Vilcasuamanian Bush War: Difference between revisions

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Vilcasuamanian Bush War
Part of the Phoney War
UH-1D Operation MacArthur Vietnam 1967.jpg
Date4 July 1969 - 12 December 1991
(22 years, 5 months, 1 week and 1 day)
Location
Result

Government victory
New Haven Peace Accords

  • Legalization of the Cooperativist Party
  • Liberalization and move towards democracy in Vilcasuamanas
Belligerents

Vilcasuamanas Vilcasuamanian government
File:JDF NTemp.png JDF

 Nimear

DVSF (until 1976)

L-27 (until 1975)

Eisenkuste (material support)
Commanders and leaders
Vilcasuamanas Mauricijus Sprogys
Vilcasuamanas Kazys Drusutis
Vilcasuamanas Salemonas Sakatauskas
Vilcasuamanas Adolfas Svirelis
Vilcasuamanas Lauras Lagūnavičius
Vilcasuamanas Vladas Pranskunas
Vilcasuamanas Kristupas Preikavičius  
File:FedFlag.jpg William Haley
File:FedFlag.jpg Allen Black
Marirana Paolo Vinciguerra
Nimear F.A. Vredeling
Stepas Bisikirskas
Vytis Bajarunas  
Saulius Kiuras  
Skirgailas Sprindis
Domas Leita  Executed
Jokubas Pakalnis  Surrendered
Faustas Kristonaitis  Surrendered
Casualties and losses
70,000–80,000 (total Vilcasuamanian dead); 2,000 disappeared; 550,000 internally displaced

The Vilcasuamanian Bush War (Ruttish: Vilkasuamanos Krūmo Karas) was a conflict between the government of the Republic of Vilcasuamanas and various left-wing movements and armed groups. The conflict began in the late 1960s and quickly escalated into a full-scale guerilla war, prompting a military intervention by the Federation. The New Haven Peace Accords in 1976 demobilized most of the guerilla forces, while forcing the military government to concede significant steps towards democratization; however, certain factions, such as the Ciapist Army of Liberation (CAL) would continue the fight until 1991.

The war is seen as a reaction to the repressive policies of military dictator Mauricijus Sprogys, who had ruled the country since 1958, but was more generally rooted in the wide social discontent caused by vast corruption and income inequality. Various suppressed leftist groups would coalesce to form the Workers and Peasants' Solidarity Front (Ruttish: Darbuotojų ir Valstiečių Solidarumo Frontas, DVSF), which would declare open warfare on Sprogys' government after a failed coup in 1969; the urban July 27th Movement (L-27), while not explicitly socialist, would join in 1971. The expected resistance to Sprogys within the military failed to materialize, and instead the conflict became characterized by unconventional warfare, particularly in the Sythian rainforest region of the country. Federation involvement, initially in the form of military advisors, would escalate dramatically as part of the anti-leftist measures of the Phoney War; Vilcasuamanas invoked the mutual defense clause of the Joint Defense Force, and by 1972 there were several thousand Federation, Mariranan, and Nimearian troops "in-country".

The government-aligned forces conducted vast search and destroy operations against the rural guerillas; these bloody tactics were controversial in both the Federation and in Vilcasuamanas, as their effectiveness against the insurgents was dubious. From 1974, Federation troops began a gradual withdrawal, straining the Vilcasuamanian armed forces that had relied on Federation support. Fearing the unpopularity of the war among his supporters threatened to undermine his regime, Sprogys made concessions to the L-27 movement, restoring the Seimas and releasing hundreds of political prisoners. This brought the DVSF to the negotiating table as well, and the New Haven Peace Accords of 1976 officially ended the conflict, with Sprogys pledging to hold free elections. In 1976, the first general elections were held, with the military relinquishing power and allowing for presidential elections shortly after Sprogys' death in 1978. However, the CAL refused to demobilize and broke with the DVSF following the New Haven Agreement, continuing a low-level asymmetric conflict for fifteen years.

Although estimates vary, scholars believe around 75,000 Vilcasuamanians were killed in the course of the war; approximately 6,000 foreign troops were also killed between 1970 and 1976. The war was also notorious for the human rights violations committed on both sides; the rebels forcibly recruited child soldiers, the government launched indiscriminate strategic bombing campaigns, and all combatants regularly executed civilians believed to be collaborating with the enemy. In the initial stage of the conflict, the Vilcasuamanian dictatorship significantly cracked down on civil liberties; Sprogys' government is thought to be responsible for nearly 2,000 forced disappearances during this period. The war precipitated a vast refugee crisis as disaffected Vilcasuamanians migrated to Nimear and Satucin, leading to tensions in both of those nations. However, the return to democracy in Vilcasuamanas can also be credited to the conflict, as both the insurgents and the government's allies pressured the Sprogys government to liberalize and return to traditional party politics, initiating the Fourth Republic.

Background

Sprogys dictatorship

Marshal Mauricijus Sprogys led the Republic of Vilcasuamanas from 1958

Emergence of leftist groups

First phase (1969-1976)

Initial attacks

Government crackdown and escalation

Vilcasuamanian forces in combat against a VTSP stronghold

JDF intervention

Velykų Offensive

Federation withdrawal

New Haven Peace Accords

Split of the DVSF

Second phase (1976-1991)

CAL steps up campaign

CAL guerillas lie dead in the town of Šv. Steponas, Juodopė

Failed negotiations

Rutuliukas massacre

Failed offensive of 1986

Ceasefire

War crimes

Government and JDF war crimes

Insurgent war crimes

Truth Commission on Vilcasuamanas

Aftermath

Democratization of Vilcasuamanas

Effects on Asteria Inferior

Cost of the war