Geopolitics: Difference between revisions
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!style="text-align: center; background-color:#ff7e01; color:black;font-size:110%;font-family:Share Tech Mono;" width="50%"| Notes | !style="text-align: center; background-color:#ff7e01; color:black;font-size:110%;font-family:Share Tech Mono;" width="50%"| Notes | ||
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| colspan="3" style="text-align:center;"|'''European Defense Cooperation | | colspan="3" style="text-align:center;"|'''European Defense Cooperation''' | ||
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| '''Belgium''' | | '''Belgium''' | ||
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*Western Union | *Western Union | ||
| | | While France maintains relations with Germany, it never stopped by suspicious of the Germans. In the years following the Soviet invasion of the Baltics (1948), France signed a bilateral security agreement with Poland reupping security guarantees. To back up this treaty, France agreed to forward deploy a brigade in Poland at all times to act as a ''de jure'' deterrent and ''de facto'' tripwire force to force the French government of the day to act. As revanchist rhetoric from Germany intensified from the 1980s to the present, France, the United Kingdom, and Belgium formed the Western Union to deter Germany. Although technically separate organizations, due to bilateral treaties between France, the United Kingdom, and several Intermarium memberstates, the Western Union and Intermarium are widely considered to essentially be functionally the same alliance. The relationship between the Western Union and Intermarium is most commonly called the European Defense Cooperation. | ||
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| {{flagicon|United Kingdom}} '''United Kingdom''' | | {{flagicon|United Kingdom}} '''United Kingdom''' | ||
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* The Munich Understanding | * The Munich Understanding | ||
| While the German Reich (colloquially called the Weimar Republic until that peetered out of fashion in the 1990s) maintains a veneer of cordiality with its European neighbors and it fought in the Pacific War alongside the Allies, its political landscape has become increasingly conservative and nationalist since the 1980s. In 2055, it entered in a secret pact with the Soviet Union and Hungary called "The Munich Understanding" which lays out plans to carve up Central and Eastern Europe between themselves. While the public does not know this agreement exists, the Western Union and Intermarium (functionally forming one defense alliance called the European Defense Cooperation through multiple overlapping bilateral agreements) are primarily focused on deterring parties to The Munich Understanding. | | While the German Reich (colloquially called the Weimar Republic until that peetered out of fashion in the 1990s) maintains a veneer of cordiality with its European neighbors and it fought in the Pacific War alongside the Allies, its political landscape has become increasingly conservative and nationalist since the 1980s. In 2055, it entered in a secret pact with the Soviet Union and Hungary called "The Munich Understanding" which lays out plans to carve up Central and Eastern Europe between themselves. Only the inner circle of the Conservative (KVP) party room knows of the pact. It is understood by the Soviet Union and Kingdom of Hungary that should the KVP go a period of time out of power, as it did between 2056 and 2060, the understanding is no longer in force for that time. While the public does not know this agreement exists, the Western Union and Intermarium (functionally forming one defense alliance called the European Defense Cooperation through multiple overlapping bilateral agreements) are primarily focused on deterring parties to The Munich Understanding. | ||
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| '''Hungary''' | | '''Hungary''' | ||
Revision as of 22:33, 17 December 2024
Geopolitics is the "analysis of the geographic influences on power relationships in international relations."[1]. This page is a quick reference to some of the major powers in the world, their major interests, and relations with each other. It is broken down into the Tensions in Asia and Europe, and Other Regions (broadly including any power not involved in the two major Cold Wars). If a single nation is significantly involved in multiple regions they may be listed in multiple sections.
Tensions in Asia
| Country | Intergovernment Organizations | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Western Aligned | ||
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Hotbed of tensions. The primary reason for the existence of SIPDO. Imperfectly democratic state and recovering military dictatorship. Borders the hostile People's Republic of China to the north. Long-term aim of reunifying the Chinas, but forced to keep these aims secret from the Americans and SIPDO. Not a member of SEADEF due to objection from India and Vietnam. | |
| India |
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| Japan |
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| New Zealand |
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| Philippines |
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| Thailand |
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Founding member of SIPDO at the end of the Pacific War in 1946 and SEADEF in 1952. Still holds the British Overseas Territory of Hong Kong bordering the Republic of China. While the British Army withdrew is rotational brigades from China in 2057, it still maintains defense agreements as part of the SIPDO network. Notably this includes the deployment of troops garrisoned in Hong Kong into China, the joint defense of Chinese air space, and defense of the Chinese coast through naval operations in the South China Sea. | |
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Primary guarantor of Chinese (ROC), Japanese, and Vietnamese sovereignty. Maintains permanent and rotational military forces in all three states. | |
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| Vietnam |
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| Beijing Pact | ||
| China, People's Republic of |
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Hotbed of tensions. Communist state. Borders the hostile Republic of China to the south. Long-term public aim of reunifying the Chinas. |
| Korea |
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| Mongolia |
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| Soviet Union |
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The primary guarantor of Chinese (PRC) and Korean (DPRK) sovereignty. |
Tensions in Europe
Other Regions
| Country | Intergovernment Organizations | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Constellation of Southern African States |