The German plan for the final destruction of the UK and France has gone slightly awry this year due to an epic series of struggles in northern France. General Charles de Gaulle, in command of the majority of the French armor and a significant force of backup infantry, designated the First Army, opened the French counterattack against the northern wing of the German army under von Mackensen. At the same time, a significant British Expeditionary Force under the command of aging Field Marshal Horace Smith-Dorrien landed at the Pas de Calais with support from the French and Royal Navies, completing the operation successfully before the
Kaiserliche Marine could intervene. Von Mackensen, under heavy fire from several directions, outnumbered, and with his rear areas a mess due to the confusing presence of large numbers of Belgian troops, was forced to withdraw from the Channel ports during the epic Lille Campaign, but successfully covered his rear and, using the Belgian troops more or less as cannon fodder, halted the Anglo-French drive just inside the Belgian border during June and July, turning Lille into a black hole, a hornets nest after the famed American tactic at Shiloh during their Civil War. Having successfully halted the main Entente sucker punch, Chief of the General Staff Hans von Seeckt spent much of the remaining summer months sorting out his supply situation and repelling disjointed and weak attacks by Joseph Joffres Second Army in Burgundy. Finally, in late August, the siege of Paris began in earnest; the coordinated Belgo-German attack on the Paris forts that guarded the entrances to the cities was surprisingly repulsed by vast numbers of French civilian conscripts along with the support of a select few Regulars, who had spent the time gained by the Lille campaign by strengthening the defenses of the city of Paris. Both sides suffered tremendous casualties in the battles outside Paris, especially the titanic fight for the suburb of Le Bourget. By mid September, von Seeckt could see that the French were not committing reserves to the Paris siege as had been expected; Joffre and Tassigny, the commanders of the French troops in the main body south near Orleans and in the northern Rhone Valley, refused to try to relieve the beleaguered city and expose themselves to German counterattack. Husbanding the German strength, von Seeckt merely launched probing attacks against the French main body south of Paris and continued to tighten his siege of the city itself, but the Germans inability to cut Paris off completely has allowed the defenders to keep fighting into the New Year. Practically the only decisive action of the year took place in the air, where the meager Royal Air Force attempted to cover the British landings at Calais during April and May; the
Luftwaffe, with overwhelming numerical superiority, crushed the RAF in the skies over Lille. German air superiority has allowed some attempts at using zeppelins to damage the industrial regions of France and the UK, but thus far damage has been negligible and has mostly resulted in an angry Entente home population rather than any real industrial slowdown. Close air support, on the other hand, has proven somewhat valuable to the Germans during the Siege of Paris.
(-4 British infantry divisions, -5 British marine infantry divisions, -3 British tank brigades, -1 British artillery brigade, -11 British fighter squadrons, -3 British zeppelin squadrons, -21 French infantry divisions, -14 French conscript infantry divisions, -6 French tank brigades, -4 French artillery brigades, -1 French fighter squadron, -1 French zeppelin squadron, -7 Belgian infantry divisions, -2 Belgian artillery brigades, -2 Belgian fighter squadrons, -17 German infantry divisions, -8 German tank brigades, -3 German artillery brigades, -5 German fighter squadrons, -2 German zeppelin squadrons)
While the epic Siege of Paris raged on the Continent, the naval war continued in the North Sea. Rebuilding the shattered Royal Navy after the devastating Battle of Heligoland Bight last year took on a priority for the British Government, who managed to complete several new ships this year but strangely enough sent them to the Mediterranean; the onus of defending the UK and attempting to maintain some kind of Continental blockade would have to shift to the French, as the Admiraltys aim of defeating the
Kaiserliche Marine and blockading German ports was clearly an impossibility with the numerical deficiency that the British currently had. Gabriel Auphan, head of the
Royale, was determined similarly not to allow a battle with the Germans in the North Sea, correctly believing the Entente to be at a distinctive disadvantage, and thusly outside of a few haphazardly placed minefields the Continental Blockade remained a pipe dream. With virtually a free hand in the North Sea, then, the Germans pursued a strategy of bombarding the British coastline to work on the civilian population and force them to come to terms with Germanys ultimate victory and also perhaps to lure out the Royal Navy and the
Royale. Aside from a few minor casualties to French submarines, the Germans didnt lose any ships but similarly failed to convince the British People to throw in the towel; a real invasion force is likely necessary for such an endeavor.
(-2 French submarines, -1 German cruiser, -2 German destroyers)
Portugal has dissolved into chaos; the military, under Jose Mendes Cabecadas, has attempted to remove the current republican government, armed with confidence and new weapons presumably acquired from the Allies. Cabecadas managed to topple the Republic after a brief skirmish outside Lisbon with a few loyalist troops in May, removing Afonso Costa and having him quietly executed. Cabecadas regime was naturally enough unacceptable to the Spanish government, and during October after a round of Portuguese nationalist bombing attacks on the Spanish Constitutional Convention, Carlos V ordered troops into Portugal to wipe out the militarist regime. A brief battle near Badajoz resulted in the near-complete destruction of the Portuguese army, after which Cabecadas was assassinated and what remained of the militarist regime disintegrated. What remained of the republican government, led now by Antonio Maria da Silva, tried to control the situation from exile in Madrid, but as of right now Portugal is a complete mess and a confusing quagmire for the Spanish troops what have been sent to intervene there.
(-Portuguese Republic as a coherent nation, -8 Spanish infantry divisions, -2 Spanish tank brigades)
Neapolitan armies have launched an offensive to clear Mussolini's fascists from Italian soil; with the support of what was left of the Confederation army and the acquiescence of the Pope (for now, at least), the Neapolitan troops under Marshal Rodolfo Graziani have managed to push Mussolini's disorganized
fascisti back from Tuscany and the Romagna, though in the fall further pushes were made virtually impossible by the stiffening fascist resistance in Parma and on the Apennines, as well as the worsening weather and the lack of sufficient supplies to circumvent the rapidly coalescing Po Line on which Mussolini's forces, under the overall command of one Filippo Turati, were establishing a solid barrier to further Neapolitan advances. Still, Graziani managed to launch a successful drive in November that overwhelmed the fascist defenses of Parma and Modena through sheer weight of numbers and dispersed the few remaining fascist semblances of regular army forces; Graziani has had to halt his drive due to adverse weather and renewed Marxist/fascist insurrections behind the front lines, but Milan is threatened and the fascists seem to be on their last legs already.
(-5 Neapolitan divisions, -1 Neapolitan tank brigade)
The Russian Civil War has begun; Mikhail IIs monarchist faction has managed to get a significant portion of the army to defect to his control, although much of Russia has adhered to the Blue regime, which has generally disengaged from the Global War (although without an official cease-fire) and instead turned the Russian Army on other Russians. Mikhails generalissimo, one Aleksey Evert, managed to establish control of St. Petersburg as well as much of the Volga River valley, as well as a significant region centering on Kursk south of Moscow and part of Siberia, where the local Army commander, one Vladimir Sukhomlinov, defected to the monarchist cause with most of his troops. Kolmogorovs government still has managed to command much support amongst the army, and the chief Blue commanders, Sergei Khabalov and Aleksey Brusilov, have developed a cunning plan to smash the monarchists. The disjointed group of monarchist troops south of Moscow under the nominal command of General Aleksey Kaledin was fairly easily smashed by Khabalovs Army of Bulgaria as it returned from the front in the Balkans, while Brusilov began to mount a full scale offensive through the Volga, coercing support from the civilians there and breaking up the two separate forces cobbled together to oppose him during first the epic Kazan Campaign in July and August and then a second series of clashes around Saratov during October, during which the tsarists under the command of one Vladimir Kappel, who managed to extricate his army and marched to join the Ural forces under Sukhomlinov in the winter. As the year ended, the Blues had managed to take effective control of much of European Russia and the associated national territories such as Poland and the Ukraine, but the monarchists were surprisingly enough still extant in Ekaterinburg where Sukhomlinov made his headquarters and St. Petersburg itself, which was feverishly being turned into a fortress by not only Russian troops under Evert but also Finns rallied by Carl Gustaf Mannerheim. The Chinese of Manchuria and the Amur Valley had also chosen this moment to rise up in revolt with major elements of Marxist sponsorship the already-extant People's Brigade framework helped to rebel several monarchist assaults. On the other hand, the Navy has relatively unsurprisingly decided to join with the Blues, save for Admiral Kolchaks flotilla in the Baltic and the North Sea, which has declared for Mikhail II.
(-12 Monarchist Russian infantry divisions, -6 Monarchist Russian tank brigades, -4 Monarchist Russian artillery brigades, -2 Monarchist Russian fighter squadrons, -2 Monarchist Russian zeppelin squadrons, -16 Blue Russian infantry divisions, -4 Blue Russian tank brigades, -2 Blue Russian artillery brigades, -1 Blue Russian fighter squadron)
The Balkans flared back up into heavy fighting before the snow even melted. Serbias attempt to mobilize troops from their mountain fastness in Macedonia took time, considering the disorganized state of the Serbian army and nation following the defeats at Hungarian hands over the past year. Kövess von Kövesshazas men were able to dig in rudimentary defenses in Serbia before the Entente troops struck despite harassing attempts by a small group of vastly outnumbered Serb troops throughout the winter months. With Bulgarian support, the Serbian attack what began in March and April pushed the Hungarians out of Nish and through sheer élan carried even further, reaching at its high tide the exit to the Morava Valley at Kragujevac in July. Hungarian firepower and numbers began to take their toll quickly, though, and Imperial pressure from the south forced the Serbian Army to commit its reserves to fighting in the Monastir Gap instead of against the hard pressed Hungarians, who managed to effectively regroup in August as Serbian and Bulgarian supplies began to run low and the Entente troops reached the end of their string. The tank reserve that had been husbanded slowly by Kövess von Kövesshaza was then unleashed; Petar Bojovic, the Serbian voivode, was forced to conduct a hasty retreat in the face of a renewed Magyar onslaught, while the Bulgarian Vladimir Vazov decided to cut his losses and withdrew to cover Sofia with his oversized army corps. Bojovics Serbs managed to bleed the Hungarians for every inch of ground they gave up the Morava Valley throughout the autumn, but they were being increasingly forced to give more and more ground, while the Imperial troops in the south were overpowering the reserves what could be sent by the otherwise-occupied Serbs. And in the meantime, a British attempt to land troops to assist the Serbs had been crushed by the Hungarian Navy the British convoy had been once again unprotected by the Royal Navy due greatly to the serious losses suffered in the previous year and the Hungarians used the local naval superiority thus gained to assist the Imperials in a small scale attack on the Albanian and Montenegrin coastlines. Bojovic managed to finally halt the bloodletting just south of Kosovo and switch many of his troops to Albania, clearing a path to the sea again, but at the price of more territory in Macedonia to the Hungarians and Imperials. The Serbs offensive may have failed, but at least they are in roughly the same boat they were in last year and they still have an open route of escape
and further east, the Entente was doing decidedly better. Bulgarias defenses held easily; the Imperials were busy elsewhere, attempting to maintain the territorial integrity of their nation, while the Russians under Khabalov were of course occupied elsewhere. Vazov opportunistically decided to switch his attack from the Serbian front where he could defend easily against the gradually overstretched Magyars but not attack without serious loss without much gain to Wallachia, which the Russians had more or less abandoned, as well as the Russian-owned Dobruja and the Danube delta. With the onset of winter, Vazovs veterans easily overran the disorganized Wallachia and Dobruja and consolidated their control against the disjointed and minor Hungarian attacks what were attempted in the last weeks of December against the strong positions the Bulgarians were holding around Craiova. Meanwhile, the fighting to the south was some of the most uneventful all year; the Imperials and Bulgarians both held defensive positions against the other, with only a few minor probing attacks by both sides in the lower Maritsa Valley.
(-12 Serbian infantry divisions, -3 Serbian tank brigades, -3 Serbian artillery brigades, -1 Serbian fighter squadron, -7 Bulgarian infantry divisions, -2 Bulgarian tank brigades, -3 Bulgarian artillery brigades, -1 Bulgarian fighter squadron, -17 Hungarian infantry divisions, -4 Hungarian tank brigades, -5 Hungarian artillery brigades, -3 Imperial infantry divisions, -1 Imperial artillery brigade)
The British have strangely enough renewed their Anatolian campaign for this year, attempting to completely smash the Aegean Empire/Kingdom of Greece once and for all. Admiral Pavlos Kountouriotis wisely decided to withdraw from combat with the British upon the news that they were being massively reinforced; the Royal Navy landed extra troops in Anatolia in April and was able to support a massive new push by Allenbys expeditionary force, which launched a drive aimed at securing the Ionian coastline in June. Outnumbered, the shell of the Greco-Turkish army began to withdraw until it was joined by reinforcements from Thessalonika in August near Brusa. Allenby, in the meantime, had been slowly extending his supply lines and doing his best not to outrun them, but continued Turkish and Greek partisan action in his rear decreased the number of supplies actually getting to his men and forced him to detach extra troops to hold onto his rear areas. Allenbys army was further weakened by Royal Marine detachments sent to capture the Aegean islands and who were forced to stay there due to further partisan action. Britains confusing policy of supporting a bid for Turkish independence alienated the Greeks who were the majority in the lands they were trying to seize, while the lack of any actual actions taken to free said Turks annoyed those who were to have been supported by the British. The fact that Turkish cities were hit by terror bombings from British zeppelins didnt help the matter. In any event, the British were ripe for counterattack during the scorching days of August and September 1928, and they sure as heck got one. General Leonidas Paraskevopoulos extemporized First Army, a ragtag bunch of amalgamated Turkish, Greek, partisan, and reserve troops, opened the campaign of Panderma on August 21 and smashed a hole in the British front line; exploitation was slow, but Paraskevopoulos kept up the pressure while coordinating with partisan groups to the rear of the British troops, and Allenby was finally forced to begin a general withdrawal down the coastline towards Smyrna in late September. The Imperial, who didnt have any tanks or significant amounts of cavalry, werent able to properly harry the British as they fled southwards, but the Greco-Turkish partisans took their own toll, and the Expeditionary Force suffered many casualties on the way back to Smyrna. Seizing the meager prepared Imperial defenses around the city, Allenby managed to coordinate a naval withdrawal during the last days of November, and brought off nearly all of his army before the Imperials arrived except for much of his heavy equipment and tanks, with only two last divisions stuck in southern Ionia near Petronion that capitulated to Paraskevopoulos on Christmas Eve. Allenby did however manage to accomplish something productive with his troops after fleeing from Smyrna, effecting control over the Aegean islands save Euboea and crushing the still extant civil disorder on Crete and Rhodes. A serious blow was struck against the Royal Navy force in the Aegean, though, after Imperial submarines sank three of British aircraft carriers HMS
Argus,
Vindictive, and
Unicorn in two days, eliminating several other Royal Navy ships on the way out, though this wolf pack suffered severe casualties to the skilled Royal Navy destroyer crews. Britains Anatolian campaign seems over, and with the change of government further strikes in the Mediterranean seem unlikely at best, especially considering the dire German threat closer to home.
(-6 British infantry divisions, -4 British marine infantry divisions, -5 British tank brigades, -3 British artillery brigades, -3 British aircraft carriers, -2 British cruisers, -4 British destroyers, -2 British fighter squadrons, -1 British zeppelin squadron, -4 Imperial infantry divisions, -2 Imperial artillery brigades, -9 Imperial submarines, -5 Imperial fighter squadrons, -2 Imperial zeppelin squadrons)
Africa is becoming more and more of a grand battlefield as the war stretches into its second year. The US General Staff has proposed a campaign to assist the Liberians and simultaneously wreak havoc with the Entente West African colonies; General George Patton and a small expeditionary force of a reinforced combined arms corps were sent across the Atlantic under guard of the US Second Fleet, in turn under the command of Admiral William Sims. Off Portuguese Guinea, Sims' fleet encountered a French flotilla under the command of Admiral Jean Decoux, apparently bound south; Decoux, weighing the relative strength of his fleet against his mission, decided to refuse battle and escaped Sims' fleet, although one destroyer was sunk by aircraft operating from the USS
Lexington. Sims' fleet continued to Liberia, where Patton's corps was offloaded with no incident although since Liberian harbor facilities weren't quite up to the task, it did take a while and then moved to support the Brazilian Navy. Patton himself launched a wild rampage through French West Africa, first fighting the hastily mobilized garrison troops who were unfortunately forced to miss their Kamerun date (see below) - at the Battle of the Lobo River in October and smashing the French in a weeklong running battle that carried his army to Yamoussoukro, which was easily captured. With virtually no resistance by any Anglo-French troops, Patton has been able to run rampant through the colonies during his two months in Africa, spreading confusion and destruction over a wide swath of West Africa.
(-3 French African divisions, -1 American infantry division)
The Islamic Republic of Arabia has declared war on Britain in conjunction with the members of the Global Alliance following some riling-up activity on the part of the Arabian clerics; under the banner of liberating the holy cities of Mecca and Medina from the British oppressors, rebellions have begun in those two cities, and large forces of Arabian tribesmen have ridden in to support them. The utter lack of any fighting forces in the area with any motivation to shoot at their Arabian brethren somewhat hampered the British defense, and most of the Arabs in the Egyptian/Rhodesian territorial army defected to their Islamic Republic comrades. Mecca and Medina were overrun quickly enough, and the Islamic Republic ragtag force moved on to the Suez Canal, avoiding Rhodesia proper, which was heavily populated by Jews, who were indeed highly motivated to fight for the British. In September and October, the Arabs mounted several attacks on the Canal, but were eventually forced to retreat due to the redeployment of regular British troops (backed up by Rhodesian native divisions) from the inactive Caucasus front, but retained control of the Hejaz. Meanwhile, the Arabian regulars what could be recruited launched a whirlwind attack on southern Mesopotamia, but the Shiites living there were unwilling to lend them support and the redeploying British troops managed to achieve some successes later on, pushing the Arabians' troops back to Basra, which they only tenuously hold. Meanwhile, to the south, a token German force has landed and seized Aden with virtually no British resistance.
(2 British Egyptian/Rhodesian infantry divisions to Islamic Republic of Arabia)
(-3 Arabian infantry divisions, -6 Arabian "divisions", -1 British infantry division, -2 British Rhodesian divisions)
The German colony of Kamerun has been the target of a vast swarm of Spanish troops this year; with virtually no resistance apart from the loyal German
askaris and even then not very many of them the quarter of a million Spanish troops completely annihilated every last vestige of pro-German resistance in that country, although not bothering to put some of the more remote areas under tight Spanish control.
(-Kamerun, -3 Spanish infantry divisions)
Following the pacification of Kamerun, the reinforced Spanish in Angola, under the command of General Emilio Mola, opened an attack on the weak German forces that had invaded Angola the year before. Paul von Lettow-Vorbecks troops withdrew without engaging the Spanish directly, but after Mola continued to attack across the border into German colonial territory von Lettow-Vorbeck began to launch hit-and-run attacks on the vast Spanish force, depriving it of supplies in the trackless Ovamboland wastes. Several individual Spanish detachments were surrounded, cut off, and annihilated by the German askaris and their Regular allies, and Mola was forced to halt the offensive as winter began to set in.
(-6 Spanish infantry divisions, -1 Spanish marine division, -2 Spanish tank brigades, -4 Spanish artillery brigades, -3 German Sudafrikan divisions, -1 German infantry division)
The Constitutionalist Persians manage to drive their monarchist enemies out of Khorasan and into Russian Central Asia with relatively few casualties.
(-2 Persian infantry divisions)
The Qing army takes some minor casualties fighting the members of the People's Brigade in Manchuria, though the enemy disperses fairly quickly.
(-1 Qing Chinese infantry division)
As part of their new armed unilateral policy, the Japanese have dispatched troops to seize Hong Kong and Macao from Britain and Portugal respectively. The Portuguese were of course occupied with something else, while the Royal Navy was once again conspicuously absent from the scene. A French contingent under Admiral Jean de Laborde was present, but France is not in a state of war with Japan, so de Laborde let the Japanese pass without incident. The two defenseless colonies surrendered to the Imperial Japanese expeditionary force easily enough without any fighting whatsoever, and while Britain has protested (Portugal is a bit busy at the moment) the Japanese are in complete control with no resistance at all.
Instead of fighting against the Japanese, de Laborde's flotilla instead engaged the German Far East squadron under the command of Admiral Erich Raeder in April. The German aircraft carrier
SMS Braunschweig provided a critical advantage to Raeder's squadron, which had the ability to first harass de Laborde's ships before the actual engagement and then sink one of the dreadnoughts under de Laborde's command the
Lille and then harass the cruisers escorting the carriers. A brief submarine battle ensued further out, but the German preponderance in destroyers helped them prevail (although apparently one of the German U-boats was sunk by a friendly depth charge) and then launch an attack on de Laborde's flagship, the
Tourville; the French were forced to retreat to Cam Ranh Bay after this decisive Battle of the Spratly Islands, and the Germans for now have the run of the South China Sea and the Western Pacific.
(-1 French dreadnought, -2 French cruisers, -4 French submarines, -2 German destroyers, -2 German submarines)
The United States Third Fleet and Raeder's Far East squadron then linked up for a combined attack on British Australia and New Zealand. After securing some of the larger Entente-controlled Pacific islands, the German-American combined fleet forced a landing on the North Island of New Zealand, which was more or less secured by the end of fall. Due to the heavy fighting in New Zealand itself, especially the bloody siege of Auckland, the Allies were unable to conduct their projected assault on Australia, which was postponed in favor of an attack on the South Island, which was more or less secure by year's end.
(-2 British Australian divisions, -2 American infantry divisions, -1 American marine division)
OOC:
Shadowbound, the reason Amsterdam was used instead of Rotterdam for your project was because Rotterdam was already an EC.

However, it has been duly changed to Batavia. Also, I guess this wasn't sufficiently clear either, but you can't use more than 2 EP to rush a project, and those extra EP have been banked. Also, only one EP was needed to mobilize your entire military, as it costs but 1 EP/20 units.
Aetius, you are still in control of the UK, but your policies should probably reflect the goals of both Conservatives and Liberals now, lest your people lose even more confidence in the government.
The Arabian "divisions" are units of about 10,000 horsemen with fairly good rifles, almost no staying power, and good mobility...the usual Arab trip. They were created due to the very low likelihood that the Islamic Republic could just wave its hand, dispense monies, and create whole new infantry divisions out of practically nothing.
Everyone else especially Wubba (!) please note exactly how many troops you are using for each operation. Commands like spread everything else evenly isnt quite specific enough, especially when youre a world power and have lots of stuff amongst which to spread troops.
Sorry about that whole delay - things got wild this weekend. When I get to my other comp tomorrow morning when I wake up - got to go to bed right now, and I promised Thlayli that it would finally be tonight - I'll be able to post stats and map and assorted frontpage stuff, but for now you get this.
