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Ninvite War

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Ninvite War
Part of Fahrani-Charnean conflict
Clockwise from top: Fahrani forces in forward trenches, destroyed Fahrani fighter-bomber in the opening hours of the war, Hamath old city district damaged by bombing, Fahrani If-25 shot down over the Ninva desert, Mutulese K'akmul 5 fighter-bombers delivered to the Charnean air force, entrenched Fahrani armor disabled by air strikes, mobilized Charnean infantry units, combat on the Ihemod line, improvised Charnean anti-tank vehicle.
Date17 April 1985 – 10 December 1987
(2 years, 7 months, 3 weeks and 2 days)
Location
Result

Stalemate; both sides claim victory

  • Fahrani failure to capture Charnean territories and bolster Gharib separatism in Hatheria.
  • Charnean failure to destroy Fahrani military power.
  • Fahrani dictator Sabir Afzal Rahmani steps down.
  • Treaty of Kahrash establishes armistice.
Territorial
changes
No territorial changes
Belligerents

 Fahran

Supported by:

 Charnea

Supported by:
Commanders and leaders

Fahran Sabir Afzal Rahmani
(Qayid of Fahran)

Charnea Pazir Madoun
(Premier of Charnea)

Units involved
See order of battle See order of battle
Strength

Start of war:
210,000–250,000 soldiers

More:
  • 700–900 tanks,
    1,000 armoured vehicles,
    300 artillery pieces,
    485 fighter-bombers,
    750 helicopters

    In 1986:
    450,000 soldiers,
    700 tanks,
    2,700 armored vehicles,
    400 artillery pieces,
    350 aircraft,
    1,000 helicopters

    In 1987:
    600,000 soldiers,
    1,500+ tanks,
    3,500–4,000 armored vehicles
    600 heavy artillery pieces,
    500 fighter-bombers,
    1,200 helicopters

Start of war:
300,000 soldiers

More:
  • 1,000 tanks,
    4,000 armored vehicles,
    1,400 artillery pieces,
    380 fighter-bombers,
    350 helicopters

    In 1986:
    575,000 soldiers,
    1,200 tanks,
    2,300 armoured vehicles,
    1,700 artillery pieces,
    450 aircraft,
    580 helicopters

    In 1987:
    700,000 soldiers,
    1,500 tanks,
    3,000 armored vehicles
    4,000 artillery pieces,
    900 fighter-bombers,
    1,000 helicopters
Casualties and losses

Military dead:
400,000–600,000

More:
  • 323,220–360,000 KIA,
    60,711 MIA
    (Fahrani claim)
    800,000 killed or captured
    (Charnean claim)
    320,000–500,000 WIA
    60,000–62,875 POW
    11,000–26,000 civilian dead

    Economic loss:
    $627 billion

Military dead:
405,000–500,000

More:
  • 500,000 WIA
    70,000 POW

    Economic loss:
    $561 billion
Civilian dead: 100,000+

The Ninvite War (Gharbaic: حرب نينوى, Tamashek: ⴰⵎⵢⴻⵔ ⵏⵉⵏⵠⴰ) was an armed conflict between Fahran and Charnea that began on April 17, 1985 with the Charnean declaration of war. The outbreak of hostilities was preceded by the escalating guerilla conflict in the eastern Charnean region of Hatheria occurring from 1982 to the outbreak of the Ninvite War and continuing until 1986. The Charnean rationale for declaring open war with Fahran was the cited need to prevent the Gharib pan-nationalist regime of Fahrani prime minister Sabir Afzal Rahmani from supporting the predominantly Gharbaic rebel groups active in the east of Charnea and preventing the formation of a Fahrani-backed separatist state in Hatheria. Fahran cited numerous Charnean military incursions across the two nations' shared border as its casus belli, characterizing the Charnean activities and later declaration of war as an unprovoked aggression towards neutral Fahran whilst denying Charnean allegations of Fahrani military support for Hatherian rebels. The conflict would earn its name two weeks into the start of open hostilities, through the remarks of Charnean Premier Pazir Madoun stating that "Fahran [had] provoked a war that would light the Ninva on fire".

As part of the age-old Fahrani-Charnean conflict, the outbreak of the Ninvite War inflamed regional tensions that had long simmered below the surface as a result of centuries old grievances. The scale of the war quickly drew the attention of many nations in the east Scipian region and the Association of Ozeros Nations of which Fahran was a member. Charnea drew military and economic support initially from local allies such as those in Itayana but would later be forced to look further afield, petitioning for aid from distant Mutul. Fahran was aided by neighboring Vardana with which the nation had coordial relations, and would begin to purchase arms from Alanahr and Latium as the war escalated.

The conflict would be one of the bloodiest wars of the 20th century, rivalled only by the Third and Fourth West Scipian Wars for the title of the largest war on the Scipian continent in that period. More than 1 million lives would be claimed by the fighting, with at least one in ten of those killed being civilian inhabitants of the conflict zone. The loss of life would be compounded by the economic loss of over $1 trillion as a result of war-related economic stress and direct disruption of economic activity by the war. The regions of eastern Charnea, western Fahran and the territory of Happara later involved in the war are significantly impacted by the effects of the war even in the present day.

Background

Fahran-Charnea relations

Akzay War

Charnean COIN sector sweep in southern Hatheria in 1983

The insurgency in Hatheria, known in Charnea as the Akzay or "Bastard" war, began as a result of a severe drought in eastern Charnea in 1982. The Charnean government tightened its water controls in reaction and deployed the Raxla into the region to enforce its policies, which involved the redistribution of water from the majority Gharbaic eastern Hatheria to the Deshrian and Tenerian majority areas in the central and western portions of east Charnea. This mitigated the drought for the western regions but caused a state of severe water shortage in the east, sparking off unrest. The Gharbaic minority in Charnea, long opposed to the rule of the Tenerian majority government, entered a state of armed resistance to the Raxla which forced the intervention of the Imperial Charnean Army. The Gharibs unilaterally declared their independence from the Charnean Empire, claiming themselves to be the independent nation of Hatheria with its capital in Hamath, an act which marked the start of the Akzay war. The Gharib insurgency struggled for years in their attempts to force the capture of the Hatherian city of Hamath, their claimed capital city, which remained in Charnean hands for the duration of the conflict.

The regime of Prime Minister Rahmani in Fahran, directly bordering the Charnean region of Hatheria, was sympathetic to the cause of the rebellion. The ideology of the Rahmani government was a mixture of secularism and pan-gharibist nationalism, which inclined the Fahrani state to align itself with Gharib nationalist separatists fighting an independence struggle against the non-Gharib Charnean state. Charnean repeatedly accused Fahran of supporting the rebels with funding and weapons, calling into question the providence of many items found in rebel bases, caches and in the possession of rebel fighters on several occasions. The Fahrani government denied the Charnean accusations on each occasion, claiming the discoveries to have been planted by the Charneans themselves to implicate Fahrani involvement. The Charnean army, unmoved by the denials of the Rahmani government, began a series of operations to cut off the supply of weapons, ammunition, food and volunteers across the Fahrani-Charnean border. These began as military operations within the context of the Akzay War, which re-established nominal Charnean government control over the area of the Fahrani-Charnean border, but would later escalate further as a result of rebel activity and lead to the start of the Ninvite War.

Border Conflicts

The Imperial Charnean Army began military operations near the shared border in late 1984 as part of their effort to cut off the rebel forces from their suspected source of arms and supplies. This came at the tail of two years of frustration and consistent failure by the ICA to trap and defeat the rebels on the field of battle, and represented a change in tactics from pursuit of a tactical defeat of the rebels to a strategic one. However, the borders of eastern Charnea with many neighboring countries are generally open desert or otherwise hostile terrain that was difficult to monitor and fully secure with the technology of the early 1980s, forcing the Charnean army to take on a more aggressive approach in blocking the entry of any supply that might be smuggled through their blockade at the border. The ICA began a series of raids and ambushes in early 1985, several of which led to confrontations and even conflict with Fahrani forces at the border. On more than one occasion, Charnean units violated Fahrani territory in their operations to block Fahrani supply convoys from breaking their blockade and resupplying the rebels under siege across the Hatherian region. The Rahmani government issued protests and threatened reprisals for these border incursions, escalating to a major diplomatic incident between the two nations. While some parties in both governments had been involved in negotiations towards an end to the conflict since 1983, these had seen no progress and now broke off altogether. At some point in late 1984 or early 1985, high ranking members of the Imperial Charnean Army and the Charnean state reached the conclusion that the Rahmani regime in Fahran would continue to foment resistance to Charnean rule in the east under any circumstance, and that breaking the back of the Fahrani state and demilitarizing it would be the only way to secure a lasting peace in Hatheria and the rest of the Charnean east. Charnea had already amassed a significant force in Hatheria and the border region to fight the ongoing Akzay War, and so after only a brief buildup of forces, the Charnean Empire declared war on the Kingdom of Fahran.

Course of the War

1985

Charnean Incursion

The opening moments of the war between Charnea and Fahran took the form of a large scale Charnean aerial strike launched in the early morning of the 17th of April 1985 with the intentions of destroying the Fahrani air force on the ground and securing Charnean dominance in the air for at a long period. Charnea possessed fewer fighter-bombers and combat aircraft than Fahran, and its air force was generally less well equipped with older airframes and weapons systems in its inventory. For this reason, Charnea aimed to neutralize the Fahrani air advantage and secure the skies as a prelude to a planned invasion of Fahran which Charnean leaders hoped would topple the Rahmani government and secure victory in a matter of months. The strike was successful in severely damaging many Fahrani airbases and base infrastructure, but proved far less effective at destroying the Fahrani combat aircraft themselves. As a result, after hurriedly repairing their runways, Fahrani bases were able to launch their superior fighter aircraft and launch retaliatory sorties against Charnean positions in Hatheria.

The ICA leadership ordered the planned land invasion to go ahead regardless of the failure of the aerial attack to destroy the Fahrani air advantage, hoping to exploit the nearly 5 to 1 Charnean advantage in tanks and armored vehicles to punch through the Fahrani army's ground forces and proceed with the invasion plans. The incursion of Charnean forces into Fahran would begin on the 20th of April. Charnean armor, once over the Al-Kira river which marked the border at prepared crossing points, would traverse over open desert quickly to catch the Fahrani's by surprise. However, Fahrani forces were better prepared for the attack than expected thanks to the pre-emptive mobilization of the country ordered by Prime Minister Rahmani. In addition, the intact Fahrani air force was able to destroy a large number of vehicles involved in the Charnean attack over the border. The ICA units involved, planning to take the enemy by surprise and denuded of air cover, had not anticipated the enemy air superiority and was lacking in anti-aircraft defenses and countermeasures. In under 48 hours, the Charnean incursion into Fahran was called off and a full retreat back into Charnea was ordered. A number of units would become stranded on the Fahrani side of the Al-Kira river after Fahrani aircraft destroyed their bridges, resulting in the humiliating loss of a number of armored units. The attack was a resounding failure for the Charnean army, a sobering loss and one which prompted the hurried reshuffling of the army command and general staff.

Fahrani counter-attack

Charnean equipment abandoned during the rout from Hatheria.

The disorganized state of the Charnean forces in Hatheria invited the Fahrani army to launch a retaliatory strike through the first weeks of May against the positions of the ICA across the Al-Kira. Simultaneously, the Hatherian rebels stepped up their attacks in response to the weakening of the ICA positions against them as a result of the opening moves of the war, causing further disarray among the Charnean forces. ICA units, many already weakened by losses suffered in the failed incursion against Fahran, suffered serious damage. Many units, such as the 11th motor rifle regiment, functionally ceased to exist with remnants scattering into the Hatherian portion of the Ninva desert to the west of the combat zone, later being absorbed into other units. Reinforcements from the reserves intended to contain the rebels and exploit the expected breakthrough in Fahran were called forward only sporadically, as the reshuffling of the Charnean high command was contributing to the discoordination on the front. After two days of heavy losses, the new Charnean high command ordered a general withdrawal from the contested regions in Hatheria to a new defensive line around the built up areas of Deshret, abutting the Alanahri border. This order was met with some disobedience, as a number of subordinate Charnean officers at the divisional and regimental command levels opted instead to make a stand at Hamath and deny the city to the rebels, now linked up with their Fahrani allies quickly deploying into the region. A significant Fahrani-Hatherian force moved to break the defenders at Hamath, initiating what would become a grueling siege of the city against stubborn Charnean defense. As the month of May drew to a close and June began, the momentum of the massive Fahrani counter-offensive would break against the Charnean defenses in front of Deshret and in the surrounding positions in Hamath.

War in Hatheria

The Hamath-Pertoth highway became the scene of repeated clashes between Charnean and Fahrani armor, resulting in significant losses for both sides. The roadway soon become littered with the debris of destroyed vehicles.

The war in Hatheria would become one of the most protracted and bloodiest phases of the war as front lines crystalized and an attritional contest set in. The Fahrani air force had more advanced and more numerous airframes in the air over the region, yet the Charneans were desperately contesting Fahrani air power with sorties of their own, as well as the rushed deployment of their air defense stockpiles consisting primarily of mid and short ranged missile systems and anti-aircraft cannons on mobile platforms. Thanks to their numerical and technological advantage, the Fahrani air force maintained a lasting advantage in the air and consistently carried out strikes against the besieged Charnean positions in Hamath, but faced the deadly obstacle of massed Charnean air defense missile systems in their attacks against the main Charnean defensive line on the approaches to Deshret region and in the open desert where those Charnean air defense units mobile enough to operate in the desert did so with the cover of the feared Charnean raider units. These were small, highly mobile motorized units armed with A45 Torka armored car and the new A84 Inabarom infantry fighting vehicle that excelled in ambush and hit-and-run attacks in the hostile terrain of the Ninva, considered to be qualitatively the best trained and most elite units of the ICA. These raiding units faced motorized units of the Fahrani army as well as Hatherian forces equipped with improvised fighting vehicles, primarily used to screen armored pincers of the regular Fahrani army attempting to carry out attacks on the southwestern flanks of the main Charnean defensive positions. In contrast to many of the other Charnean front line units, the Charnean raiders excelled in their role and frequently outmaneuvered the opposition in the open desert. Besides the superior training of these units compared to the rest of the ICA, the style of engagement in the open Ninva was much closer to the traditional Charnean light cavalry tactics and desert warfare doctrine with which the ICA was well acquainted. The more conventional modernized Fahrani army adapted quickly to conditions on the Ninvite front, drawing on their own experiences in the desert and their Bedouin Gharib heritage, but remained on the backfoot under of the oppressive campaign of harassment and disruption of their Charnean opposition. As the campaign mounted, both sides made greater and greater use of chariot-type improvised fighting vehicles fashioned from all manner of civilian automobiles to fill the gaps in these raider units as the production of new armored cars and IFVs could not keep up with attrition. The battle of the Hatherian Ninva would be dubbed the "Chariot War" after the Charnean term for the improvised vehicles that would become its hallmark.

As the second half of the year 1985 rolled in, attritional fighting along the Hamath-Pertoth highway and in the Hatherian Ninva continued. The deadlock from July in August saw both sides calling up reserves, denuding other portions of the military such as the Fahrani Navy and the Charnean border guards to funding and manpower replacements, and mobilizing the population. In this, the Charneans had an advantage despite their smaller population as the years of the Akzay War preceding the conflict with Fahran had given the army ample time to prepare itself and begin a pre-mobilization initiative. Although they had been caught off balance by the bungled opening of the war, as the months dragged on the Charnean military began to mobilize the stockpiles and registers planned in advance. In spite of its failures, the Charnean military had been far more prepared for a major war than its Fahrani counterpart and began to build up large reserves outpacing the Fahrani mobilization in the short term. Conversely, the Fahrani siege on Hamath and its offensives along the Hamath-Perthoth positions had depleted stocks of artillery shells and strike munitions for its fleet of fighter-bombers, which the Rahmani regime was working to remedy by negotiating for purchases from abroad. In the meantime, the ICA had gained the upper hand in the battle and began to push back Fahrani forces. As losses mounted there was an increase in irregular units of the Hatherian rebels were used to plug holes in the line, which the ICA had picked up on. First raider units and then full combined arms forces began to exploit the weakness of the rebels in open combat to punch through the lines and cause small breakthroughs wherever the rebel units were manning defenses. Attacks of this nature progressed, with losses mounting over September and October as the Charneans slowly ground down the opposition, opening up a supply line to Hamath and relieving the defenders there. It was also during this time that units of the Divine Army of the Ninety-Nine Nations, specifically Charnean born contingents disbanded by the Mutulese and quietly permitted to return to Charnea to join the fighting, began to arrive. These were highly trained fighters renowned for their ferocity and effectiveness in combat, and were quickly integrated into the ICA's elite raider units to fill in the losses of difficult to replace Charnean commandos. Piecemeal attacks against the Fahrani positions in Hatheria would slow down towards the end of November and go into an extended lull through December and into the new year, foreshadowing a new Charnean offensive being prepared by the ICA high command to retake the initiative, sweep the Fahranis from Charnea, and cursh the rebel forces once and for all.

1986

End of the Hatherian campaign

The monolithic dome in the Hatherian city of Saadia, the de facto capital of the separatist Hatherian state, was left mostly intact thanks to its sturdy construction despite the rest of the city suffering severe damage from sustained shelling.

The war in Hatheria came to an end through the dramatic offensive of 5th of January, which initiated simultaneously along the southern border regions abutting Kembesa and along the frontier in the north, outflanking the Hamath-Pertoth highway front. In the south, the breakthrough began as another minor attack targeting Hatherian gharib militias holding the Fahrani flanks. The Fahranis were slow in reacting, relying on reserves of the local rebel fighters to delay what they assumed to be another light, mobile long range raiding party. They were surprised to discover that what was indeed another long range raiding force that had conducted the initial probing attack had in fact been the vanguard for a significant formation, outfitted with many Elatian IBVs and a handful of of the Charnean Inabaroms bringing significant armored firepower to bear on the rebel reserves and then, on the Fahrani flanks. On their side, the Fahrani commanders quickly realized that they had critically underestimated the Charneans capability to move such a formation through the open desert without alerting aerial surveillance radar. This was due in part to these AEW&C aircraft being shot down or grounded by sporadic attacks of ground based radar-seeking missiles from Charnean mobile launchers in the desert. Fahrani troops in the south quickly pulled back to avoid an encirclement, recalling troops from other zones to prepare a fallback line. The Charnean cross-desert armored offensive in the south gained significant ground, but within 12 hours had begun to mean more resistance from the well equipped Fahrani troops rather than their rebel allies and began to loose vehicles and men as a result. However, as the momentum slowed and the southern offensive began to reach its culminating point the ICA unleashed an offensive in the north with Elatian and Mutulese tanks and self-propelled artillery covered by their new and formidable mobile air defense systems in high concentration. The attack here, formidable on its own, was doubly devastating as the Fahrani troops had already deployed much of their strategic reserves to contain the bleeding in the south on the opposite side of their zone of control. In such condition, there was little the Fahrani forces could do to prevent the advance of the Charneans.

Ashkan ICA soldier operating a surface-to-air missile system during the January 5th offensive

The collapse of the Fahrani positions in Hatheria unfolded over the course of the month of January 1986. Over the course of weeks following the initial breakthroughs and the Fahrani retreat, the advancing spearheads in the north and south threatened to form a Fahrani pocket in Hatheria. While in some places the retreat remained well organized under the supervison of the veteran Fahrani commanders and their now well seasoned subordinates, in other regions desperation set in with the Charneans closing in at great speed and the retreat threatened to become a disaster. The Fahrani Air Force proved instrumental in averting such a disaster through airlift, albeit at the high price of a particularly costly day for the air fleet at the hands of Charnean SAM batteries. During this time, the extensively stockpiled munitions, mobilized regiments and imported war machines were expended at a rapid pace by the Charnean side in exchange for gains in recaptured territory. For its part, the Fahrani Army was faced a great loss of equipment either destroyed or left behind. Fahrani casualties were moderate relative to the standard set by the bloody atritional warfare of the previous months, while losses due to surrender had skyrocketted. While most large formations had escaped the fate of being pinned down and cut off by the Charneans, many sub-units faced such conditions and were left to face the Charnean rear units tasked with liquidating the pockets.

For the Hatherian national forces, the situation was far worse. A handful of high ranking military leaders of their organization alongside most of the members of their civilian government went into exile in Fahran with the recapture of Hatheria by the Charnean Army and the defeat of the rebel's conventional military units. As it was well known that Hatherian POWs would recieve far worse treatment than their Fahrani counterparts, far fewer rebel fighters surrendered and most chose to continue resistance even as the immediate military situation became hopeless. As the ICA reached the towns that had been strongholds of insurgency before the onset of the war, resistance was stiff with everyday townsfolk mobilizing to defend what they saw as their newly independent homeland from being subsumed into the Charnean Empire once again. However, the ICA that returned to Hatheria was a far cry from that which had conducted the counterinsurgency operations of the Akzay war only a few short years prior. Towns which had changed hands dozens of times in the years of the Akzay War were in the course of hours entirely destroyed by the indiscriminate shelling of Charnean forces. Some locales were destroyed not by artillery but by the direct fire of the combat formations as they passed through the area. Amid the embittered fighting of the retreat, a number of Gharib reprisals against the non-Gharib Hatherians were carried out, usually by Fahrani rather than Hatherian Gharib forces. The most striking of these was the massacre at Imlil, a Charnean-Deshrian village the inhgabitants of which were massacred before their belongings were looted and the village burned to the ground. The Charnean reaction to this would be visited not on the Fahrani forces which were guilty of the action at Imlil, but rather their Hatherian allies. In the end, Janurary and February of 1986 would prove to be the bloodiest period of the war, and by far the most deadly to what civilian population was left in the region. The advancing Charnean military frequently turned away refugees, forcing them to flee the warzone in the direction of Fahran, officially to disrupt and jam up the roads the Fahrani forces were using for their retreat. The end of the fighting in Hatheria would see the eastern Charnean region almost totally devoid of any native population, with its capital and cultural heart in ruins and its countryside largely razed to the ground. With the recapture of Hatheria by the ICA and the liquidation of the remaining Hatherian separatist forces which followed, the Akzay War had come to an end even as the larger Ninvite War it had spawned continued to rage.

Invasion of Happara

Breakthrough in the Hasidmawt

Struggle in Western Fahran

1987

Ihemod Line

Stalemate

Ceasefire

Aftermath

Operation Wrap-up

Casualties

Economic situation

End of the Rahmani Regime

Foreign involvement

Alanahr

The Kingdom of Alanahr had expressed great concern and dissatisfaction with the escalation of the conflict since the outbreak out of the Akzay War and the Charnean accusations of Fahrani involvement in 1982 and '83. The Alanahri state was involved in the attempted brokering of a peace agreement to end the Akzay War and the tensions between the belligerent powers from that point until the outbreak of the Ninvite War in 1985. Alanahr followed a policy of neutrality in the war, supporting neither party during the war in Hatheria. However, the Alanahri government would be provoked to change this policy and begin offering material aid to Fahran in retaliation to the Charnean violation of Happaran neutrality in mid 1986. The aid remained minor, however, and largely aimed as diplomatic leverage against Charnea which would eventually affect the relinquishing of Happaran territory and renegotiation of Happara's neutrality. At the insistence of Alanahri diplomats, Charnea would be included as guarantor of Happara, an agreement in which Charnea barred itself from moving any forces into Happaran territory. Alanahr would also be involved in the peace talks which would eventually culminate in ceasefire and the final armistice of the Treaty of Kahrash.

Itayana

Sparse available records indicate that the interest in the region appeared in several governorates within several months of 1983 and it has been confirmed that observers from the 6th, 7th, 19th, 32rd and 35th Governorates were present during the initial stages of war. These separate missions observed doctrinal and technical developments of the recent era, seeking to apply them during what was believed to be the inevitable conflict for reunification of Itayana and possibly further.

The situation changed after ICA defeats in Hatheria. A special expeditionary unit was formed from the forces of mutiple governorates of the right bank of Karana, commanded by Lord Abiodun II Sarimjatau of the 6th Governorate. Deployed in early 1986, it saw action in several Charnean offensive operations, ending the war defending the Ihemod Line. Perceiving the war as a training ground, governors made sure to rotate officers and enlisted to the frontlines and back; combined with often serious casualties, by the end of the war two to three times more men served in the unit than its original size was.

The role the war played in the political processes of modern Itayana appears to be crucial, yet is overall poorly assessed. High casualties included many dissenters from the officer corps of the governors, mostly hailing from the land-owning class. That allowed firmer and faster consolidation of power for the Solar Temple of Yanbango in the West Itayana and Yan'omi Alignment in the East Itayana. However, the unit also served as a starting ground for the majority of the contemporary military staff across Itayana. While the impact of military networking on Itayana regional politics is poorly understood, it may have contributed in ensuring stability after the Central Itayana War, preserving the otherwise questionable status of the governorates of Upper Karana.

Mutul

The Divine Kingdom exact role in the conflict remain an unclear and debated topic. Official documents concerning the Ninvite war are still classified and kept away by the Central Library with only a minority of historians being allowed to go through a selected panel of files.

Charnea had already been an important client for the Mutulese industry. Before the war, the Mutulese aircraft manufacturer Ik' Chuk' won an important state contract with the Desert Republic, refurbishing its air forces with its K'ak'mul 5 jet fighters, deploying engineers and military trainers alongside the aircrafts. Many of these personel would still be present in the country at the start of the hostility.

Before any known involvement from the Divine Throne, "Mutuleses" volunteers made their apparition in Charnea in 1985. These were Charnean-born Tenerians serving in the Divine Army of the Ninety-Nine Nations who despite their rigorous religious and political training had deserted to return defend their country. To this day, the surviving deserters are officially forbidden from setting foot in the Mutul under threat of capital punishment for high treason if ever arrested, a condemnation unaffected by the various mass or specific pardons granted by the K'uhul Ajaw in the past three decades.

In 1986, the K'uhul Ajaw bought Charnean War bonds for an estimated total of 50 billion Latin solidus. The monetary influx was used notably to buy more K'ak'mul 5 to replenish the air force dwindling number of aircrafts. An operation made easier by the fact the war bonds had already been paid in B'ul, the Mutul' legal currency. Later in the same year, Mutuleses great houses such as the Ilok'tab, the Chel, or the Xiu, agreed to a new joint credit operation to Charnea, injecting another 10 billion in the desert country, while the K'uhul Ajaw validated the demand by Charnea' government to the Mutul' central bank for another 20 billion solidus while the Divine Lord continued to buy various Charnean obligations and bonds and encouraged other Mutuleses investors to do so as well. By 1987, the Mutulese financial support had been massive, reaching a total 100 billion solidus. A large portion of the money will serve to buy aircrafts, vehicles, missiles, guns, and other weapons from the Mutul directly or from other sources such as the then still unstable Elatia.

The reasons behind the Divine Throne late but valuable direct help to Charnea remain unclear. The Desert Country had become during the 20th century a valuable client especially when it came to military affairs. Economically, it is questionable if such a middle-tier economic partner, especially one with a negligible ammount of long-term investments in it, was worth such a risky, sudden, 100 billion loan. Not all of that money was lost to the Mutul as a country: part of it served as a "stimulus check" to the militaro-industrial complex as the Charnean used their B'ulob to buy military equipments and supplies. But a large part of the money went to pay for the training and sustainment of the army, the maintenance of their equipments, the reconstruction of destroyed roads and rails, the stockpiling of rations and other supplies, etc... money virtually lost for the Mutul in the short term.

Some historians and geopoliticians have theorized that the cultural ties between the two countries, symbolised by the Tazzarat, have played their role in convincing the Divine Throne to so massively help Charnea. Especially when the Mutul had just gone through the collapse of one of its partner (Elatia) and might have been scared into action seeing another partner in danger which would have left the Mutul closer and closer to isolation. This vision of the Ninvite War as part of a larger Culture war between the theoretical White Path world and the Western Monarchies has also been criticized as not matching previous patterns of behavior from the Mutul. The argument of the Divine Throne being concerned about a potential isolation doesn't really add up either when its economy had already picked up after the 50s crisis through partnership with Tsurushima and Sante Reze, tying the Mutul deeply to their respective economic spheres.

A later interpretation of the events was that the Mutul simply seized an opportunity it did not foresee and gambled upon it. When seen from the 2020s, this seems a natural conclusion: following the war, ties between Charnea and the Mutul were deeper than ever with economic, cultural, and even political and military cooperation reaching unprecedented levels. However, this a-posteriori reading seemingly forget that, in the aftermath of the Ninvite War, relations between the two countries became tense, glacial even. The burden of the war debt weighted on all of Charnea and the Divine Throne only agreed to debt reductions if the Charneans were capable of offering something equally valuable in return. It is only after the Seven Day Coup of 2013 that relations between the Mutul and Charnea normalized once more.

Yisrael

The Kingdom of Yisrael and Fahran had deep ties going back centuries, especially among the mercantile Fahrani Jewish families who engaged in long-range trade with their Yisraeli cousins across North Scipia and the Ninva Desert. In the aftermath of the fall of the Autocracy regime in Yisrael, certain senior Azoulayist supporters fled to Fahran, where the late dictator had distant relatives influential in local politics. After some tensions, the two governments began to strengthen ties during the Yarden peace process in the late 1960s. Meanwhile, Yisraeli feelings soured on the Charneans, who they viewed as local puppets of the the Mutulese due to the anti-Mutul panic in the 1950s and irritating neighbors who permitted a wild west-style atmosphere at the the northwestern fringe of the Great Ninva desert. Furthermore, inside Charnea, the Ashkans, a group comprising the descendants of vanquished Temple-era heretics, claimed Jewish descent and legitimacy, irking the religious authorities in Yisrael. As new and fast modes of travel and technology quickened the worldwide exchange and movement of people and ideas over the course of the 1950s-1970s, such perspectives were being brought to the attention of Yisraeli audiences.

As the era of liberal ascendancy was receding inside Yisrael, the view of Fahran was on the rise and Charnea on the decline. The three-term Conservative presidencies of the Schwartz-Citron era reset Yisraeli foreign policy, pushing a more expansive, post-Yarden view that emphasized buttressing supportive monarchies. The Akzay War broke out during the last two years of President Binyamin Schwartz, and he denounced the Charnean actions as "brutal" and "aggressive," and further defended Fahran's defense of its neutrality with the independence move. Clandestinely, he organized black budget arms sales to Fahran with Knesset's consent in 1983 and 1984.

His successor, Michoel Citron, continued quiet support of the Fahranis, and forcefully condemned the early 1985 Charnean offensive and declaration of war. Once war was official, Yisrael openly sold and/or supplied small and heavy arms to the Fahranis for their war effort, as well as provided an economic aid package in 1986 through Knesset appropriations. At the request of the Fahranis, a volunteer unit at the regiment-level was formed from Yisraeli military veterans that saw action along the Ihemod Line in 1986-1987.