Barikalus–Hurmu war: Difference between revisions
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== International reactions == | == International reactions == | ||
* {{team flag|Sanama}}: On 12.VIII.{{AN|1703}} [[Piter Oreya]] and [[Muqana Soke]] issued a statement on behalf of the Federal Coordination Committee. In the statement they condemned the attack on civilians, called for moderation from both sides and offered to mediate in the conflict in any way possible. They also expressed their hopes for a ceasefire and talks between the parties. As a nation with positive relations with both Barikalus and Hurmu, the Sanaman officials hoped that their invitation could mitigate the volatile situation. | * {{team flag|Sanama}}: On 12.VIII.{{AN|1703}} [[Piter Oreya]] and [[Muqana Soke]] issued a statement on behalf of the Federal Coordination Committee. In the statement they condemned the attack on civilians, called for moderation from both sides and offered to mediate in the conflict in any way possible. They also expressed their hopes for a ceasefire and talks between the parties. As a nation with positive relations with both Barikalus and Hurmu, the Sanaman officials hoped that their invitation could mitigate the volatile situation. | ||
* {{team flag|Mondo}}: On 14.VIII.1703, Fort Ermingander released a statement expressing concern at the rising tensions and calling upon all belligerents to take measures to avoid exporting the conflict to neighbouring states. A personal message from [[Mondo]] offered free prosthetic limbs and emergency cake rations to civilian survivors of the ferry attack. | |||
[[Category:Lontinien]] | [[Category:Lontinien]] | ||
Revision as of 16:33, 19 December 2021
| Barikalus–Hurmu conflict | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the Arboric Civil War | |||||
Barikalus bombs Ghawlama |
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| Belligerents | |||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||
| Units involved | |||||
| Strength | |||||
| 117,935 | |||||
The Barikalus–Hurmu conflict began on 10.VIII.1703 AN when forces under Barikalus attacked a Maerifa-flagged passenger ferry that has drifted into Hurmu waters and taken anchorage in Ghawlama. In the territory of Hurmu, on that first day of conflict, at least 350 people were killed.
Hurmudan preparations
The response to the attack on Ghawlama was an opportunity to test the doctrine of civic defence which laid at the heart of its policy of armed neutrality.
Civic defence relied upon the Hurmu Constabulary and Hurmu Peace Corps being able to hold key cities, ports, and airports, as islands of resistance that would allow civil society and contracted defence and security partners to begin to mobilise and carry on an asymmetrical resistance campaign that would ultimately erode the willingness of the aggressor to carry on their incursion by targeting their lines of communication and areas of vulnerability via civil disobedience, propaganda, sabotage, and acts of guerrilla warfare.
The particular circumstances of this conflict did not however exactly match the model as envisaged. Instead of waging a defensive war, the civil society of Hurmu had been called upon to assist in an expeditionary war launched into Arbor, with the purpose of expelling the aggressor from the watershed of the River Glacei, and more generally of bringing the purpetrators of the attack on Ghawlama to justice.
Mobilisation
The attack, unprovoked and nonsensical, had however stirred in Hurmu a widespread popular anger. The multi-ethnic communities of Lontinien found a common voice through their shared outrage. Meanwhile in the Lake District the sentiment of "Never Again", which had prevailed amongst the community of the Hurmudan since the Jingdaoese invasion and long occupation by Stormark afterwards, led to a widespread outpouring of support for the Senate of the Lakes in its decision to take a robust stand against the so-called Barikalus regime.
The upshot of this was that there was no shortage of willing volunteers, many coming forward without official prompting, as the Hurmu Peace Corps garrison in Ghawlama went onto full alert after the events of 10.VIII.1703 AN.
Civil Defence Volunteers, as civilians who wished to support the Constabulary and Peace Corps were termed, who were resident in the Apollonian territories, received directions to muster at government administrative offices in Ghawlama, Mitrovska, and Vadimbaatar. Volunteers from all other locations were directed to travel to Vesüha by their own means at the earliest opportunity.
Concurrently the eastern ulus of the Silver Yak Horde, at the instigation of Chaghagan Khoga, had held a khuruldai during the eighth month of 1703 AN, the same month as in which the attack on Ghawlama occurred. The banners of the Blue and White Bands assembled to Vadimbaatar, ahead of the outcome of the gathering. Support for the war was a forgone conclusion, with the main source of rancor being haggling being over the distribution of commmands and government stipends between the two banners.
The looming conflict would see the Hurmu Peace Corps activate its Defence Service Agreements, with the ESB-Jagdverbände and the Society of Yeshua called upon to send contingents. For the Jagdverbände, arrangements to airlift its Bitzurænhæd (Assault Unit) and "Combat Group A" from locations in Eura and Lyrica to Ghawlama International Airport was underway within forty-six hours. The Krasnocorians of the Society of Yeshua meanwhile were instructed to assemble a force of able-bodied men as a regiment at Mitrovska before travelling on to the Ghawlama region.
These various contingents began to in the region between Ghawlama and Vadimbataar during the course of the eighth and ninth months of 1703 AN. Joining up with the Ghawlama Garrison of the Hurmu Peace Corps, and coming under their discipline, they would form a part of a larger combined arms formation that would become known as the 1st Hurmudan Expeditionary Force.
Composition of the Expeditionary Force
| Formation | Volunteers |
|---|---|
| Allied Tribes of Lontinien | 19,435 |
| Blue Banners of the Eastern Ulus of the Silver Yak Horde | 12,619 |
| White Banners of the Eastern Ulus of the Silver Yak Horde | 6,816 |
| Civil Defence Volunteers | 39,944 |
| Civil Defence Volunteers - Ghawlama | 22,775 |
| Civil Defence Volunteers - Mitrovska | 13,605 |
| Civil Defence Volunteers - Vadimbaatar | 3,564 |
| Defence Service Contractors | 7,878 |
| ESB-Jagdverbände | 2,777 |
| Mitrovska Regiment | 5,101 |
| Lontinien Division of the Hurmu Constabulary | 44,318 |
| 1st Demi-Regiment | 459 |
| 3rd Division, Special Auxiliary Constabulary | 6,004 |
| Marine Support Unit | 145 |
| Rivermen (impressed) | 37,710 |
| Ghawlama Garrison of the Hurmu Peace Corps | 6,360 |
| 8th Port and Maritime Regiment | 572 |
| 33rd Inshore Patrol Regiment | 547 |
| 43rd Regiment of Peacekeepers | 655 |
| 47th Regiment of Peacekeepers | 1,178 |
| 61st Signals Regiment | 309 |
| 67th Depot & Logistics Regiment | 554 |
| 87th Medical Regiment | 455 |
| 99th Field Engineering Regiment | 512 |
| 103rd Electrical & Mechanical Engineers Regiment | 327 |
| 112th Basic Training Regiment | 290 |
| 118th Aviation Base Regiment | 290 |
| 131st Air Policing Regiment | 152 |
| 139th Air Transport Regiment | 167 |
| 148th/3rd Cohort of the Peace Academy | 352 |
| Total | 117,935 |
Of the 117,935 men assembled in the Ghawlama-Vadimbaatar concentration area, only 15,597, including the Constabulary, were considered to be wholly profficient under arms. From these were established six regimental battlegroups. While the Peace Corps had only two regiments of peacekeepers rated for combat operations, every other regiment of the garrison had been asked to contribute a cadre of volunteers, allowing for the six ad-hoc battlegroups, of roughly 1,200 men per instance, to be formed. On the stretch of the River Glacei between Vadimbaatar in the north and Ghawlama in the south, three armed encampments were formed, while the Allied Tribes of Lontinien formed their own encampments north of Vadimbaatar, as far as the border with Lac Glacei - so as to afford a sufficient range for their grazing herds.
For the civil defence volunteers, a two month period of basic training in drill, physical fitness training, weapon familiarisation, and fieldcraft was mandated, under the supervision of the 112th Basic Training Regiment. At the end of this period a third of this body of men, enough for a furrther eleven regiments, were sent out of Ghalwama to tne encampments, whilst the remainder were placed under the authority of the 67th Depot & Logistics Regiment and used to form a "commissariat" which would provide labour detachments and foraging parties for the main force, as well as staff the growing number of field bakeries, fuel depots, and munition dumps, that began to appear at dispersed locations to the west and north of the main encampments.
The chosen men who were now encamped as part of the Expeditionary Force along the western shore of the River Glacei, marked their initiation into the force through a peculiar custom. They shaved the top of their heads down to the temples, passing along both sides of the head. They shaved also the temples and the back of the neck, and the forehead as far as the crown of the head, on which they left a single tuft of hair which would fall down between the eyebrows. They left the hair on the sides of the head untouched, save for braids around the ears.
This peculiar style was adopted, after the fashion of the Silver Yak Horde, so that all of the diverse forces who had pledged to cross the River Glacei would know one-another during the assault, and after, as brothers-in-arms.
International reactions
Sanama: On 12.VIII.1703 AN Piter Oreya and Muqana Soke issued a statement on behalf of the Federal Coordination Committee. In the statement they condemned the attack on civilians, called for moderation from both sides and offered to mediate in the conflict in any way possible. They also expressed their hopes for a ceasefire and talks between the parties. As a nation with positive relations with both Barikalus and Hurmu, the Sanaman officials hoped that their invitation could mitigate the volatile situation.
Mondo: On 14.VIII.1703, Fort Ermingander released a statement expressing concern at the rising tensions and calling upon all belligerents to take measures to avoid exporting the conflict to neighbouring states. A personal message from Mondo offered free prosthetic limbs and emergency cake rations to civilian survivors of the ferry attack.