User:Char/sandbox4: Difference between revisions

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| caption          =  
| caption          =  
| date              = 17 April 1985 – 10 December 1987<br />({{Age in years, months, weeks and days|month1=04|day1=17|year1=1985|month2=12|day2=10|year2=1987}})
| date              = 17 April 1985 – 10 December 1987<br />({{Age in years, months, weeks and days|month1=04|day1=17|year1=1985|month2=12|day2=10|year2=1987}})
| place            = [[Fahran]], [[Charnea]], [[Ninva|Ninva desert]]
| place            = [[Fahran]], [[Charnea]], [[Happara]], [[Ninva|Ninva desert]]
| territory        = {{wp|Status quo ante bellum|No territorial changes}}
| territory        = {{wp|Status quo ante bellum|No territorial changes}}
| result            = Stalemate; both sides claim victory
| result            = Stalemate; both sides claim victory

Revision as of 12:36, 23 October 2022

Ninvite War
Part of Fahrani-Charnean conflict
Date17 April 1985 – 10 December 1987
(2 years, 7 months, 3 weeks and 2 days)
Location
Result

Stalemate; both sides claim victory

  • Fahrani failure to capture Charnean territories and bolster Gharib separatism in Hatheria.
  • Charnean failure to destroy Fahrani military power.
  • Fahrani dictator Sabir Afzal Rahmani steps down.
  • Treaty of Kahrash establishes armistice.
Territorial
changes
No territorial changes
Belligerents

 Fahran

Supported by:

 Charnea

Supported by:
Commanders and leaders
Fahran Sabir Afzal Rahmani
(Prime Minister of Fahran)
Charnea Baseel Madoun
(Premier of Charnea)
Units involved
see order of battle see order of battle
Strength

Start of war:
210,000–250,000 soldiers

More:
  • 700–900 tanks,
    1,000 armoured vehicles,
    300 artillery pieces,
    485 fighter-bombers,
    750 helicopters

    In 1986:
    450,000 soldiers,
    700 tanks,
    2,700 armored vehicles,
    400 artillery pieces,
    350 aircraft,
    1,000 helicopters

    In 1987:
    600,000 soldiers,
    1,500+ tanks,
    3,500–4,000 armored vehicles
    600 heavy artillery pieces,
    500 fighter-bombers,
    1,200 helicopters

Start of war:
300,000 soldiers

More:
  • 1,000 tanks,
    4,000 armored vehicles,
    1,400 artillery pieces,
    380 fighter-bombers,
    350 helicopters

    In 1986:
    575,000 soldiers,
    1,200 tanks,
    2,300 armoured vehicles,
    1,700 artillery pieces,
    450 aircraft,
    580 helicopters

    In 1987:
    700,000 soldiers,
    1,500 tanks,
    3,000 armored vehicles
    4,000 artillery pieces,
    900 fighter-bombers,
    1,000 helicopters
Casualties and losses

Military dead:
200,000–600,000

More:
  • 123,220–160,000 KIA,
    60,711 MIA
    (Fahrani claim)
    800,000 killed
    (Charnean claim)
    320,000–500,000 WIA
    40,000–42,875 POW
    11,000–16,000 civilian dead

    Economic loss:
    $627 billion

Military dead:
105,000–500,000

More:
  • 400,000 WIA
    70,000 POW

    Economic loss:
    $561 billion
Civilian dead: 100,000+

The Ninvite War (Gharbaic: حرب نينوى, Tamashek: ⴰⵎⵢⴻⵔ ⵏⵉⵏⵠⴰ) was an armed conflict between Fahran and Charnea that began on April 17, 1985 with the Charnean declaration of war. The outbreak of hostilities was preceded by the escalating guerilla conflict in the eastern Charnean region of Hatheria occurring from 1982 to the outbreak of the Ninvite War and continuing until 1986. The Charnean rationale for declaring open war with Fahran was the cited need to prevent the Gharib pan-nationalist regime of Fahrani prime minister Sabir Afzal Rahmani from supporting the predominantly Gharbaic rebel groups active in the east of Charnea and preventing the formation of a Fahrani-backed separatist state in Hatheria. Fahran cited numerous Charnean military incursions across the two nations' shared border as its casus belli, characterizing the Charnean activities and later declaration of war as an unprovoked aggression towards neutral Fahran whilst denying Charnean allegations of Fahrani military support for Hatherian rebels.

The conflict would be one of the bloodiest wars of the 20th century, rivalled only by the Third and Fourth West Scipian Wars for the title of the largest war on the Scipian continent in that period. More than 1 million lives would be claimed by the fighting, with at least one in ten of those killed being civilian inhabitants of the conflict zone. The loss of life would be compounded by the economic loss of over $1 trillion as a result of war-related economic stress and direct disruption of economic activity by the war. The regions of eastern Charnea, western Fahran and the territory of Happara later involved in the war are significantly impacted by the effects of the war even in the present day.