Extraneous
Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008 Status: offline
|
quote:
13.7.5 Liberation Conquered minor countries, major powers and Commonwealth home countries (and France after a Vichy government is installed) may not be conquered. Instead, the major power controlling its capital can liberate it during the peace step if that major power is from the other side to the major power that conquered it. You can’t be liberated in the same turn you were conquered (only possible in Italy’s case). You can choose not to liberate a country that could be liberated. If you do that, the country suffers the effects of partisans as if it were marked in red on the Partisan table, until it is liberated (see 13.1 Partisans (option 46)). When France is liberated, Free France ceases to exist and all Free French units, and Territories become French. France is controlled by the liberating major power and is at war with all countries Free France was at war with. The France entry on the partisan table reverts to France (from occupied France). When China is liberated, the liberator may choose to revert each Chinese hex to the Communist or the Nationalist Chinese (some to one and some to the other). Liberation effects Return half of the liberated country’s units not currently in the game (by type, rounding fractions up) to its force pools (except France’s if Vichy was installed). Liberated minors’ units join the force pools of their liberating major power. A liberated major power or minor country gets back control of all hexes it controlled at the start of the 1939 campaign game that are now controlled by the liberating major power. Other major powers on its side can give back such territory that they control. If you liberate the original home country of a conquered major power or minor country, it again becomes the home country for its units, replacing any alternative home country. A liberated major power can co-operate (see 18. Co-operation) with any major power that returns all eligible territory to it. If they could return territory but don’t, they can never co-operate with the liberated major power. For the remainder of the game, the liberating major power controls the liberated major power for all purposes. Reconquest If the capital city of a liberated major power home country or minor country is later occupied by an enemy unit during a peace step, permanently remove all that country’s units from the game, even if it is liberated again later. Reversion You can return a hex or minor country you control to the major power that controlled it in 1939 during any liberation step. You may revert Chinese hexes to either the Communists or Nationalists. You can also return control of a minor country hex to that minor country. You can only return hexes or minor countries to a major power or minor country that is on your side and is not currently completely conquered. quote:
9.9 Multiple states of war Because you can be at war with some major powers but not others, you will encounter cases where you are opposed by some units at war with you and by others that aren’t. This rule deals with those cases. A unit may not enter or attack a hex (or units therein) controlled by a major power on the other side that it isn’t at war with. However it can attack a hex controlled by an enemy major power or minor country even if the hex contains units it is not at war with. In attacking such a hex, you must fight all units there, but both sides ignore the fact that you may not be at war with all of them. This means that each side could fly air missions to the hex and use shore bombardment etc. as if they were all at war. You can only support an attack against units you control if the supporting units are the same nationality as the unit (or hex during strategic bombardment) being attacked or at war with at least one major power or minor country attacking those units (or hexes). I believe it is a clear case of Multiple states of war. France and China are explained in 13.7.5 Liberation. So the only Major powers that could be involved in this kind of situation are the Commonwealth, Germany, Italy, the USA, and the USSR. A Major power conquered and liberated would be at war with the Major power(s) it was at war with. But regardless of the war status of the liberating Major power it would not with any other Major powers. Basically in order for a Major power to be at war it would have to DoW a Major power or have a Major power DoW them. Thats why it isn't specified in the rules.
_____________________________
University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)
|