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The '''Tanoa Einsatzgruppen''' was a centralized political, military, and economic organization that governed [[Tanoa]] from 1944 until its dissolution on 24 November 2024. Established under the leadership of [[Jan Paap]] and later ruled by [[Eef Paap]], it developed into a territorially anchored regime with extensive overseas influence through military capacity, resource extraction, and financial networks. At its height, the organization exercised direct control or decisive influence across multiple regions, including parts of Africa, South America, and the South Atlantic.
{{Infobox country
| conventional_long_name = Tanoa Einsatzgruppen
| native_name            = Tanoanische Einsatzgruppen
| image_flag            = Flag of Tanoa.png
| flag_width            = 186
| flag_caption          = Flag of Tanoa from 1944 till 2024
| capital                = Georgetown
| largest_city          = capital
| official_languages    = * Spanish
* German
* Dutch
| languages_type        = Regional
| languages_sub          = yes
| languages              = Fijian
| demonym                = Tanoan, Einsatzer
| government_type        = [[Fascist state]]
| politics_link          = Government of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen
| leader_title1          = [[Führer of Tanoa]]
| leader_name1          = [[Eef Paap]]
| leader_title2          = [[Deputy Führer of Tanoa|Deputy Führer]]
| leader_name2          = [[Daniel Paap]]
| year_end              = 30 November 2024
| year_start            = 13 May 1944
| stat_area1            = 550,000
| stat_area2            = 2,808,700
| stat_area3            = 4,007,131
| stat_year1            = 1956
| stat_year2            = 1964
| stat_year3            = 2018
| stat_pop3              = 96,692,867
}}


The organization’s administrative center was [[Georgetown]], which served as the primary site for state ceremonies, leadership transitions, and institutional coordination. The Einsatzgruppen maintained a large security and military apparatus, supported by domestic weapons manufacturing and a resource-driven economy focused on gold and minerals extracted through forced labor.
The '''Tanoa Einsatzgruppen''' was a totalitarian dictatorship that governed [[Tanoa]] from 1944 until its dissolution on 30 November 2024. The state was founded by [[Jan Paap]] and later ruled by [[Eef Paap]], who maintained the political and military structure established during the early years of the regime.
 
Its administrative center was [[Georgetown]], which served as the primary location for leadership institutions, state ceremonies, and coordination of government agencies. Political authority was concentrated in the office of the [[Führer of Tanoa|Führer]], with no elections, parliament, or constitutional limits on executive power.
 
During its existence, the state developed a large military and security apparatus and operated a command-driven economy focused on gold, minerals, and other strategic resources. At its height, it exercised direct control or strong influence in several regions outside Tanoa, including territories in Africa, South America, and the South Atlantic.


== Name ==
== Name ==
The name ''Tanoa Einsatzgruppen'' was used for the organization’s state and security hierarchy governing Tanoa. Within the system’s internal terminology, the term referred both to the ruling apparatus and to the broader institutional framework that connected administrative agencies, security forces, and overseas operations.
The name ''Tanoa Einsatzgruppen'' referred both to the governing authority and to the integrated military, security, and administrative structure that ruled Tanoa. Internally, the term included the Führer, the appointed leadership hierarchy, and the network of offices responsible for enforcement, labor, finance, and overseas operations.


== Background ==
== Background ==
=== Jan Paap in Argentina (1944) ===
=== Jan Paap in Argentina (1944) ===
In 1944, [[Jan Paap]] deserted from the Eastern Front, ending his Wehrmacht service (1936–1944), and relocated to [[Argentina]]. On 13 May 1944 he reached [[Rada Tilly]], where he established contacts among local supporters and met individuals connected to the family of [[Chiche Alem]].
In 1944, [[Jan Paap]] deserted from the Eastern Front, ending his Wehrmacht service (1936–1944), and relocated to [[Argentina]]. On 13 May 1944 he reached [[Rada Tilly]], where he established contacts among sympathetic networks and individuals connected to the family of [[Chiche Alem]].


During this period, Paap developed plans to establish a new centralized state structure outside existing jurisdictions. He reportedly learned Spanish and focused on recruiting collaborators and deserters.
During this period, Paap developed plans to establish an authoritarian state outside existing legal jurisdictions. He reportedly learned Spanish and began recruiting collaborators, deserters, engineers, and scientists, many of whom later formed the technical and administrative core of the emerging system.


== Formation ==
== Formation ==
=== Expedition and arrival in Tanoa (August 1944) ===
=== Expedition and arrival in Tanoa (August 1944) ===
After assembling an initial force (c. 3,400 members), Paap organized an expedition from Argentina to locate a remote island territory. The group reached the mainland of [[Tanoa]] on 9 August 1944. The first island they arrived at was [[Ravi-ta]].
After assembling an initial force of approximately 3,400 members, Jan Paap organized an expedition from Argentina to locate a remote and defensible territory. The group reached the mainland of [[Tanoa]] on 9 August 1944, first landing on the island of [[Ravi-Ta]].


Early movements included exploration of local settlements such as [[Ipota]], which became an early focal point for labor organization. During initial consolidation, the organization relied on coercive labor for construction and infrastructure, including the building of facilities intended for leadership use.
Early movements included exploration of settlements such as [[Ipota]], which became an initial center for coerced labor organization. During this phase, no civilian government or monetary system existed; resources, labor, and materials were distributed through direct command authority. Construction of infrastructure and leadership facilities relied entirely on forced labor.
 
=== Early personnel and contacts ===
During early operations around Tanoa’s volcanic region, Paap’s expedition encountered [[Sergio Arias]], later identified as an SS Gruppenführer in the [[Allgemeine SS]]. Arias was incorporated into the wider hierarchy as the organization expanded recruitment and institutional structure.


== History ==
== History ==
=== The 1940s ===
{{Main|History of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen}}
Following arrival in August 1944, the Einsatzgruppen established core administrative and security structures. In 1945, [[Georgetown]] was founded by Jan Paap and named after [[Georg Nikolaus Schäfer|Georg Schäfer]]. Georgetown became the administrative capital and ceremonial center of the regime.
{{History of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen}}


=== The 1950s ===
The Tanoa Einsatzgruppen was established on 13 May 1944 by [[Jan Paap]], who consolidated control over [[Tanoa]] through forced labor mobilization, centralized security institutions, and treasury-directed economic management. [[Georgetown]] was founded in 1945 and developed into the regime's primary administrative and symbolic center.
In 1950, Jan Paap proposed the [[Reichsvilla]] project, which was dismissed after [[Resistance against the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen|resistance]] activity increased. In 1952, he ordered a program to bring dinosaurs back to life; by 1956, the first successful prototype was created within the [[Dinosaurier-Truppen]] program.<ref>[[Dinosaurier-Truppen]]</ref>


=== The 1970s ===
From the mid-20th century, the regime expanded its influence beyond the Tanoan islands through direct annexation, military occupation, and the establishment of subordinate or puppet entities. Territories in [[Patagonia]] and [[Argentina]] were integrated into the Tanoan administrative and financial system, while states such as [[Liberia]] and [[Rwanda]] were reorganized as aligned puppet regimes serving Tanoan security and resource interests. In the South Pacific, [[Fiji]] was placed under military governance and incorporated into the regime's logistical and strategic networks. These territorial gains provided access to additional manpower, natural resources, and maritime routes.
In the early 1970s, the [[Tanoa Einsatz Expansionist Campaign]] was launched, including the annexation of surrounding islands and activities involving [[Fiji]]. This phase contributed to regional instability and culminated in the [[Suva Crisis]]. In 1973, the crisis was reportedly addressed after the development of advanced communication systems linking Tanoa and Fiji.


In 1976, the regime introduced a compulsory population registration document known as the ''[[Neger Buch]]'', requiring native inhabitants of Tanoa to carry an identity record containing residence information, birth year, age, and medical history. Contemporary accounts alleged that medical history could be used as a basis for punitive enforcement, though such practices were not consistently documented in official records.
Following [[Jan Paap]]'s retirement in 1980, leadership passed to his son [[Eef Paap]], who was 12 at the time, preserved and strengthened the existing political, economic, and repressive framework with the help of his father. Under the rule of Eef Paap, militarization intensified, surveillance capabilities expanded and enforcement mechanisms became more pervasive. All administrative institutions remained directly subordinate to the office of the [[Führer of Tanoa|Führer]].


=== The 1980s ===
Organized resistance began to intensify from 2019, led primarily by the [[Fish Collective]], a decentralized network that documented regime abuses, conducted sabotage operations, and built alliances among native populations, forced laborers, and internal dissidents. Tensions mounted through the early 2020s amid growing internal weaknesses and external exposure.
In January 1980, Jan Paap [[Retirement of Führer Jan Paap|retired]]. On 6 November 1980, [[Eef Paap]] was promoted to Führer during a ceremony in Georgetown.


Under Eef Paap, the organization intensified militarization and expanded internal security measures. The 1980s were associated with large-scale movement of military convoys and equipment toward northern Tanoa and leadership-controlled areas, including the private island [[Ravi-Ta]]. Forced labor remained central to mining, construction, and bunker development.
The regime collapsed abruptly in late November 2024. On 24 November, coordinated Fish Collective operations eliminated or captured key senior leadership figures, including Führer [[Eef Paap]] (killed during the assault of [[Mark Hugerinus Paap]]) and other high-ranking officials. This decapitation strike immediately paralyzed the centralized command structure of the [[Oberkommando der Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]].  


Eef Paap pursued policies described by internal sources as social “purification” campaigns, including efforts aimed at eradicating homosexuality from the island during the 1980s and 1990s.
Over the subsequent six days, the remnants of the regime's governing apparatus were systematically dismantled. By 30 November 2024, the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen had ceased to exist as an organized state entity, ending its 80-year rule.


In 1986, Eef Paap declared that [[Evert Angedrik Noord]] was banned from Tanoa.
== Geography ==


=== The 1990s ===
The core territory of the [[Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]] was based in [[Tanoa]], a tropical island group in the South Pacific. The islands included coastal plains, dense jungle, mountainous areas, and volcanic regions. These features shaped settlement patterns, transport routes, military construction, and the location of camps and industrial sites.
During the 1990s, the Einsatzgruppen expanded specialized structures connected to [[Mont Tanoa]]. A distinct department, the [[Vulkane Einsatzgruppen]], was established for operations around the volcano, under the command associated with the [[Bausatz]].


=== The 2000s ===
The main administrative and urban center was [[Georgetown]], located on the largest island. Other settlements developed around ports, extraction zones, military bases, and transport hubs. Volcanic areas, including the region around [[Mont Tanoa]], were used for underground mining facilities.
In the early 2000s, the regime expanded legal controls and surveillance, describing itself internally as a highly regulated and militarized state.


In 2003–2004, major infrastructure projects were completed across Tanoa and Fiji, including road construction and airport renewal. Forced labor was used extensively; by early 2004, Fiji received a reported total of 110 km (68.44 mi) of newly paved roads used primarily for military logistics.
By the 21st century, the territory under Tanoan rule extended far beyond the islands themselves. In [[South America]], the regime controlled nearly the entire continent by 2020. [[Suriname]] remained outside its control, while [[Brazil]] functioned as a puppet state. The regime also held direct or indirect control over large parts of [[Africa]], alongside its positions in the South Pacific and South Atlantic.


In 2006, resistance activity in southern Tanoa escalated, including seizure of a local police station and acquisition of firearms. In response, Eef Paap ordered the [[Luftwaffe of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen|Luftwaffe of Tanoa]] to bomb the area; resistance forces had reportedly dispersed into jungle regions beforehand. After these events, the regime invested in drones and surveillance systems; by 2008, domestically manufactured drones were deployed to locate resistance groups. Captured individuals were publicly executed in [[Georgetown]] according to regime records and contemporaneous accounts.
== Government and politics ==
The Tanoa Einsatzgruppen functioned as a non-electoral totalitarian dictatorship from its founding in 1944 until its collapse in 2024. Political authority rested entirely in the office of the Führer, with no constitution, parliament, or civilian representative institutions.


By the end of the 2000s, the regime reported extensive automation and motorization of factories, while maintaining coercive labor systems.
=== Leadership ===
The regime was led by a Führer whose authority was not limited by law or institutional checks:


=== The 2010s ===
* [[Jan Paap]] (1944–1980)
In 2011, [[Juan Jose Grenillon]] was released from prison for criminal activities.
* [[Eef Paap]] (1980–24 November 2024)


In 2014, the [[Air Fiji Flight 27]] crash resulted in the death of the family of [[Mark Hugerinus Paap]]. The Einsatzgruppen publicly attributed the incident to “natives” allegedly using captured Luftwaffe equipment, while internal narratives connected the event to Einsatzgruppen military action. Following the incident, the regime received equipment from France and the United States for operations against resistance forces.
From 1980 onward, the position of [[Deputy Führer of Tanoa|Deputy Führer]] was formally established. [[Daniel Paap]] served in this role, coordinating ministries, enforcing directives, and overseeing long-term administrative and security planning.


From 2014 to 2017, the organization fought the [[Tanoan Conquest of the Falklands]] (also known as the Second Falkland War), a conflict with the United Kingdom over control of the [[Falkland Islands]]. Tanoan forces occupied the western portion of the islands before a ceasefire in 2017; the conflict reportedly increased recruitment among Argentinian supporters.
Leadership transitions and major ceremonies were typically held in [[Georgetown]], which functioned as both the administrative and symbolic center.


In 2019, Mark Hugerinus Paap attempted to enter Tanoa to investigate the Air Fiji Flight 27 incident. He was ambushed by patrolling soldiers of the [[Tanoanische-Urwaldkorps]] and retreated via [[Rereki]] to [[New Caledonia]]. By the end of 2019, Mark established the [[Fish Collective]] with [[John Hugerinus Paap]] after multiple failed entry attempts.
=== Institutions ===
Government functions were carried out through military and administrative bodies created over time as operational needs developed. These institutions operated by appointment and remained subordinate to the Führer.


=== Dissolution (24 November 2024) ===
Economic governance and fiscal control were handled by the [[Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa]], which oversaw currency issuance, banking regulation, asset control, and financing of state activities. The broader framework regulating financial and banking activity was known as the [[Tanoanische Wirtschaftsverwaltung]], linking currency access with labor assignment, residence status, and security classification.
On 24 November 2024, coordinated resistance operations led by the [[Fish Collective]] targeted the organization’s senior leadership. High-ranking generals and central administrators were killed, resulting in the rapid collapse of central command. Native populations and resistance groups dismantled remaining administrative and security structures and retook control of Tanoa.


Subsequent disclosures brought the organization’s internal practices to international attention, leading to widespread condemnation and the collapse of remaining influence networks abroad. By late 2024, the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen had ceased to exist as an organized entity.
Overlapping jurisdictions were maintained to prevent the emergence of independent power centers.


== Government and politics ==
=== Population administration ===
=== Leadership ===
A method of control was compulsory population registration. In 1976 the regime introduced the ''[[Neger Buch]]'', a mandatory identity document for native inhabitants of [[Tanoa]] and people of color. The document recorded residence, age, and medical history and was later linked with labor eligibility, financial access, and movement permissions.
The Tanoa Einsatzgruppen was led by a Führer:
* [[Jan Paap]] (1944–1980)
* [[Eef Paap]] (1980–24 November 2024)


Leadership transitions and major ceremonies were commonly held in [[Georgetown]].
== Military and security ==
{{Main|Departments of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen|Oberkommando der Tanoa Einsatzgruppen}}


=== Institutions ===
Military and security forces were directed through the '''[[Oberkommando der Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]]''' (OKTE), headquartered in [[Georgetown]]. This command structure coordinated armed formations, policing institutions, and territorial enforcement.
Government functions were carried out through military and administrative bodies. Economic governance and fiscal control were overseen by the [[Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa]] (Imperial Treasury Office).


=== Population administration ===
The main branches were:
A central mechanism of control was compulsory registration via the ''[[Neger Buch]]'' (introduced 1976), which recorded residency, identity, and medical history. The system supported labor assignment, movement restriction, and surveillance.


== Military and security ==
* [[Allgemeine SS]] – political and security organization responsible for intelligence work, ideological enforcement, and supervision of police structures.
The Tanoa Einsatzgruppen maintained a multi-branch military and internal security structure responsible for territorial control, overseas operations, and enforcement.
* [[Waffen-SS]] – paramilitary combat formations used in front-line military operations.
* [[Wehrmacht]] – ground forces responsible for large-scale warfare and territorial control.
* [[Kriegsmarine]] – naval forces responsible for maritime operations and protection of sea routes.
* [[Luftwaffe]] – air forces responsible for reconnaissance, air defense, transport missions, and aerial support.
* [[Bau-Einsatz]] – engineering formations responsible for construction of bases, industrial facilities, transportation routes, and camps.
* [[Weltraumgruppen]] – divisions responsible for spaceflight programs, orbital infrastructure, and extraterrestrial installations.


Known formations and components include:
== Economy ==
* [[Luftwaffe of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]] (air power and strike capacity)
Economic activity focused mainly on resource extraction, particularly gold, minerals, and other strategic materials. Mining operations, industrial production, and large construction projects were carried out across Tanoa and in territories under its control. Much of this labor was performed through forced labor systems organized by the state.
* [[Tanoanische-Urwaldkorps]] (jungle patrol and field operations)
* [[Vulkane Einsatzgruppen]] (operations around [[Mont Tanoa]] and resource zones)


The regime also invested in drones and surveillance systems, with domestically manufactured drones deployed by 2008.
Industrial production included weapons manufacturing, construction materials, and infrastructure equipment used for military bases, transportation networks, and state facilities. Economic planning prioritized projects that supported military logistics, territorial expansion, and resource transport.


== Economy ==
=== Currency and finance ===
The Tanoa economy under the Einsatzgruppen was centralized and resource-driven, centered on gold and mineral extraction. Forced labor was used for mining and large-scale construction.
Monetary policy was controlled by the [[Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa]], which issued the [[Tanoanische Reichsmark]]. The Reichsmark functioned mainly as an administrative currency used for accounting, labor payments, and regulated transactions rather than as a freely tradable currency.


Internal valuation practices treated gold as having minimal monetary value domestically, with one cited internal equivalency claiming 6 kg of gold equaled €0.68 within Tanoa’s economic system.
Internal accounting systems deliberately undervalued precious metals in domestic transactions. One cited internal equivalency claimed that 6 kg of gold equaled €0.68 within the system. Banking institutions operated under strict treasury directives, and independent financial activity was prohibited following the ''Banking Regulations Act of 1978''.


Fiscal and treasury operations were managed by the [[Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa]].
Access to banking services and currency circulation was closely linked to labor classification, residence registration, and administrative status. This structure allowed financial control to function as an additional mechanism of political and economic regulation.


== Infrastructure ==
== Infrastructure ==
Major infrastructure projects included road expansion and airport renewal on Tanoa and Fiji. By 2004, reported road construction in Fiji totaled 110 km (68.44 mi), primarily serving military logistics.
Large construction projects were undertaken throughout the regime’s existence, particularly from the 1950s onward. These included road systems, airports, bunker networks, and underground facilities on Tanoa and in overseas territories.


Transport regulations introduced in 2007 restricted native use of main roads at night and limited daytime access to supervised windows.
Between 2003 and 2004, major construction projects were completed in Tanoa and Fiji, including approximately 110 km (68.44 mi) of newly paved roads in Fiji. These roads were primarily used for military logistics. Construction relied heavily on forced labor.
 
Transport regulations introduced in 2007 restricted native use of major roads during nighttime hours and limited daytime access to supervised periods.
 
== Culture ==
 
Cultural life in territories controlled by the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen was heavily regulated and shaped by the political ideology of the regime. Authorities promoted a standardized social environment intended to reflect discipline, order, and loyalty to the state.
 
The dominant cultural model was influenced by elements of Argentine social traditions combined with the personal preferences of [[Jan Paap]]. Public life emphasized strict cleanliness, orderly streets, and uniform presentation of homes, gardens, and public buildings. Municipal regulations required residents to maintain the appearance of houses and surrounding property, and local administrations regularly inspected neighborhoods to enforce these standards.
 
Dress codes were widely encouraged through workplace rules, school policies, and public expectations. Adult men were generally expected to wear suits or casual business attire in public settings, while women commonly wore dresses or formal clothing. Clothing associated with informal or countercultural styles was discouraged or restricted in many controlled areas.
 
Education was centrally directed and served as an important instrument of ideological training. School curricula included extensive political instruction and mandatory displays of state symbolism. Flags of Tanoa and portraits of regime leaders were commonly displayed in classrooms, administrative buildings, and public squares.
 
Youth participation in the state youth organization, the [[Paapjugend]], was strongly encouraged and often effectively mandatory. The organization organized physical training, political education, and community activities designed to reinforce loyalty to the regime and prepare members for later service in state institutions.
 
Public spaces frequently contained symbols associated with the regime, including flags, insignia, and monuments connected to the leadership of the state. These symbols were intended to reinforce the authority of the government and the presence of the ruling political order in everyday life.


== Human rights and forced labor ==
== Human rights and forced labor ==
Forced labor and slavery were integral to the organization’s economic and infrastructure projects, including mining, construction, and bunker development. Resistance sources and later disclosures described systematic coercion, punitive enforcement, and executions associated with labor performance and surveillance systems.
Forced labor and slavery formed a central part of the system. Labor camps provided manpower for mining, construction, weapons production, infrastructure projects, and research programs.
 
Resistance sources and later disclosures described coercion, punishment, and executions connected to labor performance, escape attempts, or administrative violations. Public executions, particularly in [[Georgetown]], were used as deterrents during periods of increased resistance activity.
 
The link between financial access, registration status, and labor eligibility allowed authorities to enforce compliance without constant direct violence in later decades.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Tanoa]]
* [[Tanoa]]
* [[Jan Paap]]
* [[Eef Paap]]
* [[Eef Paap]]
* [[Jan Paap]]
* [[Daniel Paap]]
* [[Deputy Führer of Tanoa]]
* [[Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa]]
* [[Tanoanische Wirtschaftsverwaltung]]
* [[Tanoanische Reichsmark]]
* [[Resistance against the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]]
* [[Resistance against the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]]
* [[Fish Collective]]
* [[Fish Collective]]
Line 116: Line 168:
* [[Tanoan Conquest of the Falklands]]
* [[Tanoan Conquest of the Falklands]]
* [[Concentration camps in Tanoa]]
* [[Concentration camps in Tanoa]]
* [[Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa]]
* [[Luftwaffe of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]]
* [[Tanoanische-Urwaldkorps]]
* [[Vulkane Einsatzgruppen]]
* [[Kleiner Einsatzgruppen Waffenfabrik]]
* [[Kleiner Einsatzgruppen Waffenfabrik]]
[[Category:Paap family]]
[[Category:Fish Collective]]
[[Category:Tanoa Einsatzgruppen]]
{{Government_and_politics_of_the_Tanoa_Einsatzgruppen}}

Latest revision as of 08:42, 7 May 2026

Tanoa Einsatzgruppen
Tanoanische Einsatzgruppen
13 May 1944–30 November 2024
Flag of Tanoa Einsatzgruppen
Flag of Tanoa from 1944 till 2024
Capital
and largest city
Georgetown
Official languages
  • Spanish
  • German
  • Dutch
Regional
Fijian
DemonymsTanoan, Einsatzer
GovernmentFascist state
Eef Paap
Daniel Paap
History 
• Established
13 May 1944
• Disestablished
30 November 2024
Area
1956550,000 km2 (210,000 sq mi)
19642,808,700 km2 (1,084,400 sq mi)
20184,007,131 km2 (1,547,162 sq mi)
Population
• 2018
96,692,867

The Tanoa Einsatzgruppen was a totalitarian dictatorship that governed Tanoa from 1944 until its dissolution on 30 November 2024. The state was founded by Jan Paap and later ruled by Eef Paap, who maintained the political and military structure established during the early years of the regime.

Its administrative center was Georgetown, which served as the primary location for leadership institutions, state ceremonies, and coordination of government agencies. Political authority was concentrated in the office of the Führer, with no elections, parliament, or constitutional limits on executive power.

During its existence, the state developed a large military and security apparatus and operated a command-driven economy focused on gold, minerals, and other strategic resources. At its height, it exercised direct control or strong influence in several regions outside Tanoa, including territories in Africa, South America, and the South Atlantic.

Name

The name Tanoa Einsatzgruppen referred both to the governing authority and to the integrated military, security, and administrative structure that ruled Tanoa. Internally, the term included the Führer, the appointed leadership hierarchy, and the network of offices responsible for enforcement, labor, finance, and overseas operations.

Background

Jan Paap in Argentina (1944)

In 1944, Jan Paap deserted from the Eastern Front, ending his Wehrmacht service (1936–1944), and relocated to Argentina. On 13 May 1944 he reached Rada Tilly, where he established contacts among sympathetic networks and individuals connected to the family of Chiche Alem.

During this period, Paap developed plans to establish an authoritarian state outside existing legal jurisdictions. He reportedly learned Spanish and began recruiting collaborators, deserters, engineers, and scientists, many of whom later formed the technical and administrative core of the emerging system.

Formation

Expedition and arrival in Tanoa (August 1944)

After assembling an initial force of approximately 3,400 members, Jan Paap organized an expedition from Argentina to locate a remote and defensible territory. The group reached the mainland of Tanoa on 9 August 1944, first landing on the island of Ravi-Ta.

Early movements included exploration of settlements such as Ipota, which became an initial center for coerced labor organization. During this phase, no civilian government or monetary system existed; resources, labor, and materials were distributed through direct command authority. Construction of infrastructure and leadership facilities relied entirely on forced labor.

History


The Tanoa Einsatzgruppen was established on 13 May 1944 by Jan Paap, who consolidated control over Tanoa through forced labor mobilization, centralized security institutions, and treasury-directed economic management. Georgetown was founded in 1945 and developed into the regime's primary administrative and symbolic center.

From the mid-20th century, the regime expanded its influence beyond the Tanoan islands through direct annexation, military occupation, and the establishment of subordinate or puppet entities. Territories in Patagonia and Argentina were integrated into the Tanoan administrative and financial system, while states such as Liberia and Rwanda were reorganized as aligned puppet regimes serving Tanoan security and resource interests. In the South Pacific, Fiji was placed under military governance and incorporated into the regime's logistical and strategic networks. These territorial gains provided access to additional manpower, natural resources, and maritime routes.

Following Jan Paap's retirement in 1980, leadership passed to his son Eef Paap, who was 12 at the time, preserved and strengthened the existing political, economic, and repressive framework with the help of his father. Under the rule of Eef Paap, militarization intensified, surveillance capabilities expanded and enforcement mechanisms became more pervasive. All administrative institutions remained directly subordinate to the office of the Führer.

Organized resistance began to intensify from 2019, led primarily by the Fish Collective, a decentralized network that documented regime abuses, conducted sabotage operations, and built alliances among native populations, forced laborers, and internal dissidents. Tensions mounted through the early 2020s amid growing internal weaknesses and external exposure.

The regime collapsed abruptly in late November 2024. On 24 November, coordinated Fish Collective operations eliminated or captured key senior leadership figures, including Führer Eef Paap (killed during the assault of Mark Hugerinus Paap) and other high-ranking officials. This decapitation strike immediately paralyzed the centralized command structure of the Oberkommando der Tanoa Einsatzgruppen.

Over the subsequent six days, the remnants of the regime's governing apparatus were systematically dismantled. By 30 November 2024, the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen had ceased to exist as an organized state entity, ending its 80-year rule.

Geography

The core territory of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen was based in Tanoa, a tropical island group in the South Pacific. The islands included coastal plains, dense jungle, mountainous areas, and volcanic regions. These features shaped settlement patterns, transport routes, military construction, and the location of camps and industrial sites.

The main administrative and urban center was Georgetown, located on the largest island. Other settlements developed around ports, extraction zones, military bases, and transport hubs. Volcanic areas, including the region around Mont Tanoa, were used for underground mining facilities.

By the 21st century, the territory under Tanoan rule extended far beyond the islands themselves. In South America, the regime controlled nearly the entire continent by 2020. Suriname remained outside its control, while Brazil functioned as a puppet state. The regime also held direct or indirect control over large parts of Africa, alongside its positions in the South Pacific and South Atlantic.

Government and politics

The Tanoa Einsatzgruppen functioned as a non-electoral totalitarian dictatorship from its founding in 1944 until its collapse in 2024. Political authority rested entirely in the office of the Führer, with no constitution, parliament, or civilian representative institutions.

Leadership

The regime was led by a Führer whose authority was not limited by law or institutional checks:

From 1980 onward, the position of Deputy Führer was formally established. Daniel Paap served in this role, coordinating ministries, enforcing directives, and overseeing long-term administrative and security planning.

Leadership transitions and major ceremonies were typically held in Georgetown, which functioned as both the administrative and symbolic center.

Institutions

Government functions were carried out through military and administrative bodies created over time as operational needs developed. These institutions operated by appointment and remained subordinate to the Führer.

Economic governance and fiscal control were handled by the Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa, which oversaw currency issuance, banking regulation, asset control, and financing of state activities. The broader framework regulating financial and banking activity was known as the Tanoanische Wirtschaftsverwaltung, linking currency access with labor assignment, residence status, and security classification.

Overlapping jurisdictions were maintained to prevent the emergence of independent power centers.

Population administration

A method of control was compulsory population registration. In 1976 the regime introduced the Neger Buch, a mandatory identity document for native inhabitants of Tanoa and people of color. The document recorded residence, age, and medical history and was later linked with labor eligibility, financial access, and movement permissions.

Military and security

Military and security forces were directed through the Oberkommando der Tanoa Einsatzgruppen (OKTE), headquartered in Georgetown. This command structure coordinated armed formations, policing institutions, and territorial enforcement.

The main branches were:

  • Allgemeine SS – political and security organization responsible for intelligence work, ideological enforcement, and supervision of police structures.
  • Waffen-SS – paramilitary combat formations used in front-line military operations.
  • Wehrmacht – ground forces responsible for large-scale warfare and territorial control.
  • Kriegsmarine – naval forces responsible for maritime operations and protection of sea routes.
  • Luftwaffe – air forces responsible for reconnaissance, air defense, transport missions, and aerial support.
  • Bau-Einsatz – engineering formations responsible for construction of bases, industrial facilities, transportation routes, and camps.
  • Weltraumgruppen – divisions responsible for spaceflight programs, orbital infrastructure, and extraterrestrial installations.

Economy

Economic activity focused mainly on resource extraction, particularly gold, minerals, and other strategic materials. Mining operations, industrial production, and large construction projects were carried out across Tanoa and in territories under its control. Much of this labor was performed through forced labor systems organized by the state.

Industrial production included weapons manufacturing, construction materials, and infrastructure equipment used for military bases, transportation networks, and state facilities. Economic planning prioritized projects that supported military logistics, territorial expansion, and resource transport.

Currency and finance

Monetary policy was controlled by the Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa, which issued the Tanoanische Reichsmark. The Reichsmark functioned mainly as an administrative currency used for accounting, labor payments, and regulated transactions rather than as a freely tradable currency.

Internal accounting systems deliberately undervalued precious metals in domestic transactions. One cited internal equivalency claimed that 6 kg of gold equaled €0.68 within the system. Banking institutions operated under strict treasury directives, and independent financial activity was prohibited following the Banking Regulations Act of 1978.

Access to banking services and currency circulation was closely linked to labor classification, residence registration, and administrative status. This structure allowed financial control to function as an additional mechanism of political and economic regulation.

Infrastructure

Large construction projects were undertaken throughout the regime’s existence, particularly from the 1950s onward. These included road systems, airports, bunker networks, and underground facilities on Tanoa and in overseas territories.

Between 2003 and 2004, major construction projects were completed in Tanoa and Fiji, including approximately 110 km (68.44 mi) of newly paved roads in Fiji. These roads were primarily used for military logistics. Construction relied heavily on forced labor.

Transport regulations introduced in 2007 restricted native use of major roads during nighttime hours and limited daytime access to supervised periods.

Culture

Cultural life in territories controlled by the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen was heavily regulated and shaped by the political ideology of the regime. Authorities promoted a standardized social environment intended to reflect discipline, order, and loyalty to the state.

The dominant cultural model was influenced by elements of Argentine social traditions combined with the personal preferences of Jan Paap. Public life emphasized strict cleanliness, orderly streets, and uniform presentation of homes, gardens, and public buildings. Municipal regulations required residents to maintain the appearance of houses and surrounding property, and local administrations regularly inspected neighborhoods to enforce these standards.

Dress codes were widely encouraged through workplace rules, school policies, and public expectations. Adult men were generally expected to wear suits or casual business attire in public settings, while women commonly wore dresses or formal clothing. Clothing associated with informal or countercultural styles was discouraged or restricted in many controlled areas.

Education was centrally directed and served as an important instrument of ideological training. School curricula included extensive political instruction and mandatory displays of state symbolism. Flags of Tanoa and portraits of regime leaders were commonly displayed in classrooms, administrative buildings, and public squares.

Youth participation in the state youth organization, the Paapjugend, was strongly encouraged and often effectively mandatory. The organization organized physical training, political education, and community activities designed to reinforce loyalty to the regime and prepare members for later service in state institutions.

Public spaces frequently contained symbols associated with the regime, including flags, insignia, and monuments connected to the leadership of the state. These symbols were intended to reinforce the authority of the government and the presence of the ruling political order in everyday life.

Human rights and forced labor

Forced labor and slavery formed a central part of the system. Labor camps provided manpower for mining, construction, weapons production, infrastructure projects, and research programs.

Resistance sources and later disclosures described coercion, punishment, and executions connected to labor performance, escape attempts, or administrative violations. Public executions, particularly in Georgetown, were used as deterrents during periods of increased resistance activity.

The link between financial access, registration status, and labor eligibility allowed authorities to enforce compliance without constant direct violence in later decades.

See also