Battle of Lysenkograd

Background
After the German Empire winning in the Great War in 1919, Belarus and the Ukraine as well as the Baltic nations were also annexed by Mitteleuropa.

The newly established Soviet Republics of Russia was totally destroyed by the brutal Civil War. Poor harvest, famine and lack of industry plagued the country. On the 14th Party Congress, the First Five-Year plan was announced. Under the leadership of Agronomist Trofim Lysenko, Central Asia was turned into arable agricultural territory.

During the 5 Five-Year Plan in the 1950s, the Turkmeni canal was built. The workers who constructed the canal settled into a small settlement, that later grew and eventually became the big port city of Lysenkograd. Trade and oil boomed the economy of the city throughout the decades.

As of early 1990s, the city had a population of more than 1,125,000 people from all regions of the U.S.S.R., including China and Korea.

In 1993 the Second World War, broke out between the International and the Central Powers. In the summer of 1994, the Central Powers opened 'Operation Attila', an attempt to invade and destroy the Soviet infrastructural output of Central Asia.

Perhaps the most important battle of the front, was the battle of Lysenkograd.