Military: War
The All-American Crusades were a series of aggressive military campaigns and ideological annexations launched by President Marcellus James de Dior, known globally as “All-American,” between 2003 and 2006. Driven by a doctrine of “unified humanity under Pax Americana,” these conquests began with the controversial annexation of Canada, Mexico, and Puerto Rico, swiftly followed by clandestine regime-change operations, proxy wars, and direct military occupations in regions across South America, the Caribbean, and parts of Europe and the Pacific. Marcellus mobilized superhuman operatives, advanced U.S. military tech, and loyalist militia groups to enforce this vision of American-led global unity. The Crusades sparked massive international condemnation, the fracturing of NATO, and open conflict with UN-aligned forces, culminating in the Battle of New Manhattan in late 2006. There, Marcellus was defeated by Red Son II and B.E.N., leading to his capture and imprisonment on the Moon. Though brief, the Crusades left a lasting legacy of geopolitical instability, superhuman militarization, and a world forever marked by the ghost of “One Nation Earth.”