The 'regulars' are fine, the subsaharan troops are fine, the more troops GHQ produces the better. I might even use the regulars for Iranians for my Iran/Iraq War forces.
But the same problems remains, there are no forces available to play any of the forces that have fought Israel since 1983. The US has been involved in Iraq for over 7 years with only one month of fighting versus regulars. There is not a single item in the entire GHQ figure that represents enemy forces in either of those wars.
GHQ produces a line of buildings and civilians for fighting in the middle east, they produce US and Israeli forces that have only ever seen action against jihadi irregulars. So over 100 packs of GHQ figures, vehicles, buildings, and aircraft cannot be used in a historical wargame because GHQ does not produce a single figure for them to fight against. So GHQ has invested tens of thousands of dollars (if not more) producing packs that are absolutely worthless to historical wargames, simply because they ahve not invested a few thousand dollars to produce a single figure for them to fight against. I am sure they do not see the need for the figures since there other middle eastern items don't sell as expected. But they have to soon realize that the reason their middle eastern items don't fly off the shelf is that they have absolutley no reasons to buy scenery and figures to fight in the middle east until they produce an enemy to fight.
People have been abandoning microarmor for a long time, primarily because since the collapse of the Soviet Union, no microarmor manufacturer has actually produced any figures that would allow anyone to fight the conflicts of our era. Or more accurately they have produced one side and then not been able to sell it because they did not make the other side.
How well would all of that cold war microarmor have sold if GHQ and their competitors had refused to make a single soviet tank.
Plenty of looks to go for:
http://www.google.com/images?hl=en&sour ... =&gs_rfai=