WHAT KIND OF MADMEN ARE THESE?
The Americans (Commanders)
Wesley Merritt (Brigadier general Regular Army, Major General of volunteers, commander of 8th Corps)
George Dewey (Officer in tactical command, newly minted Rear admiral, fresh off the SS Esmeralda Incident and a confrontation with German Vice admiral von Dederichs)
Arthur MacArthur, Jr. (Hero of Lookout Mountain during the American Civil War, and a hothead. Colonel of Regulars, Brevet Brigadier of volunteers. He’s the calm one on the American side.)
The Filipino Rebels
Emilio Aguinaldo (Befuddled leader of the Filipino Army of National Liberation. As an Illustrado (intellectual) he knows as much about military matters as a six year old child.
Antonio Luna (The scheming conniving one. Knows the old adage well, Let’s you and him fight. Is the one who plots the Blockhouse 6 Incident that starts the whole ruckus. How was he to know Dewey was not bluffing?)
Spanish Commanders
Fermin Jáudenes (Military commander, and after Basillio is arrested, Captain general of the Spanish Philippines.)
Basilio Augustín (Captain general of the Spanish Philippines caught negotiating with the Americans. It is not the fact that he negotiates; it is the size of the bribe he inveigles to surrender the city of Manila to the gringos. He was not going to cut Fermin Jáudenes in on it. Fermin Jáudenes arrested him and made his own deal with the Americans, which you will see below. (RTL altered a tiny bit for the AU. ) )
The Order of battle for the US Army Eighth Corps (in this AU):
Commanding General, Eighth Army Corps: Major General Wesley Merritt
2nd Division - Brigadier General Thomas M. Anderson
1st Brigade - Brigadier General Arthur MacArthur
23rd Infantry Regiment RA- Colonel John W. French
14th Infantry Regiment RA Colonel Lafayette Hawes Jr.
13th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment - Colonel of Volunteers Mathew Johns
21st North Dakota Volunteer Infantry Regiment – Lt, Colonel Edward Susskind
11th Idaho Volunteer Infantry Regiment – Colonel of Volunteers Gustavus Montjoy
9th Wyoming Volunteer Infantry Regiment – Colonel of Volunteers Abner Peacock
Astor Battery - Captain Peyton C. March (Volunteer 2nd machine gun company)
2nd Brigade - Brigadier General Francis Vinton Greene
18th U.S. Infantry Regiment RA Colonel James Gordon Howell
1st Battalion - Colonel Clarence M. Bailey
2nd Battalion - Major Charles Kellar
3rd U.S. Artillery Regiment RA (Siege Train Apple) Lt. Colonel David Silwell
1st Battalion - Captain James O'Hara
2nd Battalion - Captain William E. Birkhimer
U.S. Engineer Battalion, Company A - 2nd Lieutenant William Durward Connor
12th California Infantry Regiment - Colonel James S. Smith
24th Colorado Infantry Regiment - Colonel Irving Hale
18th Nebraska Volunteer Infantry Regiment - Colonel John P. Bratt
22nd Oregon Volunteer Infantry Regiment-Colonel Rufus Truscott
10th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment - Colonel Alexander L. Hawkins
Utah Volunteer Artillery Regiment (Volunteer 7th Artillery) The Right Reverend Abner Cobblepot, Colonel of Volunteers
Light Battery A - Captain Richard Whitehead Young
Light Battery B - Captain Frank A. Grant
California Volunteer Heavy Artillery Detachment (Siege Train Baker) Major Thaddeus Jones
Roughly speaking, each dot represents a strong point or a unit equivalent to about a battalion of 1000 men. this does not mean that all battalion units are equivalent. A Filipino battalion was only 1/4 the actual combat effectiveness of a Spanish Tercio battalion or an American infantry battalion. Roughly speaking the Americans and Spaniards should have been equivalent, but poor leadership at Manila, decayed morale and material and logistical handicaps reduces the Spanish troops outside of Zapote fortifications to exactly 1/2 the effectiveness of American equivalents in a maneuver battle.
The RTL US Army shows astonishing blitzkrieg prowess in the 1898 Spanish American War. Madman Joe Wheeler did launch lightning attacks at Guasimas and at El Canay in Cuba. Kettledrum and San Juan Hill were executed with a rapidity that astonished European observers who saw the fights. Fighting Native Americans does that to you. In the Philippines, in the RTL, the same lightning war style overwhelms the Filipino Army of Liberation, in the Philippine American War as it is shattered in a forced march campaign conducted by MacArthur, Otis and Anderson. Once thrown out of their trenches, the Filipino insurrectos are relentlessly pursued up the Luzon central plain to be encircled just south of Lingayen Gulf and harassed to destruction. MacArthur in particular makes certain that Aquino’s men are not allowed to escape into the Cordillera. He does this by seizing the Manila to Dagupan railroad and dares the insurrectos to cross that clear ground. Machine guns (Gatlings on captured Spanish trains) form a part of that RTL tactical containment. US infantry, yes infantry! outmarches the Katipuman irregulars in their own country, ambushes the Filipinos, and cuts them to pieces again and again. This kind of warfare was conducted in a pampas and semi-jungle at the platoon and company level by young boys from Colorado, Oregon, Utah and Montana, men who had never seen a jungle or savannah in their life and it is utterly astonishing. It gets no historic play at all, because it is a dirty war, fought the dirty way, with little quarter.
You can compare that American campaign and the pacification war that follows with the utter mess the British make of things in the Sudan, in Zimbabwe, in Boer ruled South Africa, in Zambia and you just shake your head at it.
Aquino's men in this AU are armed with Marata 22 rifles or rolling block Winchesters and a dozen or so captured or stolen field guns (Ordunez or Schneider Canet 3 inch mountain howitzers). As far as can be historically determined, Luna's bunch of revolutionaries were armed with anything that ranged from Napoleonic era muskets to old shotguns. What artillery they had, consisted of a battery of four 12 pounder cannon they stole from an old Spanish fort that defended Bocaue.
The Spanish troops had their 7 mm Spanish Mauser and were alleged to have bought a dozen or so Maxim Model 1894 machine guns in the 7 mm Mauser cartridge, but these models were shipped to Havana, sited in the Cubano and never used as other than fortress guns. The Spanish did not use machine guns in the Philippine Islands; period. Artillery: modern field or fortress guns such as the Spanish had; was either Hontoria, Krupp, Ordunez, Schneider Canet, or Vickers and was 6, 7.5, 7.8, 21 or 12 cm in field guns, and 12, ,15.2, 16, 18, 20.3, 23.4 or 25.5 cm coastal defense or landed naval guns in the Manila area, using a bewildering array of types and kinds of ammunition.
The Americans, being American, have simplified their logistics. They use three types of rifle, the Springfield 1893 (Krag system), the 1895 Remington Navy (Lee system) and the 1897 Various (Mannlicher system) all in the Navy Lee 6 x 60 mm cartridge. Field artillery is the 8cm/40 caliber Driggs howitzer. Siege artillery is courtesy of Mr. Driggs in the 25 cm Endicott mortar.
And that artillery… both ship and ashore, the Americans believed in their artillery in the RTL. The biggest Moro uprising of the insurrection, the Bud Dajo Massacre, when suppressed was an artillery bombardment of a trapped rebel encampment inside a volcano! It makes Wounded Knee look like a peaceful pow-wow. 1000 people blown to bits. Americans hauled 1 tonne field howitzers and a machine gun I(Gatling on a gun carriage) up 2400 meters of steep grade so inclined that soldiers used bayonets jammed into the ground as steps and pitons to haul themselves up, fought off the Tausogs at the top, knife to knife, and then block and tackled the guns up by hand, because mules could not climb it.
THAT was the American army of 1898-1908. Incredible.