Granzerian War

The Granzerian War (: Гранская Вайна, Granskaja Vajna), known in Granzery as the War of Liberation (: Felszabadítási Háború), was a war from 1970 to 1971 in Granzery, Transkarpatia and Straknia. The conflict was fought primarily between the Granzerian People's Republic and Vastava Pact against the Republic of Granzery and Granzerian National Front.

The Granzerian War is believed to have started following the Véragyőr Spring, in which tens of thousands of student protesters took to the street to protest the increasingly harsh communist government, which at the start of the Stasno-Gorbatovic Split had become increasingly repressive and radical to win favour with the Gorbatovic government. The Stasnovan Premier Ilya Adamov made multiple attempts to negotiate with both the protesters and the Granzerian State, however due to the ongoing arms embargo placed on Granzery by Stasnov and the fallout of the Gorbatovic split, the Granzerian government remained unwilling to budge and on the 30th of September 1969, the Granzerian People's Army began to violently suppress the increasingly fervent protests.

The Granzerian State, seeing the situation deteriorate further, approached the Gorbatovic government for help, and the 3rd Guards Tank Army was deployed into Granzery to assist the Granzerian People's Army. By the 9th of December the rioting and protesters had all been dispersed, killed or arrested, while Stasnovan negotiators still attempted to de-escalate the situation in Granzery.

On the 4th of November 1970, elements of the Granzerian People's Army under Field Marshal Zsombor Hegedűs, deserted their post and formed the Granzerian National Front, with the intention of launching a coup d'état of the Granzerian government, and establishing a new fascist government based on the Granzerian Kingdom of the Second Great War. This coup was successful in securing the Granzerian capital building and surrounding areas, half of the Granzerian government was arrested by the GNF and summarily executed while the rest (including Acéloz) managed to escape to form a temporary government in Csongrád, while the Gorbatovic and Stasnovan embassy were both raided and destroyed. Much of the staff of the Gorbatovic Embassy were killed while the Stasnovan Ambassador was kidnapped by the GNF the rest of the Stasnovan staff was turned over to the Csongrád government.

Immediately afterwards the Gorbatovic government once again deployed forces to solve the situation, while Stasnov, after the raid on their embassy drew up contingencies to embark on an intervention of their own. Another series of defections occured in the Granzerian People's Army under Field Marshal Csongor Fodor, as elements of the Granzerian 3rd, 8th, 16th and 25th Motor Rifle Divisions turned their guns on the Gorbatovic forces, causing the Gorbatovic government to withdraw its crippled forces. Hundreds of thousands of civilian insurgents flocked to the forces of Fodor, fearing both reprisals from the Granzerian State and the oppression of the GNF.

Stasnovan Forces and Gorbatovic Forces began their intervention on the 17th of May, 1971 shortly after the coronation of the new Stasnovan Premier Nikolai Bereza, with the 5th Guards Army deployed from Gorbatov via Straknia (which had seen combat spillover and ignite its own ongoing insurgencies) to Granzery, while the Stasnovan TBA Guards Airborne Corps was deployed to Csongrád to evacuate Stasnovan Embassy staff from the country. By the 1st of June the vast bulk of the Granzerian People's Army had defected to the forces of Field Marshal Fodor, which had begun styling itself the Granzerian Republican Army (GKH). The GKH made great gains against what remained of the Granzerian People's Army, eventually capturing what remained of the Csongrád government in late June 1971. After the capture of the Csongrád government the Granzerian Republican Army turned its attention on the National Front, with whom they had previously fought alongside, and by the end of August the Granzerian National Front had also been eradicated and the Capital secured. For a further few weeks sporadic clashes occurred between Granzerian Republican Army forces and the Proletarian Liberation Army, particularly in Straknia. After the Battle of Novak in September 2nd of 1971, and subsequent destruction of the Gorbatovic TBA Motor Rifle Division, the Gorbatovic and Stasnovan governments, fearing the loss of Straknia and Transkarpatia withdrew from Granzery. On the 6th of September the Gorbatovic and new Granzerian government now led by the charismatic Mihály Meggyesfalvi who had been elected a month prior signed the Treaty of Novak, formally withdrawing Granzery from the VP and ending the Granzerian War.

The Granzerian War was a disaster for both Gorbatov and Stasnov, and directly led to the Stasno-Gorbatovic split. The subsequent political and economic turmoil that occured in Stasnov following the Granzerian War led to the conditions that began the Elesarian Revolution, Transkarpatian War as well as inspiring independence movements in Lavikona and Zolevskoy.