Parabocan War

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Parabocan War
File:Mexico nebel.jpg
Zamastanian troops parade in Cardoza, Paraboca, following their victory in the Parabocan War
DateJanuary 5th, 1871 - May 17th, 1876
LocationZamastan, Paraboca Chanchajilla (West Chanchajilla and East Chanchajilla), Quetana, Rio Palito
Result
Belligerents
  • Zamastan
  • Chanchajilla
  • Rio Palito
  • Quetana
  • Ruskayn
  • Parabocan Empire
  • Commanders and leaders

    Zamastan

    Chanchajilla

    Rio Palito

    Paraboca

    Strength
  • Zamastan - 2,882,000
  • Chanchajilla - 900,000
  • Rio Palito - 320,000
  • Quetana - 65,000
  • Paraboca - 3,597,000
  • Casualties and losses
  • Zamastan - 43,332 Military Killed, 130,000 Injured, 1,060 MIA
  • Chanchajilla - 14,838 Killed, 60,000 Injured, 278 MIA
  • Rio Palitos - 3,928 Killed, 12,000 Injured, 10 MIA
  • Paraboca - 172,939 Killed, 290,000 Injured, 7,000 MIA
  • The Great Cardoza War, or more commonly, the Parabocan War as it is known in Zamastan, Rio Palito, West Chanchajilla, East Chanchajilla, Ruskayn, and Quetana, was a military conflict which involved the Empire of Paraboca invading the southern border of Zamastan in 1871 in a continuation of their military conquests. The Empire had previously conquered large swaths of Chanchajilla, Rio Palito, and Quetana. The war was heavily shifted in the favor of the Parabocans until the addition of allies like the remaining armies of Commonwealth of Chanchajilla and Los Isles de Rio Palitos, alongside mercenaries from the islands of Ruskayn, created the conditions possible to drive the Parabocan forces out after four years of near stalemate land-warfare in 1875.

    The war tested Zamastan's small army by promoting the first draft of soldiers and the concern of being conquered by a foreign power. Hundreds of thousands of soldiers were killed during the war, and the death toll for civilians in Zamastan and Rio Palito was also staggering, as the Parabocan soldiers were notoriously violent. When the war ended, Paraboca went into political upheaval and turmoil, leading to the collapse of the nation in 1879, three years after the war ended. Paraboca would remain in a state of civil disarray and conflict until 1910, when they federalized their government and reorganized, including establishing diplomatic relations with their neighboring countries.

    The victory and territorial expansion following the war President of Zamastan William Castovia envisioned inspired great patriotism in Zamastan, but the war and treaty drew some criticism in Zamastan for their casualties, monetary cost, and heavy-handedness, particularly in the later stages of the war when the Parabocan armies had began their retreat.

    Background

    Throughout the late 1700's and early 1800's, the military dictatorships of Paraboca thrived to conquer territory to reach their imperial boundaries to the Olympic Ocean. In 1788, the captured Vilanja after a month-long siege, ultimately annexing much of the eastern regions of Chanchajilla into their empire. Thirty years later in 1819 in another bout for resource-fueled expansion, a more aggresive push westward brought the Parabocan armies to Ivora. With the northern stretch of the Chanchajillan provinces held, and much of the southern Lake Greening shoreline under their control. Throughout the next twenty years, Parabocan armies began to seize area around the lake and eventually into indigenous Zamastanian lands in current day Redeemer’s Land, where the fledgling tribes were either conquered or retreated north towards the newly established nation of Zamastan. President Tomias Hapson established projects to house and protect fleeing indigenous refugees, one of the first refugee-crisis management projects in history.

    In 1832, Paraboca invaded Rio Palito, seizing their southern shoreline and effectively capturing their access to the Olympic Ocean. In 1840, they moved northward and captured territory that bordered Zamastan's newly established frontier. President Hapson met with Parabocan leader Osi Jo Oberk when the latter traveled to Tofino, and aggressively talked him down from any more aggression northward, to which the Parabocans agreed. Instead of expanding north, the Parabocans moved southwest, capturing swaths of land up to just shy of the southern border with United New England's peninsula.

    In 1850, Zamastan defeated Shen in the Louise Mountains War. Avi Taures, concerned about his nation's ability to wage war, began amassing troops on the southern border. He declared truthfully, according to historians, that he would not fight Paraboca unless they attacked, and that the troops were simply there for defensive purposes after being faced with the Shen invasion three years prior. Taures died in 1868, handing the presidency over to William Castovia. Castovia was more confident than his predecessor, and pulled thousands of troops from the southern border in a show of good faith towards the Parabocans, who had not betrayed their agreement in nearly thirty years. Also in 1868, Manuelo Cardoza became President of Paraboca, and began secretly planning for an invasion of southern Zamastan. In 1870, Cardoza also pulled his troops away from the northern border so as to appear peaceful against their neighbor.

    The Parabocan Empire in 1870. The red is their territorial extent, the blue is Zamastan at the time, and the green is Paraboca's modern day borders

    War

    Aftermath