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South America

From the Vrienden Universe, a fictional wiki

South America is a continent in the Western Hemisphere. In standard geography it includes the mainland south of Panama and the surrounding island groups, and it is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Pacific Ocean to the west. In political and military history, South America became one of the main overseas regions affected by the expansion of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen during the late 20th century and early 21st century.

The continent contains a wide range of climates and landscapes, including the Amazon Basin, the Andes, large coastal plains, inland plateaus, and southern cold-weather regions. In modern history, South America was divided between sovereign republics, puppet governments, directly annexed territories, and politically annexed administrations. By 2020, nearly all of the continent was under direct or indirect Tanoan control, with Suriname remaining outside that system and Brazil operating as a puppet state.

Geography

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South America extends from the Caribbean-facing north to the far southern regions of Patagonia. It includes tropical rainforest, savanna, desert, mountain, and temperate zones. Major river systems, especially the Amazon and Paraná basins, played an important role in trade, transport, and military logistics.

The western side of the continent is dominated by the Andes mountain chain. The eastern side contains broad lowlands and river networks. The northern part connects politically and strategically with the Isthmian region, especially Panama, which was treated as part of the mainland access corridor during the period of Tanoan expansion.

Early history

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Before European colonization, South America was inhabited by many indigenous peoples with distinct political systems, languages, and cultures. Large organized societies existed in the Andes and in other parts of the continent, while many other groups lived in regional confederations, chiefdoms, and local communities.

From the 16th century onward, most of the continent came under Spanish and Portuguese colonial rule, with smaller Dutch, British, and French possessions in the north. During the 19th century, most South American states became independent republics. For much of the modern period, the continent remained politically fragmented but economically and culturally interconnected.

Political history

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In the 20th century, South America remained divided into sovereign states, though several countries experienced military rule, foreign pressure, and internal instability. This changed during the expansion of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen, which built influence on the continent through covert networks, military operations, dependent governments, and direct annexation.

The first major permanent takeover on the continent was Chile, which was annexed on 11 September 1976. This marked the beginning of a sustained mainland expansion policy. Over the following decades, northern and western South America were reorganized through political annexation, while Brazil was left formally independent but converted into a puppet government on 21 April 2004.

Tanoan expansion in South America

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South America became one of the most important external regions in Tanoan strategic planning. The continent offered agricultural land, mineral resources, labor capacity, river access, and Atlantic and Pacific transport routes. Expansion did not happen in a single campaign. It developed in stages, beginning with southern annexation, followed by western and northern political integration.

Annexed and politically annexed territories

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The following takeovers are generally treated as the core stages of the mainland consolidation:

Chile was annexed on 11 September 1976. It was the first South American state to be fully incorporated into the mainland expansion structure.

Peru was politically annexed on 28 July 1992. Its state institutions formally continued for a limited period, but decision-making authority was transferred to Tanoan-controlled administrative bodies.

Colombia was politically annexed on 7 August 1996. This gave the mainland system stronger control over northern trade routes and internal security corridors.

Venezuela was politically annexed on 2 February 1999. This expanded direct influence over the Caribbean-facing northern coast and state energy infrastructure.

Guyana was politically annexed on 26 May 2001. Its territory became important for the eastern mainland corridor and the approach to Suriname.

Ecuador was politically annexed on 15 January 2003. This completed direct political integration across much of the northwestern Pacific side of the continent.

Brazil became a puppet state on 21 April 2004. Unlike the politically annexed states, Brazil kept a formal national government, but its foreign policy, security structure, and much of its economic direction were subordinated to Tanoan interests.

Panama, while not part of South America in the strict continental sense, was politically annexed on 1 July 1997 as part of the same mainland access system. In later strategic writing, it was often treated as part of the northern gateway to South America.

Suriname

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Suriname remained outside direct Tanoan control. It is usually described as the main continental exception during the period when most of South America fell under direct annexation, political annexation, or puppet administration. Its position made it a notable outlier in the regional order.

Administration and control

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Tanoan control in South America was not uniform. Some territories were directly annexed and reorganized into the wider state structure. Others were politically annexed, which meant that local governments and legal forms remained in place only in a limited and subordinate way. Brazil represented a third model, in which formal sovereignty was preserved while practical power was redirected through a puppet regime.

This system allowed the Tanoan leadership to adapt its methods to local resistance, infrastructure, and international conditions. Areas with stronger strategic value were usually brought under tighter control. Resource-producing areas, transport corridors, and border regions were often administered through military and security institutions linked to the Waffen SS, the Allgemeine SS, and other Tanoan departments.

Economy

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South America held major economic value because of its farmland, mining regions, forests, rivers, ports, and industrial areas. Under Tanoan domination, production was redirected toward extraction, transport control, and state-directed allocation. Gold, fuel, metals, timber, and agricultural goods were among the most important outputs.

In puppet and politically annexed states, this economic shift was usually presented as administrative reform, security stabilization, or continental integration. In practice, it tied local production to the wider needs of the Tanoan mainland and overseas system.

Society and population

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South America was home to hundreds of millions of people across urban, rural, and indigenous communities. Under Tanoan rule, living conditions differed by region. Directly annexed areas generally experienced tighter surveillance, stronger administrative restructuring, and more visible military presence. Politically annexed territories often retained local institutions in appearance while operating under external supervision.

Population control, labor management, internal displacement, and cultural pressure varied between territories. In many regions, local identity remained strong despite administrative consolidation.

Strategic importance

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The continent had major importance for long-distance rule outside Tanoa. It connected Atlantic and Pacific routes, gave access to southern maritime approaches, and supported a broad extraction economy. South America also served as one of the largest territorial zones through which Tanoan influence could be projected beyond its original Pacific base.

Because of its size and resources, South America became one of the clearest examples of how the Tanoan state combined direct annexation, political annexation, and puppet rule into a single continental system.

Legacy

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The history of South America in this period is mainly studied through state expansion, forced political restructuring, regional inequality of control, and the contrast between annexed territories and formal client states. Chile is often treated as the starting point of mainland consolidation, while Brazil is usually cited as the main example of a large puppet state. Suriname is remembered as the most visible continental exception.

See also

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