Soviet Union (Germania)

Introduction
The Soviet Union emerged as a major power in the early 1900s after the Russian Revolution, and it became a driving force behind several important events in the world. However, after the Germans crushed the Soviets in World War II, the nation struggled to retain its new territories, which it eventually lost in the Aggression Wars, and it struggled to remain intact as a nation. During World War III, a civil war broke out in the Soviet Union, resulting in the dissolution of the union and the creation of the nation of the Communist Republic of Siberia in 2001.

Military
The Soviet Armed Forces was the fourth most powerful military in the world up until the Aggression Wars, when they were surpassed by the Australians after a devastating defeat. The Soviet Army consisted of around 4 million soldiers at its peak in 1977, a number that drastically declined in the following years. The Soviet Air Force was a particularly weak area of the military, with plane production dwindling as the nation lost its major factories in World War II, leading to a steady decline in both aerial and naval power. The Soviet Navy was also lacking after the Aggression Wars and World War II, leaving the nation defenseless of any territories not directly connected to the mainland. It also did not have any submarines, leaving them particularly weak against submarine warfare.

Conflicts
A list of all conflicts, both direct and indirect.
 * World War II
 * Aggression Wars
 * Cold War
 * Second Russian Revolution