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Austro-Polish Alliance and the Irish Revolution
The Turkish invasion was repelled after a decisive victory at the outskirts of Vienna. The exhausted and undersupplied Austrian army failed to continue the offensive, and the Poles were facing a loss after their initial successes against Russia had been reversed, and the Tsarist forces breached deep into Ruthenia.
The Ottoman Empire signed a status quo peace, with minimal casualties, many see this as a Turkish victory. The lambasting of the Imperial army in Bohemia had left Austria weak, and the Sultan Murad had forced Austria to give up her ambitions in North Germany. The Turks would be back, and the Austrians quickly realized they were outmatched.

The French alliance with Turkey and the Swedish alliance with France had effectively surrounded Austria. The Venetian rivalry strangled Austrian attempts at expanding her influence in Italy, and her main ally, Spain was disconnected. Austria would have to find allies

The Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth offered an excellent ally, and the PLC was worried about Swedish encroachment while seeing the benefit of an Austrian buffer between them and the Turks. Wladyslaw accepted the Austrian proposal for an alliance, although this angered the pro-French elements of his country.

A mutual defense pact guaranteeing protection from Sweden or Turkey was forged, and the Austrians had managed to create some breathing space. Despite this, the Holy Roman Empire was still beset on all sides. An Italian front seemed to be a good option, as the French had little qualms with razing the Venetians.
The Imperial army would have to rebuild first, however. the Imperial army was bruised and beaten to a pulp, with their soldiers and mercenaries crying for pay. The Austrians decided to invest the next few years developing the economy and getting their nation back into a state worthy of being a great power, and then they would set their sights on the Italian peninsula, and reassert Imperial Rule throughout the continent.

The English political situation was degrading. The war taxes had hurt the English economy and the war had hurt England's relations with the continent. But the end of the war would give the Irish deep-set fears that the protestants were moving down an endless spiral that would eventually lead to the Protestant conquest of Ireland. An attempted coup would succeed in most of Ireland, however the English to would not back down. The Irish offered dominion status so long as their religion was guaranteed to be safe but Charles I would have none of it, and quickly set his sights to bringing down the Irish rebellion.

The Irish would respond by looking to states to offer the Irish crown to. Two options showed themselves; The French and the Spanish. Having a Habsburg on the throne might be a lot easier to swallow for some European monarchs, but a Bourbon could project closer to Ireland. Falling under the orbit of either Spain or France wouldn't be ideal, but the coup had already taken off, and only outside influence could save them from the English firestorm.

Both Louis and Phillip had interests in Ireland, mainly to screw the English, and with the war of Irish independence in full swing and the 16 year's war over both sides eyed the state. Louis sent a letter to the Irish revolutionaries, offering the throne and a French armada to protect them from the English. The Irish entertained this idea but were still apprehensive. The English wouldn't come until later, as Parliament and the king were in a heated argument as to who should have control of the army that would invade Ireland.

Spain decided it wouldn't wait. Offering the generous gift of an Irish parliament that would be able to make its own home-ruled decisions and the guarantee that Ireland wouldn't be merged into Spain, the Iberian Union would not threaten the sovereignty of Spain so long as they placed a Spaniard on the throne of Ireland.

France offered a better deal, offering the Irish protection for their own monarch and even suggesting an aristocratic republic should they choose, as long as the Irish swear vassalage to the French throne. This move, most historians argue, was mainly to appeal to the Dutch, who were apprehensive about the French behemoth. Louis knew a French Ireland would spark another continental war, but figured if such a war did break out the Netherlands could fall into France's orbit, and Louis would be securing an Irish vassal and the friendly Netherlands. The Spanish couldn't match this offer, their option still meant Ireland would be a dominion, the French were even willing to give them an aristocratic republic. The loyalists in Ulster revolted, and Charles decided to forgo Parliament by marching an army to Liverpool to amass an invasion force.
Both France and the Iberian Union couldn't wait much longer, and Spain decided to send it's fleet to Ireland to force them into their sphere. France moved an army to Calais, hoping to finally be able to place troops in England. Louis bargained that if he could land an army in England, Ireland would be forced to accept their vassalage. The Irish were so split a crisis occurred, where Ireland split up in a brutal three-way civil war between the Royalists, supported by the English and Irish protestants, the Aristocrats supported by the French and many of the merchant and middle classes, and the Imperialists, supporting house Habsburg with the backing of Catholic landed nobility.
The Great Irish War would turn into a bloody exchange between the three powers and soon extended to almost all of Europe.

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