Random Events:
The Platine rebellion grows in popularity (+1 Confidence).
A failed coup strenghthens Shah Ardashir IV's power and prestige in Persia, as not much organized opposition remains (+1 Confidence).
The First French Republic makes a call for volunteers, which is immediately answered (+10 divisions).
Portugal begins to calm down somewhat (+1 Confidence)...
Outraged by the invasion of Poland itself, more and more of its citizens join the army (+5 divisions).
The Scandinavian people rally around Karl XV, seeking to avenge the destruction of Stockholm and Kalmar by Muscovite raiders (+2 Confidence). Volunteers enroll in large amounts as enthusiasm for war grows (+10 divisions). The battle-hardened army is equally determined to wreck vengeance on Muscovy (+1 Army Training).
The sudden, unprecedented, dizzying successes of the present war, combined with the general unpopularity of his noble enemies, increase Alexius' prestige among the Muscovite masses (+1 Confidence). This, along with his charisma, allowed a monk named Kazimir to mobilize a rather large, if undisciplinned, peasant army (+10 irregular divisions).
Popular Federate support for the war effort grows thanks to Gladstone's oratory (+1 Confidence). Volunteers from all the Kingdoms enlist (+5 divisions).
The Croat revolutionaries have problems with actually running their country themselves, having no experience in that (-1 Civilian Leadership).
As the Muscovite Tsar's attention seems centered on the war, he nearly fell victim to a new noble conspiracy with ties in the military; in the wake of the aborted coup d'etat, many competent yet treacherous officers had to be... removed (-1 Military Leadership).
The Siamese keep having problems with their new railroads and dockyards, due to inexperience (-1 Infrastructure).
A failed mutiny near Vienna itself resulted in brief but brutal fighting before the rebelling Imperial Sturmtruppen units are subdued by their former comrades (-5 Imperial Sturmtruppen).
More and more French army officers defect from the Provisional Government, either joining one of the other sides, either starting some revolts of their own (see above), either just retiring and sitting things out (-1 Military Leadership).
Without the efficient French management and maintenance, the roads in Yucatan quickly worsen (-1 Infrastructure).
Spotlight:
The Eastern War.
"The time for words has ended. We will settle this on the battlefield."
- Tsar Alexius I (Aleksey Nikolaevich Shuisky). Year 1866, after the breakdown of negotiations with Sweden.
What had started in 1865 as a regional war between Sweden and Muscovy, fought over the border city of Novgorod and a few other Russian-majority territories, has by the beginning of its fourth year become something much greater, in all regards. The old Livonian War pales by comparison, and until now it was the largest East European war. Back then, Sweden and Poland eventually defeated Russia, crippling it forever and paving way for the eventual Polish conquest. However, the Polish empire itself didn't survive too long, and fragmented, and though Lithuania and Ukraine were eventually reconquered, Muscovy remained independent under the Shuisky dynasty. But that dynasty failed to achieve much in all those years, apart from the reconquest of Kazan from the Ottomans. During the 19th century, with some Imperial assistance, Muscovy begun modernizing itself, and even took part in the Nine Years War (unsuccesfully, albeit it didn't lose anything there neither). This process was a slow one, until Tsar Nicholas I's downfall in 1864. His son Alexius, who overthrew him, immediately sped things up. In an organized reign of terror, he cleaned the ranks of the Muscovite aristocracy, destroying the traditional organized resistance to the modernizing efforts, and with the help of Imperial advisors and other foreign specialists he managed to turn the Muscovite army, if not Muscovy itself, into a war machine. A war machine that, thanks to all this and the generally good quality of Alexius' new military elite, managed to inflict several noticeable defeats on the more advanced regional powers of Sweden/Scandinavia and its Polish allies.
But it hasn't broken them. Even as they had to fight another war in the west, the Scandinavians and the Poles struggled on against the Muscovites, at times making considerable gains. And though as 1868 begun a fairly large Polish force was trapped in a Muscovite pocket and other Polish troops were firmly on the defensive, the Scandinavians had by then retaken most of Finland, and in some points even reached the Muscovite borders. There was no end in sight at all, as both sides, though weakening with time, were still strong enough to fight on, and on, and on.
And by then, the war has become total. There clearly was no turning back now, now that Stockholm and Kalmar were destroyed in a Muscovite raid, now that Poland and Scandinavian declared their wish to depose the Tsar. Though the ideological propaganda of the Scandinavians and the Poles didn't work as well as was hoped among the illiterate, loyal peasantry and the over-intimidated, patriotic urban middle class of Muscovy itself, it HAS worked on their own people and soldiers quite well, as did the Muscovite war atrocities. So well that they would now rather die than surrender, that they were ready to fight to the last man. But also so well that they just wouldn't UNDERSTAND any attempts to make peace. There was no turning back for neither side now.
The year begun with heavy fighting in the "Polish Pocket" in southern Muscovy. Contrary to Muscovite expectations, the Poles made no attempts to try and rescue their forces trapped in the Pocket, instead using the distraction provided by it to prepare their fortifications. So the Muscovites themselves could also concentrate on their own task - on eliminating the Pocket. Led by a mystic monk named Kazimir, a rag-tag force of newly-freed (in exchange for military service) serfs harrased the Polish troops, which, in combination with the lack of supplies and the coming of a harsh winter, basically destroyed the Polish troops, crushing the resolve of some so much that they actually surrendered, desperate to get out of this frozen hell. But a (admittedly-narrow) majority tried to fight on, moving south in a desperate bid to escape through Dalnorossian territory. A few somehow managed to do so, possibly due to some prior agreement, possibly due to bribery (indeed, certain local Dalnorossian officials soon lost their positions...), or maybe thanks to some of the local Polish sympathisers who smuggled them through. It might have even been some sort of a daring breakthrough, though Poland didn't yet declare war on Dalnorossia. But that didn't matter too much - most forces in the Pocket were eliminated anyway. The PoWs were sent to build fortifications. The war on the central sector of the front, at first expected by observers all over the world to become the spot of the decisive, culminative campaign, died down into positional warfare with a few minor skirmishes. No, the great battles of the day were to take place further north.
For instance, the Far North saw some fierce fighting this year, first with Finnish risings behind the Scandinavian lines that were quickly put down, in part due to betrayal at the hands of a few Finnish Scandinavianists. But it still provided a distraction for the Scandinavians that allowed the new Finnish government to test its fangs, in coordination with Muscovy ofcourse. Although they managed, just barely, to partially-relieve Helsingfors - or Helsinki, as the Finns themselves call it - they failed to advance much further, and instead had to concentrate on distracting the Scandinavians in Western Karelia, to prevent a potential separation of the Finnish forces from Muscovy. Albeit the Scandinavians didn't launch any final offensive to finish off the Muscovite forces in Karelia, they didn't give up any ground neither, and in fact scored a major victory in Eastern Karelia. The Muscovite offensive there was stopped by the Scandinavian fortifications, it stalled and then was suddenly struck in the rear. For by then, Berserker divisions took the undefended city of Arkhangelsk, Muscovy's one and only real commercial link with Western Europe, a link that remained profitable even now. Unfortunately, there wasn't much else of value in the whole region apart from furs and wood - there weren't even any real railroads there, as it wasn't yet entirely feasable. The early ambitious plans had to be edited accordingly, and instead the Scandinavian Berserkers struck westwards to take some pressure off their forces in Karelia. Now out-numbered and surrounded as well as out-gunned, the Muscovites were basically rounded in the Battle at Lake Vyg. It was a disaster, but thankfully only a one of local significance, as the Scandinavians chose not to press on, due to the logistical improbability of it all.
Further south, the Scandinavians knew better than to attack, withdrawing from their untenable positions near Noteborg. The Muscovites were thus granted initiative, and they used it fully. At first, it seemed as if they were trying to repeat their old trick with pseudo-Scandinavian ships. These ships were immediately apprehended, and as the Scandinavian officers went aboard to search them, they, not unexpectedly, came under attack. What WAS unexpected was that the attack didn't just come from the troops on board; it also came from a huge Muscovite fleet, reinforced by the remnants of the Imperial one that hid in Noteborg after the Scandinavian re-occupation of the German northern coast. Very possibly the Scandinavians could have lost that battle badly, if not for three factors. Firstly, they, though surprised by the Imperials, weren't completely surprised by the larger-than-expected Muscovite fleet, as the Polish intellegence, which was in cooperation with the Scandinavian one, had learned of it by then. Secondly, the Muscovite fleet was built rather hastily and crewed by rather unexperienced crews, as Muscovy wasn't a particularily sea-faring nation, and in fact hadn't fought in any real naval battles since its very creation [1]. Thirdly, and most importantly, the world's definite superpower finally made up its mind about the ongoing war there. That day at the Osel Island [2] off the Livonian coast, the Scandinavian fleet wasn't reinforced only by the Polish one. No, that day it was also supported by a Federate fleet, a little one by Federate standards perhaps, but not by those of the Baltic Sea. That settled it, really. The Muscovite and Imperial fleets resisted fiercely, but both were eliminated, along with most of those Muscovite troops already aboard. But the Scandinavians weren't confident enough to exploit their newly-gained naval supremacy. Yet.
By then, the main Muscovite offensive against Poland stalled. The offensive, led by Alexius I personally, was launched in Samogitia, or Lithuania Proper. Though the first line of defenses was built rather hastily and the Muscovites, armed with the best Persian-style artillery (unfortunately, in small amounts, but it still was quite powerful), managed to overrun it, they failed to secure all of it due to sabotage and suffered many casualties to the Polish artillery bombardment before the fortifications could be restored. The second line was defended much better, and several Muscovite assaults were repulsed. Alexius had to order a halt to the offensive, as the new defenses were prepared and as the Muscovite forces regroupped. The war here has also turned into a positional, skirmish war, as elsewhere apart from the front's central sector where a large portion of Polish territory was left mostly undefended and quickly secured by Kazimir. All things changed in late summer.
When the news of the defeat at Osel reached Alexius' stavka, he, unlike his advisors, didn't despair. Immediately, he found one good thing in all this - now, the would-be invasion forces that weren't yet embarked could be redeployed here. These fresh reserves could now be used here... and maybe, that would be just enough to breach the Polish line. It certainly was an opportunate time - for just after the Romanian minorities in Polish Bukovina and Yedisan begun to riot and had to be dispersed by the gendarmerie, the Balkan Pact officially entered the war on the Muscovite side, as Romania extended its claims to the regions of the riots. Immediately, it was supported by Bulgaria, Turkey and Persia, and with a minor delay, by Croatia; the latter two weren't in position to send any troops, but Bulgaria, Turkey and Romania itself launched an offensive. It was a catastrophe. The disorganized, uncoordinated Balkan armies, the only really competent of them being the Turkish one that was disliked by the other "Balkanists", attempted to cross the Dniester... and immediately came under attack. Those boats that weren't eliminated by the dreaded new Polish sea mines were sunk or, at best, turned back by the artillery bombardment. However, the surviving Balkan forces were regroupped by the Romanian king himself. Ion Kantemir launched a minor offensive just for the show and "conquered" a small piece of Bukovina, where he encountered practically no resistance. Despite the anti-climax of this, the Poles now knew that they had a new front, a potentially-threatening one, and the Muscovites were sure now that, at least, they won't have to deal with any Polish reinforcements from Yedisan. And the effect on morale was also apparent - Poland was now fighting a three-front war. What the Muscovites didn't count on were the facts that, firstly, the Poles had quite enough troops to continue defending anyway, and that, secondly, they only became more desperate now. And that they would defend accordingly.
Still, the Poles were quite overstretched in the east, and the Muscovites launched a diversionary assault on the southern sector of their positions to ensure that they don't try to concentrate their forces in the north. There, ofcourse, the main attack took place, once more led by Alexius. It was a hell of a battle, as tens of thousands of lives had to be thrown away for meager gains for the Muscovites, and as artillery on both sides raged ceaselessly. But eventually, superior numbers and the use of the Persian "Allah's Needles" allowed the Muscovites to, eventually, achieve some breakthroughs. After that, things went more easily; a few Polish positions were out-flanked, and the other Poles staged a fighting retreat southwards. It was ultimately succesful: albeit Kaunas was besieged, that was as far as the Muscovites got, bloodied and tired, and logistically-troubled as they were.
But this didn't change the basic facts that now, the Muscovites had no chances of going on a naval offensive. That the Scandinavians were too well-fortified to be forced out. That the Balkanists were unlikely to be defeated as easily next time. That now, the Polish direction was the most promising one for the Muscovites.
This didn't change the basic fact that the next year, at long last, would be the decisive one, and would determine the history of Eastern Europe for ages from now.
NPC Diplo:
From: Republic of Italy
To: Holy Roman Empire, Republic of Croatia, Turkey and Safavid Persia
We want to discuss the terms of peace.
From: Bulgaria
To: Croatia
We politely request that you hand over Northern Bulgaria to us.
OOC:
[1] Note that I mean Muscovy specifically here, or the Grand Princedom of Moscow, rather than Russia from the Kievan Rus period onwards.
[2] Alternatively known as Sarema (Russian) or Saaremaa (Estonian), but Osel is the official, Germano-Swedish name.
If anyone notices any obvious mistakes or orders that I forgot, inform me immediately. I know I goofed up somewhere, probably in the Far East (was quite tired by then).
silver2039, you don't really have that much control over technology, so I didn't add that design to the project; but anyway, you'd need to be in the Middle Industrial Age to have any chances at discovering that.
1889, as the Federates kept control over the Niger Delta trade, you only had two EC eco. points to spend this turn, so I cancelled your last order.
SB, before you ask - you forgot to order any logistical support. The Parliament cancelled some of the army growth and diverted the funds into supplies in the last moment, but not enough for such a wide range of operations, and for so many forces.