Occupation of Syara

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Common Axis Occupation of Syara

Republika Sijara
1938–1956
RepublicofSyara.png
Flag
OccupiedSyara.png
CapitalZovahr
GovernmentMilitary Occupation
History 
1938
• Withdrawal of Cacertian forces.
1956
Population
• 1940
94,000,000
• 1955
100,000,000
CurrencyDrachma

The Occupation of Syara was carried out by the powers of the Common Axis from 1938 to 1956. The occupation began following the end of the Siduri War with the signing of the Treaty of Debrecen, and continued until the final withdrawal of the last Common Axis forces in Syara. Syara was divided into four occupation zones with each zone managed by a member of the Common Axis. The occupation is generally divided into two phases; the initial disarmament phase from 1938-1939, and the oversight phase lasting from 1940-1956.

Background

Following the resignation and suicide of President Sasko Anastasov, the Republic of Syara sued for peace to bring an end to the Siduri War. Negotiations were held in recently liberated Debrecen between representatives of the Common Axis powers and Syara. The terms of the treaty required Syara to withdraw all its military forces to its pre-war borders, demobilize its armed forces and dismantle much of its military hardware. To ensure this was carried out, the Republic would be jointly occupied by the Common Axis powers. The Treaty of Debrecen was signed on 10 February 1938 and went into effect the next day.

Although the occupation of Syara was agreed to, no end state was officially identified. Ruvelka was incensed by the treaty, which failed to return the region of Zemplen back to the Principality, which had been seized by the Syarans during the Ruvelkan Civil War. The Cacertians leading the negotiations however had feared the igniting of ethnic tensions would prevent the complete cessation of hostilities and insisted that the pre-war borders be respected. Debrecen eventually yielded and Ruvelkan forces did not directly participate in the occupation, though Ruvelkan infrastructure and resources were utilized by the occupying powers at various points during the occupation.

Occupation Zones

Syara was divided into four occupation zones, each one falling under the responsibility of one of the Common Axis powers to maintain and administer. The Cacertian Empire took control of much of northern Syara within the Realm of Makedon, utilizing the Syaran naval base at Sena which became known as Joint Operations Center Sena for the Cacertian Royal Navy. The Cacertians were also responsible for Syaran Chryse. Northern and central Scitaria were occupied by Quenmin, with their headquarters in Slocova. Mansuriyyah was responsible for much of Galania and southern Scitaria, with a headquarters in Cuprasi. Tennai established its mission in Hayreniky and parts of southern Galania, with headquarters in Dateva.

Disarmament

Per the Treaty of Debrecen, the Armed Forces of the Syaran Republic were to stand down and be disarmed of most of their military equipment. The exact number or required amount to be disarmed was never fully established in negotiations, only that the Syara would be restricted to military equipment "necessary for national defense". At the end of the Siduri War, Syara had amassed 17,000,000 rifles, 7,400,000 handguns and revolvers, 3,500,000 machine guns, 1,500,000 mortars, 5,233 tanks (of which 3,299 were operational), 14,625 aircraft (of which 9,880 were operational), 12,650 artillery pieces of all types, 33,960 trucks, 279 warships of all types, 4,400,000 tons of ammunition, and approximately 1,000,000 tons of fuel.

What to do with Syara's military equipment and weaponry was the subject of debate within the Common Axis. While some hardware, like the Amycus and Rhaecus tanks and 25-mm anti tank guns had been rendered obsolete by the technological progress of the war, the large number of automatic weaponry, 75mm guns, artillery, and some aircraft were still considered useful. The outbreak of the Eracuran War the previous year had also created a large market for surplus military equipment, and the Common Axis had already been petitioned regarding the fate of Syaran military hardware. Ultimately 90% of Syaran ground forces equipment was either scrapped or repossessed by the Common Axis. This produced nearly 2,000,000 tons of scrap metal by the end of disarmament.

Syaran Navy

What to do with Navy of the Syaran Republic's remaining warships provoked considerable debate within the Common Axis. By the end of the war Syara still possessed one aircraft carrier, nine modern battleships, four battlecruisers, 37 modern cruisers, 70 submarines, 122 destroyers, and 41 sloops, patrol boats, and auxiliary cruisers. It was agreed that the fleet should be split up and distributed to the victorious powers, but it was uncertain how the fleet should be proportioned. The Cacertians, by virtue of having lost more ships than any other Common Axis member, could lay claim to the majority of tonnage, but the other powers requested that they also receive warships to augment and reinforce their own fleets. There was also concern that some of the Eracuran powers, in need of warships themselves, would request to purchase them, or possibly even seize them for their own use. It was eventually agreed that the Syaran fleet would be escorted to Cacerta and afterwards distributed among the Common Axis.

However on 15 March 1938 the Cacertian Center Fleet arrived in Moddra to learn that the Syarans had scuttled their own ships rather than let them fall into Common Axis hands. None of Syara's battleships, battlecruisers, or heavy cruisers remained afloat. The Syarans later scuttled their remaining aircraft carrier the same day, leaving the Common Axis to seize what was left. Several warships were later re-floated, but none returned to service and were eventually scrapped.

Syaran Air Force

Syara had produced approximately 75,000 aircraft for the Syaran Army Air Corps over the course of the war, but by the end of the conflict less than a fraction of these aircraft remained, and barely half were operational due to shortages of spare parts and fuel. While some designs, like the Ladon, Alectryon, and Oeneo were considered outdated, other aircraft were repossessed by the Common Axis. Syara was required to dismantle all of its bombers, namely the Delphyne Medium Bomber and Procne Heavy bomber, to prevent the Republic from repeating the bombing campaigns it had carried out against Tennai and Quenmin. In the end, Syara was reduced to 300 fighters across the SAAC.

Demobilization

At the end of the war the Army of the Syaran Republic numbered 7,500,000 men in uniform, organized in 242 divisions (213 infantry, 16 mechanized, and 13 tank divisions). An additional 5,250,000 men and women served in the Syran Army Auxiliary Corps, while the Syaran Army Air Corps numbered approximately 1,000,000 active and auxiliary personnel. During negotiations there was no set limit on the size of the Syaran armed forces established, principally because of the ongoing Eracuran War that was occurring just a few hundred kilometers away from Syaran shores. It was a frequent concern expressed among Common Axis leadership that a weakened Syara would either voluntarily or forcibly align with one of the sides of the Eracuran war, threatening to spill the conflict over to Siduri.

On 1 May 1938 the Common Axis Occupational Authority decreed the demobilization of 6,500,000 Syaran soldiers from the Syaran Army, and the dissolution of all mechanized and armored formations. Similar decrees reduced and eventually dissolved the Syaran Army Auxiliary Corps, which was effectively ended on 1 August 1938. Further demobilization occurred over the course of the summer, and by September the Syaran army had been reduced to 300,000 men organized into five divisions, one in each realm and one in Chryse. In order to assist the occupational forces in carrying out their duties, most of the Syaran army's engineering, medical, and signal regiments were maintained as independent formations. These were often attached to Common Axis forces in Syara; in Makedon, Cacertian mechanized forces around Zovahr communicated through the Syaran 109th Signal Regiment, and in Hayreniky the Tennaiite Mission fielded the 334th Field Engineering Regiment under its direct command.

Syara's five remaining divisions (simply named First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Fifth Division) were armed mostly with rifles and pistols. Machine guns and mortars were kept in armories monitored by Common Axis troops. Syara's divisions were motorized with trucks for transportation, but possessed no tanks or armored cars. One element of the Syaran army that was not only maintained but actually reinforced were Syara's anti-aircraft units, which were re-deployed to the coast to watch for Eracuran incursions and in some cases coordinate through Common Axis supplied RADAR systems.

Occupation Forces and duties

At the beginning of the occupation, Common Axis forces in country amounted to 3,250,000 troops. Following the completion of disarmament by November 1939 troop numbers began to gradually decline. By 1941 the numbers had been reduced to 1,000,000, and later 500,000 by 1943. The end of the Eracuran War in 1946 signaled to several members the end to the necessity of occupation; Quenmin withdrew its forces in 1945 and was followed shortly by Mansuriyyah. Both Cacerta and Tennai however desired to maintain a presence in Syara to fulfill their strategic purposes and remained in country until the 1950s.

Because strategic bombing of Syara had not begun in full until 1937, most of Syara's infrastructure was relatively intact. The demobilization of the army resulted in millions of Syaran troops returning to factories and farms across Syara, many of which were now required to produce goods to help rebuild the Common Axis countries. In particular Syara's agriculture base was required to produce food to ship out to regions devastated by the war; in the first four years after the war Syara shipped 55 million tons of wheat and grains to Ruvelka, Tennai, Mansuriyyah and Qunemin.

Relations and attitudes

For the Syarans the agony of defeat, coupled with the heavy losses sustained during the war, resulted in permanent damage to the national psyche that the Republic never fully recovered from. Of particular bitterness for the Syarans was the Cacertian occupation of Makedon, something the Republic had struggled mightily to prevent just 20 years earlier. The relations between the other occupying forces and the Syaran people were more varied. Traditional seats of Syaran nationalism in Makedon and Galania were marked by mutual suspicion and mistrust. In places like Scitaria and Hayreniky, where traditional Syaran Aristokrati were much less prominent, relations tended to be better.