Kejserriget- Legacy of Operation Säkkijärven polkka

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Author: historymaster101

Last revision: 19 May, 2025 at 03:19 UTC

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“All dictators are gone from Europe. May you not be the next to go.”

The year is 2126.

A century has passed since Operation Sakijärven Polkka, launched in December 2025 by King Wilhelm I of Sweden, a socialist, openly gay monarch with a burning hatred for tyranny and a bizarre sense of humor. Named after the iconic Finnish accordion song, the operation shattered Putin’s Russia, forcing the dictator to flee to Trump’s America. What followed was grotesque and legendary: Wilhelm personally killed Putin and, in a moment of madness, had him ground into a burger and fed to Trump in a scene that seemed ripped from South Park. It was a moment that would haunt Wilhelm for the rest of his life.

But it was also the turning point.

In the weeks that followed, Slovakia’s Fico, Hungary’s Orbán, Turkey’s Erdoğan, and the Georgian dictatorship all collapsed like dominoes. Europe was freed from authoritarian rule in a matter of months.

What came next was the rise of the Nordic Empire, an elective monarchy uniting the realms of Scandinavia under Wilhelm’s leadership. His reign, from May 1st, 2025 to December 3rd, 2125, lasted just over one hundred years, making him the longest-reigning monarch in recorded history. He became known as Wilhelm the Great, The Last Great King.

Wilhelm ruled with humility, charisma, and compassion. He gave generously to the poor, elevated commoners to nobility, and funded vast educational programs. Among those he raised was a boy from Malmö, Gustaf, who would grow into a statesman. When Wilhelm neared the end of his life, he instructed the Conclave of the Nobility—which included the kings of each constituent realm—to elect Gustaf as his successor. They did. He took the name Wilhelm II.

Now, the world stands at another crossroads.

France is on the brink of collapse. The fragile peace between Iraq and Kurdistan threatens to ignite into open war. And though dictators no longer walk the European continent, the ideological vacuum they left behind is stirring with new and unpredictable forces.

You enter a world freed from tyranny—but full of uncertainty. Do not assume the peace will hold.

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