Antilles

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 This article is a C-class article. It is written satisfactorily but needs improvement. This article is part of Altverse II.
United Commonwealth of America

Antilles
Flag of the United Commonwealth of America.svg
Flag
of
Coat of arms
Territory controlled by the United Commonwealth of America: Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands
Territory controlled by the United Commonwealth of America: Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands
Capital Columbia City
Largest city New Charleston
Official languages English
Recognised regional languages Spanish · French
Creole · Taino
Ethnic groups
(2020)
69% European
26% African
3% Aborigines
2% Other
Demonym(s) Antillean-American (official); American (colloquial)
Government Federal Constitutional Presidential Republic
• President
Arian Lawrence (F)
Mitchell Vargas (F)
Baron Avery (F)
William Granger
Legislature National Assembly
Senate
House of Representatives
Establishment
August 13, 1898
January 3–May 18, 1921
November 1, 1950
December 5, 1983
Area
• Total
85,795 km2 (33,126 sq mi)
Population
• 2020 census
Increase 45,092,382
• Density
525.5/km2 (1,361.0/sq mi) (13th)
GDP (PPP) 2020 estimate
• Total
Increase $2.1 trillion (15th)
• Per capita
Increase $47,093 (28th)
GDP (nominal) 2020 estimate
• Total
Increase $2.1 trillion (7th)
• Per capita
Increase $47,093 (16th)
Gini (2020) 98.7
very high
HDI (2020) 0.814
very high
Currency Antillean dollar (HD)
Driving side right
Internet TLD .hsp

The Antilles About this sound [[:Media:Antilles.mp3|pronunciation]]  (Spanish: Antillas; French: Antilles; Haitian Creole: Zantiyalso), officially the United Commonwealth of America (UCA) is an island nation in the Caribbean archipelago occupying two of the Greater Antilles islands. Its territories encompass the entirety of Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. It shares a maritime border with the Continental States. Hispaniola, considered the "main island", spans a total of 76,192-square-kilometre (29,418 sq mi), possessing five mountain ranges and a wide variety of climate and flora fauna. Columbia City is the capital and largest metropolitan area. Other major cities include New Charleston, Davis, Montgomery, Saint Johns, and Whiteport. With 45.2 million inhabitants, the Antilles is among the most densely population nations and is the sixth largest economy in North America and is the largest economy among nations based in the Caribbean.

The Taíno and Arawak settled the island around 1200 CE, with both being hypothesized to have originated from South America. Christopher Columbus landed on the island on December 6, 1492 at Môle-Saint-Nicolas marking the first European landing in the Americas. Spanish colonizers settled Saint Dominic (established as Santo Domingo) in 1946 and is the oldest permanent European settlement in the Americas. During Spanish colonial rule hundreds of thousands of Tainos were enslaved to work in gold mines with many dying from disease, famine and mass killings. In 1503 the Spanish began importing African through the Atlantic slave trade, displacing much of the islands remaining native populace.Enriquillo lead an unsuccessful uprising which was put down by Columbus. The first successful revolution occurred on the island in 1791 when the Haitian Revolution was successful in the removal of the French colonial government. After the revolution the native Haitians lead a genocide of the French in the 1804 Haitian massacre, which significantly strained Haitian relations with global powers. After a period of independence the Spanish reoccupied the islands. American control was established as a concession for the Spanish–American War.

The Continental Revolutionary War in 1917 forced the expulsion of the Federalists from the American mainland, known as the "Great Retreat". in which several millions of Federalist-aligned Americans fled to the islands. During the resettlement of nearly 2.8 million Americans the government began a process of Anglicization. In the 1960s the Antilles entered into a period of rapid economic growth and industrialization that continued until the 2010s. From the settlement of Antilles by Federalists exiles to the death of President Amelia Abarough in 1983, the Antilles was ruled under a one party military dictatorship, with a state of martial law existing for nearly seven decades. Following Abarough's death, the islands would experience a period of democratization resulting in the elections of 1984 being the first free elections held since the Antilles was established. From 1984 to the present day, the Antilles would made great strides in connecting with the outside world and to avoid isolation. In the present day, the Antilles is a partially recognized state and is an observer state of the League of Nations and the Conference of American States. While the Antilles has made significant imporvements, controversies still remain with international observers criticizing several issues within the country, ranging from income inequality, race relations and civil rights, and political freedom. Democratization has been an ongoing process since the end of the martial period in 1983.

Classified as a laissez-faire free-market economy, the Antilles maintains the largest free port in North America. With a considerable presence in financial services, manufacturing and creative industries, the country is regarded as having a diversified economy, having transitioned away from its dependence on the primary sector. It is the 7th largest economy owning its success from the capital flight during the revolution. It is one of the two developed countries in the Caribbean, ranking 16th in GDP per capita and has a GDP total of $2.1 trillion. The nation has consistently ranked highly in ease of doing business index and has one of the lowest corporate taxes in the world. Columbia City is a major site of tourism, gambling, it also serves as a major port for cruise lines. Because of the country’s total lack of regulations, safety standards and a minimum wage, it is a popular “flag of convenience”, which has been a point of contention with the global community, as well as severe economic inequality. It status as a tax haven has also drawn criticism as the nation is a popular site for the illicit practice of money laundering.

Etymology

The word Antilles originated in the period before the European colonization of the Americas, Antilia being one of those mysterious lands which figured on the medieval charts, sometimes as an archipelago, sometimes as continuous land of greater or lesser extent, its location fluctuating in mid-ocean between the Canary Islands and India.

After the 1492 arrival of Christopher Columbus's expedition in what was later called the West Indies, the European powers realized that the dispersed lands constituted an extensive archipelago inhabiting the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. The Antilles were called multiple names before their current name became the norm. Early Spanish visitors called them the Windward Islands (today having a narrower definition). They were also called the Forward Islands by 18th-century British.

Before the end of the Continental Revolutionary War, the Antilles was referred to as the American Antilles, a unorganized territory and settler colony, while the nation as a whole was referred to as the United Commonwealth of America. The name would first appear in the second draft of the 1868 Constitution of the United Commonwealth of America, written by Schuyler Colfax and greatly influenced by Ulysses S. Grant. The term "United Commonwealth" was a reference the transition of the former United States from a federation of states to one united nation. Unofficially, it is also a reference to the consolidation of federal power, with the rights of states being curtailed in favor of a powerful federal government. The terms Columbia, Hispaniola, and New America are also used to describe the Antilles.

The Antilles participates in most international forums as the American Antilles, as apart of a compromise with the mainland United Commonwealth of Continental States and to avoid disputes and confusion amongst the international community. The Antilles is referred to as the American Antilles most notably in the Olympic Games and the World Trade Organization. After negotiation with international mediators in 2015, the Antilles also goes by the American Antilles in the World Health Organization.

History

Pre-Columbian era (1200–1493)

The Pomier Caves are a series of 55 caves located north of Davis. They contain the largest collection of 2,000-year-old rock art in the Caribbean, primarily made by the Taíno people, but also the Carib people and the Igneri.

Settled across the islands of Cuba and Hispaniola, the Taíno and Arawak tribes were the largest and dominant tribes in the Antilles. Both tribes are said to originate from northern South America, primarily in the Venezuela region of the modern-day United Peoples Committees. Historical records show that the tribes arrived on the island of Hispaniola around 1200 CE, while arriving in Cuba around the same tme. Unlike the centralized empires of the Aztecs and Incas, the pre-Columbian society of the islands were divided into a number of smaller kingdoms, generally ruled by a Cacique By 1492, when the island was discovered by Christopher Columbus, there were a total of five different kingdoms in Hispaniola, including: the Xaragua, Higuey (Caizcimu), Magua (Huhabo), Ciguayos (Cayabo or Maguana), and Marien (Bainoa) and 29 chiefdoms in Cuba. During this time period, a number of distinct Taíno languages existed, usually linguistically separating the different kingdoms and societies on the island. Though the exact number is unknown, through genetic and archeological tracing it is accepted the the Taíno population ranged from the thousands to 700,000 by the time of the arrival of Christopher Columbus and his explorers.

Throughout the different nations on the island, Taíno traditions and culture remained similar. A Taíno home was constructed with woven straw and palm leaves, and were generally circular. Taíno beds were also made using palm leaves, but the use of a fashioned Hammack was a prevalent alternative. Leaders of Taíno kingdoms generally lived in rectangular buildings in order to differentiate themselves from their subjects, a trait shared with other Taíno tribes that settled across the Caribbean. In terms of religion, the Taíno people adhered to a polytheistic faith centered around gods known as Zemí. Religious adherence was highly encouraged in society, with many praying to the Zemí gods for good fortune. Many Taíno also relied on priests and medicine men to consult with the gods. The Zemí faith largely disappeared after the colonization of the islands by settlers, but saw a minor resurgence during the "Down Times", the period after the devastating Spanish-American War. However, the Zemí resurgence was crushed by the United Commonwealth of America, as apart of the islands' process of anglicization.

In terms of food, the Taíno relied on meat and fish as a primary source of protein. A common food source was the islands' abundant source of small animals, including rats, snakes, ducks, bats, and turtles, which were all periodically hunted by groups of Taíno men. Like other Amerindian societies, the Taíno also relied on agriculture as a primary source of food. Unique to Hispaniola, the Taíno raised crops in a conuco, which is a large mound packed with leaves and fixed crops to prevent erosion. Notable agricultural goods included: cassava, maize, squash, beans, peppers, peanuts, cotton, and tobacco. With a strong reliance on fishing, many Taínos settled along the coasts of the island. In order to fish and travel by sea, the Taíno employed the use of canoes. Taíno canoes were able to fit an upwards of 100 people. These canoes were also used as war vessels, with the Taíno people coming into regular conflict with the Carib people. Taíno fishing parties typically carried a armament of bows and arrows with poisioned tips, while also carrying war clubs for close combat fighting. However, their conflict was exclusively fought on the sea, with both tribes never conducting a documented land invasion.

Colonization of the Antilles (1493–1865)

The Landing of Columbus, a depiction of landing of Columbus in Hispaniola.
The Haitian Revolution saw the establishment of the First Empire of Haiti.
Spanish forces invading the town of Port-au-Prince, later known as Whiteport.

Christopher Columbus first arrived in the Antilles in December of 1492, landing in the modern-day city of New Montpelier on the island of Hispaniola. While landing, Columbus and the European explorers were greeted by the native Taino people, who offered a number of gifts to the outsiders, including gold. Inspired by their lavish golds, Columbus planned to explore more inland for the valuable resource, but was forced to abandon his inland exploration after his flagship, the Santa María, was accidently beached on the shores of Hispaniola, forcing the maiden expedition into the Americas back to Spain. Before leaving, Columbus ordered the construction of a fortified outpost, known as La Navidad or the "Christmas Fort", leaving around thirty crewmen to man the station and await for his return. Columbus returned to La Navidad in 1493, but was met with an abandoned fort. While it is unknown what happened to the explorers stationed at the fort, it is assumed that disagreements with the native population resulted in conflict. With La Navidad destroyed, Columbus took the 1,300 settlers originally planned to settle the ill-fated fort east, eventually landing north of the Isabella River, establishing the settlement of La Isabela in 1493. Although La Navidad is considered the first European settlement in the Americas, La Isabela was the first permanently populated European settlement in the Americas.

With the settlement of La Isabela, the Colonization of the Antilles officially began. Columbus went onto discover Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, claiming all three islands and Hispaniola as a part of the newly-founded Spanish colonial empire. Beginning the early 1500s, the islands that consist of the modern-day Antilles was colonized by Spanish settlers. The native populations on the islands were decimated by European colonists, either through biological means, such as the spread of infectious diseases, or through military conquest. Native islanders were also caputed and forced into slave labor, serving on the growing sugarcane and tobacco plantations. Overall, it is reported that over 90% of the islands' native population succumbed to the effects of early colonization. Internationally, the mass death of indigenous Americans all around North and South America has been recognized as a genocide, however the government of the Antilles has declined to recognize it as such, which as been a point of contention in modern national politics.

The Colonial Antilles was governed under a variety of different colonial governments. From 1492 to 1535, Colonial Antilles was governed under the Spanish West Indies. From 1535 to 1821, the West Indies were governed as a province of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. The Spanish governed the entirety of the island of Hispaniola until 1625, when the western portion of the island was ceded to France as apart of the Treaty of Ryswick. With the rapid decline of native labor, the use of African slave labor became commonplace in the Colonial Antilles. The first reported that the usage of African slavery began in 1523, though is has been concluded that African slave labor could have been used earlier to a lesser extent. The large plantations in Cuba and Hispaniola were heavily reliant on slave labor, specially in French Hispaniola, where it was reported that enslaved Africans outnumbered French colonists 10 to 1. In the Spanish Antilles, the Casta' system was employed by colonial authorities to discriminate against Amerindians and Africans, and also to maintain blood purity amongst Spanish colonists. By the start of the eighteenth century, over TBD people lived in the Antilles, primarily Spanish-born Antilleans and enslaved Africans.

Opposition to increasingly oppressive colonial rule was enhanced by the American and French revolutions. The ideals of the French revolutionaries inspired the Haitian Revolution in French Hispaniola from 1791 to 1805, where the enslaved African majority rebelled against the ruling French minority, resulting in genocide and the creation of the first Haitian state. The dissolution of New Spain and widespread revolutions against Spanish colonial rule in Latin America allowed for the creation of the Republic of Spanish Haiti in Spanish Hispaniola, which was modeled after the revolutionary states of Simon Bolivar in South America. By 1825, what remained of the Spanish colonial empire in the Americas was Cuba and Puerto Rico.

In 1822, the island of Hispaniola was united under a single government after Haiti forcibly occupied Spanish Haiti, forming the Republic of Haiti. However, this unified Hispaniola was far from stable, and rebellions against Haitian rule resulted in the independence of the First Dominican Republic in 1844 and the establishment of the Second Empire of Haiti in 1849. From 1805 to 1861, the nations of Hispaniola were protected by the United States under the Monroe Doctrine. In 1861, Spain invaded the island of Hispaniola, defeating a combined force of Haitian and Dominican forces and re-established colonial authority. The Spanish invasion was unopposed as the United States was embroiled in civil war, and the re-establishment of long-term Spanish colonial rule was confirmed with the collapse of the United States during the War of Contingency.

American Antilles (1898–1917)

Frederick Wheeler (left) and David McCluskey (right) served as the two territorial governors of the Antilles. Wheeler served from 1899 to 1911 while McCluskey served from 1911 to 1921.
The Battle of Fort-Liberté was one of the most devestating battles to take place during the Spanish–American War.
Allied victory at the Battle of San Juan Hill in Cuba ensured the eventual takeover of the island.

While the Antilles were under Spanish control, the United Commonwealth of America was established in 1866 on the American Mainland following the collapse of the government of the United States and the start of the War of Contingency. The War of Contingency ended with the signing of the Treaty of Salinas, which forced the United Commonwealth to recognize the secessionist territories of Superior, the Northeast Union, Florida, and Acadiana as sovereign and independent nations. With a quarter of its territory lost, the United Commonwealth suffered economic and political turmoil during the 1870s, which allowed various European powers to re-establish colonial footholds in the Americas without contention. In the case of the Antilles, this resulted in the re-establishment of Spanish colonial authority in the Caribbean Sea and the revival of the Council of the Indies.

Tensions between the United Commonwealth and Spain began rapidly escalating during the 1880s, after the United Commonwealth had officially returned to the global stage after reuniting with the remnants of the neo-Confederate state established after the War of Contingency. Relations between the two powers were already tense since the War of Contingency, as Spain had intervened in the war and established the Kingdom of Florida, a puppet state consisting of the former state of Florida. Tensions between the two powers were also exacerbated by the Federalist Party through the absolute control of the government, who recognized Florida and the Spanish Antilles as apart of the American sphere of influence and wanted to distract from increasing economic hardships and oppression within the nation. The general negative attitude towards Spain expressed by the United Commonwealth was shared with other Anglo-American nations, most notably the Kingdom of Sierra, which had ongoing disputes with the Spanish regarding their territory in the Pacific Ocean.

In 1898, the HMBS Brazos, a Brazorian battleship, was destroyed in the Havana Harbor. While at the time, the reasoning for the destruction of the ship was unknown (and would later be determined to have been most likely an accident in contemporary times), the governments of the United Commonwealth, Brazoria, and the Kingdom of Sierra had used the sinking of the ship as proof of Spanish aggression in the Americas and as pretext for war. On April 21, 1898, Brazoria declared war on Spain and was following by the United Commonwealth, the Kingdom of Sierra, and the Northeast Union days later, beginning the Spanish–American War. Immediately after the declaration of war, the Spanish Antilles and Florida were placed under a naval blockade by the United Commonwealth Navy, and a combined force of Brazoria, Northeastern, and American fleets easily destroyed the numerically and technologically disadvantaged Spanish Navy, allowing for almost immediate invasions of Cuba and Hispaniola. The defending Spanish forces, who were already overwhelmed by cases of yellow fevor and increasing pro-American insurgencies, were no match for the combined Anglo-American armies which captured key points across the Antilles despite strong and deadly resistance from the defenders. By August of 1898, the islands of Cuba and Hispaniola were firmly under the control of the coalition, and defeats in the Pacific by the Kingdom of Sierra pushed for the Spanish surrender.

The Treaty of Paris, signed on December 10, 1898, forced Spain to relinquish their colonial possession to the Anglo-American nations and recognize the independence of Florida, which had switch sides during the war. Initially, the United Commonwealth had planned to acquire all Spanish territory in the Americas, including Florida, the Antilles, and various other island territories. However, fears that such an increase in territory would inspire potential invasions by the United Commonwealth prompted the allies to negotiate territory splitting with the U.C. prior to the signing of the treaty. After intense negotiating, the United Commonwealth agreed to take possession of only the Antillean islands (which included Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands) and recognize an independent Florida in exchange for a payment of $30 million and exclusive political and economic influence in the Caribbean.

The American Antilles Act, passed by the National Assembly on January 2, 1899, organized the newly-acquired Antillean possessions into the American Antilles. There was considerable opposition to the annexation of the Antilles leading up to the American Antilles Act, primarily from Southern politicians, who opposed the entrance of territories with large non-White and Catholic populations, while some Cuban officials opposed annexation and instead supported the establishment of an independent Antillean, or at the very least Cuban, republic. Despite these opponents, it was always the intent of the federal government to annex the Antilles as territories and eventually admit the islands as commonwealths, the Federalist majorities in both chambers of the National Assembly ensured that intent was upheld.

The American Antilles was governed by a territorial government, which was led by a governor appointed by the National Assembly. The first governor was the American Antilles was Frederick Wheeler, a general in the United Commonwealth Army who had led American forces to victory in the devestating Battle of Fort-Liberté. On April 21, 1901, approximately three years after the Spanish-American War, the National Assembly passed the Antilles Settlement Act, which established a federally-funded colonial outreach program, which aimed to encourage greater American settlement in the Antilles. The program, known as the Antillean Colonial Project, primarily focused on the settlement of Hispaniola, as the island had available land following resettlement by Spain. Settlement to Hispaniola was also encouraged by the Antillean Colonial Project because it was believed by federal officials that the devastation in Hispaniola caused by Spanish colonialism and the Spanish–American War would allow for an easy transition to American and Anglo-American oriented culture with little resistance from the native Haitians and Dominicans. It was under this belief that white applicants, primarily those of Anglo-Saxon descent, were prioritized over other applicants.

Continental revolution and retreat (1917–1921)

Map of the Federalist retreat to the Antilles in 1921.

The American Antilles was left largely unaffected by the Continental Revolutionary War that began in 1917. Following the outbreak of war, the Antilles was placed under martial law following the signing of the Martial Act of 1917 that imposed marital law across the entire United Commonwealth, including overseas territories, for the duration of the conflict. During the war, the island territories were used as bases for the United Commonwealth Navy and Marine Corps with Cuba and Hispaniola being a common rest and relaxation site for troops from all branches of the armed forces. Due to its undeveloped infrastructure and distance from the mainland, the Antilles didn't have an active Landonist movement during the revolution and wouldn't see an underground communist movement emerge until years after the war. As the war progressed and the Continental Revolutionary Army began gaining more ground, capturing more territory, and pushing loyalist Federalist forces back, evacuations began to take place in which American citizens were evacuated to the Antilles, a process that had begun following the war's beginning, but intensified in 1920 following the fall of the capital of Chicago to Landonist forces as the war had turned in favor of the Continentalist Party and president Carson Henderson as killed in the process. Amelia Abarough took over as president in his absence and began the evacuation of the entire American mainland to the Antilles, declaring the war lost. Colombia City and Whiteport were the main sites of which American evacuees would arrive in along with other sites in Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Several historic artifacts were also relocated to the Antilles by retreating Federalist forces to prevent them from being captured or destroyed by the Continental Revolutionary Army forces. Said artifacts included statues, documents, and other artifacts pertaining to the American Revolution while others were statues and monuments to the Confederate States of America from the American Civil War, per the request of White American Southerners.

During the evacuation, the army and marine corps fought in a fighting retreat as a defensive vanguard force while the evacuations went underway. Surviving loyalist personnel, government officials, and millions of civilians fled the American mainland to escape possible persecution by Landonist forces. Neighboring countries such as the Carolina Republic, the Kingdom of Florida, and the Republic of Acadiana aided in the evacuations as well by sending troops to aid in the vanguard effort and allowing cities such as New Orleans, Charleston, and Miami to be used to aid in evacuating American citizens. Baltimore in Maryland was a major evacuation site and by 1921 was the only major city on the coast that remained in Federalist hands as the Northeast Union fell into its own communist revolution and Philadelphia in Pennsylvania had been captured. Starting in 1919, several neighboring countries in Anglo-America would directly intervene to aid the Federalist government, but were ultimately unsuccessful despite initial momentum and withdrew by 1921, later signing the Treaty of Bernheim that officially recognized the Continental States as a legitimate country and the successor state to the original American Commonwealth. The evacuation ended on May 18, 1921 with the last ships leaving to the Antilles carrying the last remaining loyalist military forces and civilians who wanted to leave. By the time the evacuation had ended, the American mainland had been captured and the Continentalist Party assumed complete control over the country under the newly-formed Continental States.

Martial Period (1921–1952)

Rioters storming the Whiteport Municipal Building during the Hispaniolan Anarchy.
Citizens attacking insurrectionist forces during the June 16 incident.

The period time beginning at the end of the Great Retreat in 1921 to the June 16 incident in 1950 is referred to as the Martial Period. During this period, martial law was prevalent in all four Antillean commonwealths, though more intensively in Hispaniola, and saw the collapse of civilian government in favor of an unofficial military dictatorship.

By the end of the Continental Revolutionary War, nearly two million people had evacuated from the mainland United Commonwealth and arrived in the Antilles. A majority of the American refugees were civilians, in particular White Americans, while others included government officials, army personnel, and their families. A majority of refugees had fled to Hispaniola, with an estimate 1.1 million people relocating to the island during the Great Retreat. Almost immediately, tensions between the American refugees, who had now become settlers, and the native Haitian and Dominican peoples, who were displaced by settlement, rose and were exacerbated by racial animosity and mutual political distrust spurred by ideologues. By 1923, the natural order had broken down, and Hispaniola entered into a state of political anarchy, known in contemporary times as the Hispaniolan Anarchy.

The Hispaniolan Anarchy was characterized by frequent riots, looting, vigilantism, burglary, and overall violence on a mass scale. While the United Commonwealth Army attempted maintained order in the cities, internal rivalries and incompetence within the command structure limited the army's operations to within the urban centers alone, allowing the rural inland to be overtaken by mob rule and violence. In what was described as a genocide, groups of predominantly White Americans, most notably the Ku Klux Klan, systematically targeted Haitians in rural villages and towns, resulting in a total of TBD being killed. In 1927, President Abarough issued an executive order decrying the violence in the "capital commonwealth" and declare total martial law in the island, ordering the army to withdrawal from the urban centers in an effort to police the interior. By 1931, violence had subsided and the anarchy was declared over, though the damage had already been down. Many Haitians and Dominicans were displaced by the Anarchy, and in turn were subjected to economic hardships as Americans established themselves as the new majority. While violence between American refugee-settlers and native inhabitants was not limited to Hispaniola, it was most prominently displayed on the island during this period.

Following the relocation of the federal government to the Antilles, rivalries between different factions within the government remnants stagnated national growth. While President Amelia Abarough was the de facto dictator and sole ruler of the United Commonwealth of America, much of her early presidency was rendered ineffective by her political rivals. General of the Armies George Ossoff, who had formed a strong rivalry with Abarough during the Great Retreat, emerged as her chief political opponent. Being respected amongst army leadership, Ossoff used his position and influence to spite Abarough and disrespect her image. During the Hispaniolan Anarchy, Ossoff purposefully delayed army action against rioters until he was forced to act, and during the Saint Johns incident of 1944, he encouraged his soldiers to ignore orders to enforce Abarough's policies within the city. Their rivlary reached a boiling point in 1947, when Ossoff attempted to prevent the desegregation of the army.

On June 16, 1952, with the backing of elements within the army and the Ku Klux Klan, Ossoff staged a coup d'etat against the government of President Abarough, with the goal of overthrowing her and instituting permanent military rule. Elements of the army loyal to Ossoff surrounded and entered Columbia City, the capital of the United Commonwealth in the Antilles, though were pushed back and ultimately defeated by the army loyal to Abarough and the city's residents. The failure of the June 16 insurrection resulted in the arrest and execution of Ossoff and Grand Wizard Arnold J. Greene of the Ku Klux Klan and the widespread purge of Ossoff loyalists, Klansmen, and dissidents in the Antilles, known as the Great Blue Terror. The Great Blue Terror is commonly acknowledged as the end point of the Martial Period.

Abarough Period and Presidential absolutism (1952–1983)

Following the June 16 incident, Ossoff and all other individuals involved with the coup were arrested with only a small handful managing to escape. In the aftermath of the June 16 incident, a series of trials were held by a military tribunal appointed and set up by Abarough herself in what would become the Columbia trials. Held in the nation's capital, all tried individuals were found guilty and were given life sentences and imprisoned at the detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The highest-ranking officers and most senior participants in the coup would later be executed at Guantanamo Bay with Ossoff being executed two years later in 1952 via hanging. The Ku Klux Klan was immediately declared a criminal organization and was subjected to a widespread purge by the Antillean government with membership in the group being declared a criminal act. Pro-Ossoff individuals would also be targeted in a widespread purge of the armed forces in what would the start of the Great Blue Terror, a period of political terror inflicted the Antilles by the Abarough regime who initially targeted pro-Ossoff individuals, the terror later extended to include anyone harboring anti-Abarough views and targeted political dissidents at-large.

The Blue Terror was waged by Abarough as a means of consolidating her government as well as rooting out any form of political opposition within the country. The start of the terror also marked the start of the Abarough Period, an era in Antillean history where Abarough held absolute political power within the country and ruled as an autocratic dictator through a system known as presidential absolutism where the presidency was emboldened and made the most powerful office in the country via the lifting of restrictions in times of emergency. Under this system, the president is allowed to appoint officials to any position in government, has complete executive authority, and can ignore the legislature all together, reducing Congress to a stamp legislature and making the executive branch the most powerful branch of government while the judiciary was also made subordinate tot he president via the appointment of loyalists to the courts without requiring congressional approval. Under presidential absolutism, Abarough was able to oversee the Blue Terror and set up various concentration camps nationwide for political dissidents. As part of the terror, Abarough also became the formal process of anglicization of forceful cultural assimilation of the island's native inhabitants and other racial minorities into the European-oriented culture of its White majority at the expense of their cultural, political, and social independence. Racial segregation was sanctioned by Abarough as well on the grounds of ensuing the success of the anglicization process and opposition towards these policies was met with violence with opponents being forced into exile under the threat of forced imprisonment or execution.

A pro-Abarough propaganda leaflet promoting the planned "Great Return" to the American mainland, 1961.

In order to reinforce loyalty to Abarough and her regime, extensive propaganda efforts were launched and carried out in order to indoctrinate the public in supporting Abarough, her government, and her policies. Said propaganda depicted Abarough as the island country's strongest and sole defender and often referred to her as the "founding mother" of the Antilles, framing her as being equivalent to the Founding Fathers of the United States with propaganda often featuring Abarough alongside the likes of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Benjamin Franklin along with other founding fathers. Propaganda was promoted on all forms of media and in all aspects of civil society. The propaganda efforts lead to many outside observers and Antillean defectors combating Abarough to Continental dictator Seamus Callahan over the similarities towards both authoritarian rulers and was commonly nicknamed "Right-wing Callahan" by many foreign observers. Opposition to her rule quickly turned militant due to the frequency of state violence and culminated in armed confrontations occurring between the central government and armed groups starting in November 1952 with an armed revolt in Puerto Rico organized by the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party that sought to establish an independent Puerto Rican state and secede from the Antilles in response to the cultural genocide from anglicization. The revolt lasted in 1954 and ended with the suppression of the revolt by the government and intense repression on the island. In 1953, Cuban nationalists organized into several armed groups behind La Libertad and stated a rebellion that became the Cuban insurgency. An attempt to establish an independent Cuban state, the insurgency was the largest challenge towards Abarough's rule and the longest war in the island country's history, lasting until 1969 with the war extending after the emergence of the Cuban Liberation Army in 1962 following La Libertad's collapse. The war ended in 1969 with the defeat of the last rebels and Cuba would be pacified and placed under military rule for the entirety of the 1970s as part of Operation Goodwill. Despite widespread censorship by the Antillean government, news of Abarough's repression managed to get released internationally and caused widespread condemnation and further defection. The condemnation resulted in diplomatic pressure by the Antilles' allies in the Conference of American States into liberalizing their political system with Abarough making slight concessions throughout the 1960s and 70s which included giving some powers to the legislature and holding elections, the latter of which were criticized for lacking the qualities of a genuine, free and fair election.

During the 1950s and 60s, there was a major shift in the country's domestic and foreign policy with the focus shifting towards domestic and regional security along with establishing a permanent presence on the islands away from the original view of a temporary presence with the longterm plan of reconquering the mainland. This policy shift was formalized with the signing of the Extended Occupation Act in 1950 and was done due to the country's limited contact with the international community, global controversy, and the military strength and position of the Continental States as one of the two superpowers in the world alongside the Kingdom of Sierra. Despite the country's precarious and isolated position in the international community, the Antilles was a player in the Cold War and got involved in major international conflicts, primarily the Vietnam War and the Colombia War. The United Commonwealth Expeditionary Force was created in 1964 to allow the deployment of Antillean troops overseas to support the Western Bloc against Eastern Bloc-aligned governments and paramilitary forces. Antillean involvement in Vietnam saw its troops back South Vietnam and later Champa against North Vietnam and the Viet Cong, earning praise from the South Vietnamese government and military for their involvement and were credited for assisting SEATO in their efforts, being an observer state of the latter organization during the war. In Colombia, Antillean involvement was viewed as important to opposing the Communist Party of the Andes and their forces, but ultimately was unsuccessful and the communists took over and established the United People's Committees. The UCEF would be disbanded in 1976 following the withdrawal of the last Antillean troops from Vietnam and Colombia with the UCEF also aiding in the evacuation of Andean refugees and citizens fleeing from the communist takeover during the Andean boat people crisis. In the 1970s, the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States was created between the Antilles and several other island countries in the Caribbean to deter Continental expansion and influence in the region as part of the Antilles' new strategy for national security. The last major conflict of the Abarough period came in 1982 with Operation Caribbean Shield, the invasion of Bahamas to overthrow the pro-Continental regime in the country and install a pro-Western Bloc government. Commonly known as the Antillean War, the operation was a success and the Bahamas later rejoined the OECS after the end of Landonist rule.

Democratization (1983–present)

Abarough's health began to decline starting in the late 1970s and by 1981 she had all but withdrawn from public life, only making scant public appearances for special occasions. By the end of 1982, Abarough began having frequent health problems and was fully hospitalized by the start of 1983. On April 5, 1983, Abarough died at the age of 99, the longest-serving head of state in North America at the time of her death. After her death, Vice President Ronald Hamilton had took over as acting president until a formal successor had been chosen. Following her state funeral, Amelia's son Eric Abarough had risen as the likely successor as president and while he would accept the role, he would only do so under certain conditions, primarily the end of authoritarian rule and the establishment of a genuine democratic political system in the country. Starting at the end of April, the 1983 Antillean Constitutional Convention began where members of congress gathered in the meeting room of the House of Representatives to begin the process of drafting and later adopting a new constitution for the Antilles, seeking to model it off of the original United States Constitution while Eric began crafting a new political idea for the Federalist Party and the Antilles to govern by.

The final provisions of the new Constitution of the Antilles being passed in the Antilles Congressional Building.

The Constitutional Convention began on May 1 where delegates had gathered in the United Commonwealth Congressional Building. At the start of the convention, Eric Abarough spoke where he laid out his demands for the new constitution to the convention and his vision for the country. His vision and new ideology for the Federalist Party and the governing system for the Antilles was announced in the form of the Federalist Principles which are a federalized governmental system and autonomy for the four commonwealths, constitutionalism, freedom and the pursuit of happiness, and honoring the legacy of the American Revolution and the Founding Fathers. The Federalist Principles were to be both adopted into the constitution to establish a democratic federal framework and was to be adopted by the Federalist Party as a shift towards mainstream conservatism away from the militaristic authoritarianism that dominated national politics under his late mother. After two months of debate and discussion, a new constitution was unveiled and formally ratified on July 13. Modeled after the American Constiton of old, the new constitution granted new rights such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of the press, right to peacefully assemble and protest, and the right to a free media among others. The new constitution also laid out free and fair elections with Eric Abarough announcing the first democratic elections would take place in 1984. Eric would run for president and was successfully elected on November 5 of that year, becoming the country's first democratically elected president.

Eric Abarough would be inaugurated on January 20, 1985 which formally started his presidency. Throughout his tenure in office, Eric had worked to ensure the successful democratic transition that began with the constitutional convention and stripped away the authoritarian policies, laws, and system of his mother. Under his presidency, racial segregation was formally abolished after decades of protest and boycotts worldwide, free elections were held and one-party rule was ended with new political parties being permitted to form and contest elections and organizing the four main islands into provisional commonwealths, granting them powers like those of U.S. states and those of the original American Commonwealth. Censorship was heavily scaled back and state propaganda outlets were shut down except for those aimed at promoting dissent within the Continental States. These policies resulted in the country's international isolation being gradually reduced and new investment coming into the country and burgeoning tourism industry.

A joint taskforce consisting of the Antillean, Jamaican, and British navies performing naval training maneuvers near the Virgin Islands, circa 2019.

In the 1992 presidential election, Antillean voters elected Thomas Marshall, the first non-Federalist president ever elected in the history of the United Commonwealth of America. Marshal continued the democratization reforms first initiated under his predecessor, and implemented new reforms specifically targeted at improving the welfare of African Antilleans. His most notable accomplishment was the passage of a constitutional amendment recognizing universal voting suffrage, eliminating the controversial military service requirement for federal voting rights. The tourism industry further expanded under Marshall, especially following the legalization of gambling in 1997.

The presidency of Carlton Woodbridge saw the return to power by the Federalist Party and solidified the two-party system established in 1996. After declaring the democratization process completed in 2001, much of Woodbridge's presidency focused on foreign policy, with the goal of establishing the Antilles in the international scene following decades of isolation. Following the September 11 attacks, the Antilles organized foreign aid to the countries affected by the attacks, and in 2004 attempted to join coalition forces in invading Ba'athist Syria. In 2005, the Antilles officially submitted an application for membership into the Conference of American States. Though granted observer status in 2007, political divisions regarding the country's membership, along with external pressure from the mainland United Commonwealth, has placed the country's membership application in political limbo. In 2009, in one of his last acts as president, Woodbridge revived the a limited version Monroe Doctrine, pledging Antillean defense of non-Landonist Caribbean nations.

From 2010 to 2012, relations between the Antilles and mainland United Commonwealth slightly thawed under the direction of president Jim Cooper, who pursued a policy of "mutual non-denial" with mainland leader Helene Poirier. Following a historic meeting between both leaders, the Antilles pursued greater economic ties with the mainland, which included the lifting of flight restrictions between both countries. However, Cooper's policies towards the mainland were perceived with extreme hostility within the Antilles, and in the elections held in 2012, Cooper and the Civic Democratic Party suffered landslide defeats to Michael Abarough and the Federalists. Under Abarough, and later mainland leader Anthony Malito, relations with the mainland were again severed and returned to a state of mutual distrust and hostility. Relations with the mainland were further damaged by the second Caribbean crisis.

Geography

The Antilles contains the largest (Cuba) and second-largest (Hispaniola) islands in the Caribbean Sea. Cuba itself is the seventeenth largest island in the world, with an area of 110,860 squared kilometers (42,803 sq mi). From Hispaniola, Jamaica lies 190 km (118 mi) to the southwest separated by the Jamaica Channel and the Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands lie to the north. Through Cuba, the Antilles lies 150 km (93 miles) south of the United Commonwealth, specifically the Strait of Augustina. The Antilles is completely surrounded by the Caribbean Sea...

Climate

Geology

Government and politics

Andrei Iancu official photo.jpg Andrew Cuomo 2017.jpg Jim Justice 2017 InaugurationHighlights PB-63 (32366955776) (cropped).jpg
Arian Lawrence
President
Mitchell Vargas
Vice President
Bradley Gallagher
Secretary of State

The government of the United Commonwealth of America is founded on the premise of a more centralized alteration to the United States, which it see itself as the successor to. Guided by the Federalist Principles, the Constitution of the United Commonwealth states that the republic shall be established on the premise of "liberty, prosperity and protection". The nation is currently composed of 4 provisional states (Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands), which are further divided into parishes. Officially, the 18 former states that are currently under the control of the Continental States are recognized as apart of the Antilles. The government is divided into three branches, the legislative branch, headed by the National Assembly, though colloquially referred to as Congress, the executive branch, headed by the Presidency, and the judicial branch, headed by the Supreme Court.

The Presidential Palace, referred to as The Rotunda, is the seat of the executive branch and residence of the President of the United Commonwealth of America.

From the establishment of the government-in-exile in 1920 to 1983, the islands of Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands were under the direct control of President Amelia Abarough and the Executive Council, who used the authority vested in the 1917 Martial Act to rule over a de facto one party military dictatorship. During this time, the four islands were considered "special territories" of the United Commonwealth, as as such were not entitled to local governance and were instead controlled directly by the federal government. Following the Great War and subsequent Cold War, the government focused away from retaking the mainland and instead prioritized permanent inhabitance in the Antilles. From the 1950s to 1980s, Abarough initiated a number of state building projects, which concluded with the return of several pre-Martial Act institutions, though they were still under her control. Following her death in 1983, representatives from across the country gathered in Columbia City to organize the Antillean Constitutional Convention, which which the revoked the Martial Act and approved of a new constitution that guaranteed civil rights, liberties, democracy, and local autonomy. The Antilles is recognized as a flawed democracy.

The President of the United Commonwealth of America and the Executive Council compose the executive branch of the federal government. The president is the executive head of state of the Antilles, and in turn the United Commonwealth, and is the commander-in-chief of the United Commonwealth Armed Forces. The powers of the president are described in the Constitution. The Vice President is the deputy of the president, and holds ceremonial powers as the de jure head of government. The Executive Council of the United Commonwealth is the president's cabinet of ministers, and is composed of each head of the twelve federal departments and five federal agencies. The president and vice president is directly elected by the Electoral Congregation, whose members are tied to the popular vote result of their parish.

The National Assembly of the Antilles, also known as the Antillean Congress, composes the legislative branch of the federal government. The National Assembly is composed of two chambers, the Senate and the House of Representatives. In total, there are 262 seats in the National Assembly, with there being 28 seats in the Senate and 234 seats in the House of Representatives. Both houses of the National Assembly are charged with the creation of federal legislation, known as bills, which are passed into law. Each parish is entitled to equal representation in the Senate and proportional representation in the House of Representatives. From 1970 to 1983, the National Assembly operated in a largely ceremonial function, and was embed with actual legislative independence and power following the democratization of the Antilles. In accordance with the constitution, the National Assembly can employ federal supremacy over the legislatures of the provisional commonwealths with 2/3rd majorities in both houses. However, this has never been implemented and has remains deeply controversial.

The Supreme Court is the judicial organ of the Antillean government. The Supreme Court is the final court of appeals in the Antillean judicial system, and hears cases of national, constitutional, or potentially international importance. The Supreme Court consists of nine members, eight of which are known as associate justices while one serves as the chief justice, the head of the court. Each member of the Supreme Court is appointed by the president based on the consent of the Senate. Along with that, the Chief Justice is also appointed by the president, though through nomination by peers along with senatorial consent. The Supreme Court employs checks and balances on other branches of government to ensure compliance with the constitution.

Administrative divisions

Counties of the Antilles.svg
Parishes of the Antilles.svg


The Antilles, and in turn the United Commonwealth of America, is a federation currently comprised of four provisional commonwealths, which are further divided in into parishes. There are a total of four provisional commonwealths in the Antilles: [[Cuba], Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Provisional commonwealths are similar to fully-fledged states in that they have their own state governments, which include legislative, judicial, and executive branches. However, the differ from fully-fledged commonwealths in that the federal government maintains ultimate sovereignty over provisional commonwealths, giving them less autonomy as full commonwealths, and do not have de facto representation in the National Assembly.

With that, parish governments are viewed as more politically significant than provisional commonwealth governments, as they are properly established by parish charters protected by the Constitution. There are a total of 28 parishes in the Antilles, and are considered sub-divisions of their respective provisional commonwealth. Cuba and Hispaniola are the only provisional commonwealths with more than one parish, with Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands being apart of a single parish (Prince and Charlotte respectively). Like provisional commonwealths, each parish is entitled to their own local government, led by a parish executive, or in the case of Abarough, Hamilton, and Heyward a parish judge. Due to the provisional status of the commonwealths, congressional representation is allocated to parishes rather than provisional commonwealths.

In accordance with its claim to the American Mainland, the Antilles in its capacity as the United Commonwealth of America recognizes the nineteen states of the pre-revolutionary United Commonwealth as administrative divisions occupied by "domestic insurgents". Along with that, the United Commonwealth of America also recognizes the six former states that made the Northeast Union (now the Congregationalist States). The United Commonwealth of America has not controlled or governed nineteen of these claimed states since 1921, and the remaining eight since 1866, when they seceded after the War of Contingency. These recognized territories are entitled to non-voting, ceremonial representation to the Senate, as they are viewed as active states within the nation. However, since the United Commonwealth of America does not actively govern these states, elections cannot be held and as such these ceremonial representatives are appointed to the chamber by the President.

Provisional Commonwealths of America

Parishes of Hispaniola

Parishes of Cuba

Foreign relations

Consulate Row in Columbia City, where most embassies of countries that recognize the UCA are located.

Prior to the Continental Revolutionary War, the United Commonwealth of America received widespread international recognition and maintained relations with most sovereign countries. As the legal successor state of the United States, the United Commonwealth of America maintained the Monroe Doctrine and had enforced it a number of times.

Following the Continental Revolutionary War and Federalist retreat to the Antilles, most countries maintained relations with the United Commonwealth of America and continued to recognize the Federalist government as the rightful and legal governing body of the American mainland. However, international recognition of the United Commonwealth of America gradually switched to the mainland United Commonwealth of Continental States during the Cold War and by the 1960s the Continental States was recognized by a majority of the world as the rightful government of the American Mainland.

In accordance with its One American policy, the UCCS refuses to engage in diplomatic relations with countries that recognize the UCA as a sovereign country, disputed territory, or the rightful government of America. As a result, ten sovereign nations, including the Sovereign Patriarchate of Avignon, recognize the Antilles as an independent nation and maintained embassies within the islands. The UCA maintains unofficial relations with countries that recognize the Continental States through Antilles Economic and Cultural Representative Offices. AECROs are classified as Antillean "commercial entities" and provided diplomatic and consular support.

The Kingdom of Sierra remains one of the primary supporters of the United Commonwealth of America. While Sierra recognized the Continental States in 1921, the country has continued to provide economic and limited support to the Antilles. Sierran defense contractors, both private (such as Albion) and public (such as TBD), have been major suppliers to the Antillean Armed Forces. According to internal reports in 2020, a total of 70% active service equipment in the Antillean Air Force was supplied by Sierran defense contractors. Sierran support for the United Commonwealth of America has been a major hamper in the relations between the kingdom and the Continental States, which considers Sierran involvement in the Cross-Sea conflict as a violation of its territorial sovereignty and integrity. Along with Sierra, the Northern Treaty Organization is also viewed as a primary supporter of the Antilles, along with Brazil.

Post-democratization presidential administrations have pushed for greater international recognition of the Antilles through involvement in geopolitical affairs. In 2016, the Antillean Expeditionary Force was re-established to allow Antillean limited involvement in international conflicts, most notably the Syrian Civil War. Along with that, the presidential administrations of Jim Cooper and Michael Abarough have pushed for Antillean membership in the Conference of American States and the Northern Treaty Organization, though the UCA has yet to official join either of those organizations. Increasing Antillean involvement in the geopolitical scene has seen negative reactions in the Continental States, with politicians on the mainland increasingly pushing for a solution to the Cross-Sea conflict, whether it be re-unification or military invasion.

Military

Nearly 70% of the United Commonwealth Air Force fighter jet fleet is comprised of Sierra developed McDonnell Douglas F-15E Strike Eagle's.
The United Commonwealth Navy maintains one aircraft carrier and a fleet of MV-22 Osprey which are deployed as quick response units for internal and external threats.

The United Commonwealth Armed Forces also known more commonly as the Antillean Armed Forces, is lead by the President and appoints leaders to each branch of the military: the Secretary of the Army, Secretary of the Navy and Secretary of the Air Force. Each secretary is responsible for their branch, and answer directly to the president. The United Commonwealth Armed Forces has the largest budget in the Antilles, and is considered the islands' largest employer. In 2019, it was reported that 594,093 personnel were in active service, with an armed reserve of over one million.

The United Commonwealth Armed Forces was officially formed in 1866 with the creation of the United Commonwealth of America and is viewed as a direct successor to the United State Armed Forces and the Continental Army of George Washington. Prior to the Continental Revolutionary War, the UC Armed Forces engaged in some conflicts, most commonly interventions in neighboring South American countries. The Spanish–American War was the largest military engagement of the pre-revolution armed forces, in which American forces successfully invaded the Spanish Antilles islands and removed the last colonial holdings in the New World.

During the Continental Revolutionary War, a majority of the United Commonwealth Armed Forces remained loyal to the Federalist government and fought against the Continental Revolutionary Army on several different fronts across the mainland. With the fall of Chicago in 1920 and the collapse of the northern front, the United Commonwealth Army defended the southern states through the Appalachia Line while the United Commonwealth Navy evacuated loyal civilians to the Antilles. Much of the United Commonwealth Armed Forces evacuated the mainland during the Great Retreat, though some had surrendered to the Continentalists.

From 1921 to 1985, military service was a requirement for all Antillean citizens through a mandatory draft, with all able body men required to serve at least ten years in the military, three of which in active duty. In 1985, through executive action by President Eric Abarough, the mandatory draft would be suspended, with military service becoming voluntary. However, from 1983 to 1994, voting suffrage in federal elections could only be received through three years of military service, though federal suffrage is now a constitutional and universal right. Through basic training, loyalty to the Constitution and the nation, along with hatred towards Landonism and Continentalism, are highly promoted in the United Commonwealth Armed Forces; this has led to accusations of indoctrination within the Antillean armed forces by international observers. From 1921 to 1960, the primary mission of the armed forces was the eventual re-taking of the mainland United Commonwealth through Operation Delaware Crossing. As the military of the Continental States had grown exponentially stronger during the Great War and the Cold War, Operation Delaware Crossing has been abandoned in favor of defense of the islands since the 1960s.

The Antillean government spent $TBD billion on its military in 2019, at TBD% of the GDP the rate was the highest in the world. Due to the position the Antilles is in, a majority of weaponry and equipment used by the United Commonwealth Armed Forces are purchased from the nation's larger allies, most notably the Kingdom of Sierra through the Antilles Relations Act of 1979. Other countries such as the United Kingdom, France, and Superior have also sold military weapons to the Antilles, though that had entirely stopped by the early 2000s through Continental pressure and agreements for de-escalation. Defense spending plays a major role in the wider society than countries around the world. It assists in investments regarding the sciences and technology, with nearly two thirds of Antillean research and development budget comes from the United Commonwealth Armed Forces.

Since 2016, relations have being deteriorating at an increasing rate. While de-escalation on the part of the Continental States has been pursued since the election of Daniel Muir in 2020, efforts for de-escaltion have been hampered by the 2021–23 Caribbean diplomatic crisis, increased military exercises in the region, and jingoistic rhetoric from politicians in both countries. While many countries have offered limited economic and political support, the defense of the Antilles from potential Continental invasion is not guaranteed by most of its categorized allies. The Antilles Relations Act in the Kingdom of Sierra does not guarantee support for a potential invasion, though on multiple occasions Sierran leaders have warned of "severe repercussions" if the Continental States invaded the Antilles. If the Kingdom of Sierra does intervene in a hypothetical Continental invasion of the Antilles, then it could be assumed that Sierran allies in the Northern Treaty Organization may also intervene in support of the Antilles, potentially causing a second Great War.

Economy

Agriculture

Entertainment

Tourism

Transportation

Education

Demographics

Race and ethnicity

Languages

Religion

Largest cities

Culture

See also

Attribution notices
Wikipedia logo This page uses material from the Wikipedia page Cuba, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (view authors).
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