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Invasion of Jungg'o

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Invasion of Jungg'o/Jungg'o War
Date12 October 1995 (1995-10-12) - 12 January 2010 (2010-01-12) (14 years and 3 months)
Location
Result Neo-Korean Victory, annexation of the Jungg'o Federal Republic into Neo-Korea.
Belligerents
Neo-Korea Jungg'o Federal Republic (until 2000) Non-Recognized Combatants in the Jungg'o Invasion (2000-2010)
Commanders and leaders

Beom Dae

  • Naito Keiji (Shōshō of the Combined Field Army Grouping, Grand Marshal of Neo-Korea)

Hammad Bahtiyar

  • Juma Kusen (Federal Officer of the Combined Armies)

Northern Provincial Government:

Red and Black Army:

Jungg'o People's Front:

Strength

Combined Field Army Grouping:

  • 324,000 Men

Neo-Korean Air Force:

  • 60,000 Men

Combined Armies (1995-2000):

  • 640,000 Men (combined total of provisional armies)

Federal Airforce:

  • 200,000 Men

Northern Provincial Government:

  • 205,000 Men

Red and Black Army:

  • 11,125 Men

Jungg'o People's Front:

  • 168,120 Men
Casualties and losses

Combined Field Army Grouping:

  • 80,000 Men

Neo-Korean Air Force:

  • 15,000 Men
  • Combined Army Casualties:
  • 220,000 Men

    Northern Provincial Government:

    • 112,000 Men

    Red and Black Army:

    • 1,095 Men

    Jungg'o People's Front:

    • 80,000 Men

    The Jungg'o Invasion, also known as the Invasion of Jungg'o or the Jungg'o Reclamation (By Neo-Korea) was an armed conflict between Neo-Korea, the Jungg'o Federal Republic and its supporters, and (after the collapse of the JFR) the warlord/provisional states which emerged in the aftermath of aforementioned collapse and their supporters. Active hostilities began with Zumen-Onyx (Plan Onyx), a series of border transgressions with the objective to seize key military locations, carried out early in the morning of October 10th, which would act as the prelude to a direct invasion by the Combined Field Army Grouping. The primary rationale for the war would be, aside from public announcements of reunification between the two "Inherently conjoined states", a desire to end the large-scale rationing which had been in action until this point through the seizure of key agricultural territories from Jungg'o, alongside fears among the leaders of the Neo-Korean State that continued economic development in Jungg'o would begin to rapidly surpass Neo-Korea's own economic development which had occurred throughout recent decades.

    The Jungg'o invasion can be argued as the ultimate culmination of the longstanding relationship between Jungg'o and the Kāichrén state-entities, with the independence (fiscally or otherwise) of one fundamentally being tied to the exploitation or conquest of the other (owing to the resources of Jungg'o and the Sea Access of the Korean Peninsula alongside said region's greater industrial investment), with border skirmishes having occurred repeatedly throughout the decades of continued joint-existence before the conflict.

    Despite the slightly-greater economic strength of, and greater foreign support given to Jungg'o, a lack of military unity caused by a long-term state of defacto disunity in the goals of the provinces and their associated militaries would result in Neo-Korea making rapid progress, seizing the vast majority of urban areas in one year, while the state as a whole would defacto collapse two years into the conflict. Despite these victories, the Neo-Korean Ground Forces would be tied down in counter-insurgency operations until 2010, when they would enact Zumen-Bunri (Plan Separation), a plan which forced/concentrated the majority (generally believed to be around 2,000,000+ members of) the rural population into urban centers such as Lushun and Harbyin, alongside several cities constructed in the south of Jungg'o for the purpose (the "Bunri-Cities") to prevent them giving continued support to partisan forces. This has been declared an act of genocide by several states, including Jin Yi and Janpia, although Neo-Korea denies these claims.

    Background

    Jungg'o - Neo-Korean Relations

    Jungg'o and Neo-Korea had possessed negative relations since the end of the Korean Civil War, owing to mutually opposed unification/Pan-Hiakemirian sentiments targeting the other. Both sides would attempt to seize border territories from the other, although generally these efforts were not successful.

    By the time of the war, the most recent border dispute not associated with it was over a small village set somewhat south of the border which had attempted to join Jungg'o during the civil war.

    Agricultural Rationing in Neo-Korea

    Throughout the aftermath of the Kāichrén Civil War, the Neo-Korean State lacked the capability to maintain the population it currently possessed without the economic and agricultural capabilities possessed by Jungg'o, which maintained the necessity for rationing throughout the period from 1961 until the end of the war. This continued rationing represented one of the major sources of discontent with the Neo-Korean State during its early establishment, and would linger as a source of discontent until the conflict started.

    The Neo-Korean State had, by the mid 70’s, already made the decision that an occupation of Jungg’o or other such form of alignment would be necessary to fix this issue without rendering Neo-Korea dependent on foreign trade or sending segments of the population abroad. Under the Hikaru Sakuma regime, agricultural drives and a temporary promotion of “backyard farming” would be used as a means to hold over the population until such time as he believed the NKGF was capable of winning a conflict- a date which would never come, owing to the botched assassination which put him into a coma.

    Appointment of Beom Dae to Paramount Leader

    Beom Dae would be appointed to the role of Paramount Leader in 1995, by a grouping of CGC members who wished to continue the state of political control the system had gained while giving the population a figure to rally around, the primary reason for the then-irrelevant Beom’s appointment. Beom would proceed to use the aforementioned agricultural issues as a means to ensure the gathering of his own political base, and the seizure of power through such.

    It can be argued that this seizure of power is the primary cause of Neo-Korea’s willingness to delve into the militarization of the population during this time, the necessity of propagating a rally-around-the-flag effect creating a situation wherein ceasing the conflict would lead to the failure of the government.

    Jungg'o Military Preparedness

    Neo-Korean Military Preparations

    Border Conflicts Leading Up to the War

    Course of the War

    Zumen-Onyx

    Zumen Onyx, or Plan Onyx, would be the series of maneuvers which would begin the war- a series of border incursions which attempted to seize stockpiles and capture key military figures who may have been relocated to the area owing to the recent uptick in border conflicts. The Airforce would launch surprise strikes on 15+ airfields with strike aircraft, failing to damage infrastructure but damaging a majority of the fighter presence Jungg'o had available, although only in areas near the border this was successful- lacking the capability to strike deeper into Jungg'o owing to the limited range of Neo-Korea's aircraft. One hour after this was carried out, a declaration of war was given, followed by the border troops being reinforced by the Combined Field Army Grouping.

    Attempts at retaliation later in the day were generally foiled by recently developed Surface-to-Air Missile systems placed near the border, although damage would be done to the northern city of Sinŭiju, alongside the military base near it. Neo-Korea's recently developed helicopters would prove effective in blunting a response by the ground forces in Jungg'o, slowing its armored forces by hours or, in some limited cases, even days. Provincial armies near the border would engage in combat with several Neo-Korean divisions which had been sent ahead in an attempt to seize several southern cities, with both sides sustaining casualties and the Neo-Korean push being blunted.

    Early Combat

    Shattering of the Combined Armies

    Seizure of Key Urban Centers

    Battle of Harbyin

    Intervention by Chilokver

    Carrier Operations

    Collapse of the JFR

    Remnant Factions

    Beginning of Insurgency

    Rising War-Weariness

    The continuing insurgency, and the casualties caused by such, would begin fermenting public lack of support for the rationing, economic effects of the conflict, and similar issues which could not be entirely suppressed by the mood of social militarism. These feelings would eventually begin to turn into an overt anti-war movement, which represented a severe threat to the continued Neo-Korean war effort, and as such the Beom Dae government would attempt to prevent such from growing stronger- through entering negotiations with the leading figures of these movements and attempting to fulfill those demands they found reasonable- including beginning a gradual troop draw-down as the Zumen-Bunri began implementation.

    This conciliatory mood also allowed for the restoration of former soldiers to civilian roles, which bolstered the economy in this lesser stage of the conflict- this most likely being the reason for the surprising tone the state took towards these efforts.

    Zumen-Bunri

    Zumen Bunri, also known as Plan Separation, was a tactic created by Grand Marshal Naito Keiji, created to bring an end to the war through the internment of populations suspected of assisting insurgent activities- into a series of Bunri-Cities and major urban areas such as Lushun and Harbyin. Around 2 million individuals would be interned in these cities, the exits and perimeters of said areas guided by both conventional military groupings and the CIS, who would also provide benefits to individuals- and the families of said individuals- willing to inform on any activities made in attempts to escape.

    This would prove itself effective, according to the Neo-Korean Ground Forces General Staff, which declared that the campaign would be responsible for the end of the war two years after it was implemented, although doubt remains over this narrative, owing to already present slowing in the campaigns of insurgent forces due to losses caused by conventional forces. Conditions in these cities were generally satisfactory for survival, if poor in regards to luxuries or access to electricity, with rations being roughly equivalent to those the domestic population in Neo-Korea was receiving by this point, although communication to individuals outside of them was prevented via the attempted seizure of all communication devices within them.

    Official End of the War

    Annexation

    Incorporation of JFR Power Structures

    Emptying of the Bunri-Cities

    International Response

     Janpia - Since the start of the war, the Janpian Union had sent military attachés to the Jungg'o Federal Republic under the direction of Khirelya "Karmiya" Mariyuvisch—the People's Marshal at the time, to help train the Jungg'o forces in conducting protracted warfare, urban operations, and field fortification engineering. It was additionally reported that they had sent various forms of political, industrial, and military support to the Jungg'o People's Front after the collapse of the Federal Republic. Among the military aid which was provided were weapons such as the SKR-7 Assault Rifle and the ZTG-7 anti-tank grenade launcher. Crews that received specialized platforms such as the JP-1 tank were trained by Janpian advisers for Jungg'o service.

    The Janpian Union provided an approximate 20,000 to 60,000 M1 SKR-7 assault rifles to the forces of Jungg'o during the conflict

    Following the death of Marshal Karmiya in 2010, the stance of the Janpian Union on the conflict under the newly elected People's Marshal, Yorischa Juneschen, remained the same as her predecessor. During her administration, the Union of Party Members Committee declared the invasion as an act of genocide, and claimed that various human right violations against the Jungg'o people had occurred over the previous decade. To this day, the Janpian Union still claims that genocide and the violation of human rights have persisted, and continue to be perpetrated against the population of Jungg'o.

    Although unofficial, it is estimated that over 500 to 3,000 Janpian volunteers actively participated in the conflict starting in 1995 until the early 2000s, mostly acting to fill in the gaps along the frontlines. Minimal air support was also provided by the JURAF to provide cover for Jungg'o forces, as well as to engage in air interception against the Neo-Korean air force. Active Janpian participation began to subside around the summer of 2000s, as the People's Marshal soon began restricting any Janpian partisans from participating, not wishing to turn the war into a larger engagement with the Neo-Koreans. Although no official list of casulties was ever gathered, it was estimated that around 40 to 600 Janpians died or went missing in action during the 5 years in which participation occurred, with more than 500 dying in the conflict that followed until the official end of Janpian involvement in the conflict in 2010 under the directions of PM Yorischa Juneschen.

    Aftermath

    Casualties

    Economic Impacts

    Iminchaebol Presence in Military Development

    Strategic Innovations

    Domestic Situation During the Conflict

    Neo-Korea

    Neo-Korea, having already been in a process of rationing, was in a greater domestic position to perpetuate the war in that regards- with the general population of Neo-Korea not being effected in regards to sustenance by the conflict, and, in fact, gradually started receiving greater amounts of rationed material as the conflict proceeded, owing to both the acquisition of agricultural land and the direct seizure of food from areas which were believed to be hotbeds of insurgent activity, a practice which would be noted to contribute to the continued issues with establishing functional control over areas not immediately surrounded by urban territory.

    The war would be used as a means to expand Beom Dae's control over the state, with the enduring insurgency being used as an excuse to mitigate or remove those individuals who had originally installed him from the halls of power. This process would involve the shattering of Hikaru Sakuma's personality cult through a greater focus on a "Cult of the People" (as described by exile philosopher Maurice Shibuya), based around the principles of social militarism and the rallying of the population around the concepts of victory over and general "reunification" with Jungg'o. The White Guard, Neo-Korea's own internal youth militia, would be removed from Central Intelligence Service control during the war, instead being made independent- both as a means to make the organization more independent of former CIS Director Pyoyter Nakiovich and to allow it to assume new roles of promoting contributions to the conflict such as blood drives, public works to assist in infrastructural construction in Jungg'o (including the Bunri-Cities), and other efforts domestically.

    Jungg'o Federal Republic

    Pre-Collapse

    Post-Collapse

    Legacy and Memory

     Janpia - A fountain and a memorial was erected at Strukuschena Plaza in Kalingrad, in memory of the Janpian volunteers as well as the Jungg'o people that served in the conflict. The Janpian Union also uses it to highlight its ongoing claims of genocide in Jungg'o perpetrated by Neo-Koreans. A Janpian animation film titled "Red Skies" was also based in this conflict, which follows a story of a Janpian pilot during the war.