Log in

View Full Version : A Very, Very Short War



Fisherking
10-22-2009, 10:41
I have a fairly new campaign as the UP.

I didn’t start out with the typical scenario though.

I went to war with Westphalia simply because they wouldn’t trade. That lead to war with Württemberg and then Bavaria so Spain and France were enjoying beating up on other neighbors. I even had a trade agreement with France. The Pirates were also being a pain so I worked a bit on them too.

Then when things were a bit more settled I decided it was time to take Flanders.

I knew full well that France was coming to the aid of their erstwhile allies so I did some preparations, the best I could do with my limited means, and was ready for them when it came.

So in the summer of 1716 I declared war on Spain, took Flanders easy enough. Then I blocked the northern French port, invaded and took Alsace and French Guyana along with the last Pirate Stronghold. It was a productive turn and I was satisfied and ended the turn.

Much to my surprise the first thing that happened was that France offered peace for a couple of farming techs and offered me what money was left in their treasury. I took it with a trade agreement and that ended the Franco-Dutch hostilities.
:laugh4:

AussieGiant
10-22-2009, 15:04
I've been in and out of war with the French in a UP M/M prestige campaign the whole time.

They will even trade with me out of necessity when offered. Every time I blockade their northern French port, they put up as good a fight as possible but once they lose I can usually sue for peace with them.

On M/M I am definitely experiences sensible decisions.

It was 1724 and Maratha Conf had a go at Ceylon. They did a big loop to avoid my fleet and landed on the east coast. I then went out and smashed their army followed by their navy, then asked if they would consider a truce. They took it, and used the "feeling dirty and need a wash" line.

Then next turn they even accepted trade rights. Because it seemed they realised I was about to cripple them by blockading one of their home ports.

Basically anytime I take an AI nation to the cleaners they will be far more receptive to negotiate.

Which is sensible and very realisitic.

They are like small skirmishes. They will build up a bit of strength, have a go, and a good go, then if they fail we will have another short "peace" for a few years. It's works for me also as I'm trying to keep the number of wars down to less than three. As I can't get peace with Sweden and Spain, I have to control France and Ceylon this way.

Freedom Onanist
10-22-2009, 17:01
There was a war that lasted 40 minutes between Zanzibar and Britain in the 19th century.

Praetor Rick
10-22-2009, 19:13
There was a war that lasted 40 minutes between Zanzibar and Britain in the 19th century.

That would be the Anglo-Zanzibar War (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Zanzibar_War) I believe.

A Very Super Market
10-23-2009, 00:07
There was a 6 year war about some guy in Germany. Pffft. The Brits and French fought for a hundred...

antisocialmunky
10-23-2009, 05:02
Formal Peace between Rome and Carthage was declared in 1985 :-p

NimitsTexan
10-24-2009, 00:07
I've been in and out of war with the French in a UP M/M prestige campaign the whole time.


That sort of thing is more accurate than not. The major western powers were involved in numerous conflicts, Britain, for example, was inbolved in:
War of Spanish Succession 1701-1714 (13 years)
War of the Quadruple Alliance 1718-1720 (2 years)
Anglo-Spanish War 1727-1729 (2 years)
War of Jenkin's Ear 1739-1740 (1 year)
War of Austrian Succession 1740-1748 (8 years)
Seven Year's War 1754-1763 (8 years)
American Revolutionary War 1775-1783 (8 years)
War of the First Coalition 1792-1797 (5 years)
War of the Second Coalition 1798-1801 (3 years)

So in the 100 years from 1701-1801, Britain was at war for 50 of them.

AussieGiant
10-26-2009, 09:22
That is exactly what is going on in my UP m/m game.

It's a lot of manoeuvring, counter attacking, truce, trade, war, manoeuvre etc etc.

As you say NimitsTexan, all very believable.