Sydalon-Yisrael relations: Difference between revisions
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'''Relations between [[Sydalon]] and [[Yisrael]]''' have spanned over three centuries since the end of the [[First West Scipian War]] and the [[Proclamation of the Kingdom of Yisrael|founding of the modern Kingdom of Yisrael]]. Relations between the early {{wp|Crusader State}} Kingdom of Sydalon and earlier pre-royal Jewish realms date as far back to the 1230s during the [[Sydalon#Middle_ages|First Crusade]]. Both kingdoms [[Pan-nationalism in West Scipia|developed early and nascent nationalist visions in the late 19th and early 20th centuries]], and engaged in a series of wars known as the [[West Scipian Wars]] as well as a nearly 80-year-long [[West Scipian Contention]]. Both nations took steps to settle a permanent peace in the late 1960s and early 1970s, resulting in the 1973 [[Yarden Accords]], which stabilized centuries of conflicting geopolitical and historical claims. By the 1990s and into the early 2000s, most observers | '''Relations between [[Sydalon]] and [[Yisrael]]''' have spanned over three centuries since the end of the [[First West Scipian War]] and the [[Proclamation of the Kingdom of Yisrael|founding of the modern Kingdom of Yisrael]]. Relations between the early {{wp|Crusader State}} Kingdom of Sydalon and earlier pre-royal Jewish realms date as far back to the 1230s during the [[Sydalon#Middle_ages|First Crusade]]. Both kingdoms [[Pan-nationalism in West Scipia|developed early and nascent nationalist visions in the late 19th and early 20th centuries]], and engaged in a series of wars known as the [[West Scipian Wars]] as well as a nearly 80-year-long [[West Scipian Contention]]. Both nations took steps to settle a permanent peace in the late 1960s and early 1970s, resulting in the 1973 [[Yarden Accords]], which stabilized centuries of conflicting geopolitical and historical claims. By the 1990s and into the early 2000s, most observers agreed that Sydalon and Yisrael maintained warming, cordial relations. | ||
However, the 1973 Accords [[Yarden revisionist movements|sparked a deep backlash]] in both countries that has simmered on the fringes of polite society for decades. In the early {{wp|2020s}}, these latent tensions erupted, revived by {{wp|foreign policy}} moves and crises in the late 2010s such as the [[Gran Aligonian crisis (2019-present)]], [[Enyaman Civil War]], and [[Onekawan Affair]]. In late 2021, a new government came to power in Sydalon's [[Parliament of Sydalon|National Assembly]], with leading voices in the new body including {{wp|Christian socialism|theo-socialists}} and the [[List_of_political_parties_in_Sydalon#Parties_with_representation_in_Parliament|Patriot's Movement]], widely regarded as a far-right {{wp|antisemitic}} party. Both groups harshly criticized the foreign policy of [[Presidency of Yisrael|President]] [[Yitzchok Katz]], and in early 2022 passed a non-binding resolution calling for the "renegotiation" of the Yarden Accords, a non-starter for Yisrael. This caused the [[2022 Sydalon diplomatic crisis]]. Sectarian violence erupted in the [[Yarden River Valley]]. This came to a head during the [[September Crisis (Ajax)|September Crisis]] in late 2022, when bilateral ties crashed as the Sydalene Queen formally called for a renegotiation of the Accords, a move that was rejected wholesale by the Katz administration. The Sydalene ambassador was expelled from Yisrael in reaction, and the Yisraeli ambassador recalled from Sydalon, signifying a deep diplomatic rebuke. Numerous foreign media speculated that [[West Scipian Wars|a Fifth West Scipian War]] would erupt imminently, though both governments demurred on the likelihood of open conflict. Currently, bilateral ties are at their worst since the end of the Fourth West Scipian War in 1966. | |||
==Country comparison== | ==Country comparison== | ||
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| '''Populations''' | | '''Populations''' | ||
| 14.7 million (2017) | | 14.7 million (2017) | ||
| | | 21.4 million (2020) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Area''' | | '''Area''' | ||
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| {{wp|Judaism}} 75.1%<br>''Other'' 24.9% | | {{wp|Judaism}} 75.1%<br>''Other'' 24.9% | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''GDP (nominal) ( | | '''GDP (nominal) (2020)''' | ||
| $403.1 billion ($27,425 {{wpl|per capita}}) | | $403.1 billion ($27,425 {{wpl|per capita}}) | ||
| $ | | $892.92 billion ($41,794 {{wpl|per capita}}) | ||
|} | |} | ||
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{{main|Pan-nationalism in West Scipia|Empire of Yisrael|Sydalene Civil War|West Scipian Wars|West Scipian Contention}} | {{main|Pan-nationalism in West Scipia|Empire of Yisrael|Sydalene Civil War|West Scipian Wars|West Scipian Contention}} | ||
===Contemporary era=== | ===Contemporary era=== | ||
{{main|Yarden Accords| | {{main|Yarden Accords|2016 New Year's Revolt|2022 Sydalon diplomatic crisis|September Crisis (Ajax)}} | ||
==Trade and economics== | ==Trade and economics== | ||
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The [[Sydalon-Yisrael border]] is perhaps the most militarized {{wp|frontier}} in the world, mostly straddling the Judean Mountains and the Yarden River as its known in Yisrael, or the Cultavida River as its known in Sydalon. All land border regions are fenced and patrolled except for the highest mountainous areas and maritime frontiers. | The [[Sydalon-Yisrael border]] is perhaps the most militarized {{wp|frontier}} in the world, mostly straddling the Judean Mountains and the Yarden River as its known in Yisrael, or the Cultavida River as its known in Sydalon. All land border regions are fenced and patrolled except for the highest mountainous areas and maritime frontiers. | ||
The [[Sydalene Defense Forces]] and [[Royal Yisraeli Defense Forces]] maintain a series of fortifications and permanent garrisons and bases along the border areas, though each has relaxed the amount of offensive forces within 50 miles of the border in the years after the 1973 Accords. | The [[Sydalene Defense Forces]] and [[Royal Yisraeli Defense Forces]] maintain a series of fortifications and permanent garrisons and bases along the border areas, though each has relaxed the amount of offensive forces within 50 miles of the border in the years after the 1973 Accords. This was reversed in 2022, when during the implementation of {{wp|martial law}} in the [[Yarden River Valley]] in Yisrael, a number of RYDF units were moved to bases and entrenched positions closer to the Sydalene border. | ||
===Border controls and immigration=== | ===Border controls and immigration=== | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* [[ | * [[Talahara-Yisrael relations]] | ||
[[Category:Foreign relations]] | [[Category:Foreign relations]] |
Latest revision as of 21:17, 19 February 2023
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Sydalon |
Yisrael |
---|---|
Diplomatic mission | |
Sydalene Embassy, Yerushalayim | Yisraeli Embassy, Ostracine |
Envoy | |
Ambassador The Count of Vecchia | Ambassador David Zimra |
Relations between Sydalon and Yisrael have spanned over three centuries since the end of the First West Scipian War and the founding of the modern Kingdom of Yisrael. Relations between the early Crusader State Kingdom of Sydalon and earlier pre-royal Jewish realms date as far back to the 1230s during the First Crusade. Both kingdoms developed early and nascent nationalist visions in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and engaged in a series of wars known as the West Scipian Wars as well as a nearly 80-year-long West Scipian Contention. Both nations took steps to settle a permanent peace in the late 1960s and early 1970s, resulting in the 1973 Yarden Accords, which stabilized centuries of conflicting geopolitical and historical claims. By the 1990s and into the early 2000s, most observers agreed that Sydalon and Yisrael maintained warming, cordial relations.
However, the 1973 Accords sparked a deep backlash in both countries that has simmered on the fringes of polite society for decades. In the early 2020s, these latent tensions erupted, revived by foreign policy moves and crises in the late 2010s such as the Gran Aligonian crisis (2019-present), Enyaman Civil War, and Onekawan Affair. In late 2021, a new government came to power in Sydalon's National Assembly, with leading voices in the new body including theo-socialists and the Patriot's Movement, widely regarded as a far-right antisemitic party. Both groups harshly criticized the foreign policy of President Yitzchok Katz, and in early 2022 passed a non-binding resolution calling for the "renegotiation" of the Yarden Accords, a non-starter for Yisrael. This caused the 2022 Sydalon diplomatic crisis. Sectarian violence erupted in the Yarden River Valley. This came to a head during the September Crisis in late 2022, when bilateral ties crashed as the Sydalene Queen formally called for a renegotiation of the Accords, a move that was rejected wholesale by the Katz administration. The Sydalene ambassador was expelled from Yisrael in reaction, and the Yisraeli ambassador recalled from Sydalon, signifying a deep diplomatic rebuke. Numerous foreign media speculated that a Fifth West Scipian War would erupt imminently, though both governments demurred on the likelihood of open conflict. Currently, bilateral ties are at their worst since the end of the Fourth West Scipian War in 1966.
Country comparison
Kingdom of Sydalon | Kingdom of Yisrael | |
---|---|---|
Populations | 14.7 million (2017) | 21.4 million (2020) |
Area | 119,820 km2 | 150,304 km2 |
Population density | 122.64/km2 | TBA |
Capital | Sydalon | Yerushalayim |
Largest city | Ostracine | Yerushalayim |
Government | Federal parliamentary constitutional monarchy | Federal presidential constitutional monarchy |
Current Leader | HRM Queen Melisende III (head of state and government) Chancellor Erwan de Montfort (de facto head of government) |
HRM King Hezekiah III (head of state) President Yitzchok Katz (head of government) |
Official languages | Sydalene | Modern Hebrew, Allamunnic English and Yiddish |
Main religions | Christianity 88.4% Judaism 2.2% Irreligion 7.1% Other 2.3% |
Judaism 75.1% Other 24.9% |
GDP (nominal) (2020) | $403.1 billion ($27,425 per capita) | $892.92 billion ($41,794 per capita) |
History
Medieval era
Early modern era
Modern era
Contemporary era
Trade and economics
Law enforcement
Police agencies in both countries have little interaction or cooperation, but in 1991, both states signed a bilateral extradition treaty.
In 1978, Ostracine and Yerushalayim signed a counter-terrorism agreement, called the Sydalene-Yisraeli Treaty on Counter Terrorism, in reaction to the post-Yarden explosion in Christian and Jewish terrorist groups and acts within both nations.
Military and security
Militarized border
The Sydalon-Yisrael border is perhaps the most militarized frontier in the world, mostly straddling the Judean Mountains and the Yarden River as its known in Yisrael, or the Cultavida River as its known in Sydalon. All land border regions are fenced and patrolled except for the highest mountainous areas and maritime frontiers.
The Sydalene Defense Forces and Royal Yisraeli Defense Forces maintain a series of fortifications and permanent garrisons and bases along the border areas, though each has relaxed the amount of offensive forces within 50 miles of the border in the years after the 1973 Accords. This was reversed in 2022, when during the implementation of martial law in the Yarden River Valley in Yisrael, a number of RYDF units were moved to bases and entrenched positions closer to the Sydalene border.
Border controls and immigration
The kingdoms have three land border checkpoints accessible by motor vehicle, as well as a separate checkpoint for cross-border rail transport via the West Scipian Railway. There are dedicated customs and immigration checkpoints and spot inspections at the major seaports and airports in both countries.
According a Yarden Accords corollary agreement, both border security agencies participate in the Border Control Board, a confidence-building measure that created warmer cooperation between the two formerly hostile organizations.