History of a Country and an Inspiring Leader
War of National Independence
The people of the Azlayan Mountains, the Rift and Syrda gained true independence on the 33rd of March 1963 after a decade-long struggle against a hated puppet monarch and his colonialist string-pullers. At this time the country was poor and desperately short of reliable calendars, fresh water and technological know-how.
Abey Kaber el-Bad of the el-Bad tribe, most esteemed among the revolutionary leaders, was elected the country's first president by the free and democratic vote of the overwhelming majority of the armed men present in the capital at the end of the fighting.
Captain el-Bad Takes The Helm
In 1984, Father of the Nation President Abey Kaber el-Bad ascended to Heaven at the age of somewhere between 90 and 110. He had presided over a period of growing prosperity and his wise and extremely stern guidance had raised the small country from dusty feudal backwardness to dusty semi-feudal developing-nation status.
Captain Alim el-Bad bin Abey bin Kaber |
In accordance with what his father's dying wish may well have been, the President’s son, Army Captain Alim el-Bad reluctantly agreed to take the helm of transitional national leadership while elections could be arranged. However, the country was still troubled by foreign interference, corruption and widespread mass grief over the loss of its beloved President. There were also several rebellions of irresponsible political dissidents and assorted greedy, squabbling tribal elements to be dealt with. Simply put: elections would have to wait. At this historic moment, Captain el-Bad saw what the nation needed and sternly took up the weighty responsibility of shepherding the people safely through to a free, prosperous and realistically democratic future.
Captain el-Bad united the factions within the military and established the Constitution for the Republic of Syrda. Possessed of an intense love for the people, and superhuman energy, insight, foresight, hindsight, oversight, and secret police black sites, Captain el-Bad set about his mission of economic reform, military strength, ejection of parasitic elements, and re-moralisation the masses.
By 1994 Captain el-Bad had used the reformed military and his own tactical genius to defeat the rebellions and was awarded his country’s highest civilian honour: a decoration of his own design called the Medal of National Appreciation, as well as the Ghazi Medal for Heroism with Palm Leaf Clusters. Throughout the fighting, though he had earned the status and pay grade of a Field Marshal 1,000 times over, Captain el-Bad always humbly declined promotion to higher ranks regardless of the imploring of his grateful and devoted officers.
Even one of extraordinary strength cannot make all the important decisions by himself – a nation’s success depends on the contributions of all patriots. Captain Alim reformed his country's administration on a strict meritocratic basis, uprooting the incompetent and the unreliable and appointing to positions of power only his most qualified and trusted brothers, brothers-in-law, cousins, and old friends.
El-Bad: Practical Theorist and Intellectual
Captain el-Bad knew he needed to chart his nation's course between the all-devouring Borg-like monster of capitalism and the whirlpool of communism. During the 1980s, Captain el-Bad laid out his political, economic, religious and social theories, lessons from his personal life story and comprehensive plan for the nation in his 1,000 word treatise 'El-Bad Book,' which is required annual reading for every Syrdan, from schoolchildren to the highest military or political official (fortunately, unlike the political writings of more verbose historical figures, El-Bad Book can be easily polished off in an afternoon by anyone who is a product of Syrda’s progressive literacy programs).
Captain el-Bad has been oft been lauded as a genius of post-colonial literature for his academic papers, novellas depicting the lives of his ordinary countrymen and his flawless personal editing of the country's newspaper articles (mostly to correct typographical errors, as it is now exceedingly rare for any journalist to err in matters of politics or ideology).
In recent decades, Syrda has been increasingly persecuted by international villains such as the disingenuous United States and the bully cohorts of the UN and EU. To offer a few egregious examples: the imperialists complain of Syrda’s refusal to disengage from it’s legitimate regional interests or to hold elections (which are truly impossible with the current fragile internal security and political situation).
Most of Syrda's international allies have deserted her like cowards or have been toppled like so many Saddams in an American bowling alley. Yet truly the strength of Syrda’s defenders – the members of it’s military and security apparatus - that keep the Constitutional Republic free: tanks roll, riflemen train, lab techs labour scientifically, centrifuges spin patriotically day and night, and the rocket artillery troops practice with the delivery systems.
The Anezruf War: The present day intervention by Syrda in the Zumbanda conflict
Strife in neighbouring Zumbanda has presented Syrda with a duty and a risk. The tribal lands of the Sama people straddle the Syrda-Zumbanda border: with the majority of Sama cruelly divided from their brothers by an artificial, colonially-demarcated line and denied the benefits of Syrdan citizenship. With war and chaos in Zumbanda it is unreasonable to expect Syrda to ignore the threat this presents nor the opportunities to spread freedom and progress. Syrda must act to bring those unfortunate Sama, and their valuable aquifers, under stable leadership and protection.
The risks are great. Syrda is regrettably plagued by social media-fuelled ingratitude and an economy tied down by sanctions and foreign financial trickery. A serious military setback could permit the Constitutional Republic's enemies to use their stacks or money and propagandistic media power to tip the scales against the legitimate government. Furthermore, interference from other regional and international powers, and even non-state actors, could prove a major problem during any external expedition.
The military forces of the Constitutional Republic of Syrda
(The following was drawn from a leaked western intelligence report and open source information).
The core military strength of the Republic is found in its Army ground forces, which are doctrinally prepared to fight conventionally, in counter-insurgencies, and even as insurgents themselves should the need arise. This force is divided into four Area Armies, based on the idea that locally recruited and based forces and officers will have natural familiarity with local terrain which may be critical in defensive battles. The ground forces are comprised of highly-trained and better-equipped Metropolitan units, recruited from and stationed in the more populous and developed regions north of the Rift, and local militia forces in less critical and more remote regions.
The main operational unit of the ground forces is the Brigade. Like a cobra, the Syrdan military must make itself look bigger than it really is, and then strike with outsized fatal decisiveness. Brigades are therefore smaller units than equivalently-named formations in other armies, comprising no more than two battalions and sometimes even just a single company. The numbering of army formations is non-sequential in order to confuse enemy intelligence gathering. Some brigades and sub-units are given inspiring names that reference the people and events of the Syrdan struggle for independence and freedom from tyranny. Some brigades are named for the ferocious wildlife local to Syrda including venomous reptiles and arachnids, swooping birds, unexpectedly violent goats and smaller mammals that, while rarely a threat to humans, are still rather crafty or nippy.
The Air Force is Syrda’s second most important arm and is focused primarily on close air support and secondarily on interception - an increasingly difficult task considering the growing obsolescence of their aircraft relative to expect threats such as the US Navy, with it’s “arrogantly code-named pilots.” The Syrdan air defence system relies increasingly on SAM and AAA units and a variety of improvised solutions of dubious effectiveness. The mainstay of the Syrdan airborne component is the MiG-21, although the force is also known to possess small numbers of MiG-25s, Su-24s and other older aircraft of Soviet or European design. The Air Force also includes ground combat units, which are needed for base defence and to ensure the Air Force is 'balanced' against the Army and the National Police - wouldn't want all of one type of vital asset entirely under the command of a single clique of generals now would we?
Syrda long ago ceded the Mediterranean to larger and better-funded rivals but still has a navy which maintains coastal patrol and assault speedboat units. Efforts have been made to develop a submarine capability but so far there is little evidence this has borne results.
4th Area Army: Syrdan Forces In Theatre
The initial challenge to the Syrdan army will be in developing offensive momentum with the limited means currently deployed opposite the border while most of the Metropolitan Forces are still mobilising.
114th Infantry Brigade "Stinging Scorpions"
Immediately on-hand is the 114th Brigade. Recruited from locals in the Anezruf and equipped largely from weapon stockpiles left over from World War 2, the 114th Brigade is under strength and unconventionally attired. They are led by maverick Cuban-Canadian Colonel Geroux, an aspiring boxing champion, oriental dance enthusiast and master of deception and costume known for his ability to blend seamlessly into any cultural context.
The 114th Infantry Brigade is lucky to get BTR-152s, technicals and ISU-152s |
ISU-152 and border guard Vickers MMG. |
84th Mechanised Brigade "Comrade Agdun Asad"
Usually deployed around Thurga in the Azlayan Mountains, the 84th Brigade of the Metropolitan Forces is in the region on manoeuvres. The 84th Brigade includes a battalion of 'T-74s' (the brochure for this particular T-72M export model was misprinted) and infantry mounted in BTR-70s.
The convoy passes a broken-down T-74. |
BTR-70s, and a BTR-152 from the 114th Infantry Brigade. |
9th Airborne Detachment, the "Feathers of Death"
Based at El-Goumri in the far south of the country are the paratroopers of the 9th Airborne Detachment: a company-strength unit of the elite Parachute Brigade of the Metropolitan Forces. These loyal and fearless men are supported by AMX-13 light tanks and Austrian-made Saurer 4K4FA IFVs.
(AMX-13s from GHQ, Zis truck from CinC, Saurer 4K4FAs from Heroics & Rois, infantry from GHQ). |
80th Fighter Squadron "Dust Falcons"
Also based at El-Goumri and flying the mainstay of the Syrdan Air Force, the MiG-21, the 80th Squadron is providing air cover for the operation. The Squadron also operate a number of other aircraft types for specific missions, such as An-2 Colt light transports and a handful of the old Yakovlev fighters for close support strafing (the feared "Yak-attack" plane!)
The underestimated "Yak Attack" plane (Heroics & Ros). I really need better lighting to photograph this one. |
80th Fighter Squadron MiG-21s on patrol (Scotia Grendel miniatures). |
Reinforcements from the Metropolitan Forces
The 4th Area Army commander can expect to receive additional support as the military mobilises.
333rd Guards Brigade (the "33rd of March Guards Brigade")
The 333rd Guards Brigade is comprised of elite units with the latest tanks, AFVs and infantry weapons acquired in Central and Eastern Europe through the usual intermediaries.
78th Hunter-Killer Helicopter Squadron "War Fennecs"
The best rotary wing pilots in all of Syrda, Azlayan and the Rift join the "War Fennecs" to fly the state-of-the-art Kamov Ka-50 in battle against the enemies of the Constitutional Republic (if the mechanics can be found to get the things operational. In the meantime, the 78th may need to use the venerable Mil Mi-2 helicopters already on-hand).
Syrda II Air Force Base. |
147th Auxiliary Infantry Brigade "Iberrani" - Syrda's 'Foreign Legion'
Recruited from elsewhere on the continent through a relatively modest outlay of funds, these auxiliary troops will help boost Syrdan manpower. The bravest may be willing to risk jumping into combat in the 104th Volunteer Parachute Battalion for the right to wear brightly coloured berets.
Some have already put their hands up for the 104th Volunteer Parachute Battalion (GHQ Miniatures). |
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