User:Valdiu/Sandbox:Minoberdia

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Minoberd conflict
DateTBD - present
Location
Minoberd, southern Vailleux
Status Ongoing
Belligerents
 Vailleux TBD Minoberd insurgent groups
Commanders and leaders
Lucien Provost 1805-1845 tbd
Strength
TBD TBD
Casualties and losses
20,000-50,000 civilians killed over life of conflict

The Minoberd conflict has been ongoing between the government of Vailleux and the Minoberd Freedom Coalition, a loose grouping of militant ad political groups who from the semi-autonomous Minoberd region who separatism from the Vaillais government for more than two centuries, and is generally considered the world's oldest actively-litigated conflict. The term Minoberd conflict is somewhat misleading, as it does not refer to a single period of hostilities, but rather dozens of skirmishes and campaigns taking place over a period of two centuries, involving numerous different combatants, varying levels of violence and stemming from different immediate causes. However, since virtually all of these phases have remained closely linked to the cause of Minoberd sovereignty, the term remains widely used in scholarship.

The Minoberd region is mainly inhabited by the Minoberd peoples, who are ethnically and linguistically distinct from the Vaillais people, and while Vaillais sovereignty and control over the region has persisted throughout the life of the conflict at various levels, the region overall continues to reject Vaillais authority to this day. The conflict is generally considered to have begun in 18XX, when the Minoberd region was invaded by forces led by Lucien Provost, kicking off the Vallais Campaigns; active fighting between Vaillais forces and Meralan-backed local warlords continued for several decades.


During the First Great War, Vailleux again sent large quantities of troops into the region, hoping to capitalize on ongoing political instability worldwide to cement claims over the region, a tactic that backfired when a broad coalition consisting of foreign troops and local partisans drove Vaillais troops, who were by and large unequipped for alpine combat, from the region. The Second Great War saw Minoberd again become an active theater, when Vailleux again invaded and was once again rebuffed by war's end.



Given the conflict's length, the central combatants have changed repeatedly over time; in this regard, the Vaillais government has been the only constant participant, and even then,