An eerie peace settled over the Eastern Hemisphere in August 1919; it was a draw. After three years of brutal warfare, Turkey and Italy ceased to exist as great powers and were nearly destroyed even as nations; the Ottoman Empire died and was buried, only partially replaced by Kemal Mustafa's German puppet state, while Italy was turned into a loose, weak federation of princely states and for all purposes ceased to exercise any influence whatsoever on world affairs. France, led by Premier Georges Clemenceau, had claimed victory; although it actually had failed to beat the Germans in field or restore Lorraine-Alsace, its army remained undefeated and scored several victories late in the war, the Germans had failed to advance beyond the Meuse, and France's interests in China and the Levant were defended; but even as a patriotic upsurge set in after the war, so did paranoia - Germany remained strong as well, and during the war had, in popular perception, brought "all of Europe east of the Vosges to its knees"; and Kaiser Wilhelm II made no pretense of becoming a man of peace. Britain, though also claiming victory, with the defeat of Russian intervention in Persia and great colonial gains, and the defeat of the dreaded Hochseeflotte, too remained wary of future German motives, as the Germans immediately started rebuilding their battered fleet and aggressively pursuing the solution of various colonial border disputes. Also, British colonial authority was shaken by revolts; and the Dominions, particularily South Africa and Australia (angry at the denial of their respective gains at German expense), were increasingly alienated from the Metropolis. German commerce raiders have also dealt a heavy blow to British commerce - or, rather, the blow itself wasn't all that bad, but it had allowed USA, Germany and even Japan to seriously challenge Britain in several markets, especially in China and the Americas, even where the British used to hold near-monopoly a few decades ago; Britain, in other words, was being caught up with by competition. Germany came out of the war in an uncertain situation; it was generally considered a draw, but a beneficient one; French revanchism was thwarted, the backstabbing Italians were punished, and the German colonial empire expanded - if not quite as wildly as was hoped. Also, the presence of German troops ensured the obedience of Norway, Denmark, Italy, Poland, Albania, Greece, Turkey, Qing China - and even Russia, as the German bayonet became the main pillar of Nicholas II's resumed rule. The war helped bind the German population closer together, particularily bridging many differences between the north and the south in the aftermath of the Lanrezac Breakthrough. Also, despite the waritme damage to German economy, in the early 1920s it had rebounded and prospered even more than before with the creation of the Zollverein Mitteleuropa and the German commercial infiltration and succesful investment in Argentina and Qing China, not to mention Russia. Austria-Slavania, though seemingly victorious and expanded, still suffered from great dissent, economic damage and ethnic strife; and the independence-minded KuK Franz Ferdinand had to increasingly rely on German assistance as well. Russia, shaken by the Revolution and lesser rebellions, and increasingly turned into a German political puppet and economic colony, had the barren consolation of having, in name at least, retained its Asian Empire won earlier in the century; but as much of that empire was controlled by various warlords and separatists, Russia had now officially become the new Sick Man of Europe. Also, ofcourse, bitterness grew at German influence, at the denial of Tsargrad and the stripping away of Poland and Finland, and at Nicholas II the Bloody who was increasingly seen as a coward, a backboneless puppet of the dark lord known only as Uncle Willy, a man who, instead of coming to terms with his people, used "basurmans" to retain his power. In the Middle East, Iran was reforming and modernizing, and playing Russia, Britain and Germany against each other and to its benefit. Both Chinas were rebuilding, recovering, modernizing and preparing for a revenge - one day, maybe not soon, but still, one day... Siam sulked in a dark corner. Japan went through a time of economical prosperity and political indecisiveness. Far away across the Pacific Ocean, the American Giant slept - or, rather, napped.
The period of 1919-1922, domestically a one of reconstruction and diplomatically a one of normalization, was thus quite boring in those spheres and thus more (in)famous for the Recolonization Wars. Under this name, over a dozen of different conflicts were groupped together, which had few things in common except for the fact that they all involved forceful strenghthening of European (and in two (separate) cases, American and Japanese) positions in the world. One of such wars even took place in 1926, when Amanollah pushed his luck too far and the British finally annexed Afghanistan, entering a long, brutal conflict. The rest, however, occured (or at least started) during the aforementioned four years. They included the Anglo-German invasion of former Italian East Africa, where rogue Italian garrissons and rebels of varying religions and tribes had to be fought; the German wars with rebel tribes in the colonies lost during the war, but now restored (and conveniently abandoned to chaos by Entente troops, that also occassionally "forgot" lots of firearms and ammunition where the rebels could easily get them); Baron Ungern-Sternberg's Central Asian expedition and the ensuing massacres at Samarkand and Bukhara; the slightly later, full-scale Russo-German operations against separatist rebels in Inner and Outer Mongolias, in Sinkiang (now known as Uighuria) and in Central Asia, where Turanism had fallen, but warlords struggled on; the French struggle with a new rebellion in West Africa; inconclusive British struggles with the Saudis; anti-British rebellions in India; occupation of Siam's outer regions as per Potsdam; struggles with Chinese and Korean rebels in newly-annexed territories; re-ignited Philippine rebellion due to growth of "Asianism"... All these conflicts were parts of the same trend as Potsdam - a new surge of imperialism, which continued into the decade, even as the first ominous events begun to occur.
After 1922, as Germany's colonial empire quieted down, the economy fully recovered and now flourished and the Hochseeflotte was rebuilt, Kaiser Wilhem II has decided to concentrate on strenghthening the Dreikaiserbund. Already in 1919, Germany had created the Zollverein Mitteleuropa, a customs union and economic agreement that included Germany, Norway, Denmark, Austria-Slavania, Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Greece, Finland and Poland; Russia, Turkey and Qing China were not accepted, but Germany signed separate trade agreements with them, as economic colonization continued; also, just as the Berlin-Baghdad Railroad became the cornerstone of German might in the Middle East, so had the work begun on a Berlin-Beijing railroad (combining, ofcourse, existant German, Russian and Chinese railroads) to become the cornerstone on the Far East; as the railroad was also to belong exclusively to Germany (yet another act that resulted in great disturbances in Russia), it also would become key to German control over Russia. In 1923, the Dreikaiserbund was dissolved and replaced by die Grossbund, which then was officially joined by Germany, Denmark, Norway, Austria-Slavania, Bulgaria, Poland, Russia and Qing China. It was the time of renewed (though much weaker, in former case at least) socialist insurgencies in Russia and Italy; German troops took part in pacification of both, and in return had the Italian Federation join the Grossbund as well. In the meantime, to assure German control over Russia to an even greater extent, the Tsar was persuaded to create two autonomous regions, one for the Baltic Germans in Livonia and another for the Volga Germans in the central Volga area, and to appoint Ostzean ministers and advisors; this outraged even the monarchist Stolypin, but he was soon sent away to the mostly obscure post of the governor of the Primorskaya oblast, his less famous supporters being less fortunate as well. Meanwhile, after an attempt to leave the German alliance, Denmark was invaded and overran, and its government was overthrown; Iceland and Greenland were handed over to Norway - by now firmly pro-German - and Denmark itself, after some plnas to annex it into either Germany or Norway, was left as a puppet state. This was protested by Sweden, but rather quietly - the Swedes knew that they were surrounded by German allies, and themselves were trading extensively with Germany, eventually joining the Zollverein Mitteleuropa as well. Meanwhile, the Jager Coup took place in Finland; the firmly pro-German and monarchist Jagers, with clear German help, overthrew the Anglophilic liberal parliament and Finland became an absolute monarchy, also joining the Grossbund. A later intervention in Austria-Slavania (during the socialist, Hungarian and Polish rebellions of 1924) greatly boosted German power there. Lastly, in 1925, when Romania tried to join the Entente, it was invaded, its government overthrown, Ploeisti and surroundings handed over to Austria-Slavania, and Dobrudjia - to Bulgaria. King Ferdinand was overthrown, Carol II came to power but was forced to allow German advisors and the ambassador to make sure that he chooses only the right people for the job of ruling Romania - such a nice kingdom, it would be a shame if something were to happen to it, wouldn't it, your majesty?..
While the German alliance system centralized and expanded, the Entente gradually begun to fall apart again. Though the Great Eurasian War was generally considered a draw, or even a victory, it clearly wasn't a decisive one, and all three allies searched for scapegoats; the British blamed the French for bungling the land war, the French - the British for failing to commit any troops to France in the time of its greatest peril, both blamed the Japanese for not taking a more active part in the war, the Japanese blamed Britain and France for not backing China well enough, the British and the French colonial interests begun to clash again, while in Japan, to appease the ever rising popular movement of "Asianism" (which called for expulsion of European imperialists from the Far East), and also out of genuine anxiety, the politicians took an ever more imperialistic line and complained about the European "diplomatic atrocities" against China and Siam. In 1922-1925 the situation begun to improve again due to fear of the German militarization, but soon after, several events happened that broke up the Anglo-French Entente for good, while Japan, disgusted with both and concerned by ever more fierce competition between Japanese and British companies in China, had decided to go alone, but soon renewed its alliance with the Republic of China.
It begun in September 10th 1925. After two failed expeditions to Libya to try and claim that chaotic territory for Austria-Slavania, Vienna grew disillusioned with it, despite Sarajevo's colonial ambitions, and decided to sell it to Germany. Eventually, the Slavanian Sabor accepted this, but not quite unanimously; one of the remaining opposers (not as much out of colonialism as out of Germanophobia), SDPoS (Social-Democratic Party of Slavania) member Josip Broz, had leaked the information on this deal to several French newspapers. A scandal ensued, and Georges Clemenceau - recently returned to the post of Premier despite his age - demanded that Libya be sold to France instead; France will NOT tolerate any increase in German military presence in the Mediterranean, the Dardanelles were bad enough but a German Libya would be justly regarded as a stagging ground for a German invasion of the African departements. Clemenceau's sentiments were echoed by the greater part of the French population. The Germans adamantly refused to concede Libya, Austro-Slavanians refused to sell it to anyone else, but then suddenly a compromise was proposed by Sir Austen Chamberlain, Prime Minister of Great Britain; the British were willing to buy Libya, seeking to prop up their somewhat faltering empire. The Germans were at first unwilling, but after Austen Chamberlain personally met with the Kaiser and Kanzler von Tirpitz in Hamburg, an agreement was reached. The French, back then still thinking "better the British than the Germans", had welcomed the compromise and the British moved in from Egypt and the Malta to take control of Libya. Unbeknowst to them, Libya was a secondary - nay, tertiary! - issue only during the Hamburg meeting. Far more important were the long-term, secret Anglo-German agreements. Germany reluctantly agreed not to grow its navy beyond 62.5% of the British one after long debates, and in exchange was allowed free rein in Argentinean and northern Chinese markets, though leaving south China to the British (and those other people). Agreements were reached on colonial border disputes. And also, certain past agreements about Portugal were renewed... As of 1925, the Portuguese Republic, after a violent two-year civil war, was beginning to settle down, but in 1926 - not without British involvement, one assumes - a new economical crisis begun, combined with a political one. The Portuguese colonies were negliged for several years now, and fell into disrepair and quiet chaos, revering into tribalism. After one of the tribesmen killed an odd British traveller in Mozambique, the British declared their intention to intervenne in the Portuguese colonies. Surprisingly enough, the Portuguese government, seeking to reinforce its weak domestic positions, demanded that the British immediately withdraw that declaration; but then the British were backed by the Germans... Yet the Portuguese government defiantly pressed on, possibly feeling that it had nothing to lose (true enough by then), and declared war. British and German fleets shelled Lisbon, Lettow-Vorbeck raised the Reichskriegflagge over Mocambique, ANZACs stormed Dili, the Portuguese government surrendered, handed over the colonies and fled to Switzerland, leaving Portugal in anarchy amidst various rebellions. As chaos spread into Spain with the defeats at separatist hands in both Catalonia and Morocco and the assassination of military dictator General Primo de Rivera, France compensated itself by picking up the Spanish colonies in Africa and the Atlantic, but it couldn't have been more anxious as the partition of Portuguese colonies - all of them - was announced, proving that the British and the Germans had planned this long ago (they did plan this from 1898, though exact partition plans had changed since then). Britain took the Azores, Madeira, Cabo Verde, Portuguese Guinea, Mozambique south of Zambezi and west of British Central Africa (Nyasaland) (note that Mozambique south of Limpopo went to the Union of South Africa), Diu, Damao, Goa and Macao; the German gains sounded more modest, but they did get the entirety of Angola and the northern near-half of Mozambique, considerably enlarging their colonial empire. And certainly, they had further plans... For a while, the French were on the brink of mobilization, but eventually backed down, especially after Britain had reconfirmed the Entente. But from that day on, it was fiction. Fearful that Britain and Germany were going to partition the French colonial empire sooner or later as well, the French begun a new naval buildup and sent out diplomats and spies to look for allies in Eastern Europe. Though sympathy was found in Sweden and some support rallied in Russia and Austria-Slavania, including the aforementioned Josip Broz, this was clearly not enough...
All the events of that time curiously intertwined. The very same Anglo-German cooperation that ended the Entente also resulted in the bloody, violent culmination of political, social and economic strife in Portugal and Spain. Warlords, separatists and anarchists fought all over Iberia; occasionally, some generals managed to unify parts of Spain or Portugal, or both, under their rule, but also immediately they were overthrown. In the end, tired of the fighting, the militarized trade unions rallied under the newborn Partido Comunista de Ibera. Led by such charismatic, popular leaders as Isidora Gomez/Dolores Ibarruri, Garcia Oliver, Francisco Largo Caballero, Fernando Salgado Lenha, the Italian emigre Benito Mussolini and the Russian emigre Leon Bronstein, the Comunistas quickly secured Portugal, Andalusia and Catalonia; though at first decentralized like their enemies, they still had greater coordination and mass support, and so by the end of 1927 the takeover was complete and the Comuna de Ibera, or the Iberian Commune as it was known world-wide, was declared - an union of the three great countries and peoples of the Iberian peninsula, Portugal, Spain and - this claim became a cause of a serious international crisis and nearly resulted in a French invasion - Andorra. Almost immediately, plans were made for intervention, but the Germans didn't want the French to invade Spain fearing that they would use their strategic position to establish their control there, the French feared that the Germans, in case of their intervention in Spain, would set up another puppet state there and leave France completely surrounded and the British didn't want either French or German troops within 500 miles of Gibraltar, and themselves were restrained by worker strikes and Labour. Thus the Iberians didn't need to play the imperialists off against each other - they played themselves, while the Iberians set up a government, defeated counter-revolutionaries, gave land to the peasants, factories to the workers and power to the... well, they had a little civil war and some intrigue before that, but in the end power came to the Partido. After Francisco Largo Caballero was shot after the first meeting of the Third International, Dolores Ibarruri came to power; she centralized Iberia, defeated another reactionary uprising and then begun exporting the revolution. In the time period of 1928-1930, volunteer brigades, and grizzled veterans of the barricades that formed the elite "comandos revolutionarios", were smuggled into Latin America by various means, and there joined the native revolutionary parties that - with the exception of Peru's APRA and some minor ones - joined the Third International and received support not only in those troops, but also in weapons, ammunition and funds. Even though Iberia's own economy was still only beginning to recover and was immediately badly strained by this effort, initially this intervention resulted in a string of great victories. In Mexico, the American puppet government imposed by President Pershing after his 1925 intervention (which finally ended the First Mexican Revolution) was overthrown, workers, peasants and Amerinds rose up, the American base in Veracruz was overran, and the initial intervention bogged down somewhere near the Tropic of Cancer. Honduras became the Comunista stronghold in Central America after a quick armed takeover, and though it had only managed to advance into El Salvador and parts of Nicaragua, all of the region was shaken by the dissent and guerrila wars in the countryside, and an attack on the Panama Canal had nearly succeeded, although it was that very attack that finally outraged even the anti-interventionists in the American Senate enough to result in full-scale intervention. Rebellions in Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic were defeated by American troops, but there and in the colonies resistance continued. Dissent was quickly stiffled in Colombia, but in Venezuela the seemingly-impregnable fortress of Juan Vicente Gomez' reign was taken, after a succesful assassination resulted in power struggles that allowed a revolutionary government to take over in Caracas, although most of the country was simply filled with chaos like pre-revolutionary Iberia or Mexico during the previous revolution. Ecuador, struck by severe social strife and political turmoil, was easily captured by local Comunistas, albeit they didn't maintain much contact with the Iberians. Peru fell into a three-side civil war between government forces, Comunistas and Victor Raul Haya de la Torre's national-socialist Apristas. In Chile, Carlos Ibaces del Campo held out just long enough to be saved by the intervention, and Bolivia, back then at its most prosperous and stable, remained virtually unshaken; but in Argentina, the unstable balance of the Radical coalition broke down, and a German-backed military conservative government came to power in Cordoba, while the Radicals themselves were overthrown by the Comunistas in Buenos Aires; civil war ensued, with the Comunistas barely prevented from spreading out of the province of Buenos Aires. The Liberals remained firmly in power in Paraguay, but Argentina's chaos spread into Uruguay; the Buenos Aires Comuna had opportunistically attacked and seized Montevideo and occupied the south, the militarists occupied western Uruguay and the east was occupied by Brazil. In Brazil, a near-revolution backfired, and allowed Getulio Vargas to seize power. Despite that last and other failures, it is clear that the Iberians achieved remarkable early success, especially in the north.
But, ofcourse, the Carribean was a Comunista playground, and already in 1928 their intervention was noticed by the alarmed great powers. And in 1929, the confused, ill-coordinated interventions begun (well, the Americans had invaded back in 1928, but that invasion was slowed to turtle speed by guerrilas and logistical incompetence). To the north, the Napping Giant awakened in fury after the Panama Canal Raid, rallied by "the Navy's man in the White House", Franklin Delano Roosevelt (ironically enough a fifth cousin of Theodore Roosevelt), and, even more alarmed by the German activities (see below), struck in full force against the Mexican revolutionaries; though the various underhanded tactics and modern weapons used by the revolutionaries, combined with the poor American training and military experience against a comparatively well-organized force such as the Mexican Revolutionary Guard and the Iberian comandos have caused much grief and casualties, especially as the Americans advanced further inland, the Americans always had superior resources and forces available to them, and managed to ally wtih the northern Mexican warlords to once more breath life into their overland offensive. Though half of Mexico (including Yucatan) was seized quickly by Americans and their allies, what remained, especially the fervently-Comunista Ciudad de Mexico and its surroundings, proved to be more difficult to defeat. But it was only a matter of time, and in 1930 both Acapulco and Mexico were captured and the revolution collapsed, but for some remaining Iberian-incited resistance. Meanwhile, rebels in Cuba were completely crushed. Invasions of Central America were executted with surprising efficiency as Americans gained valuable experience; the revolutionaries were defeated quite quickly, and then the local governments were suspended and, much like Haiti and the Dominican Republic, Central America was put under occupation. The most important developments occured in Venezuela, which was invaded by Colombia (which however withdrew upon American demand), oppressed by warlordism and, in Caracas, plagued by the persistant Comunist efforts at rapid social reform and the reunification of the country. To make things more confusing, in 1929, while the Americans were fighting in Mexico, an Anglo-German intervention took place and took the credit by shelling and capturing Caracas, and advancing further inland, outraging American public opinion far beyond expectance. FDR threatened the Europeans with war unless they withdraw immediately; the British, themselves burdened by an anti-intervention public opinion, complied, but the Germans ignored this and secured the imposition of a puppet government in Caracas. Only after several naval skirmishes, the Kaiser, apparently intent on war with America, was forced by the Sozialdemokrats, who seized the Reichstag in the most inopportunate moment, to back down as well; Americans overthrew the German puppet government and imposed an American one. The rest was easier, but for Peru and its civil war; having failed to determine which of the three anti-American factions fighting for power was worse, but succeeded in determining that the Senate wouldn't give him enough funds to properly intervenne there, Roosevelt decided to skip that and concentrate on restoring order in Chile. The Germans made the job easier for him by defeating the Comunistas in Argentina and Uruguay, although that wasn't very good, come to think of it, as this meant that the militaristic Germanophile government was in charge of Argentina, and occupying two-thirds of Uruguay, the other third being in Brazilian hands. America proposed intemediation, but at the same time signed a secret alliance with Argentina.
Meanwhile, back in Europe, the Kaiser was furious. Cowards! The cowardly British backing down, and the cowardly Sozialdemokrats forcing him to back down in America as well! But if only in America...