The great pre-war idea of Marshal Józef Piłsudski, which after more than a century finally came to fruition. After the Third World War, chaos and poverty reigned all over the world. The European Union at the time of the crisis decided to transform itself into a superstate to ensure its survival, but things took an unfavorable turn. Unsurprisingly, the idea of a Federated European Union was still based on using the countries of Eastern and Central Europe as a market or an area for the exploitation of natural resources. Finally, there was a secession carried out by the so-called "Faithful Generals", who carried out a brutal and quick military coup, separating most of the Central European countries, i.e. Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary, Croatia and Slovenia, which were later joined by the Baltic States, so that at the end the Balkan countries: Romania, Bulgaria and Greece will also join the fun. After the successful coup, the Intermarium Confederation was proclaimed, and in a very short time it began to develop rapidly thanks to the free market reforms carried out by the generals and their governments, attracting both foreign investors and expanding local enterprises. In recent years, other Eastern European countries have also started to apply for membership.
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