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Coian Evacuation

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Coian Evacuation
Operation Mercury
Part of Solarian War
Date2 November 1945 - 5 February 1946
Location
Result
  • Etrurian retreat
  • Evacuation of 503,602 Etrurian soldiers and civilians
  • Collapse of the Etrurian colonial empire in Coius
Belligerents
Greater Solarian Republic
Etrurian Satria
Galbaterra
Etrurian Rahelia
Cyracana
Ninavina
Sublime State of Pardaran
 Ajahadya
Template:Country data Estmere
 Senria
Pardarian Revolutionary Resistance Command
Commanders and leaders
Leonardo Aurelia Capri
Giuseppe Albanese
Marco Antonio Evangelisti
Casualties and losses
22,430 killed
39,600 injured
18,992 captured
10,340 Etrurian civilians killed
13,489 Satrian and Zorasani civilians killed

The Coian Evacuation (Vespasian: Evacuazione Coiana), also known as Operation Mercury (Operazione Mercurio), was the evacuation of more than 500,000 Etrurian soldiers, civilians and colonial elites in Coius during the latter stages of the Solarian War, from various beaches and harbours across Etrurian Satria, Etrurian Rahelia and the Sublime State of Pardaran. The operation took place between 2 November 1945 and 5 February 1946 and commenced following the Battle for Patasura and the breakthrough of Soravian forces in Amathia. Fearful of losing vast quantities of manpower to the Community of Nations Forces in Coius, the Greater Solarian Republic leadership ordered a mandatory evacuation of all Etrurian nationals and colonial elites from its colonies, followed by military forces. The evacuation saw the complete abandonment of territories, alongside economic assets, documents and the entire political leadership, resulting the collapse of law and order in Etruria's erstwhile colonies, enabling the emergence of new nations from its colonial empire.

The Solarian War begain 1943, with the Etrurian invasion of Piraea, though part of its wider wargoals was the annexation of former Gaullican colonies that Etruria claimed but was denied in wake of the Great War. Owing to Estmere being granted mandatory control over Gaullica's possessions, Etruria invaded Padartha from Etrurian Satria, expanding the conflict to Satria, this coincided with an invasion of southern Tsabara from Etrurian Rahelia. However, the Solarian War swiftly resulted in the Community of Nations establishing a unified command, resulting in the entry of Senria, Soravia and several Asterian powers. Notably, Ajahadya backed by Shangea also intervened against the Greater Solarian Republic, greatly worsening the balance of forces in Satria. Despite initial success in Padartha and Ajahadya, Etrurian forces were stalled throughout 1944 in Satria, while its greater gains in Tsabara were reversed with the Estmerish-Rizealander amphibious landing at Manara and the rapid collapse of Etrurian forces in Tsabara. Throughout much of 1945, Etrurian forces were struggling to maintain defensive positions in Satria and Rahelia, and in the summer, GSR regime agreed on plans to possibly evacuate Coius and abandon its posessions there. This situation was forced with the successful Soravian offensive in Amathia, which broke through Etrurian lines and came to threaten Etruria proper. In October 1945, the GSR Supreme Command (Comando Supremo) authorised plans to evacuate Coius for the defence of Etruria itself.

Under Operation Mercury, four Coian harbours were selected, Belisaria (Bhalesrah), Chaboksar, Virgilia (Bandar-e Sattari) and Porto di Scippio (At-Turbah), these ports were the largest and deepest within the Etrurian Colonial Empire and all were located on the Acheolian coast and all were linked by the Via Imperia highway. Beginning on November 2 1945, the first four weeks were dedicated to extracting and transporting factory machinery, resources and financial assets (including gold bullion and jewels stolen from local Satrian elites during the Etrurian Second Republic). Beginning in late December, the operation began to evacuate Etrurian civilians, auxiliaries and select Satrian and Zorasani elites who served in the colonial administrations. By January, Belisaria had fallen to Estmerish forces and Porto di Scippio faces the threat of Rizealander forces, ending operations in those two locations. By this time, it was becoming known among colonial peoples that the Etrurians were fleeing and chaos began to spread in Virgilia and Chaboksar. This had a detrimental effect on the evacuation of Etrurian soldiers and their equipment, though a majority were successfully withdrawn.

In total 503,602 people were evacuated, including 320,155 soldiers, 156,862 Etrurian civilians and 26,585 Satrians and Zorasanis. However, an estimated 41,422 Etrurian soldiers were killed or captured during the operation, while 10,340 Etrurian civilians were killed, over 8,000 of whom died aborad the SS Marco Loredan, a cruise liner which was sunk by a Soravian submarine. A further 2,000 were killed in a series of massacres in southern Patasura and Khazestan. The extraction of entire factories and financial assests has been described as one of the "largest state-backed thefts" in history, while the legacy of how Satrians and Zorasanis were evacuated remains a controversial legacy. The greatest impact of Operation Mercury was from the rapid abandonment of colonial possessions, leaving tens of millions of Satrians, Pardarians and Rahelians without any organised governance, the evacuation also led to the emergence of fledgling national movements that go onto form Patasura, Rajyaghar, the Kingdom of Khazestan, Emirate of Irvadistan, Confederation of Riyadha and the Kexri Republic, as well as spark civil war in Pardaran. The operation also marked the collapse of one of the largest empires in history and the demise of Etruria as a great power, as part of the wider collapse concluding the Solarian War.

Background

Operation Mercury

First stage (industry and resources)

Second stage (civilians and wounded)

Third stage (Etrurian military forces)

Aftermath

Anarchy and ethnic violence

Satrian independence

Zorasan

Controversies

Sinking of SS Marco Loredan

Massacres of Etrurian settlers

Reprisals against collaborators

Legacy

The Great Theft

In Etruria