Italian Empire

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Italian Empire
Regno d'Italia
Flag of Italy
TAG = ITA
Politics
CapitalRome
Ruling Party PNF - Partito Nazionale Fascista
Head of StateKing Umberto II
Head of GovernmentDuce Galeazzo Ciano
Diplomacy
Sphere Italian Sphere
Foreign Alignment Triumvirate Founder
Economy
GDP$104.27B
Credit Rating Good
Market Type Corporatism

The Italian Empire is the fourth most powerful country in the post-WW2 world. In many ways a "lesser among equals" during the war, having a terrible start, the Italian Empire came out of the war a force to be reckoned with. Italy became a country only on March 18, 1861, after the Second War of Independence, where the armies of the Kingdom of Sardinia, along with France, conquered Lombardy from the Austrians, and the subsequent dissolution of all kingdoms allied to Austria in central Italy. And thus the Kingdom of Italy was born, with Sardinian king Victor Emmanuel II becoming King. The young nation however, was troubled from the start, and after the infamous "Vittoria Mutilata" in WWI, Benito Mussolini and his National Fascist Party seized power in the March on Rome in October 1922. After seizing complete power, Mussolini would embark on a radical development of the nation, promising the people to bring back the past glory of Rome. After the Second Italo-Ethiopian War in 1936, "Il Duce" declared the Italian Empire. After a difficult start in WW2, the Italians, with help from the Germans, would modernize their Army and it's tactics. Now, in the aftermath of the war, the Italian Empire is at the helm of the Triumvirate, an alliance led by the three Mediterranean Axis members to combat against German aggression, Italy, Turkey and the Iberian Union (plus their various colonies, client states and independent allies). The first fascist state, Italy is led by Mussolini's successor, his son in-law, Gian Galeazzo Ciano.

History

Great War

It all began with the Great War. With the start of the war in 1914, Italy was immediately divided between pro and anti war forces in politics, as Italy remained on the sidelines for a year since the government at the time was led by the anti-war government of Giovanni Giolitti. Among the "interventionists" was the young Socialist journalist Benito Mussolini, who for violent accusations against major politicians and his general riotous attitude in favor of the war, the majority anti-war PSI kicked Mussolini out of the party. But we'll return to Mussolini later. Returning to the war, with the ascent of Antonio Salandra's government, and under the impression the war would be quick, and especially after being promised large swathes of land, such as South Tyrol, Venezia-Giulia, Istria and Dalmatia by the British and French, in the spriti fo what Salandra called "sacred egoism" on the 23rd of May, 1915, Italy would declare war on Austria-Hungary. Italy's experience in the Great War was terrible to say the least. Far from a quick victory as they expected, not only was the "Regio Esercito" outdated and with insufficient resources for modern weaponry, it was also commanded by the infamously incompetent General Luigi Cadorna, who would lead young Italians into suicidal charges against the Austrian defenses, most infamously at the 12 Battles of the Isonzo River. The constant fighting in the mountains would scar a generation of Italians. Then, in 1917, with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Germany defeated Russia and then proceeded to reinforce the Austrians, while sending a majority of their troops to the Western Front. Due to the utter exhaustion of troops on the Italian side, led to the embarrassing defeat at Caporetto, where the Italians would be pushed back all the way to the Piave River, where, under the command of newly appointed General Armando Diaz, they would desperately defend the front. After that, the momentum of the advance was stopped, as the Italians would soon be reinforced by the French and British, plus more modern equipment from factories, and finally defeated the Austrians at Vittorio Veneto.

Post-War

Following Vittorio Veneto, Italy would continue advancing through the territories it claimed, seizing South Tyrol, Venezia Giulia and Trieste. Problems though, quickly arose on the exact borders, as tensions began to rise between with the nascent Kingdom of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, since both claimed Istria and Dalmatia. When the government began negotiations however, it did not sit well with many irredentist Italians, as the government was signing off territory they claimed as theirs. In the midst of this, legendary poet Gabriele d'Annunzio marched a large contingent of Arditi and idealists of his caliber to seize Fiume (in Croatian Rijeka) and declared the Italian Regency of the Carnaro. What became known as the Fiume incident shook Italia politics to its very core, as P.M.'s Francesco Nitti's Radical government fell apart, while the crippling debt and unemployed soldiers were putting the country in a precarious situation. Even if the whole incident would last only a few months, before the 1920 Treaty of Rapallo, between Italy and the Kingdom of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, settling the borders and giving Istria to Italy, while Dalmatia would go the soon to be Jugoslavians, and Fiume would become a free city within the Kingdom of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs. Among the chaos caused by Fiume, young Benito Mussolini rose to the occasion, having served himself in the war, he created the extremist "Fasci del Combattimento" in Piazza San Sepolcro, Milan, at the time only counting about 50 people. However, Mussolini would quickly become popular among some of the disillusioned populace, and would begin contact with D'Annunzio through Harukichi Shimoi, a young Japanese nobleman who was with D'Annunzio, who nicknamed him "Compare Samurai" or "Comrade Samurai". Mussolini's major support, though, came from the Milanese bourgeoisie, who were terrified of the rise of communism in the country. As mentioned before, Italy was in a pitiful state after the Great War, and the populace was furious with the political establishment and while some turned to Mussolini, others turned to communism, as the Russian Revolution spurred on a wave of proletarian movements, especially in the North, which would culminate in the separation of the more radical members of the PSI and the creation of the Italian Communist Party at a conference in Livorno, in 1921. This time period would o down in popular history as "Il Biennio Rosso" or "The Red Biennium" where on many occasions there was a genuine fear of communist revolution in Italy.

Parties and Factions

Pre-Penelope's Web Rework

At the Start of Game
Name Ideology Leader
National Fascist Party Fascism Galeazzo Ciano
National Fascist Party - Monarchy Despotism Umberto II
National Fascist Party - National Socialist National Socialism Roberto Farinacci
Democracy Restored
Name Ideology Leader
Italian Socialist Party - Berlinguer Clique Neocommunism Enrico Berlinguer
Italian Socialist Party - Maximalist Revolutionary Front Pietro Nenni
Italian Democratic Socialist Party Democratic Socialism Giuseppe Saragat
Christian Democracy Christian Liberalism Aldo Moro
Italian Democratic Party of Monarchist Unity Paternalism Achille Lauro
Italian Social Movement National Conservatism

Neofascism

Giorgio Almirante

Penelope's Web Rework

At the Start of Game
Name Ideology Leader
National Fascist Party Fascism

Sansepolcrismo Fascist Mysticism

Galeazzo Ciano
Democracy Restored
Name Ideology Leader
Italian Socialist Party Revolutionary Front Pietro Nenni
Italian Democratic Reformist Party Progressivism Giuseppe Saragat
Italian Liberal Party Oligarchic Liberalism Giovanni F. Malagodi
Italian People' Party Christian Liberalism

Christian Conservtivism National Catholicism

Carlo Donat-Cattin
Monarchist National Party Right-Wing Populism Alfredo Covelli
National Front Fascism Fascism
Communist Takeover
Name Ideology Leader
Communist Party of Italy Left Communism

Marxism-Leninism Guevarism Christian Socialism

Onorato Damen