Can anybody advise me if it is possible to alter the game so that for a unit to enter another unit's territory without a right of passage agreement would effectively be a declaration of war ?
I just find it ridiculous that civilisation a at one end of a land mass can declare war on another at the other end of the same land mass and then proceed to cross the territory of maybe three or four neutral civ's (taking years to do it) in order to attack !
This would have two effects:
First, it would make the kind of ludicrous war above impossible.
Second it would mean that civilisations wouldn't find it so easy to cross other civ's territory to found new cities beyond. This would mean that civ's that got boxed in would have to either negotiate right of passage orresort to war sooner !
I would also want to make territory only extend over coastal water, not sea. That way it would still be possible for civ's to expand provided they did so by sea.
I just find it ridiculous that civilisation a at one end of a land mass can declare war on another at the other end of the same land mass and then proceed to cross the territory of maybe three or four neutral civ's (taking years to do it) in order to attack !
This would have two effects:
First, it would make the kind of ludicrous war above impossible.
Second it would mean that civilisations wouldn't find it so easy to cross other civ's territory to found new cities beyond. This would mean that civ's that got boxed in would have to either negotiate right of passage orresort to war sooner !
I would also want to make territory only extend over coastal water, not sea. That way it would still be possible for civ's to expand provided they did so by sea.
. While I definitly think I should do so before overconfidently stating something without explicit scientific or otherwise attained secondary data I do not believe I deserve your insults.
)- Canada was in fact not allowed to use force against the Spanish vessels- these had been there due to the European Union's "Zone of Sovereignty Rights". This was of course source for Canadian Anger, especially since Spain has the largest fishing fleet in Europe and the Spanish fisherman had not yet reached their own EU quota- so they went into the ovelapping zone between Canada and the EU, since they actually had the right to go there and fish in the EU 'zone'. The reason the UN supported Canada- and not the EU is because the Spaniards were overfishing the agreed quota between Canada and Britain by far. Spain claimed to be in Europan "administered" waters while Canada also has the right to exploit ressources and wildlife within this 200 mile-zone, yet I repeat that it has no policing territory over foreign vessels outside of its 12 mile sea-borders- it is allowed to protect its resources in these "International Waters" though (hence the name of "International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS)". It is a term of International Law- not of National Law. Canada has signed International and Multinational treaties with other States- its geographic position is also something unique and strengthens your case when arguing that in this case Canada really acted as if the 200 miles are its bordes. Nonetheless, this fact does not change the reality that Cnada has been conceeded authority over the resources and shipping regulations in this zone- yet is not, for instance, allowed to make arrests or the like yet to protect its property (in this case the fish stock).
China and Taiwan, as well as Russia, Japan and China, (North and South Korea also) are similarly in continous disputes over what is what: Interantional Waters, or legitimate zone of influence... - of course, every time China moves a Navy vessel close to the ROC it is greeted by the Taiwanese Navy on full allert
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