Mon Jun 24, 2013 9:20 pm
It was my impression in the past days that my messages to Russia and Greece in IC style haven't come across. So I try in OOC terms, though still meant as IC, to the interested public.
My worthy opponents entered the war with a strategy to win, which was not hard to imagine. Wear down the turcish army with greater and superior forces and then achieve the goals at the diplomatic table. But now they have obviously no clue how to end the war. That's because they just don't get it, that they were dealing with a country that has nothing to lose from day one. Were it else, I had folded long ago.
But this is no war between equally developed countries, where one victorious army imposes a threat. There is no threat. You can only threaten countries that have something to lose, where the have-nots you need to make an offer. That's such a basic truism and yet an endeavour that up to date both of them totally failed to accomplish. At the contrary, it was me who made Russia a good offer, even including the transfer of a region. A region I might add, while not as rich as Kars, has an even greater strategic value and would have allowed an immense pressure on the Ottoman capital for good. They rejected.
What the Greek has driven into and in this war has always been beyond me anyways. There was no hope for them to gain anything here in the minute they left the diplomatic stage, because not going to war was the only thing they could have possibly offered in return for more provinces but they were so full of anticipation, that they were completly oblivious to that. Same applies, to a lesser degree, to Russia. They had never had me as far down on my knees as in the month before the war. Yet they gambled. Poor fools.
Let's have a look on how I undertook the course of the war. I tried to make it clear from day one, that the only nations that had something to lose in this war was them, not me. I slowly escalated away from the diplomatic table and they didn't react as though they became aware of the fact that windows got closed. I invented the "Vow of Bursa" and they didn't seem to understamd that I meant it and seemed to be quite buffed that I took the opportunity of escalation against one of them, when it was presented to me. An opportunity that raised only because of the incompetence of my opponents, mind you, not the worth of my force. Yet still I didn't scorch the earth like a madman. I waited for an offer, a sign of peace. Which didn't came. Actually ridiculous, given the fact that their entire economy was on stake and their capital captured. Still they were counting on some obscure "reparations" to come, but what will never happen. What a gamble for a sane government was this. It left me with the impression that this government was indeed not sane but rather insane. Well, so may be it. I say clearly that the houserules, as well as the international treaties the Ottomans signed, as well as character consitancy backs all of my acts, and that they are not, as some have put it, an act of vandalism but the only way for me to win this war. I was not the aggressor here, after all.
I did my best to make it clear that my strategy was to wait this out and make it as expensive as I possibly can on your side and as a matter of fact, the expenses for your side grow with every turn, while they stay the same for me.
What can I lose, actually?
An army?
Compared with what is still in the forcepool anyway, I have no army.
Navy?
Same.
Industry and economy?
Same.
Occupation?
Be my guest. The more you occupy, the less I have to feed.
The future of the country?
Without the regions on stake the future is highly doubtful anyways.
What with regions then?
Well, that's the point where I could really still lose something. Ironically that's exactly the only thing that they can't force me to give away.
So, they don't offer me something for reaching their goals and yet can't threat me with anything. How they think they can wind themselves out of this dilemma is not my concern. In an asynchronous war the small participant wins when he doesn't lose, whereas the big participant loses when he fails to win. That's a truism my worthy opponents seem yet to have to swallow. I can do this for the next 980 turns.
"I am here already.", said the hedgehog to the hare.