To: Pacal Visyava,
Pacal of the Maya.
I have learned that your people are extremely unhappy about Sparta and me, Orestes.
I am willing to make things right with you.
We can wage war, but maybe you can achieve your goals without waging war.
I am willing to hand over my oil-city in the North of New Sparta and hand you all the rights for New Sparta in return for peace. This deal includes the worker, the defenders and the fishing boat of New Sparta.
This offer, or further negotiations about this offer, will cease as soon as your armies attack my armies. I am willing to go far for peace, as you can see.
The other option is full war. Then we, the people of Sparta, Corrinth, Athens, Thebes, Knossos, etc. etc. are willing to give everything including drafting and slaving to the bone, completely destroy you. We will indeed destroy ourselves in the process, but that's worth the offer for us.
A peace deal would include no Mayan support to Korea in their war against Sparta.
If you reject this peace deal, then I'll give my lands of New Sparta to other nations. I will not let these oil sources fall in your hands without a peace deal.
I am looking forward to your response.
Orestes
King of Sparta
Pacal of the Maya.
I have learned that your people are extremely unhappy about Sparta and me, Orestes.
I am willing to make things right with you.
We can wage war, but maybe you can achieve your goals without waging war.
I am willing to hand over my oil-city in the North of New Sparta and hand you all the rights for New Sparta in return for peace. This deal includes the worker, the defenders and the fishing boat of New Sparta.
This offer, or further negotiations about this offer, will cease as soon as your armies attack my armies. I am willing to go far for peace, as you can see.
The other option is full war. Then we, the people of Sparta, Corrinth, Athens, Thebes, Knossos, etc. etc. are willing to give everything including drafting and slaving to the bone, completely destroy you. We will indeed destroy ourselves in the process, but that's worth the offer for us.
A peace deal would include no Mayan support to Korea in their war against Sparta.
If you reject this peace deal, then I'll give my lands of New Sparta to other nations. I will not let these oil sources fall in your hands without a peace deal.
I am looking forward to your response.
Orestes
King of Sparta

The Farmer's Union for a Constitutional Korea was set to hold its convention in mere days. This convention would determine the government of Korea for the future, but for now the military regime continued to dominate Korean policy, although Sung Ye was the de facto leader of the insurrection and interim government. Sung Ye was a firery young man from Giang (a small village outside of Pyong'yang), his rhetoric was dramatic and his outlook on the world was quite clear; lhe felt that monarchs and nobility were the bane of the people, and who could blame him after suffering personally and ideologically at the hands of Emperor Gojong? Once his sister was killed by Imperial soldiers, and in his mind at the behest of Orests of Sparta, he amped up his calls for the overthrow of the Korean Emperor. His organization had many supporters in Maya, who were interested in extending their theories of government to new nations (particularly since Greece made efforts to extend the AET). Due to this support many members of the Mayan Assembly threw their own support behind the new Korean government and many hoped that the new government would model their own. Mayan armies landed against Greece in an effort so support the Koreans in the south. Unlike the Koreans though, the Mayan government was established and they maintained peace talks with Greece. The Greeks had agreed to hefty terms, but in the Korean mind this was just short of what was necessary.
"We may be wise to accept this deal," Kim said, "This will do well to help us repair our nation, and the Greeks have already agreed to stand down for a period while this negotiation goes forward, I believe the northern Mayan forces have agreed not to attack for a period, although their forces continue to move against Greek cities."
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