Rakeoian Civil War

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Rakeoian Civil War
Date8 February 1950 – 20 November 1955
Location
Result Stratocratic victory
Belligerents
Stratocratic Authority
Militants for National Revival
Rakeoian Sovereignty Front
Second Republic of Rakeo
Provisional Defence Army
Commanders and leaders
Sutherland Sicily
Richard Cornell
Units involved

Formal Stratocratic Forces

  • First Stratocratic Army
  • Second Stratocratic Army
  • Third Stratocratic Army

Formal Republican Forces

  • First Provisional Army
  • Second Provisional Army
Strength
650,000 700,000
Casualties and losses
120,000 160,000
75,000–400,000 civilians

The Rakeoian Civil War (Rakeoian: Milito de Patriotas) was an internal armed conflict that occurred in Rakeo between 8 February 1950 and 20 November 1955. The military, aided by both ethnic nationalists and other far-right militants, fought to establish a military dictatorship euphemistically described as a Stratocratic Republic. In opposition, forces loyal to parliament sought to maintain semi-democratic control over the country. The civil war is considered by some to be a protracted or botched military coup against the Second Republic of Rakeo.

Background

The continent of Sur was in severe political turmoil caused by the emperor succession crisis in Creeperopolis that quickly devolved into a full blown civil war. Numerous armed groups formed either to fight for the major factions directly or to support political goals made possible by the weakening of the Creeperian state. The sudden availability of weapons and fighters trained abroad destabilized Rakeoian politics. Irredentism and anticolonist nationalism sentiments became widespread as well, particularly in the military.

Distrust of the military

Parliamentary distrust of the military began as early as 1892, as native members of parliament feared that changes seen as limiting the broad powers formerly held by the naval administration would see the nation put under martial rule once more. Over time, parliament worked to try and codify a separation between the military and civic governance, on occasion alienating commanders.

The Susla Affair in 1937 unnerved members of parliament, particularly as while the main plotters of the operation were placed under arrest and later executed, a large number of officers and troops were suspected to have knowledge of the attack but were either given short periods of house arrest, or were not punished at all.

Coup plot

A plot to quietly depose the existing government and install Sutherland Sicily as president and a military envoy as prime minister was concocted sometime in 1948. Spying into the private matters of Moreno Salinas and the president began ostensibly to prevent communist infiltration of their cabinet. Discovering the plot, Moreno Salinas met with several lower ranking military officers to learn if the coup had broader support amongst troops, and decided to wait for high command to reveal their plans first, in the belief that he had the upper hand politically. He gave his trusted advisor Benigno Sáenz Peña de facto control over managing the information feed back through the military's intelligence wing. Unable to agree on a precise course of action as the intelligence came back empty-handed, high command began to deliberate about a more direct coup. As the leadership neared a decision point, Moreno Salinas received a message confirming a full-scale military coup was now a "perceived inevitability”.

Combatants

Stratocratic front

Republicans

Republican leaders

Military campaigns

Weapons and technology

Use of poison gasses

Chemical weapons were allegedly used by both EPE and EDP en masse from the beginning of the war until 1952-53. Lachrymator agents (tear gasses) were extensively used in riot control within Olino in 1951, but they reportedly served as a combat weapon in fighting along the San Paúl river. Gaseous chlorine was dropped by aircraft alongside conventional bombs in raids against manufacturing centers in Eastern Rakeo. In the siege of Paragon, civilians attempting to remove unexploded shells reported severe nausea, headaches, and dead bodies that had red cheeks, consistent with the pathology of carbon monoxide poisoning.

Aftermath

Killings of diaspora members

In popular culture

See also

Notes