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Zacapine Army | |
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ππ°π¬πΏπ¨ππΏπ― ππ°πΏπ°πΉπ¨π·π¬π»π Yaoquizque Zacapiyotl | |
Active | Since 1904 |
Country | Zacapican |
Type | Army |
Role | Land warfare |
Size |
|
Part of | Zacapine Armed Forces |
Commanders | |
Commander-in-Chief | Zianya Xcaret |
Secretary of Defense | Chicacua Xiomara |
Chief of the General Staff | Nezahualcoyotl Amanaztli |
Army Chief of Staff | Hladimi Qalchic |
The Zacapine Army (Nahuatl: ππ°π¬πΏπ¨ππΏπ― ππ°πΏπ°πΉπ¨π·π¬π»π, Yaoquizque Zacapiyotl) is the consolidated land warfare component of the Zacapine Armed Forces, encompassing the professional contract soldiers and the Republican Guard forces of each Zacapine constituent republic. Together with the Air Force, it is overseen by the Homeland Defense Office of the Secretariat of Defense. The Zacapine Army is comprised of 50,000 full-time soldiers organized into 10 brigades which make up the standing army, as well as the 100,000 gendarme Republican Guards subordinated to the Army command structure. Although the Zacapine military is empowered to raise conscripts from the civilian population for service, this power has not been used since the last general mobilization in 1935. All active duty servicemembers of the Zacapine Army including the standing army as well as the Republican Guards are volunteers.
The geography of Zacapican is a major influence on the doctrine and organization of its armed forces, especially the Army. A majority of the country's interior is covered by hills and mountains, which has historically made maritime travel and communication the lifeblood of the major civilizations of the region. This condition is even more extreme in the north of the country. The northwest is dominated by the Mixtepemec mountains and the northwest by the Tlaltenantli mountains. The lands between these two mountain ranges comprises the arid plateau of the Xallipan Republic. Of these, the Mixtepemec range is generally impassable except through a handful of narrow mountain passes, while the geologically older and more weathered Tlaltenatli range and the Xallan desert represent less daunting and somewhat permeable barriers to overland travel. Nevertheless, the difficulty of moving large contingents of troops presents a serious geographical challenge to any army aiming to conduct operations in the north of Zacapican. The north presented a serious challenge to the further expansion of Aztapamatlan across Oxidentale from the 13th century onward, a challenge daunting enough to shift the focus of expansion to a costly colonial campaign in Malaio. Since the fall of Aztapamatlan and the rise of modern Zacapican, neither the Zacapine Army nor any foreign military have attempted to cross the interior of south Oxidentale with a full-scale invasion force, despite multiple armed conflicts affecting the region. Instead, warfare in the Oxidental hinterlands has taken the form of small scale border skirmishes, limited incursions and mountain warfare.