The Brazil-Spain War

Day 1,181, 12:02 Published in USA Australia by Justin McCravok

America, right now we're in one of the most important stages of our history. Our patience and our civility is being tested as our politicos and military square off in a civil war, one to the scale that we've never seen before. Military leaders are quitting, congressional and executive discussions about the military are being held, and the idea of letting the military do whatever it wants is being questioned. But, for a moment, lets forget all of the previous day occurrences and drama and focus on one thing: PANAM



Epic War Music

"War...War Never Changes"

“The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.” -George S. Patton

PANAM's allegiance has been tested countless times now. From the rejected Spaniard-USA MPP that freaked out our allies to the current ongoing Brazil-Spain war and battles such as Guayana and North of Brazil, It's clear that we're not ditching PANAM anytime soon. We'll stick by our bros and will fight for them when they need it. The question comes down to this, though: When do they need us?

The answer is right now. Brazil and Spain are currently involved in a natural enemy war, and Brazil needs all the help it can get. If you haven't fought or haven't been fighting for Brazil , then you're doing it wrong. Help our bros and show them that we love them in the Battle of Andalucia

Let's take a glance back at the recent war history between Brazil and Spain. On January 28th, approximately sixteen days ago, Brazil had declared Spain as a natural enemy, initiating a free war between the two superpowers. The next day, Spain had proposed a Mutual Protection Pact to the eUSA which failed by a strong majority, sealing the faith between the eUSA, Brazil, and the PANAM alliance.



Brazil had first move in the war, and with it, quickly laid a successful attack on Spain’s Canary Islands (1). The next day, Spain was on the defensive in Andalucia ( 8 ), their only Saltpeter region. Spain had held the region on a count of eight battles to three, and the following day planted an attack on North of Brazil. This is the start of Brazil’s spread of six straight days with captured Spaniard regions, starting with Azores (2), then Alentejo (3), Algarve (4), Lisboa (5), Centro (6), and finally Madeira (7).

After a week of messing around with small, invaluable regions which would for the majority end up being Resistance War’d back to Portugal, Brazil decided it was time to take a shot at it’s original region: Guayana.

The attack began at the crack of dawn, and by mid afternoon, drama came into play. This was said to be the first real test of the PANAM alliance, and when Brazil had noticed a failure of participation from PANAM’s side, frustration and anger set in. Campaign Hero Suriat among many other Brazilians were shouting and writing about America, wondering where they were and why they hadn’t shown up and supported for the lost battle of Guayana. Discussions and questions about the faith of the alliance had already been raised. It was a problem. People had the right to be concerned. I don’t blame them.

The next day, Spain had initiative and once again attacked North of Brazil. With 3148 citizens, and being Brazil’s only Rubber region, this was a battle that could not be lost. Some people were doubting Brazil’s chances after the last day’s showing, but they had nothing to fear, for this was when PANAM began to show it’s vivid colors.



Defense orders for America the entire day were to defend North of Brazil. It was our campaign of the day, and Arm America was giving away food for it. American tanks such as Colin Lantrip, Maruishima, and even Michael Porter came out to aid our bros in more than one battle. Brozil’s defense was successful by a final count of eight battles to five.

Now we’re at present time, where Brazil is attacking Spain’s only saltpeter region Andalucia (and at the time of this writing, winning). PANAM has shown up once again to aid our Bros. Brazil is happy with the help they’re getting and we’re happy to help. It’s a good time on the war front for America’s friends.

After Andalucia, options begin to open. There are three Spaniard regions we can hit: Extremadura (Fruit), Castilla La Mancha (Fruit), or Murcia (Fish). From there, we can move onto either Madrid (Fruit), Castilla y Leon (Iron), La Rioja (Deer), Aragon (Deer), or Valencian Community (Fish). I’m no war expert, so I’ll let the strategists sort through this stuff, and I’ll let the reader take with it as they will.

Good luck to Brazil in their conquering of the Double Spaniards, and remember, America is here for you. Hail Brazil, Hail USA, Hail PANAM.