2nd Franco-Prussian War: Difference between revisions
Line 30: | Line 30: | ||
After Operation Hangman had been executed, the [[France|French State]] issued the recruitment of many new troops and reinforcements from his allies both in Europe and in Africa. While the encirclement in the Rhineland was being closed, [[France]] managed to achieve a minor push, not enough to free it but enough to make a small encirclement of his own in the Saarland. After this the [[4th Reich|German]] armies would return to the main front and push the Rationalist Order back into [[France]] propper. This offensive was however eventually repelled as the new reinforcements were ready, and the Rationalist Order subsequently launched a new offensive, taking Brussels and reaching the gates of Frankfurt yet again. | After Operation Hangman had been executed, the [[France|French State]] issued the recruitment of many new troops and reinforcements from his allies both in Europe and in Africa. While the encirclement in the Rhineland was being closed, [[France]] managed to achieve a minor push, not enough to free it but enough to make a small encirclement of his own in the Saarland. After this the [[4th Reich|German]] armies would return to the main front and push the Rationalist Order back into [[France]] propper. This offensive was however eventually repelled as the new reinforcements were ready, and the Rationalist Order subsequently launched a new offensive, taking Brussels and reaching the gates of Frankfurt yet again. | ||
Due to the pacifism and trauma of the [[4th Reich|Fourth Reich]], no mass conscription or national rallies had been carried out and a decent part of the [[4th Reich|German]] industry was still focused on consumer goods. This made him effectively unable to stop the impending, slow but steady [[France|French]] advance. [[France]], seeking to utilize this, proclaimed the moral high ground and started mass propaganda campaigns along with Poland, blaming [[4th Reich|Germany]] for the fall of the [[Old West]] and pointing at his growing neonazi movement as proof he hasn't changed since the days of World War 2. | Due to the pacifism and trauma of the [[4th Reich|Fourth Reich]], no mass conscription or national rallies had been carried out and a decent part of the [[4th Reich|German]] industry was still focused on consumer goods. This made him effectively unable to stop the impending, slow but steady [[France|French]] advance. [[France]], seeking to utilize this, proclaimed the moral high ground and started mass propaganda campaigns along with Poland, blaming [[4th Reich|Germany]] for the fall of the [[Old West]] and pointing at his growing neonazi movement as proof he hasn't changed since the days of World War 2. Then, suddenly, [[4th Reich|Germany]] lost control over his armies, as they under the command of [[Cinatit The Corruptor]] began blitzkrieging, breaking apart the [[France|French]] line and capturing Paris in just five days. [[France]] would then start monologing once more and proclaiming his defeat, before unconditionally surrendering, as he already knew it to be too late to stop [[Return of the Reich|the inevitable.]] |