When we signed the Non-Aggression Pact (NAP) between the EPIC Alliance and South Korea, Bulgaria, China, and Serbia, the intention was simple:
to end hostilities, avoid pointless bloodshed, and give both sides a period of stability.

The agreement was clear — no military battles, no market sabotage, no resistance wars, no territorial grabs, and no indirect aggression. It was meant to be more than just ink on paper; it was a commitment to the spirit of peace, not just the letter of the terms.

The Spirit vs. the Loopholes

Unfortunately, recent actions from South Korea and China have shown that while they signed the pact, they never truly accepted its purpose.

  • They have attacked our new allies, knowing full well that such actions destabilize our bloc and threaten the very peace the NAP was supposed to protect.

  • They have supplied our enemies — providing weapons, food, energy, and gold that directly fuel the war effort against our side.

  • They have operated under the excuse that “it’s not directly against EPIC members,” hiding behind technicalities while deliberately undermining us.

This is not peace.
This is not good faith.
This is a calculated exploitation of the agreement to weaken us while pretending to respect it.

Why This Matters

A Non-Aggression Pact is not a loophole-hunting competition. It is based on mutual trust — the understanding that both sides will avoid actions that harm each other, even if those actions are not explicitly banned by every line of the document.

South Korea and China’s behavior has shattered that trust.
They have proven that their signature was never a commitment to coexistence — only a pause in open conflict to prepare for indirect strikes.

The False Peace

Let’s be clear:
They agreed not to attack us.
Instead, they attacked those who stand with us.

They agreed not to harm us economically.
Instead, they armed those who fight us.

They agreed to end hostilities.
Instead, they sought out ways to continue them without getting their own hands visibly dirty.

In diplomacy, the “spirit” of an agreement matters just as much as the “letter.”
When that spirit is broken, the agreement is no longer worth the paper it’s printed on.

Our Response

We do not take these accusations lightly. The evidence is clear, the intent is obvious, and the damage is real. This is a betrayal not only of EPIC, but of the very idea of good-faith diplomacy.

The world deserves to know:
The peace we thought we had was a false one.
And those who pretend at peace while secretly fueling war are guilty of the same aggression as those who attack openly.

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