Oil Crisis: Difference between revisions

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Instead of remaining localized, instability in Yemen spread to neighboring countries, leading to a civil war against the Sultanate of Muscat and Oman under the Imamate of Oman. The Dhofar Rebellion, a Marxist movement, emerged in southwestern Oman, initially focusing on Dhofar province but eventually expanding to Oman and joining the pan-Arab movement. The Greater German Reich supported their communist enemy to undermine the United States and Japan's influence in the Middle East, despite attempting to keep this involvement secret. The resulting instability in Yemen and the Middle East was a significant turning point in the region's history.
Instead of remaining localized, instability in Yemen spread to neighboring countries, leading to a civil war against the Sultanate of Muscat and Oman under the Imamate of Oman. The Dhofar Rebellion, a Marxist movement, emerged in southwestern Oman, initially focusing on Dhofar province but eventually expanding to Oman and joining the pan-Arab movement. The Greater German Reich supported their communist enemy to undermine the United States and Japan's influence in the Middle East, despite attempting to keep this involvement secret. The resulting instability in Yemen and the Middle East was a significant turning point in the region's history.

=== Egyptian, Sudanese, and Ananian Civil Wars ===
''Main Article(s): [[Egyptian Civil War]], [[Sudanese Civil War]], [[South Sudanese Civil War]]''

The conflict in South Arabia, if localized, would not be significant historically. However, the instability in Egypt, the largest Arab nation, would escalate the conflict into a legendary event.

==== Collapse of Italian Egypt and Egyptian Civil War ====
Since the North Africa Campaign, Egypt has been a client state of the Italian Empire. However, tensions began to build around 1965 with the death of Farouk I. Italian hegemony and control allowed Egypt to stay together, but the relationship between Egypt and Sudan was tenuous and administrative issues arose. Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser saw the Dhofar and Yemeni rebellions as a signal to strike, and he denounced the central Egyptian government as an illegitimate puppet regime. He took a significant portion of the Egyptian army and launched an insurgency in western Egypt, declaring the Egyptian Revolutionary Command Council to oversee the movement. The Muslim Brotherhood initially agreed to fight against the Free Officers, but miscommunications and failed negotiations led to their own rebellion in Eastern Egypt, aiming to create an Islamic state. The German Reich funded and supported the Free Officers, while the United States supported the Egyptian central government to stabilize Italy's economy and ENI if Italy and its subjects were in the OFN alliance. The Japanese government also supported the Muslim Brotherhood, hoping radicalism would create terror and lower oil prices.

Revision as of 16:14, 9 March 2024

Oil Crisis
Clockwise from top left to right

Egyptian Tanks rushing into battle against M.B Forces · Egyptian Tanks in a standoff against Oromo Forces · Iranian Forces in entrenched positions against Socialist Iranian Forces · Yemeni Republican Forces marching towards Ta'izz · Sudanese Republican Forces celebrating their victory against S.F.O.O Forces · Ba'athist Iraq Forces firing artillery barrages towards Baghdad in an attempt to force OFN-Supported Iraqi Republic Forces to retreat


Date1971
PlaceTheaters:
  • Yemen
  • Oman
  • Egypt
  • Sudan
  • South Sudan
  • Iraq
  • Iran
Belligerents
Leaders

The Oil Crisis is a proxy conflict and economic crisis in The New Order: Last Days of Europe that canonically occurs in 1971.

Around this time, several civil wars in Middle Eastern countries will disrupt the operations of the Italian ENI company, leading to significant price fluctuations in oil value. This disruption will disrupt the global oil market, causing economic and political turmoil abroad. Pan-Arab socialist and hardline-Islamic movements, supported by foreign nations, and national democratic movements, will emerge to take back oil assets previously controlled by the Italian Empire.

Context

The Middle East, once known as the "cradle of civilization," has been a place of changing masters throughout history. The region was the birthplace of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, reaching its peak in the Islamic Golden Age before falling with the Mongol empire in 1258.

The region then played host to a rotating series of masters, including the Timurids, Ottomans, and the French and British. The collapse of Ottoman rule in 1916 during the Arab Revolt led to Franco-British promises of a united Arab state, but this was never realized as the French and British drew lines of occupation, taking the Levant and Red Sea coast into a stranglehold.

The arrival of Italian soldiers in Jerusalem in 1943 seemed to signal an era of Arab independence, but instead, Italian influence infiltrated the Golden Square government in Iraq, extended protectorates over Yemen and Oman, seized the Gulf, and pushed old masters in Turkey into newly-independent Syria and Iraq.

Build-Up

The Oil Wars were influenced by various events, including the Second Italo-Turkish War in 1963 and the dissolution of the Governate of the Levant, which led to instability in the Middle East. The Italian Empire's grip on the region was undermined, particularly after Farouk I's death. The solution to political instability in Egypt was the Muslim Brotherhood and the Free Officers' Organization, which formed major regional forces. The dissolution of the Levant will determine the formation of the United Arab Republic, as the Negev desert is crucial for a land bridge between Egypt and the rest of the peninsula. If Turkey wins the Second Italo-Turkish War, Lebanon may become a civil war between pan-Arabists and the Turkish-backed government.

Pan-Arabism and pan-Islamism gained popular support after the Egyptian instability, spreading to other Middle Eastern countries and associating with other organizations. Iraq was particularly affected by these ideologies, creating an intense political climate within the government. However, the rift between Italian control and pan-Arabic aspiration in Yemen grew, with North Yemen becoming increasingly attracted to Pan-Arabism. Italian protection managed to control this dissatisfaction, but the situation became untenable as the Italian Empire's state worsened, particularly with the collapse of Italian East Africa.

Conflict

Yemeni Civil War

Main Article: Yemeni Civil War

In 1971, a conflict in Yemen between the predominantly pan-Arabic north and the predominantly Mutawakkilite-supporting southern half led to the emergence of the Yemeni Arab Democratic Republic. The city of Sana'a was engulfed in violence, and insurgent cells in North Yemen declared the Republic. Italian peacekeepers withdrew to the port of Aden. The pan-Arab rebels gained support from the Greater German Reich, who aimed to harm Japan and the United States' economies by creating a united Arab entity. If the Yemeni Arab Democratic Republic defeats the Kingdom of Yemen, it will rename the 'Arabian Republic' and declare war on Saudi Arabia. If successful, The Arabian Republic will be renamed and transform into a maximum-size United Arab Republic.

Omani Civil War and Dhofar Rebellion

Main Article: Omani Civil War

Instead of remaining localized, instability in Yemen spread to neighboring countries, leading to a civil war against the Sultanate of Muscat and Oman under the Imamate of Oman. The Dhofar Rebellion, a Marxist movement, emerged in southwestern Oman, initially focusing on Dhofar province but eventually expanding to Oman and joining the pan-Arab movement. The Greater German Reich supported their communist enemy to undermine the United States and Japan's influence in the Middle East, despite attempting to keep this involvement secret. The resulting instability in Yemen and the Middle East was a significant turning point in the region's history.

Egyptian, Sudanese, and Ananian Civil Wars

Main Article(s): Egyptian Civil War, Sudanese Civil War, South Sudanese Civil War

The conflict in South Arabia, if localized, would not be significant historically. However, the instability in Egypt, the largest Arab nation, would escalate the conflict into a legendary event.

Collapse of Italian Egypt and Egyptian Civil War

Since the North Africa Campaign, Egypt has been a client state of the Italian Empire. However, tensions began to build around 1965 with the death of Farouk I. Italian hegemony and control allowed Egypt to stay together, but the relationship between Egypt and Sudan was tenuous and administrative issues arose. Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser saw the Dhofar and Yemeni rebellions as a signal to strike, and he denounced the central Egyptian government as an illegitimate puppet regime. He took a significant portion of the Egyptian army and launched an insurgency in western Egypt, declaring the Egyptian Revolutionary Command Council to oversee the movement. The Muslim Brotherhood initially agreed to fight against the Free Officers, but miscommunications and failed negotiations led to their own rebellion in Eastern Egypt, aiming to create an Islamic state. The German Reich funded and supported the Free Officers, while the United States supported the Egyptian central government to stabilize Italy's economy and ENI if Italy and its subjects were in the OFN alliance. The Japanese government also supported the Muslim Brotherhood, hoping radicalism would create terror and lower oil prices.