Last man standing: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|There is only one way this war ends: last man standing. God willing, we shall be that last man.}}
{{quote|There is only one way this war ends: last man standing. God willing, we shall be that last man.}}


The failure of the [[Operation Magni|invasion of Luepola]] was realized by early 1943, and Vierzland soon faced a defensive war on multiple fronts against the [[Socialist International Coalition]] after [[Second Apelian Republic|Apelia]]'s declaration of war on X X 1943. Eschau, who despised oratory, was pressured by his advisors to make a public speech to improve national morale after a stream of military defeats.
The failure of the [[Operation Magni|invasion of Luepola]] was realized by early 1943, and Vierzland soon faced a defensive war on multiple fronts against the [[Socialist Internationale]] after [[Second Apelian Republic|Apelia]]'s declaration of war on X X 1943. Eschau, who despised oratory, was pressured by his advisors to make a public speech to improve national morale after a stream of military defeats.





Latest revision as of 19:18, 3 May 2021

Hermann Eschau enters the Reichsthing to deliver his speech.

"Last man standing" is the name of a speech that was delivered by Vierz chancellor Hermann Eschau on X X 1943, in which he called for the nation to unite and prepare for total war and emphasized that it would be a historic battle for Vierzland's survival in the face of an overwhelming communist threat. It was delivered to a plenary session of the Reichsthing and broadcast on national radio. The title of the speech is derived from its famous final line:

There is only one way this war ends: last man standing. God willing, we shall be that last man.

The failure of the invasion of Luepola was realized by early 1943, and Vierzland soon faced a defensive war on multiple fronts against the Socialist Internationale after Apelia's declaration of war on X X 1943. Eschau, who despised oratory, was pressured by his advisors to make a public speech to improve national morale after a stream of military defeats.