Euran Cold War

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Euran Cold War
Alkhivan Militants
Alkhivan militants prepare an ambush in the Nad Ali-Gizab canyon on the 30th Line
Date Mid-2011 to Present
Location Chiefly Eura (Mahoz HaSephardim and Luthoria), tensions existing in Southern Cibola, central Benacia and Keltia
Status Ongoing
Belligerents
Ashkenatzaflagsmall.png
Ashkenatza
Alexandriaflagsmall.png
Alexandria
Babkhaflagsmall.png
Babkha
Anticaflagsmall.png
Antica
EAH smallflag.png
Elwynn, Amokolia and Hurmu
Ociaformerflagsmall.png
Ocian Federation
MahoziFlagWikiSmall.png
Mahoz HaSephardim
InsurgencyFlagWiki.png
Mahozi and Luthorian insurgent groups
InsurgencyFlagWiki.png
Alkhivan and Zjandarian insurgent groups
Commanders and leaders
Jean Carmichael
Edgard II
Szhmuel Astopov
Moshe Goltz
Bartolomeo Henzelli
Mukhtar Al-Harizi
Ardashir Khan
Malliki Tosha
Hesam Shahanshah
Daniel Kalirion
Nathan I
Matt Kovac
Mukhtar Ibrahim Ramidi

Introduction

The Euran Cold War, also known as the Euran Emergency and Ashkenatzi-Babkhan Cold War was a series of heightened diplomatic tensions beginning in 2011 between Babkha and Ashkenatza on the continent of Eura, originating in a territorial dispute between the former allies over the Ashkenatzi Mahoz HaSephardim territory. Over time, it came to have a wider reaching impact on intermicronational diplomacy on Micras due to Ashkenatza finding common cause with Alexandria, whose Luthoria territory in South-Eastern Eura was also coveted by a resurgent Babkha, eager to reunify all its historic territories on Eura, and Babkha's ability to bring its significant soft power and diplomatic influence into play to form a broad coalition supporting its cause. The dispute began as a friendly diplomatic disagreement between allies and rapidly deteriorated into heightened tensions which saw both sides wage an undercover guerilla war on the borderlands of their Euran territories. Targeted assassinations, sabotage, propaganda campaigns, kidnapping and espionage became commonplace as both sides began to abandon hope of a diplomatic solution. Babkha's Raspur Pact, formalised in June 2012, saw Antica, Elwynn, The Normark, and Ocia consolidate into one political bloc, whilst Ashkenatza and Alexandria further strengthened their already existing military alliance. By late June 2012, skirmishes around the notorious 30th Line, the live border and Ashkenatzi defensive line between Babkhan controlled Alkhiva and the Mahoz HaSephardim, had become an almost daily occurrence, and similar skirmishes were beginning to emerge in Alexandrian Luthoria and Ocian Monovia. In Benacia, a Babkhan-sponsored coup of the Elwynnese government had led to increased tensions along the Ashkenatzi-Elwynnese border- it was becoming clear that the Euran conflict would not simply remain an Euran question.