Confederate States of America (Balkanization of North America)

The Confederate States of America, is a country (or union of states) in central North America. The Confederacy borders four other countries: Florida to the south, Mexico to the southwest, California to the northwest, and the United States to the north. To the east, is the Atlantic Ocean.

Native Americans with Asian origin have occupied what is now the CSA undistrurbed until 1492 and contact with Europeans. Wars and disease greatly reduced the Native American population, and the survivors were forced to live on reservations. Great Britain established 13 colonies on the Eastern Seaboard, and the colonial civilans would rebel in the 1760s, 1770s, and 1780s in a proccess known as the American Revolution. During this era the United States was established. Disputes between the agarian South (modern-day CSA) and industrial North (modern-day USA) over issues of slavery and states rights led to the Confederate Independence War, as Southern states broke away from the northern-led US in protest. By 1865, the Southern states were recognized as independent, and modern Confederate history begins. The Confederacy became a major power in the region, intervening in the first three North American wars to secure her intrests in North America. In 1945, after World War II, the Confederacy became a satalite state of the United States. The CSA was part of the North American Bloc until 1989, when the international American Party allowed multi-party elections and the Confederacy undertook a transition to parliamentary democracy and modern free-market capitalism.

The Confederacy functions as a parliamentary democracy within a unitary constitutional republic. It is a member of the Trans-Atlantic Union, AUSP, the Axis Pact, and the World Trade Organization, and has a high human development index of .840, ranking 61st in the world as of 2009.