift barricades and the 1st Battalion, Royal Agrea Rifles were placed there. This battalion was McManaman's only unit of steady infantry and he kept it close at hand, planning to employ its five companies as flying columns to reinforce positions which were under pressure.

Aware that the Prodavans' only way into the city was by crossing the River Achola, McManaman had his engineers, the 6th Field Regiment, mine many of the major bridges into the city. Several were blown up outright and several others were rigged to explode and observed. The only one left untouched was the main bridge into the city, the Vinicius Severus Memorial Bridge which connected the main highway from the east to Maria Perchowska Square. The Vinicius Severus Bridge was heavily fortified with barricades, barbed wire and machinegun nests by the 6th Field Regiment, Royal Engineers. The engineers assigned two companies to defend the bridge and the 600 men of the Agrea Yeomanry took up positions in the buildings around the bridge and Maria Perchowska Square.

Several minor bridges remained, these were mostly footbridges and single-lane road or tramways. These were mostly on the south-west of the city and McManaman left their defence to dismounted troopers of the King's Agrean Lancers and Royal Eglantine Dragoons. With 1200 troopers together, these regiments garrisoned the buildings along the bank of the Achola. There were nine bridges to be defended, most of them very small. Colonel Douglas of the Eglantine Dragoons commanded the defense in this sector and lamented the lack of machineguns: "A single machinegun would have been enough."he stated, "As chokepoints, the bridges were invaluable, but carbines and revolvers could not keep up the rate-of-fire we needed. A single Lancaster gun could have held up the Mohammedists for a week."

Prodavan Arrival and Initial Fighting

Following a full day's march from Kavarres, Rasseed Salahe's Operation-Group Oliv of 19,000 troops arrived on the Plain of St Ademios (the open plain directly east of Oliv across the River Achola) on the evening of 3rd April. A short skirmish developed between Imperial cavalry scouts on the plain and the arriving vanguard of Salahe's force. No casualties were reported by either side and the scouts were driven back into the city and one trooper of the Agrea Yeomanry was taken prisoner. The first Prodavan forces to arrive were the brigade cavalry of the 20th, 23rd, and 25th Brigades. These were followed by Colonel MacEllem's 1st Armoured Car Detachment. While the rest of the Prodavan army filed onto the plain and began to set up camp, Salahe gave the order for 1st Armoured Car Detachment to launch an assault on the Vinicius Severus Bridge. MacEllem initially counselled against the order but Salahe, anxious to prevent the defenders from blowing up the last main bridge into the city, insisted.

Colonel MacEllem arrayed the 96 armoured cars of his unit on the plain before the bridge. 1st Armoured Car Detachment was split into 4 combat companies and a detachment for maintainence, supply, and non-combat services. The 4 combat companies consisted of 200 men each with 24 cars, 72 crewmen, 18 reserve crewmen and 110 light infantrymen to support the armoured vehicles. Captain Kasin al-Hanif volunteered to lead the assault with Ceyhan (c) Company and MacEllem accepted, as that company had taken the least losses during the campaign. In a staggered formation, Ceyhan Company advanced on the bridge without coming under fire. In buildings and behind barricades, the Imperial defenders around the bridge remained unseen until a tremendous fire opened up when Ceyhan Company was most of the way across the Vinicius Severus Bridge. Though the defenders lacked heavy ordance, the Lancaster machineguns they possesed were capable of penetrating the armoured cars' plates at certain angles. Rifle and machinegun fire 'buttoned' the Prodavan vehicles, disorienting their crews and damaging wheels, guns, and vision slits. Three vehicles were knocked out outright and five more became bogged down under heavy gunfire. Under the withering fusilade the Prodavan infantry was unable to advance with the armoured cars and Captain al-Hanif, wounded badly in the arm and shoulder, ordered the retreat.

Salahe decided against a second attack. 1st Armoured Car Detachment was now at 60% strength from vehicle breakdowns and battle losses during the campaign. Instead, Salahe declared 4th April to be a day of rest, prayer, and preparation. 16th and 17th Artillery Regiments were dug in to firing positions overnight. The six batteries (24 howitzers in total) began their bombardment of the Imperial positions defending the Vinicius Severus Bridge at dawn on the 4th.