Belgian Civil War

The Belgian Civil War is an armed conflict between the Belgian Grand Army (Armee Grande Belgique) and the Eurocrat somethings. Conflict erupted on 5 January 2011, shortly after Belgium was ceded fo the Franco-German Commonwealth. The war was one of many post-World War III wars.

Background
Belgio-Yarphei was formed on 8 June 2010 as a union between the Kingdom of Belgium and the Grand Yarphese Republic. Several pro-Yarphese relations and pro-Eastern Belgians formed the Grand Party, which held a popular and parliamentary majority by the time of the union. The action was met with much controversy. Several protests erupted over both countries, and it was met with deep distrust in Europe. The uneasy climate travelled to Belgium within a few months, and in 2010, a Belgian poll showed 68% of non-Yarphese Belgians supported reintroduction into the European Union. Belgium was ceded to the Franco-German Commonwealth, and the Grand Yarphese Republic was forced to sign. Yarphese supporters in Belgium feared a reintroduction would undermine traditional principles.

Riots
The first riots by the AGB were simultaneously in the cities of Brussels and Liège. The armed, Yarphese backed AGB stormed government buildings, talking over Liège and a significant portion of Brussels.