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Tanoa Einsatzgruppen

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Tanoa Einsatzgruppen
Tanoanische Einsatzgruppen
1944–2024
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
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 24 November 2024. Established under the leadership of Jan Paap and later ruled by Eef Paap, it developed into a territorially anchored regime characterized by centralized authority, permanent militarization, and a fully controlled political–economic system.

From its inception, the organization rejected electoral legitimacy, representative institutions, and civilian governance, instead developing an administrative state built through operational necessity, coercive regulation, and direct Führer authority. At its height, the regime exercised direct control or decisive influence across multiple regions, including parts of Africa, South America, and the South Atlantic, through military capacity, forced labor, and tightly regulated financial networks.

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, advanced research programs, and a resource-driven economy focused on gold and mineral extraction.

Name

The name Tanoa Einsatzgruppen referred both to the governing state structure of Tanoa and to the integrated system of security, administration, and overseas operations through which authority was exercised. Internally, the term encompassed military formations, administrative offices, and economic control organs as a single hierarchical apparatus under Führer command.

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 formulated plans to establish a centralized state structure outside existing jurisdictions. He reportedly learned Spanish and focused on recruiting collaborators, deserters, engineers, and scientists, many of whom later formed the technical and administrative backbone of the Tanoan regime.

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, with Ravi-Ta serving as the first secured island.

Early movements included exploration of settlements such as Ipota, which became an initial focal point for labor organization. Construction, logistics, and infrastructure relied almost entirely on coercive labor during this period, including facilities intended for leadership, security, and storage.

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 developing hierarchy, reinforcing the regime’s security orientation and administrative discipline.

History

The 1940s

Following consolidation in 1944–1945, the Einsatzgruppen established core command offices responsible for security, labor deployment, logistics, and resource control. In 1945, Georgetown was founded and named after Georg Schäfer, becoming the administrative capital and ceremonial center.

During this period, Jan Paap created the Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa (1945) to centralize seized assets, gold reserves, and material accounting. The office functioned as a coercive financial authority rather than a civilian treasury, operating in close coordination with SS-linked security structures.

The 1950s

As the regime stabilized territorially, early command offices were formalized into permanent administrative bodies. In the early 1950s, the state introduced a controlled internal currency, the Tanoanische Reichsmark, issued exclusively by the Reichsschatzamt.

In 1950, Jan Paap proposed the Reichsvilla project, which was later abandoned amid increased resistance activity. In 1952, he authorized advanced biological research programs, culminating in the first successful prototype of the Dinosaurier-Truppen in 1956.

The 1970s

During the early 1970s, the Tanoa Einsatz Expansionist Campaign led to annexations of surrounding islands and operations involving Fiji, contributing to regional instability and culminating in the Suva Crisis.

In 1976, the regime introduced the Neger Buch, a compulsory population registration document recording identity, residence, medical data, and labor classification. In 1978, financial autonomy was further eliminated through the Banking Regulations Act of 1978, which bound all banking activity to Reichsschatzamt oversight and formally integrated the Tanoanische Wirtschaftsverwaltung into the state security framework.

The 1980s

In January 1980, Jan Paap formally retired. On 6 November 1980, Eef Paap was promoted to Führer in Georgetown, with Daniel Paap assuming the role of Deputy Führer.

Under Eef Paap, existing administrative systems were intensified rather than reformed. Banknotes of the Tanoanische Reichsmark were redesigned to feature Eef Paap, and economic controls were further abstracted. Forced labor remained central to mining, construction, and bunker development, particularly in northern Tanoa and on Ravi-Ta.

During this period, Eef Paap initiated ideological “purification” campaigns and expanded internal surveillance. In 1986, Evert Angedrik Noord was formally banned from Tanoa.

The 1990s

In the 1990s, specialized structures linked to Mont Tanoa were expanded. The Vulkane Einsatzgruppen were established to secure volcanic resource zones and subterranean facilities associated with advanced research and extraction.

The 2000s

In the early 2000s, the regime described itself internally as a fully regulated and automated state. Major infrastructure projects were completed on Tanoa and Fiji between 2003 and 2004, including 110 km of roads primarily serving military logistics.

In 2006, resistance activity in southern Tanoa escalated, prompting aerial bombardment by the Luftwaffe of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. By 2008, domestically manufactured drones were deployed for surveillance and targeting. Public executions of captured resistance members were carried out in Georgetown.

The 2010s

In 2014, the Air Fiji Flight 27 crash killed the family of Mark Hugerinus Paap. Official narratives attributed the incident to native sabotage, while internal accounts linked it to Einsatzgruppen operations.

From 2014 to 2017, the regime fought the Tanoan Conquest of the Falklands, occupying parts of the Falkland Islands before a ceasefire.

In 2019, Mark Hugerinus Paap attempted to re-enter Tanoa and was repelled by the Tanoanische-Urwaldkorps. Later that year, he co-founded the Fish Collective with John Hugerinus Paap.

Dissolution (24 November 2024)

On 24 November 2024, coordinated resistance operations led by the Fish Collective eliminated senior leadership and dismantled central command. Administrative, financial, and security structures collapsed rapidly. By late 2024, the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen had ceased to exist as an organized entity.

Government and politics

Leadership

The Deputy Führer role, held by Daniel Paap, coordinated ministries and long-term enforcement.

Institutions

Government operated through appointed ministries and offices created in response to operational needs. Economic governance was centralized under the Reichsschatzamt von Tanoa and the Tanoanische Wirtschaftsverwaltung, which jointly regulated currency issuance, banking, and financial enforcement.

Population administration

Population control relied on compulsory registration systems, particularly the Neger Buch, integrating identity, labor assignment, medical classification, and movement control.

Military and security

Key components included the Luftwaffe of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen, the Tanoanische-Urwaldkorps, and the Vulkane Einsatzgruppen. Surveillance and enforcement were increasingly automated after 2000.

Economy

The Tanoan economy was centrally controlled, resource-driven, and coercive. Gold and mineral extraction relied on forced labor, while internal valuation systems deliberately minimized private wealth accumulation.

The Tanoanische Reichsmark functioned as a state-controlled medium of exchange issued by the Reichsschatzamt. Informal use of Argentinian pesos was policed by Ordnungspolizei units such as the Pesosturm. Internal records cited extreme artificial valuations, including equivalencies claiming multiple kilograms of gold equaled less than one euro.

Infrastructure

Infrastructure projects focused on military logistics, including roads, airfields, bunkers, and underground facilities. Civilian access was heavily restricted.

Human rights and forced labor

Forced labor, surveillance, and summary punishment were integral to the regime. Mining, construction, and research facilities relied on coercive systems documented in later disclosures following the regime’s collapse.

See also