
The Union of National Soviets (UNS)
A New Iron Order Rises – Historical Summary
Overview
The Union of National Soviets (UNS) is an authoritarian, ultra-nationalist and neo-communist superstate that emerged from the ashes of the Soviet Union in the early 1980s. Formed through a brutal military coup and ideological restructuring, the UNS fused Stalinism, Slavic nationalism, and neo-Bolshevism into a new geopolitical entity determined to restore global influence and order through strength.
Key Historical Timeline
- 1981: Reformist Soviet leader Oleg Milan attempts to democratize the USSR.
- 1982: Hardline military commander Artemy Sergel, backed by the KGB and elements of the air force, stages a violent coup, dissolving the new liberal government.
- 1983–1985: Civil unrest and armed resistance are crushed. Sergel allies with Stalinist, ultra-nationalist, and national-Bolshevik factions.
- 1985: Formation of the Union of National Soviets (UNS). The new regime adopts a hybrid ideology of National Communism, combining Soviet symbols with imperial Russian aesthetics.
- 1986–1990: UNS consolidates power across former Soviet republics through puppet states, alliances, and military interventions.
Ideology and Identity
The UNS promotes a doctrine of “Fraternal Sovereignty”, opposing globalism and liberal democracy. It claims to be the true heir to both the Tsarist Russian Empire and the Stalinist USSR, emphasizing:
- Absolute state control
- Militarized society
- Traditionalist values fused with socialist planning
- Anti-Western, anti-NATO policy
Its flag combines the Imperial Russian tricolor, the red Soviet banner, and the hammer and sword within a crowned wreath.
Foreign Policy and Expansion
UNS leads the League of Fraternal Sovereign Nations (LNFS)—a global alliance of authoritarian regimes and breakaway states. Key actions include:
- Military occupation of Lithuania, airstrike operations from Kaliningrad
- Support for the Bulgarian-Greek war against Turkey
- Suppression of the Baltic independence movement
- Establishment of the Central Asian People's Soviet Union
- Backing nationalist regimes in East Germany, Chechnya, Iraq, Syria, and Yugoslavia
Global Impact
By the early 1990s, the UNS has become the core of a new geopolitical axis, challenging the fractured West. Former NATO structures are collapsing, and wars erupt from Finland to the Balkans, with UNS involvement either directly or through proxies.
Summary
The Union of National Soviets is a radical reinvention of the Soviet experiment—no longer internationalist but imperial, no longer Marxist-Leninist but National-Communist. Its goal: to rebuild a Eurasian-led world order through ideology, steel, and unity under authoritarian fraternity.
