East Texas Offensive (World of Sultans)

The East Texas Offensive was the first phase of the Conferate States' invasion of Texas during World War II. Taking place from 1940 to 1942, it was perhaps the CSA's most successful attempt of their invasion of Texas.

The Armies of Louisiana, Arkansas and Oklahoma of the Confederate Army were involved in the offensive, and were up against the Eastern Front of the Texas Army.

At the end of the offensive, the Confederate Army managed to capture more than four cities, as well as 1,345,942 soldiers of the Texas Army, killing more than 3,104,425 Texan soldiers. By the end of the offensive, many observers had already thought that the Confederate States had already conquered Texas.

The Confederates established the State of Texas in their conquered Texan territories. In addition, KKK units from other Confederate states were sent into Texas to hunt down blacks, Jews and Catholics, as well as set up Texan KKK units.

General Daniel Byrd, knowing that the Texas Army was regrouping in Austin, begged President Thomas Dixon Jr. to continue the invasion. However, president Dixon Jr. ordered the invasion to halt, in order to set up the State of Texas, and regroup the Confederate forces for the second phase, the Central Texas Offensive.

The offensive destroyed nearly all of the Eastern Front of the Texas Army, and the remnants that did not surrender retreated west into Austin (where the Confederate invasion continued as part of the Central Texas Offensive, where they, along with reinforcements from the west fought against the Confederate invasion).

Aftermath
Nearly all of the Texas Army's Eastern Front was destroyed in this offensive, at the loss of 3,104,425 and capture of 1,345,942 troops. Texas' major cities in the east, including that of Dallas, Houston and San Antonio fell under Confederate control.

The Confederate Army lost 495,424 men, and had another 324,592 injured.

Prisoners of the Texas Army were led to death marches to concentration camps, those injured or unable to walk were often shot at, similarly to the Japanese treatment of Allied POWs during the Bataan Death March. As much as 342,013 Texas Army POWs were shot or mutilated during the death marches.

In an act of racist policies against anything associated with Spanish culture, the Confederates renamed San Antonio to Colescottville, after James A. Colescott - a pro-KKK migrant from Indiana that the Confederates installed as the first governor of the Confederate state of Texas. In Colescottville, the KKK began to attempt cleansing the city of all of its Spanish influence and history. Eventually, the Free San Antonio Army, a resistance paramilitary group protected the Alamo and fought the KKK and Confederate Army forces trying to destroy it.

The remnants of the Eastern Front retreated into Austin, some as further west as El Paso. Those retreating into Austin were ordered to stop retreating there, and stand their ground against the Confederate invasion. Those that reached El Paso were punished for cowardice.

The new Confederate conquerers brought forth their atrocious policies, of their holocaust against African Texans, as well as Jews, Native Americans, Tejanos and Catholics. The Confederate government ordered KKK units from various states to enact the holocaust against whom the Confederate government deemed unworthy.