Spanish Civil War
  • The Spanish Civil War was the final conflict in the European Crisis leading up to the World War. It raged for more than four years and devastated the spanish countryside, and split the country into many factions. The roots of the civil war took effect during the fall of the Primo de Rivera dictatorship, as the Kingdom of Spain remained a staunch British ally due to facing possible French aggression. However, with the fall of the regime and the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic, British interests suddenly took a sharp dive, as the French-supported Republicans took power. With Portugal backs against the wall, and Spain falling to the European Alliance's side, Britain and Portugal went on to support a military coup, spurred on by General Jose Sanjurjo. Although the coup succeeded, it was still a disaster for the London Accords, who saw Sanjurjo refuse to let the monarchy come back and instead proclaimed the Spanish State, and vowed to keep the independence and interests of Spain as far away from the British and French factions as possible. With little to no support in Spain, who were torn between Republicans and Monarchists, the country soon disintigrated.
    With Sanjurjo's brutal repression of strikes and protests, the flame was soon lit for a civil war. Workers and civilians began arming themselves and some parts of the Army defected. Soon, Spain was split into three camps: the Monarchists, the Radicals and the Republicans. France and Britain supported their own camp of course, but neither dared to intervene, thinking that doing so would be provoking war with each other. For two years, the civil war raged on, with bloody battles occuring in Toledo, Valencia and Santander.
    By 1936 however, the great powers had become weary of each other taking too much ground, and the endless fighting that seemed to be to the advantage of the Radicals meant that an intervention had to be made. Interestingly, both the Alliance and the Accords made their intervention known on the same week. France was the first to announce its intervention, flooding in troops into the Basque Country, Aragon and Catalunya, rapidly reaching the frontlines at Valencia. Their help would also help the Republicans secure the Balearic Islands, as well as the Spanish possessions in Africa, such as Western Sahara, the Rif and Guinea, who were taken by either French or Moroccan forces. German troops soon followed, with other Alliance members not following suit but providing material and humanitarian aid.
    The British response came three days later, as a force led by Kenneth Anderson comprised of British and Portuguese soldiers invaded Galicia, which until then was held by the radicals. Since the Monarchists were in a very bad state, the British and Portuguese saw much of the fighting, but by 1937 had secured Galicia, parts of the Asturias with the help of the Asturias Libres Movement, as well as Extremadura and parts of Andalucia.
    The Radicals were now in a tough spot, and the death of Emilio Mola at the Battle of Cadiz did not help things at all. Finally, on November 8th, 1937, Francisco Franco and Jose Enrique Varela decided to defect along with the Army of Africa to the Monarchist side. This event completely blew the wind out of the Radical sails, who found themselves backs against the wall. Thus begun the Race for Madrid, between Republicans and Monarchists, and it was the Monarchists that got there first, but not after a two-month siege. With Jose Sanjurjo killed in the fighting, the Radicals surrenderred on June 7th, 1938.
    However, it was not the end of the Civil War, as now the French-led and British-led factions found themselves at odds with each other. Not willing to start a war with each other over control of Spain, the Accords and the Alliance met in Istres, Provence to mediate a peace treaty. Finally, on November 13th, 1938, the Istres Agreement was signed. Although not perfect, it was an agreement that would eventually stand.
    Since they were in control of Madrid, the Monarchists had managed to gather enough support to recognize the Kingdom of Spain as an independent nation. The Asturias would remain seperate, with Portuguese protection, as their role in the liberation of the region was big enough, and after the Asturian uprising, many didnt want a monarch ruling over them. As such, Galicia was also incorporated into Portugal following a local referendum. The Republicans were naturally outraged, and opted for their own government. However, the Alliance didn't control much territory, and only managed to create the Republics of the Basque Country and Catalunya (regarded as the successor to Republican Spain by the Republicans). However, the Alliance did control Aragon, which was eventually traded to Monarchist Spain for the Valencian coast, who had fallen into monarchist hands. As for the African territories, they were incorporated into the Moroccan Protectorate, or in the case of Guinea, transferred to Republican control.
    The consequences of this Civil War and Istres Agreement were immense. Although Britain had maintained an ally in the Spanish Peninsula, it had created two Alliance-bound nations. Furthermore, the extent of the destruction in Spain would mean that the Spanish would refuse to intervene in the World War under the guise of reconstruction. It was not until 1947 that Spain was declared "Rebuilt", but by then the Accords had fallen. Spain nevertheless still supported their British and Portuguese allies, being a neutral middle-man between the two countries and allowing the passing of documents, materiel and resources through the country, all of which were vital to keep the Portuguese nation alive.

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    World War
  • The World War was the final conflict of the European Crisis. Also called the Last Colonial War, this conflict was the deadliest in human history, and raged on every continent.
    It found its roots after a border disagreement between France and Britain in Nigeria turned violent, with casualties on both sides. Tensions between the two colonial powers had by then reached a critical point due to their different interests during the European Crisis, and rivalry since the Napoleonic Wars. War soon followed, and just like that, the Accords and the Allies found themselves at war.
    For Japan, it wouldn't change much. The Japanese had been at war with the Republic of China since 1938, and made good progress. With Russian intervention, Japan soon controlled half of the country, with the PRC making its own advances in the south of the country against the ROC, who had also been in the middle of a civil war. However, the alliance to the Netherlands would shelve plans to invade, but not their plans to invade the Philippines, which they did in mid-1941. With that, the US intervened, but did not declare war on Britain or Russia.
    That would have to wait for early 1942, where the U.S had finally mobilized its full force on the Canadian border. The North American front was a formality for the U.S, who ran over Canada in six months, and contributed to the Quebecan Uprising. The quick invasion also isolated the U.K even more, who was losing steam after their European Campaign ran out of steam after the failed Siege of Verdun and the Ruhr Offensive. With the Russians also failing to take Krakow and link up with the British in Berlin, and with the fall of Piedmont to the Allies, the U.K had to be on the backfoot from then on.
    Even more worrying, although the Royal Navy had protected the British Isles (except for the Channel Islands), they had been badly beaten in the Mediterranean, where French, Provencal and German troops had managed to push all the way to the Suez Canal by 1943, and isolated Malta and Gibraltar. Despite this, the two strongholds would not fall until 1945, and Britain would be permitted to keep them along with the city of Suez, which all held for two years.
    In subsaharan Africa however, the situation was much more chaotic. Apart from South Africa, Djibouti and everything west of the Huntziger Line, everything else fell into chaos, with most troops being pulled back for more important duties. Thanks to harsh colonization, order quickly broke down and several countries declared independence and soon fell into civil war (one notable example being Nigeria, for which the war was fought in the first place).
    In the Middle East and South-East Asia, the U.S intervention made Persia and Siam's position even clearer. France had already promised Siam territories in Cambodia in exchange for their intervention in the War, which they entered in late 1942 with the Allies. Persia would follow suit on the side of the Allies in 1943, pincering the Raj. The Indian Coalition, made of Hyderabad, Mysore, Tamil, Pakistan and Bengal would also rise up, although Pakistan would be crushed and later divided between Persia, Afghanistan and India. The Raj never fell, but did have to capitulate with the U.K.
    Indeed, in Europe the situation had become dire, with the Accords being forced out of mainland Europe by mid-1943, with the fall of both Amsterdam and Copenhagen, as well as the failed Normandy Landings. In the East, Russia had been pushed back to Smolensk and Kiev, as Bulgaria forced back Greek and Romanian offensives, reclaiming Dobrudja by 1944. The U.S intervention also helped speed up the invasion of Britain, as although the Royal Navy had been beaten, it still had superiority over the British Isles, which the U.S Navy helped remove at the Battle of Ushant. Operation Constellation then began, marking the beginning of a two-year campaign in Britain. Britain didn't capitulate first though, as Moscow fell in June 1945, 5 months before the fall of Liverpool.
    The last to fall was Tokyo. After a gruelling war in the Pacific, where Australia had managed to render easier by defecting to the Allies in 1942. Despite the defection, there were battles on a great number of islands, with Batavia falling only two months before Tokyo, while both Hong Kong and Singapore never fell despite Siamese intervention. Manila was reclaimed in late 1944, while the Japanese lost Okinawa and Formosa by 1945. Not wanting to put American lives at risk, the U.S put their nuclear plan into action, wiping Hiroshima and Kure off of the map and forcing the Japanese to surrender.
    Two seperate treaties were needed to end the war, one in Versailles for the European powers, and one in Darwin for the Pacific and Asian fronts. Africa on the other hand never got an official treaty due to the ongoing conflicts, the only issue needing to be settled being that of Egypt. The War directly led to the collapse of both the Japanese and British Empires, although both were allowed to keep their gains in China (although Japan had to abandon Korea and transfer it to U.S hands), as the PRC had nearly overtaken the Republic by that point, triggering the First Chinese Crisis, which resulted in Chinese Isolation and the need of International powers to keep positions on Chinese soil in case the PRC started to become a little too confident.


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    German Battleship Bismarck
  • Hello, short update this time around due to a lot of work I had to get done. Hope you like it as a preise to the World War infobox coming soon !

    The German Battleship Bismarck, named after chancellor Otto von Bismarck, was a German Super-Battleship, one of three constructed before the World War, along with Tirpitz and Friedrich der GroBe, both of which did not survive the war. Constructed in response to the growing presence of the Royal Navy in German waters, it was designed with a quasi-impenetrable armor, and would go on to be one of the "Three Unsinkable Killers" along with the French battleship Richelieu and the American aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, due to the number of ships they have directly and indirectly sunk, and the number of battles they participated in.
    Completed a year before the start of the World War, Bismarck was transferred to Casablanca along with the rest of the Afrikaflotte based in Windhoek as well as an escort consisting of the Battleship Gneisenau, the Heavy Cruisers Prinz Eugen and Deutschland, the Light Cruisers Emden, Leipzig and Frankfurt, as well as several smaller destroyers. They would be the last ships able to leave port before the declaration of war, and the British naval blockade of Germany. While Gneisenau was assigned to the Mediterranean, Bismarck stayed with the Afrikaflotte, before being assigned to Battleship Task Force 1, assigned with raiding shipping between Canada and Britain, as well as sinking lone RN ships.
    Bismarck would go on to leave a trail of destruction in its path, sinking six ships, including the carrier HMS Argus and the pride of the British fleet, HMS Hood. It was soon the prime target of every British ship in the area, and was slowly hunted down. After sinking HMS Anson off Ireland, Bismarck was intercepted along with the Cruiser Prinz Eugen by aircraft from HMS Courageous and most of Home Fleet. However, while Prinz Eugen was sunk, Bismarck held and managed to limp back to the french naval base of Brest, escorted by the battleship Strasbourg. From then on, Bismarck was out of action for a year and a half, undergoing repairs, until she saw action with the US and French fleets at Ushant. Although her role was only supportive, she managed to sink several British Light Cruisers, opening the path for Operation Constellation.
    After the Battle of Ushant, Bismarck saw only limited engagement, and was finally recalled to Germany, as the first ship entering Wilhelmshaven from the Channel in four years. Bismarck underwent several refits and served as flagship of the German navies for about twenty years after the war ended, being deployed to several conflicts, notably the Crises in East Asia. She was finally decommissioned in 1971, and now serves as a museum ship at Wilhelmshaven's National Maritime Museum.

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    Other German Battleships deployed in the World War:
    Scharnhorst-class
    SMS Scharnhorst, assigned to Baltischerflotte, survived the war, saw limited action against Russia and Denmark-Norway, decom. 1955.
    SMS Gneisenau, assigned to Afrikaflotte, then Task Force 24 (Med). Sunk at the Battle of Cape Bon, 1943.
    SMS Wilhelm I, assigned to the Pasificherflotte, sunk during the Naval Battle of Okinawa, 1944.

    Bismarck-class
    SMS Bismarck, assigned to Afrikaflotte, then Battleship Task Force 1, survived the war, decom. 1971
    SMS Tirpitz, assigned to Deutschesflotte, sunk 1942 in British air raid on Wilhelmshaven.
    SMS Friedrich der GroBe, assigned to Deutschesflotte, sunk at the Battle of the Norwegian Sea, 1941 .
     
    Indian Conflict
  • The Indian Conflict was the deadliest conflict since the World War, and one of the most devastating wars in human history, despite it lasting only little more than a year. Tensions in India had been high since the end of the World War, but no open conflict had erputed, thanks mostly to the diplomatic efforts of both sides, but also of third parties, such as the United Kingdom and the United States, who had brokered deals between the two blocs. However, in recent years, the U.K had started to back India more and more, while Walter Mondale's election in 1981 would spell the end of U.S intervention in Indian affairs, which partly led to India restarting its nuclear program, along with Indira Gandhi's election in 1980. The Southern Indians therefore also started working on their own program with European help, but progress was much slower, with India obtaining nuclear weapons in 1982, when Hyderabad's own program was still in its infancy.
    India still didn't plan on using these weapons, well not initially. India planned an invasion of the Southern Indian states, Sikkim and Bengal for two full years, before finally putting its plans into motion on April 19th, 1984, with a full-scale invasion of the Southern Indian States and Bengal. However, the Indian Coalition was quick to form back again, forming a second block against the "British Raj", as the states were prepared for such an eventuality. The Indians were unable to push far into Hyderabadi territory, and the Coalition soon closed the Bangalore pocket, capturing the city of Nellore by mid-August. In Bengal, the situation had devolved into full blown guerilla warfare, with Calcutta becoming a meat-grinder for Indian troops as civilian militias fought back hard. India had become bogged down in a conflict they thought they would win swiftly, and therefore reacted by launching Operation Red Tiger on October 25th, 1984.
    The Indian Air Force dropped two atomic weapons, one on a military target, the Hyderabadi army positions out of Karimnagar, and one civilian target. This was the city of Dacca, which was obliterated along with its 6 million inhabitants. This shocked the Coalition who convened an emergency meeting with its top chiefs...
    Meanwhile, the world hadn't stayed silent. A World Council meeting was called to discuss intervening in India. However, to everyone's surprise and shock, the United States vetoed intervention, not wanting to sacrifice thousands of american lives in a conflict that didn't concern them. The European Defence Force didn't stay idle though, and moved the 5th Fleet from Zanzibar to Pondicherry as a precauctionary measure. They were joined by the Siamese fleet out of the Andaman Islands. Portugal also joined the EDF force, in fear that India would invade Goa as well (and there would be several fire-fights between EDF/Portuguese forces and Indian forces in Goa leading to retaliatory air strikes), marking the first EDF-Portuguese collaboration since the World War.
    After Operation Red Tiger, the EDF sprung into action, having recieved the go-ahead to intercept the Indian fleet off of Trincomalee. However, they were stopped in their tracks and told to keep clear of the fleet. Soon enough, they realised what was happening, as they witness, the Coalition's response with Operation Snakehead. The Coalition had indeed four nuclear weapons in its arsenal since July, although this was classified. Hyderabad offered Bengal to choose a target of their choosing for the bombing of Dacca, while Hyderabad chose its own. Bengal's choice would prove to be one of the worse orders given in history.
    Hyderabad chose the Indian fleet blockading Trincomalee, which would be observed first hand by the EDF fleet stationned a few miles away. The Indian fleet would be obliterated in an instant, with only two ships surviving the nuclear hellfire as they were returning from anti-submarine patrols. The Bengali bomb however, headed towards New Delhi. In seconds, the city was reduced to ashes. There isn't any reliable death count, but estimates are that more than 10,000,000 people died that day, from the bomb, radiation or injuries.
    From then on both sides stood as shook as the rest of the world. India's gambit hadn't worked, as the Coalition had nuclear weapons, and Delhi had been reduced to dust. From then on both sides entered a staring contest, which would end with the Bangkok Agreements on a status quo ante bellum. Both sides had been ravaged from an intense air campaign, in which only the southern areas of the Coalition had been mostly spared, making Chennai the economical capital of the Subcontinent for several years, and a huge refugee crisis was generated. This was exacerbated when the Indian government decided to evict all muslims from the country in retaliation for the defeat. This action led to huge international backlash, and to Jammu and Kashmir, usually neutral, joining the Muslim block with Persia.

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    Sports: UEFA European Championship
  • The UEFA European Championship is a football championship pitting the best European nations against each other. So far it has had a total of 16 editions, in 16 different countries, with two more editions bringing five new countries to hosting duties. The record of wins goes over to France, with 5 wins (1956, 1960, 1984, 2000 and 2016), with the Netherlands and Germany trailing far behind with two wins (1988 & 2004 for the Dutch, 1980 & 1992 for the Germans), while England, Croatia, Russia, Czechia, Catalonia and Italy all have one win. The next edition is scheduled for 2020 and should take place on the Adriatic Sea, as it will be hosted by Croatia, Venice and Slovenia. 24 participants are expected to attend.

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    Sports: Overwatch League
  • In the meantime, have an esports nerd moment.

    The Overwatch League was established in 2018 with 15 teams participating. The format was expanded to 24 teams in 2019 with the addition of representatives from Madrid, Vienna, Boston, Toronto, Seoul, Shanghai, Sydney, San Francisco and Vancouver.
    London Spitfire defeated Hong Kong Victorious during the 2018 Grand Finals 2-0 but failed to defend their title in 2019 as they were defeated in the Quarter-Finals by Berlin Vanguard, the future winners, who toppled San Francisco Shock 4-1.

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