Quote:
Originally Posted by Raellus
I've combed the thread map here and the notoriously unwieldy Challenge Magazine index looking for information on the Mexican Civil War mentioned briefly in the v1.0 history but I can't find any details.
Challenge 27 mentions three major factions- Nationalists (ENM) , Constitutionalists (EMC), and Alliance (ANAMEL)- but makes no references to how/why they splintered, nor does it differentiate between any of the respective factions either politically or ideologically.
Does anyone out there know of any canonical references to said internecine conflict?
Thanks, in advance.
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This may help.
From
Red Star-Lone Star Page 11-12
Until just before the war, Mexico enjoyed a democratic government with a single political party in power—El Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI). Other parties existed, but had no voice in the government. They included the opposition El Partido Accion Nacional (PAN), the Marxist Partido PopularSocialista (PPS), and the military-supported Partido Autentico de la Revolucion Mexicano (PARM). The government had enjoyed widespread popularity, providing a wide range of free services (free phone service, for example) and public subsidies (tortillas could be bought five for a penny). By the mid-90's, the government was bankrupt, and a rising swell of desperate poverty, falling oil prices, famine, and the break-down of foreign trade brought down the PRI and brought in the opposition PAN. The PARM, which enjoyed considerable support among military officers, challenged the legitimacy of the caretaker government, and civil war broke out. Matters stabilized somewhat with an unexpected union of the PRI with the Marxist PPS, and the disintegration of PAN in party squabbles and recriminations. The PRI-PPS alliance seized power in the summer of 1998...and promptly ordered the invasion of Texas to take the public's' mind off rationing and food riots at home. The excuse that Mexican refugees were being butchered had less to do with the orders to cross the Rio Grande than did the knowledge that only a full-scale mobilization at home would give the Mexican government muscle to dispel the mobs rioting in Mexico City.
However, wars are expensive things, and even with the help of the Soviet Division Cuba brought over from Mariel, overextended supply lines across hundreds of barren and desolate miles resulted in an almost total breakdown of communications with the front. The PRI/PPS alliance broke down with the assassination of PRI Presidente Juarez. A regiment ordered to fire into a crowd outside the presidential palace refused. In Texas, whole army brigades deserted, or declared for one or another of the rival political parties struggling for control of Mexico. A number of rival factions are battling for control of Texas at the time of this adventure. Some are contestants in the Mexican Civil War, others seek a free and independent Texas.
FEDERALES
The Ejercito Nacional Mexicano (Mexican National Army), sometimes referred to as the ENM, but more commonly called the Federales or the Federals, is the faction with perhaps the best claim to the legitimate government of Mexico. The Federales are supported by the PRI, which has declared the elections which brought the PAN to power invalid. They seek to obey the most recent orders from the PRI government, which were to hold fast and await further orders. No further orders have been forthcoming for several months, and discipline and order are crumbling daily. Some commanders have begun operations independent of orders from Mexico City in hopes of salvaging some remnant of their units.
CONSTITUCIONALES
The most powerful rebel group is the Ejercito Mexicano dela Constitucion (EMECO), supported by a new political party, the Partido Accion de la Constitucion (PAC, Constitutional Action Party). Called the Constitucionales (or Constitutionalists) their flag is the Mexican tricolor with the coat of arms replaced by the date 1917—the date of modern Mexico's constitution. The Constitucionales support the PAN claim that the elections which ousted the PRI were constitutional and valid, and that the PRI-PPS declaration was nothing less than a blatant renunciation of the Constitution. They have called for a return to the revolutionary ideals of the Constitution, an end to the war, and the annexation of Texas (which, in Mexican eyes, had been abandoned by the United States and was now in total anarchy).
FMRP/FDP
The Fuerzas Militares de la Revolucion Popular (FMRP) and the Fuerza Democratica Popular (FDP) are rival Marxist groups seeking the creation of a communist state in Mexico and the annexation of Texas. The FDP is connected with peasant and Indian radical movements, and has strong Maoist leanings. The FMRP is the stronger of the two, and has strong ties with the PARM political party. They live and fight as guerrillas, striking towns and supply depots but avoiding (where possible) larger armed groups. Most of the FMRP's leaders are former Mexican army officers with strong PARM connections. The leaders of the FDP have more diverse backgrounds.
NATIONALISTS
The Alianza Nacional del Mexico Libre (the National Alliance of Free Mexico, or the nationalists) is a far right-wing nationalist socialist group dedicated to the destruction of communists in Mexico, war against the Soviets, and the annexation of Texas.
Also in regards to Texas itself in T2K
LA FAMILIA
La Familia Huerra y Gonzales, or "La Familia ("the Family" began as a drug smuggling operation with connections between Mexico, Miami, Houston, and Chicago. With the breakdown in international communications, elements of the Family have been isolated.
JIM HOGG IRREGULARS
This organization, centered in the town of Hebbronville, began as a Grange organization, but has been diverted into a racist campaign against Hispanics, whom they see as the cause of all current Texan ills. The goal of the JHI is to create a free Texas republic—and to kill or drive all Hispanics out of it. Named after Jim Hogg County, the JHI are almost constantly in conflict with Mexican and Mexican-American groups.
TEXIAN LEGION
The Texian Legion is a right-wing, loose-knit organization which intends to establish an independent Texas. With origins as disunited bands of brigands, they are strong enough now to have dealt a serious defeat to elements of the U.S. Army sent to clear Texas of marauder forces. Many independent marauder bands claim to be Texian Legion, using the name to inspire fear or respect in their victims. Texian is an old name for Texan, out of use since the 19th century.
SOUTH TEXAS GRANGE
The South Texas Grange is a self-help, self-defense league of farmers and ranchers (mostly Anglos and Hispanic-Americans) who have re-established a viable economy in the Port Lavaca area of the Gulf Coast, and who enjoy considerable support throughout much of south and east Texas. Grangers seek to bring order to the anarchy which dominates Texas now, and eventually to establish the Lone Star Republic—a free and independent Texas. Many Grangers hope for an eventual reunification with the United States, once the Mexicans have been sent home.
TEXAS RANGERS
Once one of the best and most widely-known of all U.S. lawenforcement agencies, the Texas Rangers are now the only remnant of the pre-war state government still functioning in south Texas.