Central Asia (Communist Re-Uprising)

The Republic of Central Asia (Turkic: Orta Azïya Respýblıkasy, Russian: Республика Центральная Азия) also known as Turkestan, is a country in the Asian region of the same name.

The region has always been contested over, by historical neighboring powers, such as that of Russia, China as well as various Islamic empires. As a result, the nations and peoples of Central Asia absorbed elements of all three cultures. For the most part, the Russian Empire controlled most of Central Asia, as well as the succeeding nation, the Soviet Union, in which the Turkic republics of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan and Azerbaijan were all Soviet Socialist Republics.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1992, the independent nations based on the former Soviet republics were established, only to be re-conquered by Russia and China in 2050, in which the entire region was divided between Russian and Chinese zones of control.

In 2075, Turkic nationalists and pan-Turanists, who grew sick and tired of being conquered by neighboring powers such as Russia and China. Mamed Tamirov, a descendant of Kazakh military veterans, called for a revolution against Russian and Chinese forces.

Lasting for 12 years, the Turkic revolutionaries were nearly defeated by the Russian and Chinese forces, until Vladimir Kasimirov became Russian leader, a staunch-supporter of a united Eurasian nation, saw the creation of a unified Central Asian republic as a precursor to a Global District that would later become, the Eurasian Global District as part of the One World Government, that would last until 2304, when Sergey Argonite led the Great Global Rebellion.