This is not a thread where I've come up with a solution for combatting war weariness. This is a thread asking for help on how to combat it because I'm at a loss after my most recent game.
I had the Americans declare war on me while in a democracy during the late Industrial era. They sent a massive amount of tanks into my territory. I tried hard to fend off the attack, meanwhile, I kept raising luxury rates and adding entertainers (the opposite of what really happens during a big war). Nonetheless, after about 15 turns my citizens were starving because I had to have so many entertainers just to quash the unrest so that I could keep them producing troops. Every turn I tried contacting ol' Abe to sue for peace, but he would have none of it.
"The Americans refused to see our emissary"
Perhaps the mistake I made was that I lost a couple of cities in the initial American attack and I invaded what used to be my territory to take them back. Nevertheless, it seems kind of hokey that the easiest way to beat a democracy is to declare war on them and then refuse their emissaries.
Anyone have any thoughts on what I might be doing wrong, or what a "democracy under duress" can do to protect its territory in a long war where the other side won't let you end the war, even if you want to?
I had the Americans declare war on me while in a democracy during the late Industrial era. They sent a massive amount of tanks into my territory. I tried hard to fend off the attack, meanwhile, I kept raising luxury rates and adding entertainers (the opposite of what really happens during a big war). Nonetheless, after about 15 turns my citizens were starving because I had to have so many entertainers just to quash the unrest so that I could keep them producing troops. Every turn I tried contacting ol' Abe to sue for peace, but he would have none of it.
"The Americans refused to see our emissary"
Perhaps the mistake I made was that I lost a couple of cities in the initial American attack and I invaded what used to be my territory to take them back. Nevertheless, it seems kind of hokey that the easiest way to beat a democracy is to declare war on them and then refuse their emissaries.
Anyone have any thoughts on what I might be doing wrong, or what a "democracy under duress" can do to protect its territory in a long war where the other side won't let you end the war, even if you want to?
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