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The Augsberger Affair, also known as the Augsberger Letter Crisis, was a major diplomatic incident stemming from a series of letters sent by Weranian foreign minister Ludwig von Augsberger during the War of the Triple Alliance, which proposed a military alliance between Werania and Florena against Gaullica. The letters indicated that, should Florena accept the offer, they would be awarded Gaullican colonies, a strip of land along the Floren-Gaullican border, and the revocation of the Treaty of Savona. The communications were intercepted by Floren nobles in the foreign ministry who were sympathetic to the Gaullican cause. Revelation of the content wrought popular outrage from Gaullicans, and galvinised support for the war on the home front. In Florena, the exposure was a national embarrassment; King Joaquim II subsequently denounced Weranian ambitions.
Background
War of the Triple Alliance
The crisis unfolded as the War of the Triple Alliance was being fought across Euclea, pitting the Triple Alliance of Gaullica, Vredlandia and Marolevia against Werania and Estmere. Although the Weranians had held the advantage in the early stages of their Vredlandian campaign, by 1853 they were beginning to lose the initiative, and were at risk of being pushed back by Gaullo-Vredlandian forces. As a result of this, they had begun to search for new allies to turn the tide of the war. The key aim in contacting Florena, on Werania's part, was to enable an unanticipated attack on Gaullica's southern flank, that would catch them off-guard and force them to pull back from Vredlandia, while Florena would be able to capture key points in southeastern Gaullica. This was ultimately misinformed; as would soon be confirmed, Florena had little military capability to act with.
Weranian-Floren relations
Relations between Werania and Florena were largely amicable at the time, but strained by a Floren refusal to counteract Gaullican influence in their country. The two countries did, however, have a shared history dating back to the Pereramonic Wars, in which the two had fought against Gaullica and the rest of Euclea. Although Werania believed that this historical friendship would help them in their cause for an alliance, Florena's crushing defeat in that war had caused them to be far more cautious when considering military activity. Further, they were hesitant to break the Treaty of Savona, which had forbade them from declaring war on the other Euclean powers.
Content of the Letters
The letters themselves were not cleverly hidden or encoded; the Weranian foreign ministry assumed that they would be kept secret by their Floren counterparts. Though there were a number of letters, the most important was one concerning rewards for joining Werania in the war. The letter was delivered to the Weranian ambassador at the Weranian embassy in Demora, and was then given by him to members of the Floren foreign office, for an intended transfer to King Joaquim II and his royal court, for his eyes only. The Weranians had not anticipated the level of Gaullican sympathy in the Floren nobility and foreign office.
The key letter read as follows:
We are planning new, great military offences across northern Euclea. We intend to smash Gaullica's resistance, and to enforce a change in the continent's politics. Our aim is nothing less than the dethroning of the Gaullican behemoth. To this end, we propose the aforementioned alliance of war together and peace together, and promise to support Floren ambitions in Coius and Bahia. We offer the recovery of Carcosa, control over the Holy Lands and rights to Southern Bahia. Further, the redrawing of the Gaullican-Floren border, in Floren favour. With Gaullica's defeat, the revocation and annulment of the unjust Treaty of Savona becomes necessary. I ask you to relay this information to King Joaquim.
Signed, Ludwig von Augsberger
Interception and revelation
The letters were ultimately intercepted by a cabal of pro-Gaullican nobles who worked within the Floren foreign office. Distressed at the contents of the letters, they immediately informed their contacts in Gaullica of the situation, and hoped it would lead to a Gaullican intervention. The information and content of the letters was quickly leaked to news outlets, who reported the story as breaking news. Within days, it had emerged as the leading story across Euclea. For a number of days, the Floren foreign office refused to comment on the scandal, until it finally addressed it a month after the revelation, in November 1853.
Reception
In Gaullica, the revelation of the letters galvinised support for the war, and stirred on anti-Weranian sentiment. The popular outrage shaped government policy, with the Gaullican government exerting its vast influence in Florena to demand that the government denounce Weranian ambitions. Joaquim II found himself backed into a corner, and publicly denounced Weranian ambitions. The revelation of the letters had a significantly negative affect on the perception of Werania worldwide, seriously damaging their credibility and raising concerns regarding their willingness to respect international norms.