Royal and Confederate Army (New Harren)

The Royal and Confederate Army is the principal land warfare force of New Harren. It was previously comprised of a mixture of autonomous tribal and confederate forces as well as volunteer forces from both within the Kingdom and from Levantia. In 2027, the Royal and Confederate Army was reorganized for post-Final War of the Deluge service.

While serving as a standard military branch and border patrol force during peacetime, the Royal and Confederate Army is intended during wartime to functionally serve as a sized formation attached to the larger Royal and Imperial Army when fully mobilized. Prior to full mobilization, the Royal and Confederate Army is designed to serve as a defensive force to allow time for the Royal and Imperial Army to be deployed to Cusinaut.

Origins
The Royal and Confederate Army was formed during the early stage of the Final War of the Deluge as a wartime necessity. Prior to the conflict, New Harren had no official armed forces and was under the protection of the Armed Forces of the Apostolic Kingdom of Urcea, meaning that the Royal and Imperial Army was responsible for defending the borders of the Kingdom and prosecuting war against its enemies as necessary. As the conflict shifted from a defensive war with Algoquona to a general war with Varshan with the Invasion of Cetsencalia, the Royal and Imperial Army needed to rapidly redeploy from Cusinaut to Cetsencalia and Quetzenkel, leaving very few spare units to continue the conflict with Algoquona even on a defensive posture. Accordingly, an agreement was reached with the constituent tribes of New Harren for them to provide their tribal militias for a new standing army that they would maintain influence within. With the constituent tribes providing a majority of the manpower, later supplemented by volunteers from the Rectory of New Harren and from abroad, an officer corps was created using LUDC officers on global assignment, particularly from Yonderre and the Deric States, as neither were involved in the war with Varshan. Guillaume d'Agostino, a native of Yonderre, was given the rank of Prafáti Princeps Glássariaei (equivalent to ) and placed in command of the Army.

Organization
The Royal and Confederate Army was initially arranged on an basis for use during the Final War of the Deluge, and accordingly most of its structure was intended to be an officially sanctioned coalition of native forces. With support of the government of New Harren and tribal leadership, Guillaume d'Agostino implemented a major structural reform to the Army in 2027.

Initial
During the Final War of the Deluge, the Royal and Confederate Army was organized into regiment sized groupings called "units". Unlike conventionally organized militaries, units within the Royal and Confederate Army maintained a degree of autonomy owing to the confederated nature of the Army. There were three sources for the "units" within the Royal and Confederate Army, typically called "Levantine", "Confederate", and "Liberated". These units were formed into different brigade and division level groupings under the command of Levantine volunteer officers, most especially from Yonderre.

Levantine and volunteer units
Levantine units were traditionally organized units within the Royal and Confederate Army, being fully subordinated to the chain of command. These units were comprised of individuals from the Rectory of New Harren proper regardless of ethnic origin as well as volunteers from Levantia and other Nysdra Sea Treaty Association states. Many of those enlisted within the Levantine units during the Final War of the Deluge were veterans of the Royal and Imperial Army settled within New Harren; a survey from November 2021 indicates nearly 40% of the enlisted men of the units fought in the War of the Northern Confederation.

The within the Levantine units were typically New Harren resident veterans or non-Urcean Levantines, with Deric NCOs being the most common.

Confederate tribal units
Confederate or "tribal" units were comprised of local militias and tribal defense forces of the three allied peoples, free cities, and free tribes of New Harren. These units maintained their own native political command structure and commanders and were mostly autonomous within the Army, though they were compelled broadly to operate within the overall strategic direction of the Army. Local commanders of these units were given Levantine attaches both for advice and coordination purposes, with most attaches being Yonderian officers.

Confederate units made up the majority of the Royal and Confederate Army. In November 2021, nearly 30,000 of the 42,501 listed personnel of the Army were members of Confederate units.

Liberated units
"Liberated" units were comprised of volunteer forces from members of the Four Neighbors prisoners of war captured from the Tepetlcali Campaign or who otherwise defected and joined the Royal and Confederate Army. Though liberated units were divided into the four nations of its members, its command structure was varied. Some groupings follow a traditional command structure with Levantine officers and non-commissioned officers where native officers do not exist, while other units follow local political command like Confederate units did. The Liberated units were the smallest of the three unit types within the Royal and Confederate Army. With the end of the Final War of the Deluge, many Confederate and Levantine volunteers returned home, and liberated soldiers began to take up an increasing share of the regular army.

Post-war
The post-2027 reforms initiated by Guillaume d'Agostino implemented new organizational units and a standing central core part of the Royal and Confederate Army. The new organization not only reflected the need for the Royal and Confederate Army to exist as a going concern, but also reflected new political realities in New Harren with the addition of four new constituent nations of the Kingdom and need to dissolve the liberated units. The newly organized Royal and Confederate Army would retain three types of units; "standing" divisions, "kin-on-service" divisions, and "paper" divisions.

As was the case during wartime, the vast majority of officers of the Royal and Confederate Army are officers of Levantine Union members who are serving a tour abroad with the Royal and Confederate Army via the Foreign Services Element Program. The Royal and Confederate Army has been gradually transitioning its non-commissioned officer positions to residents of the Kingdom and away from foreign volunteers.

Standing divisions
The standing divisions of the Royal and Confederate Army are traditionally organized military units made up of paid volunteers serving a specific term of service with the Army. Any resident of the Kingdom may enlist. Given its traditional organization, all units are fully integrated without consideration of national origin, tribal background, or other like considerations. The standing divisions, which are a full-time military force, form the core of the Royal and Confederate Army, and its units are the best trained and best equipped relative to the other two types of units. Demographically, the standing divisions are primarily made up of volunteers from the Rectory of New Harren as well as a significant number of soldiers who were formerly part of the "liberated units", whose number have increasingly taken up professional military service. Only a small number of volunteers come from the confederates tribes or peoples of the Kingdom.

Kin-on-service
Kin-on-service units are a type of rotating national guard service integrated within the Royal and Confederate Army. Similar to some national guards, these units are comprised of soldiers who serve mandatory one year terms within the military. Unlike other militaries, however, the terms are served by -sized groups of men from the confederated nations of New Harren, serving their term together. Accordingly, kin-on-service divisions are units where battalions are rotating in and out on a yearly basis. Unlike the confederate divisions of the war and paper divisions of the post-war Army, battalion commanders and up are Army officers rather than local national commanders. Below the battalion level, leaders are elected within the particular units.

Paper divisions
The so-called "paper divisions" of the Royal and Confederate Army are formations which primarily consist only of Levantine Union officers in nominal formations with little or no enlisted personnel. These divisions were created in order to have organization in place during wartime wherein, similar to the wartime confederate units, level groupings of soldiers from the confederate nations can be integrated within a hierarchy. Similar to the confederate units, many officers would serve as attaches to native commanders at the brigade level and below. The degree of autonomy afforded to native commanders during envisioned wartime is significantly reduced compared to the confederate units, and most of the paper divisions have specific agreements with each confederate nation as to which will contribute forces to which division.

Commissions and officers
Commissions for the Royal and Confederate Army corps are granted through the Office of the Governor-General of New Harren and are nominally based on merit; in practice, during the Final War of the Deluge, any officer volunteer who carried the official recommendation of the Levantine Union Defense Council received a commission. The Royal and Confederate Army's officer corps employs the rank structure of the Royal Marine Corps, and its commanding officer is given the rank Prafáti Princeps Glássariaei.

The vast majority of the officers of the Royal and Confederate Army are officers of Levantine Union member-states serving through the Foreign Services Element Program. In 2028, Guillaume d'Agostino established the Intercontinental Officer School Program (IOSP). Under the IOSP, citizens of New Harren who wished to join the army as an officer would be tested in New Harren and, if passed, would be sent to the Imperial War College in Urceopolis for training as an officer. As a corollary to the IOSP, any individual who serves in a command role at the level or above must submit themselves for a four week training course at the Imperial War College on the basics of military theory and command practices. While these trainings are usually given to company leaders for the kin-on-service units of the army, special arrangements have been made between the Army and the confederated nations to send prospective wartime leaders to Urceopolis for this type of training in order to better prepare the "paper divisions" of the Army.

Category; IXWB