2005 Polnitsan War: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
| width      =  
| width      =  
| partof      =  
| partof      =  
| image      = [[File:2005 war montage.png|250px]]
| image      = [[File:2005 war montage.png|300px]]
| caption    = Clockwise: the North Polnitsan invasion of South Polnitsa, Latin Air Force Ifrits during the war, Arthuristan paratroopers during Operation Daffodil, South Polnitsan Special Forces passing destroyed Northern armour, North Polnitsan artillery in action, street fighting during the North Polnitsan Revolution
| caption    = Clockwise: the North Polnitsan invasion of South Polnitsa, Latin Air Force Ifrits during the war, Arthuristan paratroopers during Operation Daffodil, South Polnitsan Special Forces passing destroyed Northern armour, North Polnitsan artillery in action, street fighting during the North Polnitsan Revolution
| date = 25 December 2004 – 4 March 2005
| date = 25 December 2004 – 4 March 2005

Revision as of 00:29, 29 March 2020

2005 Polnitsan War
2005 war montage.png
Clockwise: the North Polnitsan invasion of South Polnitsa, Latin Air Force Ifrits during the war, Arthuristan paratroopers during Operation Daffodil, South Polnitsan Special Forces passing destroyed Northern armour, North Polnitsan artillery in action, street fighting during the North Polnitsan Revolution
Date25 December 2004 – 4 March 2005
Location
Result Coalition victory. Polnitsan reunification and merger with Garima
Belligerents
Template:Country data Polnitsan Democratic Republic  Polnitsa
 Latium
 Garima
 Arthurista
 Drevstran (naval forces only)
Commanders and leaders
TBD TBD
Strength
55,000 20,000 (ground forces during Operation Daffodil)
Casualties and losses
Circa 10,000 military casualties during Operation Daffodil Circa 67 killed and 410 wounded during Operation Daffodil

The 2005 Polnitsan War was a ten-week undeclared war fought in early-2005 between the forces of socialist North Polnitsa, on the one hand, and a coalition of nations opposed to it on the other. North Polnitsa, supported by Valgtea, invaded South Polnitsa on Christmas Day of 2004 in an attempt to forcibly unify the divided nation, swiftly defeating all opposition and occupying the country. At the same time, Valgtea mobilised its forces along the border with Garima in an attempt to dissuade Gariman intervention in the Polnitsan situation. In response, the South Polnitsan monarchy and government in exile, as well as the Gariman government, called for international assistance in liberating the occupied country. Over the next several weeks, land forces from Arthurista and Latium were deployed in Garima, in preparation for a battle to eject the occupying North Polnitsan forces. A four-brigade ‘Multinational Division’, roughly 20,000 in total in manpower terms, was established in order to coordinate the coalition’s ground troops.

After satisfying themselves that further diplomatic efforts were fruitless, the governments of the coalition granted the final political sanction for Operation Daffodil. The plan entailed the Multinational Division, backed by the extensive use of air power, breaking through the screening North Polnitsan Forces and dashing along the North-South Polnitsa border for the shore of Lake Kupalnista, thereby cutting off and surrounding the entire North Polnitsan Army. Over the course of the 96-hour ground campaign, the four coalition brigades defeated three divisions of North Polnitsan troops and for all intents and purposes destroyed it as a viable military force. North Polnitsan units cut off in the occupied south surrendered en masse to the Multinational Division.The North Polnitsan squadron on Lake Kupalnista was also engaged and dstroyed by the Drevstranese Navy.

News of the defeat triggered the North Polnitsan Revolution, which led to the overthrow of the socialist one-party government and, in a referendum, reunification with South Polnitsa and the eventual merger with Garima. In Valgtea, the defeat of North Polnitsa constituted a major humiliation and greatly damaged its international prestige, leading to its relative decline in the subsequent ‘Decade of Chaos’, as well as triggering far-reaching military, political and economic reforms.

Historical background

Invasion of South Polnitsa

The North Polnitsan People’s Army

South Polnitsan forces

The invasion

Building a coalition

Arthuristan response

Latin response

The Multinational Division

North Polnitsan deployment

Operation Daffodil

Air offensive

Battle of Chlowitz

'The Sickle Cut'

Battle of Hill 198

Battle of Lake Kupalnista

Aftermath

Consequences for Polnitsa

Denouement in Valgtea