War of the Frontiers
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War of the Frontiers | |||||||
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Cacertian infantry attack at the Battle of Adrano | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Acrea | Cacertian Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Ludvig Vikander Mathias Corriveau August von Braun |
Zabina Padula Ariele Adinolfi Doriano Aliberti | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Start of War 85,000 By September 1885 300,000 |
Start of War 305,000 By September 1885 400,000 |
The War of the Frontiers was an armed conflict fought between the Kingdom of Acrea and the Cacertian Empire from 16 March 1885 to 24 September 1885. The war was primarily caused by the desire of Elliana I to reduce or eliminate the Acrean sphere of influence in eastern Siduri and the Bara Sea. The conflict resulted in a swift Acrean victory which halted further Cacertian expansion into southeastern Siduri. Elliana I sued for peace and petitioned the Acreans for negotiations, which Acrean Queen Alyssane II acceded to, eventually culminating in the Treaty of Apridine which would dictate Acrean-Cacertian relations for over 70 years.
The Cacertian Army invaded the Acrean colony of Auroa in March 1885 with the goal of carving a land route into central Siduri from Knichus. Issues with their sealift capability left the Acrean forces in Siduri outnumbered over three to one despite advanced warning of the Cacertian troop buildup, forcing the Acrean territorial army to adopt unconventional asymmetric tactics. Although initially heavily outnumbered, the Cacertian invasion was halted and routed by a combination of more advanced Acrean military technology, primarily smokeless powder rifles and the machine gun, alongside the asymmetric tactics employed by the Acreans. The tide was fully reversed after Acrean transport issues were resolved and large numbers of troops began to pour into Auroa, leading to a retaliatory invasion of Knichus and a return to conventional tactics in what is considered the second phase of the war. Several more months of fighting with little gain, ground lost, and severe casualties forced Elliana I to sue for peace.
The conflict was a shock to both Acrea and Cacerta alike. For the Cacertians, the Acrean victory demonstrated how the Cacertian general staff had been caught woefully unprepared and revealed critical miscalculations in the relative capabilities of Cacertian and Acrean forces. For the Acreans, the Cacertian invasion outlined dangerous complacency which had set in within Rena in regards to potential overseas rivals, and how unprepared the Acrean fleet had been to enable them to rapidly confront an adversary in Acrea's overseas territories. The war was the debut of both smokeless powder weaponry and the machine gun on the battlefield, and the devastating effectiveness of both was stunning to both belligerents as well as foreign observers. In the war's aftermath, it served as a catalyst for a major rearmament and arms development program in Acrea, and a massive push for industrialisation and modernisation in Cacerta. In addition, it also convinced Elliana of the importance of growing the Cacertian fleet to compete head-to-head with the likes of foreign powers, and within several years a major naval development and procurement program was underway.
Background
Planning for a war with Acrea in Vichenza began in late 1883, a few months before the completion of the conquest of Liriniya in the the spring of 1884. Strategically, Acrea posed several challenges to Elliana I's ambitions for Cacertian expansion. The Acrean colony of Auroa and protectorate of Pteleia created a bulwark against any Cacertian expansion westward on the continent from Knichus, while Acrea's alliance with the Phạm dynasty gave it effective control over most of the eastern seaboard of Siduri. Importantly, Acrea also controlled the eastern mouth of the Sundering Sea; consequently, the Cacertians were effectively blockaded from reaching central Siduri without first dealing with Acrea. Initially, Elliana's government first considered negotiating with the Acreans to ensure open passage through the Sundering. Although considered the easiest and most expedient route, given the neutral relationship between Acrea and the young Cacertian Empire, concerns were quickly raised about how easily the Acreans could cut off this access if relations soured or a war broke out. Elliana's plans for expansion anticipated friction with Acrea, if not outright conflict at some point. Ultimately, Elliana and her general staff decided on pursuing a land route into Siduri through Auroa.
Beginning in mid-1884, Cacertian troops began arriving in Knichus via Liriniya, using the short sea routes which connected them to Cacerta. A force of some 300,000 was anticipated to be more than enough to overwhelm the Acrean territorial army in Auroa which was correctly estimated at no more than 50,000 troops. Holding much greater confidence in her army after the Liriniya campaign, at Elliana's insistence the plan was to restrict the conflict to a land-based one. She held skepticism in the ability of the Cacertian Royal Navy to successfully engage the larger Acrean fleet in a direct confrontation. With similar concerns held by her commanders, they decided to constrain the movement of the Cacertian fleet to instead protect the sea routes between Cacerta, Liriniya, and Knichus. Although the Cacertians took steps to conceal their troop movements, word eventually reached Rena of the developments via spies by late 1884, prompting the Acreans to begin deploying an army under Ludvig Vikander to Auroa to support the 50,000-strong territorial army under August von Braun. Capacity issues plagued the Acreans, and the demands of trying to deploy a field army so quickly strained their largely untested sealift capability. Nonetheless, By the time the Cacertian invasion began in March, an additional 35,000 men had been deployed to Auroa from Acrea.
Course of the War
The Cacertian operation began on 16 March, with a three-pronged advance into Auroa with its invasion force divided into three armies. The Cacertians initially met only moderate resistance, engaging with Acrean advance forces in skirmishes, though nonetheless pushed on. Although substantially outnumbered, the Acrean Army held a few key advantages over the Cacertians, though none more important than its weaponry. Compared to the Cacertians, Acrean forces held two technological advantages: smokeless powder weapons, and the machine gun. The advent of hvittpulver, a smokeless powder propellant, by Acrean chemist Stig Vignes in 1879 led to a rush by the Acrean military establishment to field weapons utilising this new technology in the years immediately after leading to the adoption of the Dessauer M1881. This development coincided with the gradual introduction of the MG m/78 into Acrean service. The first machine gun used by Acrea, the m/78 used black powder ammunition and was intended to replace a variety of rotary guns in Acrean service at the time. Smokeless powder ammunition solved numerous reliability issues related to the older black powder ammunition, and in 1883 the more developed MG m/83 was introduced using the new ammunition. Cacertian forces, used to expeditionary warfare, were fairly lightly equipped with only light artillery and some rotary guns. Acrean forces at the start of the conflict were similarly equipped with only light howitzers and their machine guns, though as more forces arrived from Acrea they brought with them heavier howitzers.
The turning point of the conflict's early days came when Cacertian and Acrean troops first met in a major battle at the strategic town of Aonotena approximately a week after the start of the invasion. Located along a major travel route, Cacertian commander Doriano Aliberti sought to capture the town to secure a location to set up a forward depot, for which it was ideal. Expecting moderate resistance, Aliberti's attack was almost immediately halted when it encountered entrenched Acrean positions by a constant barrage of machine gun fire. Aliberti pressed forward with the attack, attempting a flanking maneuver around the town that was countered by an Acrean flanking force. The grassy, open, flat terrain of southeastern Auroa proved lethal to the Cacertians, as it allowed the Acreans to maximise their range and visibility. After a day of fighting, Aliberti fell back from the attack, with the Cacertians having suffered horrific casualties.
The results of the battle were repeated when the other two Cacertian field armies, led by Zabina Padula and Ariele Adinolfi, encountered similar Acrean defensive positions and in similar terrain. The entrenchements made the positions difficult to counter with their light artillery, while the sustained fire of the machine guns made any assault suicidal. Cacertian leaders attempted to bypass the defensive positions entirely, but quickly became mired down by a combination of Acrean regular infantry and native Aōtean militia. The latter were noted after the fact as being particularly effective when armed with new Acrean rifles, with Adinolfi commenting after the conflict that they inflicted nearly as much damage on the Cacertians as machine guns. Still severely outnumbered, the Acreans were only able to effectively outmaneuver and defeat the Cacertians in a major engagement after inflicting several weeks worth of attrition, eventually routing the combined and beleaguered Cacertian armies at the Battle of Teaorongo in late April.