Photos of the New Order

Part Four: The Second West Russian War (1972-1976)

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ROA soldiers advancing through RK Moskowein, 1975.
In 1972, the Russian Republic was an almost completely re-unified nation, save for the lands that were once the heart of the Russian nation that were under the rule of the Greater Germanic Reich led by Martin Bormann and under the German colony of RK Moskowein, led by Reichskommissar Albert Hofmann. Almost immediately after what came be to known as the “First Russian Re-Unification” President and General Bunyachenko and the high command of the Russian Liberation Army began to make new plans for the final war for Russian Re-Unification, this being a war with the German Reich over RK Moskowein. In the minds of Bunyachenko and the ROA high command, this would be the war that would not only unify Russia and restore Russia to greatness once and for all, but the war that would redeem the KONR and the ROA, the rulers of the Russian Republic for their past-collaboration with the German Reich, a regime that the government of the Russian Republic now despised for their betrayal at the end of the West Russian War, their refusal to grant Western Russia self-rule and their re-conquest of Western Russia in 1967.

Meanwhile, unbeknownst to the world, Führer Martin Bormann was diagnosed with a fatal case of cancer in December, 1972. With so many high-ranking members of the Nazi Party either dead and/or purged and with many economic problems, the German Reich was incredibly unstable politically, economically and socially. As a result, at the start of 1973, Bormann secretly named Admiral Karl Dönitz as his successor and decided to declare a new war to distract the people of Germany from economic and social ills. That war would be the results of Fall Schwartz, the Burgundian War, which was being planned with the military of the German-aligned French State led by President Pierre Poujade. The war began on April 8, 1973 and, with high militarization of fanaticism of the SS armies, was one of the most brutal fought in Western Europe. Himmler desired to launch the Burgundian nuclear arsenal, but the French, Walloon and Flemish SS legions rose up in revolt, and Himmler was killed in an SS coup led by SS-Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny . On January 8, 1974, the war came to an end, with Burgundy divided between Germany and France, with Belgium becoming Reichsprotektorat Belgium.

With the start of 1974, the perfect opportunity arose for the Russian Republic, the KONR and the ROA to get revenge on the German Reich for their lies and betrayal. On March 30, 1974, Führer Martin Bormann died of cancer in Germania at the age of 73 years old. With the death of Bormann, Admiral Karl Dönitz became interim-Führer of the Greater Germanic Reich. However, the internal situation of the German Reich was incredibly still incredibly unstable, and many in the government felt that the Reich was seemingly on the brink of collapse when the octogenarian admiral came to power. In the aftermath of the Burgundian War and the ascension of Karl Donitz, with the German army exhausted from their previous war and the German Reich in an unstable period of a transition of leadership, President Bunyachenko ordered an all-out attack against RK Moskowien on the morning of May 30, 1974. The Second West Russian War had begun. At the start of the invasion, the German armies in RK Moskowien were caught almost completely off-guard, but still managed to initially hold their defenses against the armies of the ROA. Nevertheless, in the face of a numerically superior Russian onslaught, the German armies began to fall apart and retreat in the face of the multiple Russian advances, and the ROA made numerous breakthroughs in battles along the Russo-German border. By the end of the summer, the ROA has advanced deep into the territory of RK Moskowien.

The climactic battle of the war was the Battle of Moscow, which began on July 29, 1974 with a lengthy artillery barrage and tank siege opening the battle, followed by an aerial bombardment the next day. The German armies in and around Moscow fought fanatically to the death, but the armies of the ROA continued to strategically advance in and around the former Soviet capital. On November 14, with the ROA finally entering more and more parts of Moscow and with the German armies losing more and more engagements, the government of the RK, led by Wehrmacht general and Reichskomissar Walther Wenck, who became leader of the RK after the death of Albert Hoffmann in 1973, fled to Brauchitstadt, formerly St. Petersburg. One day later, the ROA triumphantly entered Moscow to the celebration of the long-oppressed Russian residents of the city, with the remaining German residents of the city being the victims of vigilante murders by Russian nationalist partisans and ROA soldiers eager to prove they were no longer German collaborators at any cost.

Not long after the fall of Moscow, more and more major cities fell to the armies of the ROA, with many smaller towns in the countryside falling under the control of the pro-Russian partisans. All the while, many German settlers fled, with those not did not often being killed by Russian soldiers and partisans in war crimes known as "revenge killings", which were seen as revenge for the crimes of the Nazi Germans against the Russian nation, the motivations for these murders being the sheer anger Russians felt towards the Germans and, as touched upon above, the feeling that ROA soldiers needed to prove they were no longer collaborators with the hated German Reich. By July 1, 1975, over a year after the start of the war, most of RK Moskowien was under the occupation of the Russian Republic and the ROA began its invasion of RK Kaukasus. One major Russian city was still under German control; Brauchistadt, formerly Leningrad, Petrograd and St. Petersburg.

On July 12, 1975, the ROA encircled the aforementioned city with numerous infantry, armored and artillery divisions. That same day, the Battle of Brauchistadt began with a massive aerial and artillery bombardment. On September 4, 1975, the ROA finally entered the city and fought fierce hand-to-hand street battles against the German armies, with many German residents of the city caught in the fighting. After weeks of brutal fighting, with the German armies surrounded and decimated by the armies of the ROA, Reichskommissar and General der Panzertruppe Walther Wenck surrendered the German armies in Mosokwien the government of RK Mosokwien to Feild Marshall Georgy Nikolayevich Zhilenkov. With that, the armies of the paraded through the streets of the newly christened city of "Petrograd", with the long-suffering Russian residents of the city greeting the ROA as liberators, and with numerous unpunished acts of violence against the remaining German population. That same day, on the orders of President Bunyachenko, RK Moskowein was annexed into the Russian Republic, albeit without the recognition of the Greater German Reich, which due to political instability at home was unable to do much about the war in RK Moskowien, with most of the German armies in the RK being divisions that had already been posted to the German colony. Thus, the final phase of the Russian reunification and the “Second Russian Re-Unification” were finally complete, although armed groups of German settlers, mostly in the Volga region, continued to resist the ROA until the end of the war.

In October, 1975, with RK Moskowien under the control of the Russian Republic, the ROA began new invasions of RK Ukraine and RK Ostland. The ROA also continued to advance through the Caucasus and began a bombardment and invasion of the German Crimea. With all of this occurring in the eastern lands of the Greater German Reich and with interim-Führer Dönitz unable to keep peace in Germany proper and to stop the advance of the Russian armies, on November 11, 1975, General Hans Speidel launched a coup against the German government, arresting Admiral Donitz for “gross incompetence in wartime.” In the weeks after the coup, soldiers loyal to Dönitz and Speidel fought in the streets of Germania, and this led to more confusion in the eastern German colonies, which allowed the ROA to advance further and further into the Caucasus, Ukraine and Ostland. With the continuing advance of the Russian Liberation Army, an uprising of Polish militias began in the General Gouvernemnt of Poland, and similar uprisings took place in the Baltic region.

After weeks of chaos, Speidel’s loyalists secured control of Germania by the start of 1976. With the Speidel Coup finally complete, Germany offered talks with the government of the Russian Republic that January. At first, President Bunyachenko refused. This allowed the ROA to advance further into the Caucasus, Ukraine and Ostland, and Crimea fell to the ROA on April 30, 1976. The next month, the ROA had control over most of the Caucasus and Ukraine and most of Belarus. With the German Wehrmacht firmly under the control of Speidel's loyalists, a number of victories were won against the ROA in Ukraine and Ostland. However, soon afterwards the war degenerated into a stalemate between the German and Russian armies in the Baltics, Ukraine and Poland, and with the Polish Uprising and more instability on the home front, the German armies could not afford to fight with Russia for any longer. The armies of the ROA were also becoming worn down and tired. As a result, on August 3, 1976, a ceasefire was accepted by the two armies in Minsk. It was decided by Bunyachenko and Speidel that the two would meet in a neutral city to decide the final terms for the end of the war.

In September, President Bunyachenko and Führer Speidel meet in Stockholm, Sweden to discuss the final peace treaty for the Second West Russian War. The Treaty of Stockholm was finally signed on October 1, 1976. According to the treaty, the Russian Republic would annex RK Moskowien, RK Caucasus, RK Ukraine, the Crimea and Belarus. The Greater German Reich would retain control of the Baltics within RK Ostland. With that, the Second West Russian War ended in an amazing victory for the Russian Republic and President and General Sergei Bunyachenko. The German Reich was badly defeated in Eastern Europe, but in spite of this, still remained one of the premier world powers with control over Poland, the Baltics and the Low Countries, control of overseas territories in the Indian Ocean and alliances within the Einheitspakt with the nations of Denmark, Norway, Slovakia and Hungary, with France and Bulgaria having left the alliance after the start of the Second West Russian War in 1974. Nevertheless, with revenge against the German Reich achieved and with the final unification of Russia complete at last after twelve long years of warfare, a new era in the history of Russia had begun.
 
Last edited:

Rivercat893

Banned
Part Four: The Second West Russian War (1972-1976)

View attachment 609440
ROA soldiers advancing through RK Moskowein, 1975.
In 1972, the Russian Republic was an almost completely re-unified nation, save for the lands that were once the heart of the Russian nation that were under the rule of the Greater Germanic Reich led by Martin Bormann and under the German colony of RK Moskowein, led by Reichskommissar Albert Hofmann. Almost immediately after what came be to known as the “First Russian Re-Unification” President and General Bunyachenko and the high command of the Russian Liberation Army began to make new plans for the final war for Russian Re-Unification, this being a war with the German Reich over RK Moskowein. In the minds of Bunyachenko and the ROA high command, this would be the war that would not only unify Russia and restore Russia to greatness once and for all, but the war that would redeem the KONR and the ROA, the rulers of the Russian Republic for their past-collaboration with the German Reich, a regime that the government of the Russian Republic now despised for their betrayal at the end of the West Russian War, their refusal to grant Western Russia self-rule and their re-conquest of Western Russia in 1967.

Meanwhile, unbeknownst to the world, Führer Martin Bormann was diagnosed with a fatal case of cancer in December, 1972. With so many high-ranking members of the Nazi Party either dead and/or purged and with many economic problems, the German Reich was incredibly unstable politically, economically and socially. As a result, at the start of 1973, Bormann secretly named Admiral Karl Dönitz as his successor and decided to declare a new war to distract the people of Germany from economic and social ills. That war would be the results of Fall Schwartz, the Burgundian War, which was being planned with the military of the German-aligned French State led by President Pierre Poujade. The war began on April 8, 1973 and, with high militarization of fanaticism of the SS armies, was one of the most brutal fought in Western Europe. Himmler desired to launch the Burgundian nuclear arsenal, but the French, Walloon and Flemish SS legions rose up in revolt, and Himmler was killed in an SS coup led by SS-Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny . On January 8, 1974, the war came to an end, with Burgundy divided between Germany and France, with Belgium becoming Reichsprotektorat Belgium.

With the start of 1974, the perfect opportunity arose for the Russian Republic, the KONR and the ROA to get revenge on the German Reich for their lies and betrayal. On March 30, 1974, Führer Martin Bormann died of cancer in Germania at the age of 73 years old. With the death of Bormann, Admiral Karl Dönitz became interim-Führer of the Greater Germanic Reich. However, the internal situation of the German Reich was incredibly still incredibly unstable, and many in the government felt that the Reich was seemingly on the brink of collapse when the octogenarian admiral came to power. In the aftermath of the Burgundian War and the ascension of Karl Donitz, with the German army exhausted from their previous war and the German Reich in an unstable period of a transition of leadership, President Bunyachenko ordered an all-out attack against RK Moskowien on the morning of May 30, 1974. The Second West Russian War had begun. At the start of the invasion, the German armies in RK Moskowien were caught almost completely off-guard, but still managed to initially hold their defenses against the armies of the ROA. Nevertheless, in the face of a numerically superior Russian onslaught, the German armies began to fall apart and retreat in the face of the multiple Russian advances, and the ROA made numerous breakthroughs in battles along the Russo-German border. By the end of the summer, the ROA has advanced deep into the territory of RK Moskowien.

The climactic battle of the war was the Battle of Moscow, which began on July 29, 1974 with a lengthy artillery barrage and tank siege opening the battle, followed by an aerial bombardment the next day. The German armies in and around Moscow fought fanatically to the death, but the armies of the ROA continued to strategically advance in and around the former Soviet capital. On November 14, with the ROA finally entering more and more parts of Moscow and with the German armies losing more and more engagements, the government of the RK, led by Wehrmacht general and Reichskomissar Walther Wenck, who became leader of the RK after the death of Albert Hoffmann in 1973, fled to Brauchitstadt, formerly St. Petersburg. One day later, the ROA triumphantly entered Moscow to the celebration of the long-oppressed Russian residents of the city, with the remaining German residents of the city being the victims of vigilante murders by Russian nationalist partisans and ROA soldiers eager to prove they were no longer German collaborators at any cost.

Not long after the fall of Moscow, more and more major cities fell to the armies of the ROA, with many smaller towns in the countryside falling under the control of the pro-Russian partisans. All the while, many German settlers fled, with those not did not often being killed by Russian soldiers and partisans in war crimes known as "revenge killings", which were seen as revenge for the crimes of the Nazi Germans against the Russian nation, the motivations for these murders being the sheer anger Russians felt towards the Germans and, as touched upon above, the feeling that ROA soldiers needed to prove they were no longer collaborators with the hated German Reich. By July 1, 1975, over a year after the start of the war, most of RK Moskowien was under the occupation of the Russian Republic and the ROA began its invasion of RK Kaukasus. One major Russian city was still under German control; Brauchistadt, formerly Leningrad, Petrograd and St. Petersburg.

On July 12, 1975, the ROA encircled the aforementioned city with numerous infantry, armored and artillery divisions. That same day, the Battle of Brauchistadt began with a massive aerial and artillery bombardment. On September 4, 1975, the ROA finally entered the city and fought fierce hand-to-hand street battles against the German armies, with many German residents of the city caught in the fighting. After weeks of brutal fighting, with the German armies surrounded and decimated by the armies of the ROA, Reichskommissar and General der Panzertruppe Walther Wenck surrendered the German armies in Mosokwien the government of RK Mosokwien to Feild Marshall Georgy Nikolayevich Zhilenkov. With that, the armies of the paraded through the streets of the newly christened city of "Petrograd", with the long-suffering Russian residents of the city greeting the ROA as liberators, and with numerous unpunished acts of violence against the remaining German population. That same day, on the orders of President Bunyachenko, RK Moskowein was annexed into the Russian Republic, albeit without the recognition of the Greater German Reich, which due to political instability at home was unable to do much about the war in RK Moskowien, with most of the German armies in the RK being divisions that had already been posted to the German colony. Thus, the final phase of the Russian reunification and the “Second Russian Re-Unification” were finally complete, although armed groups of German settlers, mostly in the Volga region, continued to resist the ROA until the end of the war.

In October, 1975, with RK Moskowien under the control of the Russian Republic, the ROA began new invasions of RK Ukraine and RK Ostland. The ROA also continued to advance through the Caucasus and began a bombardment and invasion of the German Crimea. With all of this occurring in the eastern lands of the Greater German Reich and with interim-Führer Dönitz unable to keep peace in Germany proper and to stop the advance of the Russian armies, on November 11, 1975, General Hans Speidel launched a coup against the German government, arresting Admiral Donitz for “gross incompetence in wartime.” In the weeks after the coup, soldiers loyal to Dönitz and Speidel fought in the streets of Germania, and this led to more confusion in the eastern German colonies, which allowed the ROA to advance further and further into the Caucasus, Ukraine and Ostland. With the continuing advance of the Russian Liberation Army, an uprising of Polish militias began in the General Gouvernemnt of Poland, and similar uprisings took place in the Baltic region.

After weeks of chaos, Speidel’s loyalists secured control of Germania by the start of 1976. With the Speidel Coup finally complete, Germany offered talks with the government of the Russian Republic that January. At first, President Bunyachenko refused. This allowed the ROA to advance further into the Caucasus, Ukraine and Ostland, and Crimea fell to the ROA on April 30, 1976. The next month, the ROA had control over most of the Caucasus and Ukraine and most of Belarus. With the German Wehrmacht firmly under the control of Speidel's loyalists, a number of victories were won against the ROA in Ukraine and Ostland. However, soon afterwards the war degenerated into a stalemate between the German and Russian armies in the Baltics, Ukraine and Poland, and with the Polish Uprising and more instability on the home front, the German armies could not afford to fight with Russia for any longer. The armies of the ROA were also becoming worn down and tired. As a result, on August 3, 1976, a ceasefire was accepted by the two armies in Minsk. It was decided by Bunyachenko and Speidel that the two would meet in a neutral city to decide the final terms for the end of the war.

In September, President Bunyachenko and Führer Speidel meet in Stockholm, Sweden to discuss the final peace treaty for the Second West Russian War. The Treaty of Stockholm was finally signed on October 1, 1976. According to the treaty, the Russian Republic would annex RK Moskowien, RK Caucasus, RK Ukraine, the Crimea and Belarus. The Greater German Reich would retain control of the Baltics within RK Ostland. With that, the Second West Russian War ended in an amazing victory for the Russian Republic and President and General Sergei Bunyachenko. The German Reich was badly defeated in Eastern Europe, but in spite of this, still remained one of the premier world powers with control over Poland, the Baltics and the Low Countries, control of overseas territories in the Indian Ocean and alliances within the Einheitspakt with the nations of Denmark, Norway, France, Slovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria. Nevertheless, with revenge against the German Reich achieved and with the final unification of Russia complete at last after twelve long years of warfare, a new era in the history of Russia had begun.
I think France, Norway, Denmark, Slovakia, and Hungary will have already left the Einheitpakt since they are much more independent than Poland and firmly lean towards the Organization of Free Nations. Likewise, the Baltics are going to rebel against Germany in the next few decades.
 
Part Four: The Second West Russian War (1972-1976)

View attachment 609440
ROA soldiers advancing through RK Moskowein, 1975.
In 1972, the Russian Republic was an almost completely re-unified nation, save for the lands that were once the heart of the Russian nation that were under the rule of the Greater Germanic Reich led by Martin Bormann and under the German colony of RK Moskowein, led by Reichskommissar Albert Hofmann. Almost immediately after what came be to known as the “First Russian Re-Unification” President and General Bunyachenko and the high command of the Russian Liberation Army began to make new plans for the final war for Russian Re-Unification, this being a war with the German Reich over RK Moskowein. In the minds of Bunyachenko and the ROA high command, this would be the war that would not only unify Russia and restore Russia to greatness once and for all, but the war that would redeem the KONR and the ROA, the rulers of the Russian Republic for their past-collaboration with the German Reich, a regime that the government of the Russian Republic now despised for their betrayal at the end of the West Russian War, their refusal to grant Western Russia self-rule and their re-conquest of Western Russia in 1967.

Meanwhile, unbeknownst to the world, Führer Martin Bormann was diagnosed with a fatal case of cancer in December, 1972. With so many high-ranking members of the Nazi Party either dead and/or purged and with many economic problems, the German Reich was incredibly unstable politically, economically and socially. As a result, at the start of 1973, Bormann secretly named Admiral Karl Dönitz as his successor and decided to declare a new war to distract the people of Germany from economic and social ills. That war would be the results of Fall Schwartz, the Burgundian War, which was being planned with the military of the German-aligned French State led by President Pierre Poujade. The war began on April 8, 1973 and, with high militarization of fanaticism of the SS armies, was one of the most brutal fought in Western Europe. Himmler desired to launch the Burgundian nuclear arsenal, but the French, Walloon and Flemish SS legions rose up in revolt, and Himmler was killed in an SS coup led by SS-Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny . On January 8, 1974, the war came to an end, with Burgundy divided between Germany and France, with Belgium becoming Reichsprotektorat Belgium.

With the start of 1974, the perfect opportunity arose for the Russian Republic, the KONR and the ROA to get revenge on the German Reich for their lies and betrayal. On March 30, 1974, Führer Martin Bormann died of cancer in Germania at the age of 73 years old. With the death of Bormann, Admiral Karl Dönitz became interim-Führer of the Greater Germanic Reich. However, the internal situation of the German Reich was incredibly still incredibly unstable, and many in the government felt that the Reich was seemingly on the brink of collapse when the octogenarian admiral came to power. In the aftermath of the Burgundian War and the ascension of Karl Donitz, with the German army exhausted from their previous war and the German Reich in an unstable period of a transition of leadership, President Bunyachenko ordered an all-out attack against RK Moskowien on the morning of May 30, 1974. The Second West Russian War had begun. At the start of the invasion, the German armies in RK Moskowien were caught almost completely off-guard, but still managed to initially hold their defenses against the armies of the ROA. Nevertheless, in the face of a numerically superior Russian onslaught, the German armies began to fall apart and retreat in the face of the multiple Russian advances, and the ROA made numerous breakthroughs in battles along the Russo-German border. By the end of the summer, the ROA has advanced deep into the territory of RK Moskowien.

The climactic battle of the war was the Battle of Moscow, which began on July 29, 1974 with a lengthy artillery barrage and tank siege opening the battle, followed by an aerial bombardment the next day. The German armies in and around Moscow fought fanatically to the death, but the armies of the ROA continued to strategically advance in and around the former Soviet capital. On November 14, with the ROA finally entering more and more parts of Moscow and with the German armies losing more and more engagements, the government of the RK, led by Wehrmacht general and Reichskomissar Walther Wenck, who became leader of the RK after the death of Albert Hoffmann in 1973, fled to Brauchitstadt, formerly St. Petersburg. One day later, the ROA triumphantly entered Moscow to the celebration of the long-oppressed Russian residents of the city, with the remaining German residents of the city being the victims of vigilante murders by Russian nationalist partisans and ROA soldiers eager to prove they were no longer German collaborators at any cost.

Not long after the fall of Moscow, more and more major cities fell to the armies of the ROA, with many smaller towns in the countryside falling under the control of the pro-Russian partisans. All the while, many German settlers fled, with those not did not often being killed by Russian soldiers and partisans in war crimes known as "revenge killings", which were seen as revenge for the crimes of the Nazi Germans against the Russian nation, the motivations for these murders being the sheer anger Russians felt towards the Germans and, as touched upon above, the feeling that ROA soldiers needed to prove they were no longer collaborators with the hated German Reich. By July 1, 1975, over a year after the start of the war, most of RK Moskowien was under the occupation of the Russian Republic and the ROA began its invasion of RK Kaukasus. One major Russian city was still under German control; Brauchistadt, formerly Leningrad, Petrograd and St. Petersburg.

On July 12, 1975, the ROA encircled the aforementioned city with numerous infantry, armored and artillery divisions. That same day, the Battle of Brauchistadt began with a massive aerial and artillery bombardment. On September 4, 1975, the ROA finally entered the city and fought fierce hand-to-hand street battles against the German armies, with many German residents of the city caught in the fighting. After weeks of brutal fighting, with the German armies surrounded and decimated by the armies of the ROA, Reichskommissar and General der Panzertruppe Walther Wenck surrendered the German armies in Mosokwien the government of RK Mosokwien to Feild Marshall Georgy Nikolayevich Zhilenkov. With that, the armies of the paraded through the streets of the newly christened city of "Petrograd", with the long-suffering Russian residents of the city greeting the ROA as liberators, and with numerous unpunished acts of violence against the remaining German population. That same day, on the orders of President Bunyachenko, RK Moskowein was annexed into the Russian Republic, albeit without the recognition of the Greater German Reich, which due to political instability at home was unable to do much about the war in RK Moskowien, with most of the German armies in the RK being divisions that had already been posted to the German colony. Thus, the final phase of the Russian reunification and the “Second Russian Re-Unification” were finally complete, although armed groups of German settlers, mostly in the Volga region, continued to resist the ROA until the end of the war.

In October, 1975, with RK Moskowien under the control of the Russian Republic, the ROA began new invasions of RK Ukraine and RK Ostland. The ROA also continued to advance through the Caucasus and began a bombardment and invasion of the German Crimea. With all of this occurring in the eastern lands of the Greater German Reich and with interim-Führer Dönitz unable to keep peace in Germany proper and to stop the advance of the Russian armies, on November 11, 1975, General Hans Speidel launched a coup against the German government, arresting Admiral Donitz for “gross incompetence in wartime.” In the weeks after the coup, soldiers loyal to Dönitz and Speidel fought in the streets of Germania, and this led to more confusion in the eastern German colonies, which allowed the ROA to advance further and further into the Caucasus, Ukraine and Ostland. With the continuing advance of the Russian Liberation Army, an uprising of Polish militias began in the General Gouvernemnt of Poland, and similar uprisings took place in the Baltic region.

After weeks of chaos, Speidel’s loyalists secured control of Germania by the start of 1976. With the Speidel Coup finally complete, Germany offered talks with the government of the Russian Republic that January. At first, President Bunyachenko refused. This allowed the ROA to advance further into the Caucasus, Ukraine and Ostland, and Crimea fell to the ROA on April 30, 1976. The next month, the ROA had control over most of the Caucasus and Ukraine and most of Belarus. With the German Wehrmacht firmly under the control of Speidel's loyalists, a number of victories were won against the ROA in Ukraine and Ostland. However, soon afterwards the war degenerated into a stalemate between the German and Russian armies in the Baltics, Ukraine and Poland, and with the Polish Uprising and more instability on the home front, the German armies could not afford to fight with Russia for any longer. The armies of the ROA were also becoming worn down and tired. As a result, on August 3, 1976, a ceasefire was accepted by the two armies in Minsk. It was decided by Bunyachenko and Speidel that the two would meet in a neutral city to decide the final terms for the end of the war.

In September, President Bunyachenko and Führer Speidel meet in Stockholm, Sweden to discuss the final peace treaty for the Second West Russian War. The Treaty of Stockholm was finally signed on October 1, 1976. According to the treaty, the Russian Republic would annex RK Moskowien, RK Caucasus, RK Ukraine, the Crimea and Belarus. The Greater German Reich would retain control of the Baltics within RK Ostland. With that, the Second West Russian War ended in an amazing victory for the Russian Republic and President and General Sergei Bunyachenko. The German Reich was badly defeated in Eastern Europe, but in spite of this, still remained one of the premier world powers with control over Poland, the Baltics and the Low Countries, control of overseas territories in the Indian Ocean and alliances within the Einheitspakt with the nations of Denmark, Norway, France, Slovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria. Nevertheless, with revenge against the German Reich achieved and with the final unification of Russia complete at last after twelve long years of warfare, a new era in the history of Russia had begun.
What happen to Japan and USA?
 

chankljp

Donor
OOC: Scorza is likely on his way out so an event I made “commemorating” his existence as a character in the game.
You know.... It would be a really cool idea if all the pre-released content that got cut (Monarchic socialist path and the option to join the Co-Prosperity Sphere for HMMLR's England, etc), and things that are going to get removed/reworked (Scorza's 'wholesome' reformist fascist Italy, Berezniki, Aktau, etc) actually do exist in 'canon' TNO.... As works of alternate history fiction, maybe even being posted as TLs in their version of AH.com!
 

Rivercat893

Banned
You know.... It would be a really cool idea if all the pre-released content that got cut (Monarchic socialist path and the option to join the Co-Prosperity Sphere for HMMLR's England, etc), and things that are going to get removed/reworked (Scorza's 'wholesome' reformist fascist Italy, Berezniki, Aktau, etc) actually do exist in 'canon' TNO.... As works of alternate history fiction, maybe even being posted as TLs in their version of AH.com!
I'd also like to see an official canon path for TNO. A lot like TWR.
 
I'd also like to see an official canon path for TNO. A lot like TWR.
Some of it already exist:

-Heydrich chosen as sucessor
-NPP never wins a single election
-Bormann wins GCW
-Resistance loses, Thatcher takes over england
-South African War ends in Pro OFN ceasefire
-Sukarno wins Indonesia war only to be overthrown by Suharto
-In Russia the regional unifiers are the WRRF, Magadan, Sverdlovsk and Novosibirsk
-WRRF defeats Sverdlovsk while Novosibirsk defeats Magadan
-WRRF ends up defeating Nobosibirsk
-Hardliners take over when Zhukov dies
 
Last edited:

Rivercat893

Banned
Some of it already exist:

-NPP never wins a single election
-Bormann wins GCW
-Resistance loses, Thatcher takes over england
-In Russia the regional unifiers are the WRRF, Magadan, Sverdlovsk and Novosibirsk
-WRRF defeats Sverdlovsk while Novosibirsk degeats Magadan
-WRRF ends up defeating Nobosibirsk
-Hardliners take over when Zhukov dies
Well, as in canonical ending/path.
 
Some of it already exist:

-Heydrich chosen as sucessor
-NPP never wins a single election
-Bormann wins GCW
-Resistance loses, Thatcher takes over england
-South African War ends in Pro OFN ceasefire
-Sukarno wins Indonesia war only to be overthrown by Suharto
-In Russia the regional unifiers are the WRRF, Magadan, Sverdlovsk and Novosibirsk
-WRRF defeats Sverdlovsk while Novosibirsk defeats Magadan
-WRRF ends up defeating Nobosibirsk
-Hardliners take over when Zhukov dies
Is there a place where this Canon version of events exists? I've been looking for it but have never found it
 
Epilogue:
1608584821872.png

In the aftermath of the Second West Russian War, both the Russian Republic and the Greater Germanic Reich changed immensely. In the Russian Republic, the reconstruction of the newly conquered territories, with a special emphasis on the Muscovy region, began with an immense industrialization and build-up of the infrastructure of the territories. In regards to President Bunyachenko's rivals in the Russian government, Mikhail Ohktan was arrested by the ROA for numerous crimes, including embezzlement and misuse of state funds, in 1973, a year before the start of the Second West Russian War. On the other hand, in 1977, just after the war, Milety Zykov was pressured to retire from the KONR and from political life, which he did so, disillusioned with his efforts to liberalize the KONR. Okhtan died in prison in 1978 under mysterious circumstances, while Zykov died of natural causes in Samara in 1994 at the age of 96. As for the status of the German settlers of Muscovy, Ukraine, Belarus, Crimea and the Caucasus, a number of population transfer agreements were made between Bunyachenko and Speidel during the negotiations at the Treaty of Stockholm. By 1985, all ethnic Germans were to be expelled from the territories of Muscovy, Ukraine, Belarus, Crimea and the Caucasus. The population transfers were finished by 1982, with most of these Germans returning to Germany proper or emigrating to Latin America, with the homes of the German settlers being taken over the families who once owned the land or by ROA soldiers in exchange for their service.

With the Russian Republic at the heights of its power and after sixteen years of leading the Russian Republic and the KONR, President Sergei Bunychenko died of a fatal heart attack in his office in the Kremlin in the new capital of Moscow on June 22, 1982 at 79 years of age. After the death of Bunyachenko, the Russian people went into a state of intense mourning, as the man who unified their nation and became known as "The Father of Modern Russia" had died at the height of his power. On July 2, 1982, Bunyachenko was given a massive state funeral in Moscow, with the residents of Moscow lining up to see his horse-drawn casket, draped with the Russian flag and the ROA flag, and his funeral procession. This was also the first state funeral to be broadcast live over Russian state television. Bunyachenko was then interned in a closed casket a new Lenin's old Mausoleum, which was recently renamed the National Mausoleum. Bunyachenko was succeeded as President of Russia by Russian Air Force general and
ROA fighter ace Semyon Trofimovich Bychkov, who would serve as President until his own death at the age of 86 in 2004. Some of the most famous events of the Bychkov presidency included the Kazakhstan War of 1980, the Eleventh Russo-Turkish War (1982-1986), which resulted in the Russian annexation of Turkish Georgia and Armenia, the Manchurian War of 1987-1988, which resulted in the annexation of Russian majority areas of Manchukuo, the independence of Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan as puppet states of the Russian Republic in 1990 and the creation of the LIS alliance in 1992.

In the Greater Germanic Reich, the political landscape changed immensely. With the Wehrmacht under Speidel, and the NSDAP, in charge of the German government, Speidel made all NSDAP members swear an oath of loyalty to the new government, with those that refused being imprisoned. With that, Speidel began to reform the crumbling German Reich, admitting that National Socialism had failed and transforming Germany into a fascist, ultraconservative, militaristic state not unlike the what those of the non-Nazi right of the Weimer Republic had sought to establish. First of all, Speidel reformed the Generalgouvernement into the Polish National State, a German-puppet state led by the native Poles, led by German-collaborator Stanisław Brochwicz, while the Baltics were transformed into the Militärregierung Baltisch. In 1978, after numerous protests by Czechs in the Protektorat Böhmen und Mähren, the Czech State became a German puppet-state led by German collaborator Alois Kříž, and the Netherlands and Belgium became puppets of the Greater German Reich soon afterwards. In 1980, the Baltic State became a puppet of the Greater German Reich. On January 30, 1981, forty-eight years after Hitler became Chancellor, Speidel officially announced the end of the era of National Socialism and the beginning of a new era of German history he called "Germanism with a human face". Thus, a new flag of the Greater German Reich, the black, red and gold flag with the iron cross was unveiled and adopted as the new flag of the Greater German Reich. Speidel’s reforms that ended national socialism, while not restoring democracy or addressing the past crimes of the Nazis and the Greater German Reich, were still looked upon with hope by the international community. Throughout 1982, 1983 and 1984, free elections were held for the first time in decades in Norway, the Netherlands, Denmark and Belgium. After the death of Speidel in 1984, democracy would gradually return to Germany, with the first free elections held in 1986 and after the collapse of the Einhietspakt in 1990. After all of this, Germany as a nation and its people finally began to face up to the crimes committed under the Nazi regime.

As of the present, the world is divided into the following power-blocs; the OFN led by the USA and its allies in Europe, the Americas, Australasia and Africa, the Visegrád Pact of Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Czechia, Romania, Serbia and Bulgaria, the Beijing Alliance, an alliance of nations led by the resurgent Republic of China, and the Alliance of Independent Nations, an alliance of non-aligned major nations led by the Russian Republic and founded in 1992 as an alliance to counterbalance other major power blocs and consisting of the Russian Republic, the Kingdom of Japan (which was established after the fall of the Empire of Japan after end of the Great Asian War in 1977), the Republic of Indonesia, the United Arab Republic, the Imperial State of Iran, among others.

In the modern-day, the Russian Republic is a authoritarian yet nominally democratic republic, and has been since the adoption of the 2003 constitution, and the first elections were held in 2004 after the death of President Bychkov. The KONR was reformed in the national-conservative Russian Liberation Party, and new opposition parties include the Zykovite and liberal-conservative Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, the socially liberal People's Party of Russia and the Social Democratic Party of Russia. In spite of this, Russia is a democratic nation mostly on paper, with elections rigged, freedom of speech and assembly often curtailed, opposition figures under state surveillance and numerous actions against dissident groups, with the death penalty still legal and used often. The Russian Republic is one of the most highly industrialized and militarized countries on earth, with pollution a major issue, one of the world's largest armies and military service mandator for all Russians form the ages of 18 and 35. Non-Russian ethnic groups, such as Tartars, are all equal under the law but lack any territorial autonomy aside from managing the governments of their own oblasts. The few remaining Jews in Russia are also equal under the law, with the Russian Republic having long repudiated the anti-Semitism of the Nazis and Imperial Russia, although anti-Semitism is still not uncommon in Russia. The Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian government are on good terms in spite of the secularism of the government, with the people of Russia becoming a more and more religious over the decades.

In addition to all of this, the legacy of General Vlasov, the ROA and the KONR, all of whom are revered in Russia for their defeat of the communists and re-unification of the nation, is a mixed one and is still controversial outside of Russia for the collaboration of the ROA and KONR for over a decade with the genocidal and anti-Russian Greater German Reich. Russian historians claim that allying with the Reich was a reluctant and necessary evil for anti-communist Russians, and that most did so out of naivety for the plans that Germany had for Russia and not out of any sympathy for Nazi ideology, while most Western historians have a much more critical analysis of the ROA and KONR, although admitting they did a lot of good by unifying and brining order to Russia, with their militarization making such a unification possible where other warlord states had failed. Russian historians also claim that the ROA and KONR redeemed itself by finally defeating the Germans and giving the surviving Jewish-Russians equal rights under the law, and that the Soviets and Communists were the real traitors to Russia for failing to defeat the Germans twice during the Great Patriotic War and the First West Russian War. Today, Communism is a hated and discredited ideology in Russia, with both Communist and National Socialist symbolism outlawed. In Russia, some historians have put forward more nuanced and critical views of the ROA and KONR, although how the Russian nation will continue to deal with its troubled and difficult history, and if the Russian Republic will ever liberalize into a true democracy, is something that is still yet to be seen.

THE END
 

Rivercat893

Banned

In the aftermath of the Second West Russian War, both the Russian Republic and the Greater Germanic Reich changed immensely. In the Russian Republic, the reconstruction of the newly conquered territories, with a special emphasis on the Muscovy region, began with an immense industrialization and build-up of the infrastructure of the territories. In regards to President Bunyachenko's rivals in the Russian government, Mikhail Ohktan was arrested by the ROA for numerous crimes, including embezzlement and misuse of state funds, in 1973, a year before the start of the Second West Russian War. On the other hand, in 1977, just after the war, Milety Zykov was pressured to retire from the KONR and from political life, which he did so, disillusioned with his efforts to liberalize the KONR. Okhtan died in prison in 1978 under mysterious circumstances, while Zykov died of natural causes in Samara in 1994 at the age of 96. As for the status of the German settlers of Muscovy, Ukraine, Belarus, Crimea and the Caucasus, a number of population transfer agreements were made between Bunyachenko and Speidel during the negotiations at the Treaty of Stockholm. By 1985, all ethnic Germans were to be expelled from the territories of Muscovy, Ukraine, Belarus, Crimea and the Caucasus. The population transfers were finished by 1982, with most of these Germans returning to Germany proper or emigrating to Latin America, with the homes of the German settlers being taken over the families who once owned the land or by ROA soldiers in exchange for their service.

With the Russian Republic at the heights of its power and after sixteen years of leading the Russian Republic and the KONR, President Sergei Bunychenko died of a fatal heart attack in his office in the Kremlin in the new capital of Moscow on June 22, 1982 at 79 years of age. After the death of Bunyachenko, the Russian people went into a state of intense mourning, as the man who unified their nation and became known as "The Father of Modern Russia" had died at the height of his power. On July 2, 1982, Bunyachenko was given a massive state funeral in Moscow, with the residents of Moscow lining up to see his horse-drawn casket, draped with the Russian flag and the ROA flag, and his funeral procession. This was also the first state funeral to be broadcast live over Russian state television. Bunyachenko was then interned in a closed casket a new Lenin's old Mausoleum, which was recently renamed the National Mausoleum. Bunyachenko was succeeded as President of Russia by Russian Air Force general and
ROA fighter ace Semyon Trofimovich Bychkov, who would serve as President until his own death at the age of 86 in 2004. Some of the most famous events of the Bychkov presidency included the Kazakhstan War of 1980, the Eleventh Russo-Turkish War (1982-1986), which resulted in the Russian annexation of Turkish Georgia and Armenia, the Manchurian War of 1987-1988, which resulted in the annexation of Russian majority areas of Manchukuo, the independence of Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan as puppet states of the Russian Republic in 1990 and the creation of the LIS alliance in 1992.

In the Greater Germanic Reich, the political landscape changed immensely. With the Wehrmacht under Speidel, and the NSDAP, in charge of the German government, Speidel made all NSDAP members swear an oath of loyalty to the new government, with those that refused being imprisoned. With that, Speidel began to reform the crumbling German Reich, admitting that National Socialism had failed and transforming Germany into a fascist, ultraconservative, militaristic state not unlike the what those of the non-Nazi right of the Weimer Republic had sought to establish. First of all, Speidel reformed the Generalgouvernement into the Polish National State, a German-puppet state led by the native Poles, led by German-collaborator Stanisław Brochwicz, while the Baltics were transformed into the Militärregierung Baltisch. In 1978, after numerous protests by Czechs in the Protektorat Böhmen und Mähren, the Czech State became a German puppet-state led by German collaborator Alois Kříž, and the Netherlands and Belgium became puppets of the Greater German Reich soon afterwards. In 1980, the Baltic State became a puppet of the Greater German Reich. On January 30, 1981, forty-eight years after Hitler became Chancellor, Speidel officially announced the end of the era of National Socialism and the beginning of a new era of German history he called "Germanism with a human face". Thus, a new flag of the Greater German Reich, the black, red and gold flag with the iron cross was unveiled and adopted as the new flag of the Greater German Reich. Speidel’s reforms that ended national socialism, while not restoring democracy or addressing the past crimes of the Nazis and the Greater German Reich, were still looked upon with hope by the international community. Throughout 1982, 1983 and 1984, free elections were held for the first time in decades in Norway, the Netherlands, Denmark and Belgium. After the death of Speidel in 1984, democracy would gradually return to Germany, with the first free elections held in 1986 and after the collapse of the Einhietspakt in 1990. After all of this, Germany as a nation and its people finally began to face up to the crimes committed under the Nazi regime.

As of the present, the world is divided into the following power-blocs; the OFN led by the USA and its allies in Europe, the Americas, Australasia and Africa, the Visegrád Pact of Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Czechia, Romania, Serbia and Bulgaria, the Beijing Alliance, an alliance of nations led by the resurgent Republic of China, and the Alliance of Independent Nations, an alliance of non-aligned major nations led by the Russian Republic and founded in 1992 as an alliance to counterbalance other major power blocs and consisting of the Russian Republic, the Kingdom of Japan (which was established after the fall of the Empire of Japan after end of the Great Asian War in 1977), the Republic of Indonesia, the United Arab Republic, the Imperial State of Iran, among others.

In the modern-day, the Russian Republic is a authoritarian yet nominally democratic republic, and has been since the adoption of the 2003 constitution, and the first elections were held in 2004 after the death of President Bychkov. The KONR was reformed in the national-conservative Russian Liberation Party, and new opposition parties include the Zykovite and liberal-conservative Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, the socially liberal People's Party of Russia and the Social Democratic Party of Russia. In spite of this, Russia is a democratic nation mostly on paper, with elections rigged, freedom of speech and assembly often curtailed, opposition figures under state surveillance and numerous actions against dissident groups, with the death penalty still legal and used often. The Russian Republic is one of the most highly industrialized and militarized countries on earth, with pollution a major issue, one of the world's largest armies and military service mandator for all Russians form the ages of 18 and 35. Non-Russian ethnic groups, such as Tartars, are all equal under the law but lack any territorial autonomy aside from managing the governments of their own oblasts. The few remaining Jews in Russia are also equal under the law, with the Russian Republic having long repudiated the anti-Semitism of the Nazis and Imperial Russia, although anti-Semitism is still not uncommon in Russia. The Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian government are on good terms in spite of the secularism of the government, with the people of Russia becoming a more and more religious over the decades.

In addition to all of this, the legacy of General Vlasov, the ROA and the KONR, all of whom are revered in Russia for their defeat of the communists and re-unification of the nation, is a mixed one and is still controversial outside of Russia for the collaboration of the ROA and KONR for over a decade with the genocidal and anti-Russian Greater German Reich. Russian historians claim that allying with the Reich was a reluctant and necessary evil for anti-communist Russians, and that most did so out of naivety for the plans that Germany had for Russia and not out of any sympathy for Nazi ideology, while most Western historians have a much more critical analysis of the ROA and KONR, although admitting they did a lot of good by unifying and brining order to Russia, with their militarization making such a unification possible where other warlord states had failed. Russian historians also claim that the ROA and KONR redeemed itself by finally defeating the Germans and giving the surviving Jewish-Russians equal rights under the law, and that the Soviets and Communists were the real traitors to Russia for failing to defeat the Germans twice during the Great Patriotic War and the First West Russian War. Today, Communism is a hated and discredited ideology in Russia, with both Communist and National Socialist symbolism outlawed. In Russia, some historians have put forward more nuanced and critical views of the ROA and KONR, although how the Russian nation will continue to deal with its troubled and difficult history, and if the Russian Republic will ever liberalize into a true democracy, is something that is still yet to be seen.

THE END
I'd love to see you write more installments of TNO history like this.
 

In the aftermath of the Second West Russian War, both the Russian Republic and the Greater Germanic Reich changed immensely. In the Russian Republic, the reconstruction of the newly conquered territories, with a special emphasis on the Muscovy region, began with an immense industrialization and build-up of the infrastructure of the territories. In regards to President Bunyachenko's rivals in the Russian government, Mikhail Ohktan was arrested by the ROA for numerous crimes, including embezzlement and misuse of state funds, in 1973, a year before the start of the Second West Russian War. On the other hand, in 1977, just after the war, Milety Zykov was pressured to retire from the KONR and from political life, which he did so, disillusioned with his efforts to liberalize the KONR. Okhtan died in prison in 1978 under mysterious circumstances, while Zykov died of natural causes in Samara in 1994 at the age of 96. As for the status of the German settlers of Muscovy, Ukraine, Belarus, Crimea and the Caucasus, a number of population transfer agreements were made between Bunyachenko and Speidel during the negotiations at the Treaty of Stockholm. By 1985, all ethnic Germans were to be expelled from the territories of Muscovy, Ukraine, Belarus, Crimea and the Caucasus. The population transfers were finished by 1982, with most of these Germans returning to Germany proper or emigrating to Latin America, with the homes of the German settlers being taken over the families who once owned the land or by ROA soldiers in exchange for their service.

With the Russian Republic at the heights of its power and after sixteen years of leading the Russian Republic and the KONR, President Sergei Bunychenko died of a fatal heart attack in his office in the Kremlin in the new capital of Moscow on June 22, 1982 at 79 years of age. After the death of Bunyachenko, the Russian people went into a state of intense mourning, as the man who unified their nation and became known as "The Father of Modern Russia" had died at the height of his power. On July 2, 1982, Bunyachenko was given a massive state funeral in Moscow, with the residents of Moscow lining up to see his horse-drawn casket, draped with the Russian flag and the ROA flag, and his funeral procession. This was also the first state funeral to be broadcast live over Russian state television. Bunyachenko was then interned in a closed casket a new Lenin's old Mausoleum, which was recently renamed the National Mausoleum. Bunyachenko was succeeded as President of Russia by Russian Air Force general and
ROA fighter ace Semyon Trofimovich Bychkov, who would serve as President until his own death at the age of 86 in 2004. Some of the most famous events of the Bychkov presidency included the Kazakhstan War of 1980, the Eleventh Russo-Turkish War (1982-1986), which resulted in the Russian annexation of Turkish Georgia and Armenia, the Manchurian War of 1987-1988, which resulted in the annexation of Russian majority areas of Manchukuo, the independence of Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan as puppet states of the Russian Republic in 1990 and the creation of the LIS alliance in 1992.

In the Greater Germanic Reich, the political landscape changed immensely. With the Wehrmacht under Speidel, and the NSDAP, in charge of the German government, Speidel made all NSDAP members swear an oath of loyalty to the new government, with those that refused being imprisoned. With that, Speidel began to reform the crumbling German Reich, admitting that National Socialism had failed and transforming Germany into a fascist, ultraconservative, militaristic state not unlike the what those of the non-Nazi right of the Weimer Republic had sought to establish. First of all, Speidel reformed the Generalgouvernement into the Polish National State, a German-puppet state led by the native Poles, led by German-collaborator Stanisław Brochwicz, while the Baltics were transformed into the Militärregierung Baltisch. In 1978, after numerous protests by Czechs in the Protektorat Böhmen und Mähren, the Czech State became a German puppet-state led by German collaborator Alois Kříž, and the Netherlands and Belgium became puppets of the Greater German Reich soon afterwards. In 1980, the Baltic State became a puppet of the Greater German Reich. On January 30, 1981, forty-eight years after Hitler became Chancellor, Speidel officially announced the end of the era of National Socialism and the beginning of a new era of German history he called "Germanism with a human face". Thus, a new flag of the Greater German Reich, the black, red and gold flag with the iron cross was unveiled and adopted as the new flag of the Greater German Reich. Speidel’s reforms that ended national socialism, while not restoring democracy or addressing the past crimes of the Nazis and the Greater German Reich, were still looked upon with hope by the international community. Throughout 1982, 1983 and 1984, free elections were held for the first time in decades in Norway, the Netherlands, Denmark and Belgium. After the death of Speidel in 1984, democracy would gradually return to Germany, with the first free elections held in 1986 and after the collapse of the Einhietspakt in 1990. After all of this, Germany as a nation and its people finally began to face up to the crimes committed under the Nazi regime.

As of the present, the world is divided into the following power-blocs; the OFN led by the USA and its allies in Europe, the Americas, Australasia and Africa, the Visegrád Pact of Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Czechia, Romania, Serbia and Bulgaria, the Beijing Alliance, an alliance of nations led by the resurgent Republic of China, and the Alliance of Independent Nations, an alliance of non-aligned major nations led by the Russian Republic and founded in 1992 as an alliance to counterbalance other major power blocs and consisting of the Russian Republic, the Kingdom of Japan (which was established after the fall of the Empire of Japan after end of the Great Asian War in 1977), the Republic of Indonesia, the United Arab Republic, the Imperial State of Iran, among others.

In the modern-day, the Russian Republic is a authoritarian yet nominally democratic republic, and has been since the adoption of the 2003 constitution, and the first elections were held in 2004 after the death of President Bychkov. The KONR was reformed in the national-conservative Russian Liberation Party, and new opposition parties include the Zykovite and liberal-conservative Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, the socially liberal People's Party of Russia and the Social Democratic Party of Russia. In spite of this, Russia is a democratic nation mostly on paper, with elections rigged, freedom of speech and assembly often curtailed, opposition figures under state surveillance and numerous actions against dissident groups, with the death penalty still legal and used often. The Russian Republic is one of the most highly industrialized and militarized countries on earth, with pollution a major issue, one of the world's largest armies and military service mandator for all Russians form the ages of 18 and 35. Non-Russian ethnic groups, such as Tartars, are all equal under the law but lack any territorial autonomy aside from managing the governments of their own oblasts. The few remaining Jews in Russia are also equal under the law, with the Russian Republic having long repudiated the anti-Semitism of the Nazis and Imperial Russia, although anti-Semitism is still not uncommon in Russia. The Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian government are on good terms in spite of the secularism of the government, with the people of Russia becoming a more and more religious over the decades.

In addition to all of this, the legacy of General Vlasov, the ROA and the KONR, all of whom are revered in Russia for their defeat of the communists and re-unification of the nation, is a mixed one and is still controversial outside of Russia for the collaboration of the ROA and KONR for over a decade with the genocidal and anti-Russian Greater German Reich. Russian historians claim that allying with the Reich was a reluctant and necessary evil for anti-communist Russians, and that most did so out of naivety for the plans that Germany had for Russia and not out of any sympathy for Nazi ideology, while most Western historians have a much more critical analysis of the ROA and KONR, although admitting they did a lot of good by unifying and brining order to Russia, with their militarization making such a unification possible where other warlord states had failed. Russian historians also claim that the ROA and KONR redeemed itself by finally defeating the Germans and giving the surviving Jewish-Russians equal rights under the law, and that the Soviets and Communists were the real traitors to Russia for failing to defeat the Germans twice during the Great Patriotic War and the First West Russian War. Today, Communism is a hated and discredited ideology in Russia, with both Communist and National Socialist symbolism outlawed. In Russia, some historians have put forward more nuanced and critical views of the ROA and KONR, although how the Russian nation will continue to deal with its troubled and difficult history, and if the Russian Republic will ever liberalize into a true democracy, is something that is still yet to be seen.

THE END
Satisfying ending
 
The Great Trial: An Omsk Unification Canon
1962-1978

Part One: 1962-1970


1608941465877.png

The year is 1978, and the Great Trial, known outside of Russia as the Third Russo-German War, had just ended after four long years. The newly established Russian National State, an ultranationalist, despotic and Spartan nation, led by Glavkoverkh Dimitry Timofeyevich Yazov, stood triumphant over the war-torn lands of Eastern and Central Europe, lands littered with nuclear and biological fallout and countless unexploded weapons and craters made by artillery and bombs. The Russian National State, formerly known as the Russian National Reclamation Government, declared a surprise war against the collapsing Greater Germanic Reich after the death of Martin Bormann in 1974, and afterwards conquered Muscovy, Ukraine, the Caucasus, Belarus, the Baltics, Poland, Bessarabia, Carpatho-Ukraine, Czechia and former German lands east of the Oder and Neisse rivers. What was left of the former German Reich was in another state of civil war, with Heinz-Georg Lemm, the former Reichskommissar of Norway. trying to keep the peace in the area around the ruins of Germania, with the German RKs of the Netherlands and Norway and the protectorates of Denmark and Bohemia-Moravia declaring independence and with the Einheitspakt having disbanded, with Slovakia, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, the French State and the United Kingdom all going their own way during and after the violent fall of the Greater German Reich. To many, Yazov was a hero of the Russian and Slavic peoples, while to many others, including to many in the west, Yazov was an insane villain and war criminal who, as Friedrich Nietzsche said, looked long into the abyss and became the monster that he hated so much.

The Russian National State, also known as the Russian Black State, would not stop there. Not long afterwards, the Russian National State went to war with Manchukuo from 1980-1981 and then went to war with Turkey from 1983-1986. Today, the Russian National State is still run largely by the Russian military and is one of the most highly militarized, martial, spartan, secretive, propagandistic, xenophobic and chauvinist nations in the world, with conscription mandatory for all citizens between the ages of 18 to 35 and with a large amount of hatred and distrust for the rivals and enemies of the Russian nation on the international stage. The Russian National State also has many satellite states, such as Ukraine, Belarus, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. Still, one must ask; how did this all come to pass?

It all started in the aftermath of the Second West Russian War (1952-1955). After the Second World War, the former USSR was divided into five new entities, RK Moswein under the Greater Germanic Reich, the West Russian Revolutionary Front in Western Russia, the West Siberian People’s Republic in Western Siberia, the Central Siberian Republic in Central Siberia and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic in the Russian Far East. During the Second West Russian War, the WSPR was an ally of the WRRF against the Greater Germanic Reich. In the aftermath of the collapse of the WRRF, the WSPR also began to collapse as well, with numerous warlords breaking away from the central government in Tyumen. As a result of this chaos, General Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev, a Volga Tartar-Russian general in both the Soviet and the West Siberian Red Army, rose up in revolt in the city of Omsk on October 7, 1955, establishing the Siberian Black League, an ultranationalist and militarist party of West Siberian Red Army generals and officers disillusioned with Kagaonovich's government in the WSPR and its failure to defeat the German Reich. Within the following days, the Siberian Black League established itself officially in the city and surrounding areas of Omsk and established a militaristic one-party state dedicated to the rejuvenation of the Russian nation and the destruction of the German Reich. Not long after, on November 2, 1955, the 3rd Army of Field Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky mutinied against the government in Tyumen, forming the Ural Military District in Sverdlovsk. The rest, as they say, is history.

1608941164329.png

Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev/Дмитрий Михайлович Карбышев

In 1962, General Dmitry Karbyshev, now almost 82 years of age and in increasingly poor health, was aware that his mortal days on the physical earth were no more, and as a result began to prepare for the state of the Siberian Black League and the so-called “Black State of Omsk” after his inevitable death. Nevertheless, it seems that his inevitable death hung over the head of Karbyshev like the Sword of Damocles. Thus, mysteriously, and on the night of January 15, 1963, Karbyshev walked alone out of his compound, walked alone into the forest outside of the city and then forced himself to fall into a creek and let the rocks and cold waters of the creak kill him and take him away from this plane of existence. With the death of Karbyshev, his right-hand man and protégé General Dmitry Yzov became the new Glavkoverkh and the new supreme leader of the Siberian Black League and their warlord statelet in and around the city of Omsk. With the ascension of the now Field Marshall Yazov to the leadership of the Siberian Black League, the new supreme leader became to prepare the Black League for war and for a series of campaigns against the neighboring warlord state of the West Siberian People’s Republic of the Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, with the Black League seeing the Communists in Tyumen as traitors to the Russian nation.

1608941255337.png

Dmitry Timofeyevich Yazov/Дми́трий Тимофе́евич Я́зов

On August 18, 1964, Omsk declared a surprise war against the West Siberian Peoples Republic. In spite of the fact that the armies of the Siberian Black League were considerably outnumbered when compared to the more professional armies of the West Siberian Red Army, the Black League armies, through superior tactics, were able to win the war against the WSPR, with Tyumen falling on September 19, Chelyabinsk falling on October 8 and the war ending on the following day on October 9, 1964. Over a month later, on November 18, 1964, Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, Field Marshalls Filipp Golikov and Ivan Konev, Vyacheslav Molotov, Nikita Khrushchev and other high-ranking members of the WSPR government and military were executed by the Siberian Black Army. With the WSPR defeated, now the Siberian Black League and the Siberian Black Army now had to defeat the Ural Military District and the Soviet 3rd Army.

After the consolidation of their new territories, on New Year’s Day, January 1, 1965, the Siberian Black League declared war on the Ural Military District, also known as Sverdlovsk. The Soviet 3rd Army was surprisingly unprepared to face the Siberian Black Army, leading to the fall of Sverdlovsk after a week of battle on January 11, 1965, only a week after the start of the war. The next day, on January 12, 1965, the Soviet 3rd Army surrendered to the Siberian Black League, and the league then annexed the Ural Military District. On January 28, 1965, Field Marshall Konstantin Rokossovsky and the other high ranking military and civil leaders of the Ural Military District were executed by the Siberian Black Army, except for Pavel Batov, who led a two-year long insurgency against the Siberian Black League, a war which would end on September 30, 1967 with the assassination of Batov by the Siberian Black Army near his private headquarters deep in the forests of the Ural region. Anyways, for the rest of 1965, the Siberian Black League continued to wage war in Western Siberia. On July 10, Omsk then went to war with the Thief Territory of Yurga, which surrendered and was annexed on August 1, with the Republic of Zlaroust on September 3, which surrendered and was annexed on September 8, and with Vortuka on January 6, 1966, which surrendered and was annexed on January 18, 1966, with the Free Aviators joining the Siberian Black League on November 8, 1965. On January 18, 1966, the same day of the surrender of Vortuka to the Siberian Black League and with the conquest of West Siberia, the West Siberian Reclamation Government was established.

Over the next two years, the WSRG began to prepare for a series of new wars and campaigns to finally unify Russia not under German control, all of which would inevitably lead to the Great Trial against the Greater Germanic Reich. On June 17, 1968, the West Siberian Reclamation Government declared war on and invaded the Ural League and Orenburg Commune. The next day, the West Russian Revolutionary Front of Field Marshall Georgy Zhukov declared war on the West Siberian Reclamation Government over their invasion of the states of the South Urals. Nevertheless, the West Siberian Black Army was prepared, and was even hoping, for such an eventuality, and the Siberian Black Armies stormed their border with the WRRF and won numerous victories against the Red Army, with the Red Army exhausted after many years of internecine warfare. On July 1, 1968, the Ural League surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG, while the soldiers of Black Army continued to advance and win numerous victories against the soldiers of the Red Army, with the two week-long Battle of Vyatka ending in a Black Army victory on July 30 and the fall of the capital of Arkhangelsk on August 10 after a short but brutal battle. On August 24, 1968, the Red Army surrendered to the Black Siberian Black Army, and the WRRF was annexed into the WSRG. On September 3, the Orenburg Commune surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG. Since Yazov and the high command West Siberian Black Army highly respected the Red Army for their service and bravely in the fight against the armies of the German Reich, Field Marshall Zukov and most of the other generals of the Red Army high command were not executed and were allowed to live their private lives in peace so long as they did not take up arms or speak out against the West Siberian Black League and West Siberian Black Army. Some generals, such as Dimitry Ustinov, even joined the West Siberian Black Army on the invitation of Yazov, as the Supreme-Commander needed as many skilled generals as possible in order to take part in the re-unification of Russia and the Great Trial. Zhukov, meanwhile, lived the rest of his life in obscurity, dying after a stroke in 1974. On December 10, 1969, after over a year of political consolidation, which included successfully reaching-out diplomatically to the United States of America and also the making of a Hollywood film about the new Russian state, the West Russian Reclamation Government was established.

With the new decade of the 1970s just about to begin, and the Central Siberian Republic of President Andrei Sakharov and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic of Premier Valery Sablin locked in a bitter war for the future of Siberia, Yazov had hopes that this decade would finally be the decade in which Mother Russia would re-unify her lands and avenge her past losses to the much-hated Greater Germanic Reich.
 
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The Great Trial: An Omsk Unification Canon
1962-1978

Part One: 1962-1970


View attachment 611009

The year is 1978, and the Great Trial, known outside of Russia as the Third Russo-German War, had just ended after four long years. The newly established Russian National State, an ultranationalist, despotic and Spartan nation, led by Glavkoverkh Dimitry Timofeyevich Yazov, stood triumphant over the war-torn lands of Eastern and Central Europe, lands littered with nuclear and biological fallout and countless unexploded weapons and craters made by artillery and bombs. The Russian National State, formerly known as the Russian National Reclamation Government, declared a surprise war against the collapsing Greater Germanic Reich after the death of Martin Bormann in 1974, and afterwards conquered Muscovy, Ukraine, the Caucasus, Belarus, the Baltics, Poland, East Prussia, Bessarabia, Carpatho-Ukraine, Czechia and former German lands east of the Oder and Neisse rivers. What was left of the former German Reich was in another state of civil war, with Heinz-Georg Lemm, the former Reichskommissar of Norway. trying to keep the peace in Germania, with the German RKs of the Netherlands and Norway and the protectorates of Denmark and Bohemia-Moravia declaring independence and with the Einheitspakt having disbanded, with Slovakia, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, the French State and the United Kingdom all going their own way during and after the violent fall of the Greater German Reich. To many, Yazov was a hero of the Russian and Slavic peoples, while to many others, including to many in the west, Yazov was an insane villain and war criminal who, as Friedrich Nietzsche said, looked long into the abyss and became the monster that he hated so much.

The Russian National State, also known as the Russian Black State, would not stop there. Not long afterwards, the Russian National State went to war with Manchukuo from 1980-1981 and then went to war with Turkey from 1983-1986. In spite of the restoration of democracy in Russia by Glavkoverkh Yazov in 1990, after which Yazov allowed for free elections and then resigned from office, the Russian National State is still an illiberal democracy and one of the most highly militarized, martial, spartan, secretive, propagandistic, xenophobic and chauvinist nations in the world, with conscription mandatory for all citizens between the ages of 18 to 35 and with a large amount of hatred and distrust for the rivals and enemies of the Russian nation on the international stage. Still, one must ask; how did this all come to pass?

It all started in the aftermath of the Second West Russian War (1952-1955). After the Second World War, the former USSR was divided into five new entities, RK Moswein under the Greater Germanic Reich, the West Russian Revolutionary Front in Western Russia, the West Siberian People’s Republic in Western Siberia, the Central Siberian Republic in Central Siberia and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic in the Russian Far East. During the Second West Russian War, the WSPR was an ally of the WRRF against the Greater Germanic Reich. In the aftermath of the collapse of the WRRF, the WSPR also began to collapse as well, with numerous warlords breaking away from the central government in Tyumen. As a result of this chaos, General Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev, a Volga Tartar-Russian general in both the Soviet and the West Siberian Red Army, rose up in revolt in the city of Omsk on October 7, 1955, establishing the Siberian Black League, an ultranationalist and militarist party of West Siberian Red Army generals and officers disillusioned with Kagaonovich's government in the WSPR and its failure to defeat the German Reich. Within the following days, the Siberian Black League established itself officially in the city and surrounding areas of Omsk and established a militaristic one-party state dedicated to the rejuvenation of the Russian nation and the destruction of the German Reich. Not long after, on November 2, 1955, the 3rd Army of Field Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky mutinied against the government in Tyumen, forming the Ural Military District in Sverdlovsk. The rest, as they say, is history.

View attachment 611006
Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev/Дмитрий Михайлович Карбышев

In 1962, General Dmitry Karbyshev, now almost 82 years of age and in increasingly poor health, was aware that his mortal days on the physical earth were no more, and as a result began to prepare for the state of the Siberian Black League and the so-called “Black State of Omsk” after his inevitable death. Nevertheless, it seems that his inevitable death hung over the head of Karbyshev like the Sword of Damocles. Thus, mysteriously, and on the night of January 15, 1963, Karbyshev walked alone out of his compound, walked alone into the forest outside of the city and then forced himself to fall into a creek and let the rocks and cold waters of the creak kill him and take him away from this plane of existence. With the death of Karbyshev, his right-hand man and protégé General Dmitry Yzov became the new Glavkoverkh and the new supreme leader of the Siberian Black League and their warlord statelet in and around the city of Omsk. With the ascension of the now Field Marshall Yazov to the leadership of the Siberian Black League, the new supreme leader became to prepare the Black League for war and for a series of campaigns against the neighboring warlord state of the West Siberian People’s Republic of the Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, with the Black League seeing the Communists in Tyumen as traitors to the Russian nation.

View attachment 611007
Dmitry Timofeyevich Yazov/Дми́трий Тимофе́евич Я́зов

On August 18, 1964, Omsk declared a surprise war against the West Siberian Peoples Republic. In spite of the fact that the armies of the Siberian Black League were considerably outnumbered when compared to the more professional armies of the West Siberian Red Army, the Black League armies, through superior tactics, were able to win the war against the WSPR, with Tyumen falling on September 19, Chelyabinsk falling on October 8 and the war ending on the following day on October 9, 1964. Over a month later, on November 18, 1964, Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, Field Marshalls Filipp Golikov and Ivan Konev, Vyacheslav Molotov, Nikita Khrushchev and other high-ranking members of the WSPR government and military were executed by the Siberian Black Army. With the WSPR defeated, now the Siberian Black League and the Siberian Black Army now had to defeat the Ural Military District and the Soviet 3rd Army.

After the consolidation of their new territories, on New Year’s Day, January 1, 1965, the Siberian Black League declared war on the Ural Military District, also known as Sverdlovsk. The Soviet 3rd Army was surprisingly unprepared to face the Siberian Black Army, leading to the fall of Sverdlovsk after a week of battle on January 11, 1965, only a week after the start of the war. The next day, on January 12, 1965, the Soviet 3rd Army surrendered to the Siberian Black League, and the league then annexed the Ural Military District. On January 28, 1965, Field Marshall Konstantin Rokossovsky and the other high ranking military and civil leaders of the Ural Military District were executed by the Siberian Black Army, except for Pavel Batov, who led a two-year long insurgency against the Siberian Black League, a war which would end on September 30, 1967 with the assassination of Batov by the Siberian Black Army near his private headquarters deep in the forests of the Ural region. Anyways, for the rest of 1965, the Siberian Black League continued to wage war in Western Siberia. On July 10, Omsk then went to war with the Thief Territory of Yurga, which surrendered and was annexed on August 1, with the Republic of Zlaroust on September 3, which surrendered and was annexed on September 8, and with Vortuka on January 6, 1966, which surrendered and was annexed on January 18, 1966, with the Free Aviators joining the Siberian Black League on November 8, 1965. On January 18, 1966, the same day of the surrender of Vortuka to the Siberian Black League and with the conquest of West Siberia, the West Siberian Reclamation Government was established.

Over the next two years, the WSRG began to prepare for a series of new wars and campaigns to finally unify Russia not under German control, all of which would inevitably lead to the Great Trial against the Greater Germanic Reich. On June 17, 1968, the West Siberian Reclamation Government declared war on and invaded the Ural League and Orenburg Commune. The next day, the West Russian Revolutionary Front of Field Marshall Georgy Zhukov declared war on the West Siberian Reclamation Government over their invasion of the states of the South Urals. Nevertheless, the West Siberian Black Army was prepared, and was even hoping, for such an eventuality, and the Siberian Black Armies stormed their border with the WRRF and won numerous victories against the Red Army, with the Red Army exhausted after many years of internecine warfare. On July 1, 1968, the Ural League surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG, while the soldiers of Black Army continued to advance and win numerous victories against the soldiers of the Red Army, with the two week-long Battle of Vyatka ending in a Black Army victory on July 30 and the fall of the capital of Arkhangelsk on August 10 after a short but brutal battle. On August 24, 1968, the Red Army surrendered to the Black Siberian Black Army, and the WRRF was annexed into the WSRG. On September 3, the Orenburg Commune surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG. Since Yazov and the high command West Siberian Black Army highly respected the Red Army for their service and bravely in the fight against the armies of the German Reich, Field Marshall Zukov and most of the other generals of the Red Army high command were not executed and were allowed to live their private lives in peace so long as they did not take up arms or speak out against the West Siberian Black League and West Siberian Black Army. Some generals, such as Dimitry Ustinov, even joined the West Siberian Black Army on the invitation of Yazov, as the Supreme-Commander needed as many skilled generals as possible in order to take part in the re-unification of Russia and the Great Trial. Zhukov, meanwhile, lived the rest of his life in obscurity, dying after a stroke in 1974. On December 10, 1969, after over a year of political consolidation, which included successfully reaching-out diplomatically to the United States of America and also the making of a Hollywood film about the new Russian state, the West Russian Reclamation Government was established.

With the new decade of the 1970s just about to begin, and the Central Siberian Republic of President Andrei Sakharov and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic of Premier Valery Sablin locked in a bitter war for the future of Siberia, Yazov had hopes that this decade would finally be the decade in which Mother Russia would re-unify her lands and avenge her past losses to the much-hated Greater Germanic Reich.
Let's GO! Omsk is by far my favorite nation in TNO, I replay it every few playthroughs.
 
The Great Trial: An Omsk Unification Canon
1962-1978

Part One: 1962-1970


View attachment 611009

The year is 1978, and the Great Trial, known outside of Russia as the Third Russo-German War, had just ended after four long years. The newly established Russian National State, an ultranationalist, despotic and Spartan nation, led by Glavkoverkh Dimitry Timofeyevich Yazov, stood triumphant over the war-torn lands of Eastern and Central Europe, lands littered with nuclear and biological fallout and countless unexploded weapons and craters made by artillery and bombs. The Russian National State, formerly known as the Russian National Reclamation Government, declared a surprise war against the collapsing Greater Germanic Reich after the death of Martin Bormann in 1974, and afterwards conquered Muscovy, Ukraine, the Caucasus, Belarus, the Baltics, Poland, East Prussia, Bessarabia, Carpatho-Ukraine, Czechia and former German lands east of the Oder and Neisse rivers. What was left of the former German Reich was in another state of civil war, with Heinz-Georg Lemm, the former Reichskommissar of Norway. trying to keep the peace in Germania, with the German RKs of the Netherlands and Norway and the protectorates of Denmark and Bohemia-Moravia declaring independence and with the Einheitspakt having disbanded, with Slovakia, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, the French State and the United Kingdom all going their own way during and after the violent fall of the Greater German Reich. To many, Yazov was a hero of the Russian and Slavic peoples, while to many others, including to many in the west, Yazov was an insane villain and war criminal who, as Friedrich Nietzsche said, looked long into the abyss and became the monster that he hated so much.

The Russian National State, also known as the Russian Black State, would not stop there. Not long afterwards, the Russian National State went to war with Manchukuo from 1980-1981 and then went to war with Turkey from 1983-1986. In spite of the restoration of democracy in Russia by Glavkoverkh Yazov in 1990, after which Yazov allowed for free elections and then resigned from office, the Russian National State is still an illiberal democracy and one of the most highly militarized, martial, spartan, secretive, propagandistic, xenophobic and chauvinist nations in the world, with conscription mandatory for all citizens between the ages of 18 to 35 and with a large amount of hatred and distrust for the rivals and enemies of the Russian nation on the international stage. Still, one must ask; how did this all come to pass?

It all started in the aftermath of the Second West Russian War (1952-1955). After the Second World War, the former USSR was divided into five new entities, RK Moswein under the Greater Germanic Reich, the West Russian Revolutionary Front in Western Russia, the West Siberian People’s Republic in Western Siberia, the Central Siberian Republic in Central Siberia and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic in the Russian Far East. During the Second West Russian War, the WSPR was an ally of the WRRF against the Greater Germanic Reich. In the aftermath of the collapse of the WRRF, the WSPR also began to collapse as well, with numerous warlords breaking away from the central government in Tyumen. As a result of this chaos, General Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev, a Volga Tartar-Russian general in both the Soviet and the West Siberian Red Army, rose up in revolt in the city of Omsk on October 7, 1955, establishing the Siberian Black League, an ultranationalist and militarist party of West Siberian Red Army generals and officers disillusioned with Kagaonovich's government in the WSPR and its failure to defeat the German Reich. Within the following days, the Siberian Black League established itself officially in the city and surrounding areas of Omsk and established a militaristic one-party state dedicated to the rejuvenation of the Russian nation and the destruction of the German Reich. Not long after, on November 2, 1955, the 3rd Army of Field Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky mutinied against the government in Tyumen, forming the Ural Military District in Sverdlovsk. The rest, as they say, is history.

View attachment 611006
Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev/Дмитрий Михайлович Карбышев

In 1962, General Dmitry Karbyshev, now almost 82 years of age and in increasingly poor health, was aware that his mortal days on the physical earth were no more, and as a result began to prepare for the state of the Siberian Black League and the so-called “Black State of Omsk” after his inevitable death. Nevertheless, it seems that his inevitable death hung over the head of Karbyshev like the Sword of Damocles. Thus, mysteriously, and on the night of January 15, 1963, Karbyshev walked alone out of his compound, walked alone into the forest outside of the city and then forced himself to fall into a creek and let the rocks and cold waters of the creak kill him and take him away from this plane of existence. With the death of Karbyshev, his right-hand man and protégé General Dmitry Yzov became the new Glavkoverkh and the new supreme leader of the Siberian Black League and their warlord statelet in and around the city of Omsk. With the ascension of the now Field Marshall Yazov to the leadership of the Siberian Black League, the new supreme leader became to prepare the Black League for war and for a series of campaigns against the neighboring warlord state of the West Siberian People’s Republic of the Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, with the Black League seeing the Communists in Tyumen as traitors to the Russian nation.

View attachment 611007
Dmitry Timofeyevich Yazov/Дми́трий Тимофе́евич Я́зов

On August 18, 1964, Omsk declared a surprise war against the West Siberian Peoples Republic. In spite of the fact that the armies of the Siberian Black League were considerably outnumbered when compared to the more professional armies of the West Siberian Red Army, the Black League armies, through superior tactics, were able to win the war against the WSPR, with Tyumen falling on September 19, Chelyabinsk falling on October 8 and the war ending on the following day on October 9, 1964. Over a month later, on November 18, 1964, Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, Field Marshalls Filipp Golikov and Ivan Konev, Vyacheslav Molotov, Nikita Khrushchev and other high-ranking members of the WSPR government and military were executed by the Siberian Black Army. With the WSPR defeated, now the Siberian Black League and the Siberian Black Army now had to defeat the Ural Military District and the Soviet 3rd Army.

After the consolidation of their new territories, on New Year’s Day, January 1, 1965, the Siberian Black League declared war on the Ural Military District, also known as Sverdlovsk. The Soviet 3rd Army was surprisingly unprepared to face the Siberian Black Army, leading to the fall of Sverdlovsk after a week of battle on January 11, 1965, only a week after the start of the war. The next day, on January 12, 1965, the Soviet 3rd Army surrendered to the Siberian Black League, and the league then annexed the Ural Military District. On January 28, 1965, Field Marshall Konstantin Rokossovsky and the other high ranking military and civil leaders of the Ural Military District were executed by the Siberian Black Army, except for Pavel Batov, who led a two-year long insurgency against the Siberian Black League, a war which would end on September 30, 1967 with the assassination of Batov by the Siberian Black Army near his private headquarters deep in the forests of the Ural region. Anyways, for the rest of 1965, the Siberian Black League continued to wage war in Western Siberia. On July 10, Omsk then went to war with the Thief Territory of Yurga, which surrendered and was annexed on August 1, with the Republic of Zlaroust on September 3, which surrendered and was annexed on September 8, and with Vortuka on January 6, 1966, which surrendered and was annexed on January 18, 1966, with the Free Aviators joining the Siberian Black League on November 8, 1965. On January 18, 1966, the same day of the surrender of Vortuka to the Siberian Black League and with the conquest of West Siberia, the West Siberian Reclamation Government was established.

Over the next two years, the WSRG began to prepare for a series of new wars and campaigns to finally unify Russia not under German control, all of which would inevitably lead to the Great Trial against the Greater Germanic Reich. On June 17, 1968, the West Siberian Reclamation Government declared war on and invaded the Ural League and Orenburg Commune. The next day, the West Russian Revolutionary Front of Field Marshall Georgy Zhukov declared war on the West Siberian Reclamation Government over their invasion of the states of the South Urals. Nevertheless, the West Siberian Black Army was prepared, and was even hoping, for such an eventuality, and the Siberian Black Armies stormed their border with the WRRF and won numerous victories against the Red Army, with the Red Army exhausted after many years of internecine warfare. On July 1, 1968, the Ural League surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG, while the soldiers of Black Army continued to advance and win numerous victories against the soldiers of the Red Army, with the two week-long Battle of Vyatka ending in a Black Army victory on July 30 and the fall of the capital of Arkhangelsk on August 10 after a short but brutal battle. On August 24, 1968, the Red Army surrendered to the Black Siberian Black Army, and the WRRF was annexed into the WSRG. On September 3, the Orenburg Commune surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG. Since Yazov and the high command West Siberian Black Army highly respected the Red Army for their service and bravely in the fight against the armies of the German Reich, Field Marshall Zukov and most of the other generals of the Red Army high command were not executed and were allowed to live their private lives in peace so long as they did not take up arms or speak out against the West Siberian Black League and West Siberian Black Army. Some generals, such as Dimitry Ustinov, even joined the West Siberian Black Army on the invitation of Yazov, as the Supreme-Commander needed as many skilled generals as possible in order to take part in the re-unification of Russia and the Great Trial. Zhukov, meanwhile, lived the rest of his life in obscurity, dying after a stroke in 1974. On December 10, 1969, after over a year of political consolidation, which included successfully reaching-out diplomatically to the United States of America and also the making of a Hollywood film about the new Russian state, the West Russian Reclamation Government was established.

With the new decade of the 1970s just about to begin, and the Central Siberian Republic of President Andrei Sakharov and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic of Premier Valery Sablin locked in a bitter war for the future of Siberia, Yazov had hopes that this decade would finally be the decade in which Mother Russia would re-unify her lands and avenge her past losses to the much-hated Greater Germanic Reich.
Germany shall suffer what Russia experienced in the past!!

May I ask, do Omsk hate the US in this canon?
 
Germany shall suffer what Russia experienced in the past!!

May I ask, do Omsk hate the US in this canon?
Love-Hate. They like the US because they are also an anti-fascist power and the US sends them aid (but only because the Russian government puts on an elaborate smokescreen to divert away from their war crimes and inhumane experiments), but they feel that the USA didn't do enough to help Russia during the Great Patriotic war or the West Russian War.
 
The Great Trial: An Omsk Unification Canon
1962-1978

Part One: 1962-1970


View attachment 611009

The year is 1978, and the Great Trial, known outside of Russia as the Third Russo-German War, had just ended after four long years. The newly established Russian National State, an ultranationalist, despotic and Spartan nation, led by Glavkoverkh Dimitry Timofeyevich Yazov, stood triumphant over the war-torn lands of Eastern and Central Europe, lands littered with nuclear and biological fallout and countless unexploded weapons and craters made by artillery and bombs. The Russian National State, formerly known as the Russian National Reclamation Government, declared a surprise war against the collapsing Greater Germanic Reich after the death of Martin Bormann in 1974, and afterwards conquered Muscovy, Ukraine, the Caucasus, Belarus, the Baltics, Poland, East Prussia, Bessarabia, Carpatho-Ukraine, Czechia and former German lands east of the Oder and Neisse rivers. What was left of the former German Reich was in another state of civil war, with Heinz-Georg Lemm, the former Reichskommissar of Norway. trying to keep the peace in Germania, with the German RKs of the Netherlands and Norway and the protectorates of Denmark and Bohemia-Moravia declaring independence and with the Einheitspakt having disbanded, with Slovakia, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, the French State and the United Kingdom all going their own way during and after the violent fall of the Greater German Reich. To many, Yazov was a hero of the Russian and Slavic peoples, while to many others, including to many in the west, Yazov was an insane villain and war criminal who, as Friedrich Nietzsche said, looked long into the abyss and became the monster that he hated so much.

The Russian National State, also known as the Russian Black State, would not stop there. Not long afterwards, the Russian National State went to war with Manchukuo from 1980-1981 and then went to war with Turkey from 1983-1986. In spite of the restoration of democracy in Russia by Glavkoverkh Yazov in 1990, after which Yazov allowed for free elections and then resigned from office, the Russian National State is still an illiberal democracy and one of the most highly militarized, martial, spartan, secretive, propagandistic, xenophobic and chauvinist nations in the world, with conscription mandatory for all citizens between the ages of 18 to 35 and with a large amount of hatred and distrust for the rivals and enemies of the Russian nation on the international stage. Still, one must ask; how did this all come to pass?

It all started in the aftermath of the Second West Russian War (1952-1955). After the Second World War, the former USSR was divided into five new entities, RK Moswein under the Greater Germanic Reich, the West Russian Revolutionary Front in Western Russia, the West Siberian People’s Republic in Western Siberia, the Central Siberian Republic in Central Siberia and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic in the Russian Far East. During the Second West Russian War, the WSPR was an ally of the WRRF against the Greater Germanic Reich. In the aftermath of the collapse of the WRRF, the WSPR also began to collapse as well, with numerous warlords breaking away from the central government in Tyumen. As a result of this chaos, General Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev, a Volga Tartar-Russian general in both the Soviet and the West Siberian Red Army, rose up in revolt in the city of Omsk on October 7, 1955, establishing the Siberian Black League, an ultranationalist and militarist party of West Siberian Red Army generals and officers disillusioned with Kagaonovich's government in the WSPR and its failure to defeat the German Reich. Within the following days, the Siberian Black League established itself officially in the city and surrounding areas of Omsk and established a militaristic one-party state dedicated to the rejuvenation of the Russian nation and the destruction of the German Reich. Not long after, on November 2, 1955, the 3rd Army of Field Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky mutinied against the government in Tyumen, forming the Ural Military District in Sverdlovsk. The rest, as they say, is history.

View attachment 611006
Dmitry Mikhaylovich Karbyshev/Дмитрий Михайлович Карбышев

In 1962, General Dmitry Karbyshev, now almost 82 years of age and in increasingly poor health, was aware that his mortal days on the physical earth were no more, and as a result began to prepare for the state of the Siberian Black League and the so-called “Black State of Omsk” after his inevitable death. Nevertheless, it seems that his inevitable death hung over the head of Karbyshev like the Sword of Damocles. Thus, mysteriously, and on the night of January 15, 1963, Karbyshev walked alone out of his compound, walked alone into the forest outside of the city and then forced himself to fall into a creek and let the rocks and cold waters of the creak kill him and take him away from this plane of existence. With the death of Karbyshev, his right-hand man and protégé General Dmitry Yzov became the new Glavkoverkh and the new supreme leader of the Siberian Black League and their warlord statelet in and around the city of Omsk. With the ascension of the now Field Marshall Yazov to the leadership of the Siberian Black League, the new supreme leader became to prepare the Black League for war and for a series of campaigns against the neighboring warlord state of the West Siberian People’s Republic of the Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, with the Black League seeing the Communists in Tyumen as traitors to the Russian nation.

View attachment 611007
Dmitry Timofeyevich Yazov/Дми́трий Тимофе́евич Я́зов

On August 18, 1964, Omsk declared a surprise war against the West Siberian Peoples Republic. In spite of the fact that the armies of the Siberian Black League were considerably outnumbered when compared to the more professional armies of the West Siberian Red Army, the Black League armies, through superior tactics, were able to win the war against the WSPR, with Tyumen falling on September 19, Chelyabinsk falling on October 8 and the war ending on the following day on October 9, 1964. Over a month later, on November 18, 1964, Premier Lazar Kagaonovich, Field Marshalls Filipp Golikov and Ivan Konev, Vyacheslav Molotov, Nikita Khrushchev and other high-ranking members of the WSPR government and military were executed by the Siberian Black Army. With the WSPR defeated, now the Siberian Black League and the Siberian Black Army now had to defeat the Ural Military District and the Soviet 3rd Army.

After the consolidation of their new territories, on New Year’s Day, January 1, 1965, the Siberian Black League declared war on the Ural Military District, also known as Sverdlovsk. The Soviet 3rd Army was surprisingly unprepared to face the Siberian Black Army, leading to the fall of Sverdlovsk after a week of battle on January 11, 1965, only a week after the start of the war. The next day, on January 12, 1965, the Soviet 3rd Army surrendered to the Siberian Black League, and the league then annexed the Ural Military District. On January 28, 1965, Field Marshall Konstantin Rokossovsky and the other high ranking military and civil leaders of the Ural Military District were executed by the Siberian Black Army, except for Pavel Batov, who led a two-year long insurgency against the Siberian Black League, a war which would end on September 30, 1967 with the assassination of Batov by the Siberian Black Army near his private headquarters deep in the forests of the Ural region. Anyways, for the rest of 1965, the Siberian Black League continued to wage war in Western Siberia. On July 10, Omsk then went to war with the Thief Territory of Yurga, which surrendered and was annexed on August 1, with the Republic of Zlaroust on September 3, which surrendered and was annexed on September 8, and with Vortuka on January 6, 1966, which surrendered and was annexed on January 18, 1966, with the Free Aviators joining the Siberian Black League on November 8, 1965. On January 18, 1966, the same day of the surrender of Vortuka to the Siberian Black League and with the conquest of West Siberia, the West Siberian Reclamation Government was established.

Over the next two years, the WSRG began to prepare for a series of new wars and campaigns to finally unify Russia not under German control, all of which would inevitably lead to the Great Trial against the Greater Germanic Reich. On June 17, 1968, the West Siberian Reclamation Government declared war on and invaded the Ural League and Orenburg Commune. The next day, the West Russian Revolutionary Front of Field Marshall Georgy Zhukov declared war on the West Siberian Reclamation Government over their invasion of the states of the South Urals. Nevertheless, the West Siberian Black Army was prepared, and was even hoping, for such an eventuality, and the Siberian Black Armies stormed their border with the WRRF and won numerous victories against the Red Army, with the Red Army exhausted after many years of internecine warfare. On July 1, 1968, the Ural League surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG, while the soldiers of Black Army continued to advance and win numerous victories against the soldiers of the Red Army, with the two week-long Battle of Vyatka ending in a Black Army victory on July 30 and the fall of the capital of Arkhangelsk on August 10 after a short but brutal battle. On August 24, 1968, the Red Army surrendered to the Black Siberian Black Army, and the WRRF was annexed into the WSRG. On September 3, the Orenburg Commune surrendered and was annexed into the WSRG. Since Yazov and the high command West Siberian Black Army highly respected the Red Army for their service and bravely in the fight against the armies of the German Reich, Field Marshall Zukov and most of the other generals of the Red Army high command were not executed and were allowed to live their private lives in peace so long as they did not take up arms or speak out against the West Siberian Black League and West Siberian Black Army. Some generals, such as Dimitry Ustinov, even joined the West Siberian Black Army on the invitation of Yazov, as the Supreme-Commander needed as many skilled generals as possible in order to take part in the re-unification of Russia and the Great Trial. Zhukov, meanwhile, lived the rest of his life in obscurity, dying after a stroke in 1974. On December 10, 1969, after over a year of political consolidation, which included successfully reaching-out diplomatically to the United States of America and also the making of a Hollywood film about the new Russian state, the West Russian Reclamation Government was established.

With the new decade of the 1970s just about to begin, and the Central Siberian Republic of President Andrei Sakharov and the Far Eastern Soviet Republic of Premier Valery Sablin locked in a bitter war for the future of Siberia, Yazov had hopes that this decade would finally be the decade in which Mother Russia would re-unify her lands and avenge her past losses to the much-hated Greater Germanic Reich.
Two questions:
1. How did taking East Prussia (especially with the black league's explicitly genocidal intent) not result in Germany firing off every nuke it has?
2. Why would Yazov establish democracy when in the mod he is generally shown as being extremely disdainful towards it?
 
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