Satrian Wars and conflicts: Difference between revisions

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| combatant2  = {{flag|Arthakhand}} <br> {{flag|Rajyaghar}} <br> <small>Supported by:</small>
| combatant2  = {{flag|Arthakhand}} <br> {{flag|Rajyaghar}} <br> <small>Supported by:</small>
------  
------  
{{flag|Baekjeong}} <small>(1966-)</small>  <br> {{flag|Dakata}} <small>(1977-)</small> <br> <small>Supported by:</small>
{{flag|Baekjeong}} <small>(1965-)</small>  <br> {{flag|Dakata}} <small>(1977-)</small> <br> <small>Supported by:</small>
| combatant3  =  
| combatant3  =  
| commander1  = {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Mohan Balchandra]] (1946 - 1948) <br>{{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Jalander Sarai]] (1946 - 1966) <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Aman Sabanis]] (1966 - 1974) <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Arjuna Kalsarah]] (1946 - 1981) <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Nishant Balchandra]] (1981 - 1997) <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Vimal Sarai]] (1997 - 2005) <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Diya Kalsarah]] (2005 - 2013) <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Salil Balchandra]] (2013 - Present)
| commander1  = {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Mohan Balchandra]] <small>(1946 - 1948)</small> <br>{{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Jalander Sarai]] <small>(1946 - 1966)</small> <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Aman Sabanis]] <small>(1966 - 1974)</small> <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Arjuna Kalsarah]] <small>(1946 - 1981)</small> <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Nishant Balchandra]] <small>(1981 - 1997)</small> <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Vimal Sarai]] <small>(1997 - 2005)</small> <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Diya Kalsarah]] <small>(2005 - 2013)</small> <br> {{flagicon|Ajahadya}} [[Salil Balchandra]] <small>(2013 - Present)</small>
| commander2  = {{flagicon|Rajyaghar}} [[Abhinav Devdhar Malhotra|A.D. Malhotra]] <small>(1960-67)</small>
| commander2  = {{flagicon|Rajyaghar}} [[Abhinav Devdhar Malhotra|A.D. Malhotra]] <small>(1960-67)</small>
| commander3  =  
| commander3  =  

Revision as of 18:22, 3 March 2021

Since the end of the Solarian War in 1946, the subcontinent of Satria has been involved in a number of conventional conflicts, insurgencies and military standoffs between Ajahadya and its neighbouring states, Arthakhand, Rajyaghar and Dakata.

Satrian Conflict
Date4th May 1946 – Ongoing
(78 years, 7 months, 2 weeks and 3 days)
Location
Status Ongoing
Belligerents
 Ajahadya
Supported by:
 Xiaodong (1946-1964, 1977-)
Union of Khazestan and Pardaran (1950-1980)
 Zorasan (1980-)

 Arthakhand
 Rajyaghar
Supported by:


 Baekjeong (1965-)
 Dakata (1977-)
Supported by:
Commanders and leaders
Ajahadya Mohan Balchandra (1946 - 1948)
Ajahadya Jalander Sarai (1946 - 1966)
Ajahadya Aman Sabanis (1966 - 1974)
Ajahadya Arjuna Kalsarah (1946 - 1981)
Ajahadya Nishant Balchandra (1981 - 1997)
Ajahadya Vimal Sarai (1997 - 2005)
Ajahadya Diya Kalsarah (2005 - 2013)
Ajahadya Salil Balchandra (2013 - Present)
Rajyaghar A.D. Malhotra (1960-67)

Background

Great War

-Raja taps into Pan-Satrian sentiment
-Founding of Azad Fauj, coalition of Pan-Satrian and ethnic/religious nationalist groups
-Raja's defeat and continued colonial presence spurs further growth of both nationalism and Pan-Satrianism

Solarian War

-UFRS invades Etrurian Satria, seeking to take it after the war
-Denied this in peace conference, Etrurian Satria given independence under nationalist groups
-Viewed as betrayal by colonial powers, start of First Satrian War due to unclear borders and Ajahadya refusing to accept the results of the peace conference

First Satrian War (1946 - 1948)

-Breaks out after failure to unify Satria peacefully
-A free-for-all as everyone tries to draw borders across formerly Etrurian Satria
-Likely a high degree of bleedover into Estmerish Satria
-Shortest war, all sides weakened by Solarian War
-Likely ends with roughly modern borders

Second Satrian War (1959 - 1964)

-Ajahadya attacks Arthakhand and Rajyaghar
-No one expects Ajahadya to win
-Ajahadya wins, takes parts of both Arthakhand and Rajyaghar (Union States of Pinjar and Mondari)

Dakian War (1965)

-Aja launches a surprise attack into Baekjeong, successfully takes over Bumistan and Vijay
-Baekjeongese counter-offensives stalled by Ajahadyan army, forced to accept ceasefire
-Unnerves surrounding nations (Xiaodong, Zorasan) at prospect of a united Satria, Ajahadya in international wilderness

Third Satrian War (1972 - 1978)

-Coalition of Baekjeong, Arthakhand, Rajyaghar invades Ajahadya
-Ajahadya overwhelmed, quickly loses occupied territory
-Baekjeong accepts ceasefire in 1973, withdraws back to pre-1965 borders
-Arthakhand and Rajyaghar continue offensives into Ajahadya
-Widespread use of chemical weapons by Ajahadya to stall offensives and in counter-attacks
-Xiaodongese support later in the war allows Aja to start some counter-offensives
-Ends with modern borders, Ajahadya heavily damaged and on verge of collapse

Dakatan War (1977 - 1981)

-Dakata attacks Ajahadya out of opportunity
-Xiaodong invades Dakata from the south
-End of Third Satrian War allows Ajahadyan forces to push Dakatans out of Ajahadya
-Guerrilla campaign by Dakata and international pressure force status quo ante bellum peace in 1981

Insurgencies (1946 - Ongoing)

Baekjeong

Dakata

Arthakhand

Rajyaghar

Foreign Support and Involvement