Confederate States

The Confederate States, officially the Confederate States of America (CSA), is a Confederal republic located in North America. The nation consists of 13 states. It bordered by the United States and Mexico.

The Confederacy was originally formed by seven states – South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas – in the Lower South region of the United States whose regional economy was mostly dependent upon agriculture, particularly cotton, and a plantation system that relied upon the labor of African-American slaves. It fought a rather bloody conflict of secession against the United States that ended under a temporary armistice, which was later finally settled in a mediated treaty in London in 1864 comprising of the parties of a diplomats from the Confederate States, United States, Great Britain, and France.

Following the war, the nation sought to consolidate itself. The country was forced to abandoned chattel slavery all-together under President James Longstreet in late 1888 under intense international pressure. By the turn of the early 20th century, many liberties were done to modernize the nation. Under the reign of President Huey Long, many social and economic changes were implemented during this period under his "Honest Share Program" during the Great Depression of the 1930s. The Confederate States joined the Allies side during in World War II, providing substantial support in Europe and North Africa. Race relations in the nation later vastly improved by the late 1970s and early 1980s, although some nations remain rather critical of the societal norms of the nation.

Today, the Confederate States is a major regional power in North America, only to be rivaled by their neighbor; the United States. It possesses good relations with most of it's neighbors.