Sieuxerrian-Saintonge War

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Sieuxerrian-Saintonge War
Part of the Casaterran Front of the Pan-Septentrion War
Date11 June 1937 – 4 April 1943
(5 years, 9 months and 24 days)
Location
Result Saingtonian loss
Belligerents

 Sieuxerr


Supported by:

 Saintonge


Supported by:
Commanders and leaders
Sieuxerr Napoléon IV Saintonge Charles III
Strength
Sieuxerr 6,500,000
(March, 1942)
Saintonge 1,100,000
(March, 1942)
Casualties and losses
400,000 dead 300,000 dead

The Sieuxerrian-Saintonge War, known in Saintonge as the xxx and in Sieuxerr as the Guerre de la Troisième Coalition (War of the Third Coalition), was apart of the Pan-Septentrion War and focused mostly between Saintonge and Sieuxerr with nominal and mostly materiel support from their respective allied powers.


Background

Ideologies

Forces

Conduct of operations

Situation Noir: June 1937

Starting before sunrise on 11 June 1937, the Saintgonian 1st Armored Corps, spearheading Army Group South began a rapid advance into Sieuxerr. Supported by devastating air strikes conducted by the Royal Air Force, the 1st Armored Corps rapidly overran border forces and also staging points that were being used by the Sieuxerrian Army for its own mobilization, a few hours after the 1st AC began its attack, the entirety of Army Group South began a general attack as well. Beforehand, infiltration units of the Department of Public Relations and Intelligence, known as DEPRI, had advanced forward and began sabotaging of radio communications systems in Sieuxerr. Having cracked or discovered many of the codes used by the Sieuxerrian Army beforehand as well, the lack of radio communications combined with the ability to clearly read and plan against Sieuxerrian counter-attacks and movements would lead to disastrous results for Sieuxerrian commanders.

Within a week much of the Sieuxerrian Army Group 1, (GA 1), had been encircled and destroyed.

Continuation Noir: March 1938

Stalemate and air war: 1938-1941

Opération Saint-Antoine: March 1942

Results

Casualties