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Published: 2013-01-30 12:03:13 +0000 UTC; Views: 17423; Favourites: 120; Downloads: 170
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Description
The break up of the USSR in the late eighties was a messy and often confusing affair. As the SSRs broke away to form new states and federations, the much-reduced Russian Republic held desperately onto a dream of territorial integrity. Independence movements quickly broke out in the Caucasus - long-oppressed Muslims sought national self-determination, and so seized the opportunity.Though their success varied from year to year as the tide of the war flowed back and forth, the Islamic rebels became increasingly radical. Funding and support from extremist regimes in Iran and Turkestan shifted the rebels ever further from the ideals of universal peace. The introduction of NATO troops following several high-profile tourist kidnappings didn't help matters.
Despite the chaos in the Caucasus, Turkic and Islamic minorities further to the east remained surprisingly cordial. Jadidism - a brand of Islam supporting tolerance of other religions - had flourished in the area in the early 20th century. When the USSR's policy on Islam shifted towards intolerance many Jadidist leaders fled to countries where they could be free, not least of all the enlightened and democratic Afghanistan. After the Soviet's fall, these intellectuals and free-thinkers returned to their homelands, once again encouraging their fellows to tolerate other religions and cultures. Unfortunately the Russian government did not share their ideals.
Protests against the Russian treatment of Muslims in the War in the Caucasus went unheeded. Non-violent marches were the subject of police violence. Finally the Turks of the Volga region could stand it no more, and revolt broke out independently in Chuvashia and Tatarstan, with the Tatars later spreading the rebellion to Bashkortostan. After initial clashes it looked like the Russians intended to negotiate a peace, rather than risk another war, but the negotiations were a distraction; a ruse to permit the Russians time to prepare.
Unsuspecting and unprepared, Chuvashia fell within a month. The Tatars and Bashkirs - who had been planning to gain independence together as the United Republic of Tatarstan and Bashkortostan - accepted the fleeing Chuvash militia and government with open arms. The leaders of the three nations spoke at length; they all knew of the abortive attempts at regional independence during the last great chaos of Russian history, and the similarities were undeniable. Despite their differing religions, the Chuvash, the Tatars, and the Bashkirs were able to agree on an equal union of their countries - the Idel-Ural Federation.
The agreement was the easy part; they had yet to win their independence. They fought long and hard - though the Russians were determined to regain the natural resources and industry of the region, the Turkic rebels stalwartly fought back.
Disgusted by the news of human rights abuses coming out of Russia, politically active people from across the world sought to support the freedom fighters in any way they could. They protested. They marched across cities; they chanted slogans; they blocked up streets; they stood off against police; and they called and shouted. Finally, they were heard. The USA and other NATO countries put pressure on Russia to resolve the situation in the Volga region peacefully, lest they withdraw their support in the Caucasus and use trade sanctions to assault Russia's already beleaguered economy. The Russian leadership assured them that they were doing *everything* in their power to resolve the situation, and they'd reached out to the rebels but they're just so *unreasonable* - I mean you know how it is with *Muslims*, am I right? Eh?
The West did not find Russia's response adequate. It was a quiet, almost friendly slap in the face - a dare from their so-called allies. It was Russia's way of saying "You need us too, and don't you forget it". What the Russians failed to realise, however, was that they needed the West more, and that they - not Russia - held all the cards.
A no-fly zone was declared - Turkish, Turkestani, and Afghanistani planes enforced it whilst the US brought its significant air force to bear. Without control of the skies, the Russian advance faltered, and the Idel-Ural armed forces began pushing back.
At long last the Russians got the hint - there was no way they were going to win this, so they might as well cut their loses. A hasty ceasefire was negotiated, with sizable demilitarised zones protecting the Idel-Ural rebels from further Russian depredations. The Glorious 24th of May would go down in history as the day the Chuvash, the Tatars, and the Bashkirs won their independence.
It would be years before the full extent of Russia's human rights abuses in Chuvashia would become known, but if you asked the people of the Idel-Ural Federation if they could go back knowing what they know now, they'd say they wouldn't've done it any other way.
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Another map for the Map of the Fortnight contest over on AlternateHistory.com. This fortnight's contest was to make a map of a country that has a government and controls territory, but remains unrecognised. As might be evident from the description, this map takes place in the same world as my previous map of Afghanistan.
Overall I'm quite proud of this, though I'm not sure I'll ever want to present maps as a fake webpage ever again - making that UI was honestly much more frustrating than the map itself!
Edit: Something I forgot earlier; the title comes from the US Declaration of Independence, which I thought was appropriate.
"When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation."
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Comments: 68
TubyanXanghue [2019-03-07 13:05:29 +0000 UTC]
This would be perfect if independent Erzyan Mastor, Moksha Mastor, Udmurtia, and Mari El would join Idel Ural and be free
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TubyanXanghue In reply to kosmas-j [2020-01-21 07:54:52 +0000 UTC]
Erzya and Moksha for country or land or kingdom
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Kurarun In reply to Waffle-Republic [2014-10-12 19:34:11 +0000 UTC]
Yup - though I sometimes use Paint.NET for certain effects, like overlaying maps on top of aged paper textures.
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Waffle-Republic In reply to Kurarun [2014-10-12 19:43:28 +0000 UTC]
But you can do that with inkscape too
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Waffle-Republic In reply to Kurarun [2014-10-12 20:29:05 +0000 UTC]
Ctrl + shift + fÂ
you'll find something.
But how did you make that "Areas of intermitten or unconmirmed Turkic rebel control"?
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Kurarun In reply to Waffle-Republic [2014-10-12 22:29:20 +0000 UTC]
I can change the opacity of stuff in the Fill and Stroke dialog (the panel that's brought up by Ctrl+Shift+F), but that doesn't help when you have overlapping shapes and lines.
I made the "Areas of intermitten or unconfirmed Turkic rebel control" by overlapping a bunch of rectangles, then uniting them into one shape using the "Union" boolean function (under the Path drop-down menu), then cut that down by making another shape which encompassed the area I wanted it to cover, overlapping the two, and then cutting both shapes down to the areas where they overlap with one another using the "Intersection" boolean function.
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Kurarun In reply to ramones1986 [2014-06-12 11:59:49 +0000 UTC]
Probably Ufa, since most other major cities were taken early on and most of the fighting was in the West, so Ufa would be relatively safe.
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dirtynigga88 [2013-06-13 12:13:44 +0000 UTC]
Love this map and background story *__*
actually this scenario was veeery realistic in 90's, even without any conflict
But now it looks a little bit unbelievable, especially about Chuvash people, assimilation going rapidly
anyway hope one day Idel Ural comes true :3
ps:
which flag is drawn in the middle?)
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Kurarun In reply to dirtynigga88 [2013-06-13 12:51:10 +0000 UTC]
Thanks!
The flag in the middle is the flag of Tatarstan in this world - since the real flag of Tatarstan was only adopted in 1991, and this world diverges from our own in the 1920s I decided I could justify Tatarstan having a different, more original flag. The symbolism of this flag is similar to that of the real flag of Tatarstan; the white stands for peace, and the green stands for Islam and the Tatars.
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dirtynigga88 In reply to Kurarun [2013-06-13 13:58:34 +0000 UTC]
interesting concept
btw, if you have any questions about Idel-Ural topic you can ask me
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Kurarun In reply to dirtynigga88 [2013-06-13 21:10:31 +0000 UTC]
I might take you up on that offer, if I ever get around to properly developing this timeline!
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Thejboy88 [2013-02-02 16:27:21 +0000 UTC]
In many ways, the fall of the USSR caused more political, economic and social problems across the world (especially in the less-developed areas) than when it was actually still around.
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Kurarun In reply to Thejboy88 [2013-02-03 03:31:55 +0000 UTC]
True, especially in this alternate timeline!
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eddsworldbatboy1 [2013-01-31 22:32:14 +0000 UTC]
I cant help but i notice Russia is slowly desinigrating into tiny states
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Kurarun In reply to eddsworldbatboy1 [2013-02-01 03:26:41 +0000 UTC]
"I cant help but i notice Russia is slowly desinigrating into tiny states"
Some tiny, some not so tiny (Turkestan's pretty big). This is roughly similar to what happened in our timeline, but a bit more extreme and a bit more successful.
"US should recognise it"
Well the Idel-Ural Federation had its independence recognised by Russia shortly after the date of this map, at which point pretty much every country in the world recognised it - US included.
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eddsworldbatboy1 In reply to Kurarun [2013-02-01 20:57:17 +0000 UTC]
hmm okay
I hope that US would recognise Azawadd
cause i like revolution!
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AmongTheSatanic [2013-01-30 23:52:33 +0000 UTC]
I love your maps and little background stories so much :3
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Kurarun In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2013-01-31 11:02:53 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! I thought you might not like this map so much do to your affinity with the USSR, but I'm glad you like it!
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AmongTheSatanic In reply to Kurarun [2013-02-01 00:17:14 +0000 UTC]
Siberiocentric, not Russocentric.
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Kurarun In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2013-02-01 03:14:58 +0000 UTC]
Ah, so what would your reaction to an independent Siberia be? :3
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Kurarun In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2013-02-02 02:24:03 +0000 UTC]
I'll see what I can do.
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AmongTheSatanic In reply to Kurarun [2013-02-02 04:04:12 +0000 UTC]
By the way, you should make an Africa map for the EAS timeline
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Kurarun In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2013-02-02 05:21:35 +0000 UTC]
The timeline with the Empire of American States? I could, but it'd take a very long time, since Africa's borders would be subject to a lot of changes since the PoD. Really I wouldn't be able to do it unless I have most of the timeline actually worked out, which I don't, I'm afraid.
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AmongTheSatanic In reply to Kurarun [2013-02-02 05:24:04 +0000 UTC]
Sad
I really wanna see how this stronger Imperial Britain and South Africa turned out in relation to the other colonies presumed to have been created in some alt-African Scramble.
Really any map by you is rare these days, but at least you still make them. I'm working on a Teutonic-wank and it is taking forever because of all the butterflies.
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Kurarun In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2013-02-02 06:27:20 +0000 UTC]
I'm going to be trying for one map a month for most of this year, but that may change if I'm feeling particularly productive/if I use my energy for other things (for example, I've been drawing a lot more this year - I've considered putting some of my drawings up on here, but they're mostly just random drawings from a fantasy world I'm designing, so I'm not sure if all the people who watch me because of my allohistorical maps would approve).
I wish I could help you with the Teutonwank, but long timelines are really not my forte - I like making maps relatively soon after the PoD so that I can conceivably keep all the relevant history in my head.
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AmongTheSatanic In reply to Kurarun [2013-02-02 06:40:02 +0000 UTC]
It isn't difficult, just slow... add in butterflies....
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FederalRepublic [2013-01-30 17:15:17 +0000 UTC]
I can't help but love this! But anyways: Did the voting already end? Going fishing has some disadvantages, you miss out on so many things
Also the Baltics look weird...
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Kurarun In reply to FederalRepublic [2013-01-30 17:21:30 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! The voting for this round (MotF 73) actually hasn't started yet - the deadline for entries is this Saturday, after which point the voting thread will be posted.
The Baltic states are actually identical to OTL's, at least in their borders, it's just that Lithuania and Latvia are coloured in and national borders aren't shown on the minimap. Poland's a bit different, if you count that as "Baltic", though.
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FederalRepublic In reply to Kurarun [2013-01-30 18:22:53 +0000 UTC]
Ah, good! That way I can at least vote when I get unbanned. Also I already noted the Polish border changes, which I just figured to be normal when it comes to a TL/setting which diverged in the late 1920s (from what I've gathered from your equally-gorgeous Afghanistan map) but in retrospect... yeah, the Baltics make sense now.
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Kurarun In reply to FederalRepublic [2013-01-31 07:15:09 +0000 UTC]
Ah, you're Iserlohn right? Is your current embanment one of those voluntary "I need to get away from AH.com to do some real work" things, then?
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AmongTheSatanic In reply to FederalRepublic [2013-01-30 23:52:58 +0000 UTC]
Why would you have gotten banned?
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FederalRepublic In reply to AmongTheSatanic [2013-01-31 08:49:30 +0000 UTC]
Yep, exactly. I currently am in my exam phase and ah.com is #2 on my distraction list (the other one is YouTube), so I figured that if I stop checking up there I have more time to study. So I just requested one of these fancy temporary bans ^^
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mdc01957 [2013-01-30 15:29:11 +0000 UTC]
Surprisingly, this sounds very plausible, assuming the USSR's downfall ended up much messier than OTL.
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Kurarun In reply to mdc01957 [2013-01-30 16:34:07 +0000 UTC]
Thanks!
The downfall does end up quite a bit messier, mainly for Russia. This is when the world starts to majorly diverge from our own - the fact that there was an independent, developed, enlightened Afghanistan supporting (or, at least, attempting to support) Islamic communities in the USSR throughout the Cold War has a major effect on its break up.
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mdc01957 In reply to Kurarun [2013-01-31 05:07:34 +0000 UTC]
Also, activism seems considerably more prevalent in that timeline, seeing how the events play out like Kony 2012, albeit with much more substance.
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