NES2 V - The Great Game.

Status
Not open for further replies.
So the peopl want to attack Geneva even thought we just finished a civil war?

Well than... Will they accept conscription? Or can I trust volunteers?
 
IC: One of your admirable qualities, Tsar Alexis, is your determination and certainty; I'm a sure you would be equally or more firm in asserting your rights in this matter if we were to transgress on your lands. There will be no extensions of the deadline, our course has been set.

Very well, then Dalanrossia will be payed in full.
 
@Muscovy; We look forward to such an event, and hope to once more extend the hand of friendship to Muscovy, we will even reopen the borders. (So your EC shouldn't suffer)

@erez: Are you sure you need conscription?
 
Disenfrancised said:
@Muscovy; We look forward to such an event, and hope to once more extend the hand of friendship to Muscovy, we will even reopen the borders. (So your EC shouldn't suffer)

@erez: Are you sure you need conscription?
I think... My army is less than half of theirs... :( i realy don't want to do still thought..
 
So the peopl want to attack Geneva even thought we just finished a civil war?

They want to throw the Genevans out of French land, and stop it at that.

Well than... Will they accept conscription? Or can I trust volunteers?

They probably won't accept conscription, however. But you will probably get some volunteers.
 
lol, they want to fight tooth and nail for thier land....but they dont want to conscript for it. They want SOMEONE ELSE to fight tooth and nail for thier land :p
 
Well duh. Who doesn't want that? ;)
 
Hey, it was a dream sequence. And also, I didn't have the time (or the presence of mind) to research Turkish versions of Islam.
 
ANNOUNCEMENT TO THE WORLD

siamweathered.jpg


On behalf of His most August Majesty King Rama the Fifth of Siam, I wish to announce the treaties agreed upon with both the independent states of Nepal and Tibet.

Spoiler Siam-Tibet Treaty of 1870 :

His Highness Phra Ram Ti Ha's Government of Siam on the one part, and His Highness the Dalai Lama's Government on the other part, equally animated by the desires to regulate in a friendly manner and upon a solid and durable basis the states of affairs caused by the termination of the Qing Chinese Government’s authority in Tibet, and to promote and foster the relations of friendship and neighbourliness so necessary for the well-being of their peoples, have resolved to conclude the following Treaty.

Article THE FIRST
There shall be perpetual peace and friendship between the Government of Siam and the Government of Tibet.

Article THE SECOND
The Government of Siam undertakes to exercise no interference in the internal administration of Tibet. On its part the Government of Tibet agrees to be guided by the advice of the Government of Siam in regard to its external relations.

Aricle THE THIRD
The Government of Siam agrees to make an annual payment of baht one hundred thousand to the Government of Tibet. And it is further hereby agreed that the said annual payment shall be made on the tenth day of January every year, the first payment being made on the tenth of January, 1870. This payment shall continue so long as this Treaty remains in force and its terms are duly observed.

Article THE FOURTH
There shall, as heretofore, be free trade and commerce between the territories of the Government of Siam and of the Government of Tibet; and the Government of Siam agrees to grant the Government of Tibet every facility for the carriage by land and water, of its produce through the territory of the Government of Siam ,including the right to use such forest roads as may be specified by mutual agreement from time to time.

Article THE FIFTH
The Government of Siam agrees that the Government of Tibet shall be free to import with the assistance and approval of the Government of Siam, from or through Siam into Tibet, whatever arms, ammunition, machines, warlike material or stores may be required or desired for the strength and welfare of Tibet, and that this arrangement shall hold good for all time as long the Government of Siam is satisfied that the intentions of the Government of Tibet are friendly and that there is no danger to Siam from such importations. The Government of Tibet, on the other hand, agrees that there shall be no export of such arms, ammunition, etc.. across the frontiers of Tibet either by the Government of Tibet or by private individuals.

Article THE SIXTH
The Government of Siam and the Government of Tibet agrees that Tibetan subjects residing in Siamese territories shall have equal justice with Siamese subjects, and that Siamese subjects residing in Tibetan territories shall have equal justice with the subjects of the Government of Tibet.

Article THE SEVENTH
(1) The Government of Siam shall, on demand being duly made in writing by the Government of Tibet, take proceeding for the surrender of all Tibetan subjects accused of any of the crimes in the eyes of Tibetan law who may taken refuge in Siamese territory.
(2) The Government of Tibet shall, on requisition being duly made by the Government of Siam, or by any officer authorized by the Government of Siam on its behalf, surrender any Siamese subjects, or subjects of a foreign power, whose extradition may be required in pursuance of any agreement or arrangement made by the Government of Siam with the said power, accused of any crime in the eyes of Siamese law, who may take refuge in the territory under the Jurisdiction of the Government of Tibet, and also any Tibetan subjects who, after committing any crimes referred to in Siamwaw territory, shall flee into Tibet, on such evidence of their guilt being produced as shall satisfy the local court of the district in which the offence may have been committed.

Article THE EIGTH
Any differences and disputes arising in the application or interpretation of this Treaty shall in first instance be settled by negotiation. If within three months of the start of negotiation no settlement is arrived at, then the matter shall be referred to the arbitration of three arbitrators, who shall be nationals of either Siam or Tibet, chosen in the following manner:
(1) One person nominated by the Government of Siam
(2) One person nominated by the Government of Tibet
(3) A Judge of the Federal court, or of a High court In Siam, to be chosen by the Government of Siam ,who shall be Chairman.
The judgment of this Tribunal shall be final and executed without delay by either party.

Article THE NINTH
This Treaty shall continue in force in perpetuity unless terminated or modified by mutual consent.


Spoiler Siam-Nepal Treaty of 1870 :

His Highness Phra Ram Ti Ha's Government of Siam on the one part, and His Highness the King of Nepal's Government on the other part, equally animated by the desires to regulate in a friendly manner and upon a solid and durable basis the states of affairs caused by the termination of the Qing Chinese Government’s authority in Nepal, and to promote and foster the relations of friendship and neighbourliness so necessary for the well-being of their peoples, have resolved to conclude the following Treaty.

Article THE FIRST
There shall be perpetual peace and friendship between the Government of Siam and the Government of Nepal.

Article THE SECOND
The Government of Siam undertakes to exercise no interference in the internal administration of Nepal. On its part the Government of Nepal agrees to be guided by the advice of the Government of Siam in regard to its external relations.

Aricle THE THIRD
The Government of Siam agrees to make an annual payment of baht one hundred thousand (1 economy point) to the Government of Nepal. And it is further hereby agreed that the said annual payment shall be made on the tenth day of January every year, the first payment being made on the tenth of January, 1870. This payment shall continue so long as this Treaty remains in force and its terms are duly observed.

Article THE FOURTH
There shall, as heretofore, be free trade and commerce between the territories of the Government of Siam and of the Government of Nepal; and the Government of Siam agrees to grant the Government of Nepal every facility for the carriage by land and water, of its produce through the territory of the Government of Siam ,including the right to use such forest roads as may be specified by mutual agreement from time to time.

Article THE FIFTH
The Government of Siam agrees that the Government of Nepal shall be free to import with the assistance and approval of the Government of Siam, from or through Siam into Nepal, whatever arms, ammunition, machines, warlike material or stores may be required or desired for the strength and welfare of Nepal, and that this arrangement shall hold good for all time as long the Government of Siam is satisfied that the intentions of the Government of Nepal are friendly and that there is no danger to Siam from such importations. The Government of Nepal, on the other hand, agrees that there shall be no export of such arms, ammunition, etc.. across the frontiers of Nepal either by the Government of Nepal or by private individuals.

Article THE SIXTH
The Government of Siam and the Government of Nepal agrees that Nepali subjects residing in Siamese territories shall have equal justice with Siamese subjects, and that Siamese subjects residing in Nepali territories shall have equal justice with the subjects of the Government of Nepal.

Article THE SEVENTH
(1) The Government of Siam shall, on demand being duly made in writing by the Government of Nepal, take proceeding for the surrender of all Nepali subjects accused of any of the crimes in the eyes of Nepali law who may taken refuge in Siamese territory.
(2) The Government of Nepal shall, on requisition being duly made by the Government of Siam, or by any officer authorized by the Government of Siam on its behalf, surrender any Siamese subjects, or subjects of a foreign power, whose extradition may be required in pursuance of any agreement or arrangement made by the Government of Siam with the said power, accused of any crime in the eyes of Siamese law, who may take refuge in the territory under the Jurisdiction of the Government of Nepal, and also any Nepali subjects who, after committing any crimes referred to in Siamwaw territory, shall flee into Nepal, on such evidence of their guilt being produced as shall satisfy the local court of the district in which the offence may have been committed.

Article THE EIGTH
Any differences and disputes arising in the application or interpretation of this Treaty shall in first instance be settled by negotiation. If within three months of the start of negotiation no settlement is arrived at, then the matter shall be referred to the arbitration of three arbitrators, who shall be nationals of either Siam or Nepal, chosen in the following manner:
(1) One person nominated by the Government of Siam
(2) One person nominated by the Government of Nepal
(3) A Judge of the Federal court, or of a High court In Siam, to be chosen by the Government of Siam ,who shall be Chairman.
The judgment of this Tribunal shall be final and executed without delay by either party.

Article THE NINTH
This Treaty shall continue in force in perpetuity unless terminated or modified by mutual consent.


We wish to announce (to those too lazy to read the damn treaty), that Tibet and Nepal are under Siamese protection. An attack on them would equate to an attack on us.

Yours truly,
Chatichai Songbeem,
Foreign Minister of Siam.

OOC: Think India-Bhutan OTL
 
From Geneva
To France:
So are you declaring war on us or not? :p
 
OOC: Sorry about the payments, silver. I'd help you with that if I could. But you can have more weapons, if that makes you feel better. (and something tells me it will) :evil:

From: Persia
To: Poland

Oh Land of Po, do you agree to peace or not? We'd really appreciate some sort of response.
 
OOC: Nothing like finishing a good story arc.

Whispers in Mecca, Part Four

Riyadh, January 8, 1870

General Osman Mustafa, First Commander of the Persian Army in Arabia, and chief of the Supreme Persian Military Command, looked through his field glasses. He smiled. The Wahhabites were with him again, as shown by the fighting in the city center. They were fickle allies for sure, and Federate money had deluded them for a while, into thinking that the Persians were their enemies. But several Bedouin chiefs owed Mustafa a life-debt from the Turkish Wars, so he was able to call in some favors. The resisting pro-Federate militias were slowly being forced towards the north side of the city by the Arab irregulars.

Above the north side of the city was a ridge. Unknown to their enemies, who thought that they had a whole desert to retreat to, Mustafa waited there with three divisions of infantry, and the 4th Artillery, too. His grin grew wider as the retreating enemy columns came within range.

“Move the heavy artillery up to the ridge. And a score of sharpshooters, not enough to give us away. Use the tan Bedouin costumes, it might fool them.”

The hardened veterans (all snipers) crept over the ridge, slipping down into fissures in the rock. A few pebbles scrabbled down the cliff, and a gust of sand blew through the army. Mustafa held up two fingers for silence. He crept over to his aide, and whispered an order.

“They’re in range. When the Wahhabites retreat as according to plan, open the bombardment. Aim for troops and fortifications. And try not to destroy any shrines, we don’t want a repeat of Fallujah.”

“At once, General.”

“Oh, and one more thing. Wait until I give the command.”

After five more minutes, the Wahhabites retreated, according to plan. As their stunned enemies milled about happily in the square below them, Mustafa swaggered up to the top of the ridge. Cupping his hands to his mouth, he yelled,

“Hello down there! Hope you like hell, because Armageddon’s coming early!” Turning quickly to the cannons and the sharpshooters behind him, he roared out the first command of the Second Battle of Riyadh.

“FIRE!”

---

Abban tried to look casual. He failed, but thankfully there weren’t any Federates on the street. That didn’t rule out Federate spies, though.

He’d just left his home, if it could even be called that, for perhaps the last time. It wasn’t more than a shack attached to the rear of his master’s house and smithy. Still, he’d grown attached to it. A pair of worn leather boots were the only thing his father had left behind. Though he despised both his father for leaving him, and the boots for not fitting him, they were never thrown away.

Before he left, though, he put on the boots. They felt soft, the soles worn down by years of walking. But surprisingly, they fit him. So he wore them. “Maybe Cornea will notice,” he thought.

The curfew passed, and he slipped into an alleyway. The Federates probably thought that a rigorously enforced curfew would keep people inside, but they’d forgotten to check their facts. Mecca had been crushed under the iron grip of the Ottoman Guards for several years, and a curfew was nothing compared to raids, torture, and complete brutality. In addition, any Meccan seen after sunset in the streets was shot on sight by the Ottomans.

The Federates were more civilized (or maybe just less intelligent) than that. If they saw someone running, they had to catch him, first. If the Ottomans saw someone running, they assumed that he was doing something wrong, and killed him at range.

So, Abban didn’t have that much to worry about. But it didn’t keep him from looking like someone with a secret. He wove his way through the tangled web of back-streets, half deserted souks, and empty plazas, heading towards the garrison on the southern side of the city.

The original owner of the palace was unknown, as the Ottomans had occupied the place for ages, it being the seat of the military government. After the governor was killed in the First Rebellion, General Allashir Kemal used the place as his command center, until he moved north to campaign against Mustafa in Palestine, and later Turkey where he died in the Battle of Constantinople. Ardashir didn’t want to rule over the Arabs with as heavy a hand as the Ottomans, so he put the Sharifs of Mecca in power, a delegation of rulers from the city itself, and the surrounding tribes. They technically had control over Arabia…and the Shah didn’t interfere, as long as the Sharifs agreed with his plans, that is.

While most of the Sharifs were quite loyal to the Shah, some even contributing troops from their militias for the war effort, several were corrupt. They took frequent bribes, and their spending of state money on palaces and harems was quite notorious. Last year, however, Federate agents approached the Sharifs with a plan…and a huge bribe to go along with it. So the Traitorous Six, as they were called, killed several of the pro-Persian Sharifs, and made sure that the defenses in the Sinai and on the coasts were weakened for the FK invasion.

Interestingly enough, the Persian garrison managed to kill five of the Six before they were slaughtered by the advancing Federate troops. So they took the palace for their own. There was a barracks, an Office of Colonial Intelligence, and a code-breaking office. Cornea was very interested in the last two.

But then again, Abban didn’t care about any of this backstory. What he cared about was destroying the people that burned his mosque, and killed his father. And that was another reason for wearing the boots…they concealed daggers quite nicely.

The meeting place was a ditch, actually. Rather inconspicuous, it was only half a mile from the garrison palace. Around fifteen men were crouched in it, and one woman. Cornea sat at the top, gazing through binoculars. When he saw Abban coming, he winked and motioned with his hands. Abban jumped quietly into the ditch.

“Ah, you came! I was hoping you’d get here in time. Everyone, this is Abban, Abdullah’s son. Abban, this is Retina, Choroid, Fovea, and Iris.” Abban was greeted with a variety of quiet smiles, winks, and pats on the back. “You see, most of us served in the same battalion as your father, and we’re glad you’ve come. Don’t expect to be treated differently…but know that we trust you.”

Abban smiled. His fear was of being treated like a child. This suited him just fine.

“You all know the plan,” Cornea whispered. “Let’s go. At my whistle, we move in.”

So the seventeen people, whether they were spies or freedom fighters, split up into four groups, each taking cover on a side of the building. Daggers were drawn, and Choroid loaded a crossbow that looked like it had been stolen from a museum. At Abban’s glance, he whispered, “It’s quieter than a gun, but still has a good range. Trust me.”

There were eight guards on the roof. Abban could see the silhouette of one against the moonlit sky, a black figure with a long rifle slung over his shoulder. There was a bayonet at the top, and it looked painful. As he started to really consider what dying would feel like, a low, quiet whistle echoed across the grounds.

Abban couldn’t see Cornea. He pulled out two daggers, holding them in each hand. Choroid raised his crossbow, and slowly sighed. “Well, this is it.”

“Allah protect us,” someone said.

“Hopefully.”

The crossbow fired. Its black bolt flew forward, quietly whistling through the air, to land with a thump in the chest of the Federate sentry. He sunk with a gurgle to the ground. On all four sides of the palace roof, daggers silently flew through the air. Six of the guards were killed, but then a crossbow bolt merely grazed the head of the seventh. He dropped to the ground, seeing his comrades all dead. He crept to the alarm bell.

Before he could ring it, three grappling hooks clattered onto the top of the whitewashed battlements. The unfortunate sentry crept to the side of the wall, and peered over. No one was there…damn, a decoy! Before he could react and finally ring the bell, everything went black. Another team had scaled the opposite wall while the seventh sentry was preoccupied with the hooks. The eighth, a Dutchman who was actually sleeping with a bottle of whiskey in his lap, woke up to a very unpleasant sensation, the cold steel of a knife at the jugular. Towering over him was the massive form of Choroid, cloaked in a black robe. He looked like Death itself. Grinning like a feral wolf, he uttered three words.

“Ring the bell.”

When the team of crack Federate troops arrived on the scene, they stormed the roof, guns blazing. The first up, a sergeant from York, saw something. No assassins or rebels, but a fuse. One that was slowly burning towards several large barrels of gunpowder, potassium sulfate, and blasting sticks* packed into a corner.

“Bloody he--

The local gossip said that the explosion could be seen from as far as Medina.** Several hundred Federates died that night, and the game had begun again.

*A precursor to dynamite, invented by the Engineering Corps. All historically accurate, of course.

**It's probably just a rumor. But then again, when the resulting collapse and fire ignited the powder magazine of the base, THAT could probably be seen from Medina.
 
Thlayli said:
OOC: Sorry about the payments, silver. I'd help you with that if I could. But you can have more weapons, if that makes you feel better. (and something tells me it will) :evil:

OOC: Just a heads up, when we mean our borders will be closed until further notice, we don't arse around...and I doubt you'll have much luck getting through Poland or Sweden either :lol:
 
Thlayli said:
I didn't know that your borders with Persia were closed, though.

I never siad that, its jsut that the borders with muscovy are...so how are you going to get in? :crazyeye:

Also
Thlayli said:
*A precursor to dynamite, invented by the Engineering Corps. All historically accurate, of course.

Its either dynamite or it isn't :). Without the diatomite the nitroglycerin is unusable, and without the nitroglycerin the diatomite is just cat litter. There isn't any 'precusor' except fluid nitroglycerin...which you do not want to mess around with :lol:
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom