07-15-2018, 10:37 PM
For Liberty!
Part Two
Indian Liberation and the “Great” War
A Victoria 2 Japanese continuation game from Europa Universalis III
>> Click Here for the "Ethiopian Campaign!" <<
>> Click Here for the "European Expedition!" <<
>> Click Here for the "Sino-Japanese War!" (Part 1) <<
>> Click Here for the "Sino-Japanese War!" (Part 2) <<
>> Click Here for "For Liberty!" (Part 1) <<
Liberty has its challenges. Luckily, Japanese politics were up to the task.
The First War of Indian Liberation
The First War of Indian Liberation was fought as an intervention to the Portuguese invasion of Gujarat. The Imperial Japanese Navy was quickly drawn up to do what it did best and establish dominance of the Indian Ocean In the meantime, Army of India - based in Bengal and the closest force to the enemy - was sent to Astarabad to defend the retreating Gujarati and buy time for the war while the Expeditionary Army was enroute. Battles against the Portuguese in India were a veritable massacre as the powerful Japanese artillery lobbed dangerous poison gas shells, causing havoc in the Portuguese lines, and the new tank and aircraft weapons proved exceedingly resilient and deadly: though outnumbered, Army of India routed the enemy from Gujarat and occupied the Portuguese holdings in the north. The Expeditionary Army soon easily cleared the Portuguese from the south in several decisive engagements, forcing them from the continent.
Soon, the Portuguese capital in Angola would be under threat by Japanese occupiers after a naval engagement off the coast opened the way for Japan’s troop transports.
One thing that wasn’t counted on, though, was Spanish protection of Portugal, which drew one of Japan’s age-old rivals into the war. Though weakened from their communist coup and wars in Europe, they still had a sizeable-enough army to cause problems, which they did by attacking Japanese Africa. 1st and 2nd Africa Corps were sent to Spanish Djibouti and Aden to occupy the rear, while 3rd Africa Corps was sent to delay the Spanish advance until the occupations could be completed. Unfortunately, bad intelligence and an overconfident zeal on the part of the 3rd Africa Corps led to an attack on what turned out to be a superior Spanish force, and their waiting artillery. The attack was a disaster with 22 thousand casualties in a force of only 30 thousand before the Japanese retreated from the line, leaving Ethiopia open to attack.
At the same time, Syria Corps, defending the Suez canal, received news of a Spanish advance through Egypt to take the vital link between Asia and Europe, but attacked the unprepared Spaniards during their crossing of the Nile, obliterating the army twice their size with only a few hundred casualties. Thankfully, reinforcements from Korea and India were not long in coming, which shored up the battle line and prevented an attempted flank from a separate Spanish army further up the river. Down in Ethiopia, they met the Spaniards in the mountains, where the Japanese use of air power proved decisive in the small front.
The Spanish defeats proved to sap most of their remaining trained, veteran fighting force. IN a desperate bid to hold back the Japanese in Africa, waves of reserves were sent to the front, but the massed Japanese attack on such a large front proved too mobile for them to establish another line; within months, the Japanese had overrun Spanish Turkey, Greece, and all of Africa east of Algeria. With the front line gone and Japanese ships threatening Spanish home ports, surrender was the only option, and the Indian Liberation War came to a close.
I know, I have a bad habit of not getting screenshots of anything interesting. I’m too interested in playing.
The Second War of Indian Liberation
Japanese success against the Iberian alliance saw a unified pan-Indian state emerge for the first time, though its lands were scattered enclaves and split apart by a large area of British colonial control, which Japanese military commanders believed was necessary to eliminate if they were to push European colonial power further out of what they saw as “their” Asian domain. However, despite the British crown government falling to a communist coup (the after-effects of which severely weakened the stability and strength of this new “Worker’s Commonwealth”) an attack on the British Raj did not immediately occur; failings in the previous war had highlighted failings in the current Japanese corps structure, and so a certain amount of time was taken to disband and/or retrain certain regiments into a new kind of military.
Gone was the reliance on trench warfare and the use of sappers and massed artillery. In its place was the new modern mobile army of combined arms and air superiority.
When the war over India came, there wasn’t much to tell. The Japanese navy had once before delivered a crushing blow to the British navy, the latter of which never recovered and left Japan with undisputed dominance of the seas. Unable to reinforce their troops, British forces in India were overwhelmed and outgunned by a superior mobile army; all of British India fell within 2 months, and British Africa capitulated in 4 months. With Japan landing on British possessions in Europe, and the empire’s American allies beating the British in Louisiana, the Commonwealth ceded all its holdings in India to the natives, joining together the two halves of this new pan-Indian creation.
The “Great” War and the end of an era
...and that’s about it. By this time, the world was at or near 1930, and so I decided to take the remaining time to clean up the save and get it ready for a transfer to Hearts of Iron 3. The process meant changing my country tag around, creating/merging some small countries that don’t exist in HoI (though I found out later that doesn’t even matter), making some borders look better (though again, the converter borked some stuff anyway), and generally making sure the file was ok to convert.
Somewhere along the way, a crisis over self-determination for Bosnia and Croatia turned into “the Great War,” the first and last in the game as AI-Japan sided with Croatian liberation and Britain protected the Austrian status quo; in the end, Germany steamrolled Austria, securing a free Croatia. The war was over by Christmas.
With two years left in play, Japan completely reached max rank in all its technologies - the first and only country to do so - and the nation held a laudable 90%+ literacy rate in a diverse, world-spanning empire, which only served to prove the rightness of Reigen the First’s education initiatives...even if the school system was widely regarded as “discriminatory” until it was reformed in 1930. Regardless, the last two years passed without incident or note.
The time is now January 1st, 1936. The world rang in the new year full of tension, with war forecasted on the horizon between powers determined to attend to “unfinished business.”
Bonus Content!
-
The Changing of Japan: 1836 (left) to 1936 (right)
-
The Changing of the WORLD: 1878 (left) to 1936 (right)
Part Two
Indian Liberation and the “Great” War
A Victoria 2 Japanese continuation game from Europa Universalis III
>> Click Here for the "Ethiopian Campaign!" <<
>> Click Here for the "European Expedition!" <<
>> Click Here for the "Sino-Japanese War!" (Part 1) <<
>> Click Here for the "Sino-Japanese War!" (Part 2) <<
>> Click Here for "For Liberty!" (Part 1) <<
Liberty has its challenges. Luckily, Japanese politics were up to the task.
The First War of Indian Liberation
The First War of Indian Liberation was fought as an intervention to the Portuguese invasion of Gujarat. The Imperial Japanese Navy was quickly drawn up to do what it did best and establish dominance of the Indian Ocean In the meantime, Army of India - based in Bengal and the closest force to the enemy - was sent to Astarabad to defend the retreating Gujarati and buy time for the war while the Expeditionary Army was enroute. Battles against the Portuguese in India were a veritable massacre as the powerful Japanese artillery lobbed dangerous poison gas shells, causing havoc in the Portuguese lines, and the new tank and aircraft weapons proved exceedingly resilient and deadly: though outnumbered, Army of India routed the enemy from Gujarat and occupied the Portuguese holdings in the north. The Expeditionary Army soon easily cleared the Portuguese from the south in several decisive engagements, forcing them from the continent.
Soon, the Portuguese capital in Angola would be under threat by Japanese occupiers after a naval engagement off the coast opened the way for Japan’s troop transports.
One thing that wasn’t counted on, though, was Spanish protection of Portugal, which drew one of Japan’s age-old rivals into the war. Though weakened from their communist coup and wars in Europe, they still had a sizeable-enough army to cause problems, which they did by attacking Japanese Africa. 1st and 2nd Africa Corps were sent to Spanish Djibouti and Aden to occupy the rear, while 3rd Africa Corps was sent to delay the Spanish advance until the occupations could be completed. Unfortunately, bad intelligence and an overconfident zeal on the part of the 3rd Africa Corps led to an attack on what turned out to be a superior Spanish force, and their waiting artillery. The attack was a disaster with 22 thousand casualties in a force of only 30 thousand before the Japanese retreated from the line, leaving Ethiopia open to attack.
At the same time, Syria Corps, defending the Suez canal, received news of a Spanish advance through Egypt to take the vital link between Asia and Europe, but attacked the unprepared Spaniards during their crossing of the Nile, obliterating the army twice their size with only a few hundred casualties. Thankfully, reinforcements from Korea and India were not long in coming, which shored up the battle line and prevented an attempted flank from a separate Spanish army further up the river. Down in Ethiopia, they met the Spaniards in the mountains, where the Japanese use of air power proved decisive in the small front.
The Spanish defeats proved to sap most of their remaining trained, veteran fighting force. IN a desperate bid to hold back the Japanese in Africa, waves of reserves were sent to the front, but the massed Japanese attack on such a large front proved too mobile for them to establish another line; within months, the Japanese had overrun Spanish Turkey, Greece, and all of Africa east of Algeria. With the front line gone and Japanese ships threatening Spanish home ports, surrender was the only option, and the Indian Liberation War came to a close.
I know, I have a bad habit of not getting screenshots of anything interesting. I’m too interested in playing.
The Second War of Indian Liberation
Japanese success against the Iberian alliance saw a unified pan-Indian state emerge for the first time, though its lands were scattered enclaves and split apart by a large area of British colonial control, which Japanese military commanders believed was necessary to eliminate if they were to push European colonial power further out of what they saw as “their” Asian domain. However, despite the British crown government falling to a communist coup (the after-effects of which severely weakened the stability and strength of this new “Worker’s Commonwealth”) an attack on the British Raj did not immediately occur; failings in the previous war had highlighted failings in the current Japanese corps structure, and so a certain amount of time was taken to disband and/or retrain certain regiments into a new kind of military.
Gone was the reliance on trench warfare and the use of sappers and massed artillery. In its place was the new modern mobile army of combined arms and air superiority.
When the war over India came, there wasn’t much to tell. The Japanese navy had once before delivered a crushing blow to the British navy, the latter of which never recovered and left Japan with undisputed dominance of the seas. Unable to reinforce their troops, British forces in India were overwhelmed and outgunned by a superior mobile army; all of British India fell within 2 months, and British Africa capitulated in 4 months. With Japan landing on British possessions in Europe, and the empire’s American allies beating the British in Louisiana, the Commonwealth ceded all its holdings in India to the natives, joining together the two halves of this new pan-Indian creation.
The “Great” War and the end of an era
...and that’s about it. By this time, the world was at or near 1930, and so I decided to take the remaining time to clean up the save and get it ready for a transfer to Hearts of Iron 3. The process meant changing my country tag around, creating/merging some small countries that don’t exist in HoI (though I found out later that doesn’t even matter), making some borders look better (though again, the converter borked some stuff anyway), and generally making sure the file was ok to convert.
Somewhere along the way, a crisis over self-determination for Bosnia and Croatia turned into “the Great War,” the first and last in the game as AI-Japan sided with Croatian liberation and Britain protected the Austrian status quo; in the end, Germany steamrolled Austria, securing a free Croatia. The war was over by Christmas.
With two years left in play, Japan completely reached max rank in all its technologies - the first and only country to do so - and the nation held a laudable 90%+ literacy rate in a diverse, world-spanning empire, which only served to prove the rightness of Reigen the First’s education initiatives...even if the school system was widely regarded as “discriminatory” until it was reformed in 1930. Regardless, the last two years passed without incident or note.
The time is now January 1st, 1936. The world rang in the new year full of tension, with war forecasted on the horizon between powers determined to attend to “unfinished business.”
Bonus Content!
-
The Changing of Japan: 1836 (left) to 1936 (right)
-
The Changing of the WORLD: 1878 (left) to 1936 (right)