List of proposed state mergers
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For". Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Unsubst". This is a list of proposed state mergers, including both current and historical proposals originating from sovereign states or organizations. The entities listed below differ from separatist movements in that they would form as a merger or union of two or more existing states, territories, colonies or other regions, becoming either a federation, confederation or other type of unified sovereign state.
Current proposals
| Proposed state | Component states | Continent | First proposed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Template:Flagicon United States of Europe | File:Flag of Europe.svg European Union | Europe | 1831 | Currently advocated for by Volt Europa, Democrats 66, NEOS, DiEM25 and other Eurofederalist parties. |
| File:Flag of Samoa.svg Samoa | File:Flag of American Samoa.svg American Samoa File:Flag of Samoa.svg Samoa |
Oceania | 1894 | Proposed unification of the two Samoas |
| File:Flag of Canada.svg Canada | File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada File:Flag of the Turks and Caicos Islands.svg Turks and Caicos Islands |
North America | 1917 | The proposed Canadian annexation of the Turks and Caicos Islands has been an ongoing political discussion between the two nations since Canadian Prime Minister Robert Borden first supported the idea in 1917.[1] |
| China | File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg People's Republic of China File:Flag of the Republic of China.svg Republic of China |
Asia | 1949 | Unification of the territories of the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China is the nominal goal of both governments, which both operate under the One-China policy.[2][3][4] However, within the free area of the Republic of China, there is a sizeable movement to formally declare a Taiwanese state, led by the Democratic Progressive Party,[5] which is currently in government. |
| Template:Flagdeco Korea | File:Flag of North Korea.svg North Korea File:Flag of South Korea.svg South Korea |
Asia | 1953 | Korean reunification has been a goal for both Koreas since the 1953 armistice agreement. However, proposed strategies vary between the two Koreas, with both proposing unification under one sociopolitical system while abandoning the other, similar to German reunification.[6] In January 2024, the supreme leader of the DPRK, Kim Jong Un called for amending the constitution to remove references to cooperation and unification, as well as defining the territorial boundaries of the DPRK and adding an article designating the Republic of Korea as the most hostile state.[7] |
| Isratin or Canaan | File:Flag of Israel.svg Israel Template:Country data Palestine (West Bank & Gaza Strip) |
Asia | 1967 | Also known as the one-state solution, it is a proposed approach to create a bi-national state to resolve the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. |
| United India | File:Flag of India.svg India File:Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan File:Flag of Bangladesh.svg Bangladesh |
Asia | 1972 | The concept of an Indo-Pakistani Confederation advocates for a political confederation consisting of the sovereign states of India and Pakistan as a means of ending bilateral conflicts and promoting common interests in defence, foreign affairs, and cultural and economic development. While this idea does not propose to end the sovereign existence of either nation through reunification, it is aimed to resolve the conflicts afflicting the subcontinent since the partition of India in 1947. |
| File:Flag of Saint Martin island (Unification flag).svg Saint Martin | File:Local flag of the Collectivity of Saint Martin.svg Saint Martin File:Flag of Sint Maarten.svg Sint Maarten |
North America | 1990 | Proposed unification of the island.[8] |
| Template:Flagdeco Romania | File:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova File:Flag of Romania.svg Romania |
Europe | 1991 | Due to the Russian Revolution, the Bessarabia Governorate declared secession in 1917 as the Moldavian Democratic Republic and united unconditionally with the Kingdom of Romania in 1918, before the Soviet occupation in 1940. After Moldova gained independence following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, unification of Moldova and Romania has been proposed which is supported by the Moldovan minorities according to polls and the Romanian Government. |
| File:Flag of the Union State.svg Union State | File:Flag of Belarus.svg Belarus File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia |
Europe and Asia | 1999 | Russia and Belarus signed an agreement to form the Union State in 1999 aiming to continue deeper integration, possibly until unification.[9][10] Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has refuted this idea, declaring that any attempt to annex Belarus would result in war.[11] |
| East African Federation | File:Flag of Burundi.svg Burundi Template:Country data DR Congo File:Flag of Kenya.svg Kenya File:Flag of Rwanda.svg Rwanda File:Flag of Somalia.svg Somalia File:Flag of South Sudan.svg South Sudan File:Flag of Tanzania.svg Tanzania File:Flag of Uganda.svg Uganda |
Africa | 2004 | Proposed political union between the eight member states of the East African Community.[12] Federation was proposed in 2004, but in 2016 it was decided that confederation would be the short-term goal. South Sudan, the DR Congo and Somalia are not as integrated as the other five members, as South Sudan only gained independence from Sudan in 2011, the DR Congo joined the Community in 2022, and Somalia joined the Community in 2023.[13] |
| File:Flag of Albania.svg Greater Albania | File:Flag of Albania.svg Albania File:Flag of Kosovo.svg Kosovo |
Europe | 2008 | Since Kosovo's Independence from Serbia, talks have been made for Albania and Kosovo to unite into a Greater Albania due to Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanian population.[14][15][16] |
| File:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa | File:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa File:Flag of Lesotho.svg Lesotho |
Africa | 2010 | Proposed integration of Lesotho with South Africa.[17][18][19] |
| Template:FlagiconGreater Serbia | File:Flag of Serbia.svg Serbia File:Flag placeholder.svg North Kosovo File:Flag of the Republika Srpska.svg Republika Srpska Sometimes included: File:Flag of Kosovo.svg Kosovo |
Europe | 1991 | Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". |
| West African Union | Part of UEMOA: File:Flag of Benin.svg Benin File:Flag of Burkina Faso.svg Burkina Faso File:Flag of Côte d'Ivoire.svg Ivory Coast File:Flag of Guinea-Bissau.svg Guinea-Bissau File:Flag of Mali.svg Mali File:Flag of Niger.svg Niger File:Flag of Senegal.svg Senegal File:Flag of Togo (3-2).svg Togo |
Africa | 2019 | Proposed by Alassane Ouattara.[20][21] |
Historical
Early modern period
19th century
20th century
| Proposed state | Components | Time period | Successful? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| File:Flag of Australia (1901-1903).svg Commonwealth of Australia | File:Flag of New South Wales.svg New South Wales File:Flag of Queensland.svg Queensland File:South Australia Colonial Flag 1876-1904 alternate.svg South Australia File:Flag of Tasmania.svg Tasmania File:Flag of Victoria (Australia).svg Victoria File:Flag of Western Australia (1870-1953).svg Western Australia Also invited: File:Flag of Fiji (1883–1903).svg Colony of Fiji Template:Flagicon Colony of New Zealand |
1901 | Yes | Federation of Australia. New Zealand had many disagreements with the Australian government and decided to not join. Fiji also did not join. |
| File:Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia | File:Flag of the Emirate of Riyadh (1902-1913).svg Third Saudi State Template:Country data Jabal Shammar File:Flag of Hejaz (1920).svg Kingdom of Hejaz Template:Flagicon Sharifian Caliphate File:Flag of the Idrisid Emirate of Asir (1909-1930).svg Idrisid Emirate of Asir File:Mecca (Ottoman Empire).svg Sharifate of Mecca File:Flag of Upper Asir.svg Sheikdom of Upper Asir File:Flag of the Principality of Najran.png Principality of Najran |
1901-1934 | Yes | Proclamation of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia |
| File:Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia Template:Country data Kingdom of Yemen |
1934 | No | Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". | |
| Franco-British Union | File:Flag of France.svg France File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom |
1904–1956 | No | A Franco-British Union is a concept for a union between the two independent sovereign states of the United Kingdom and France. Such a union was proposed during certain crises of the 20th century; it has some historical precedents. In April 1904 France and the United Kingdom signed a series of agreements, known as the Entente Cordiale, which marked the end of centuries of intermittent conflict between the two powers, and the start of a period of peaceful co-existence. Nationalist political leaders from both sides were uncomfortable with the idea of such a merging. |
| File:Flag of Oklahoma (1911–1925).svg Oklahoma | Oklahoma Territory Template:Country data Cherokee Nation Template:Country data Choctaw Nation Template:Country data Chickasaw Nation File:Muscogee Nation Seal.png Muscogee Nation Seminole Nation |
1904–1907 | Yes | The Five Civilized Tribes in Indian Territory did not want to unify with Oklahoma, and thus proposed to create a separate state as a means to retain control of their lands and some measure of independence.[55] Their efforts culminated in the State of Sequoyah in 1905, but they failed to gain support in the U.S. Congress. Following annexation, the region was admitted to the union as the State of Oklahoma. |
| File:South Africa Flag 1910-1912.svg Union of South Africa | Template:Country data Cape Colony File:Flag of the Natal Colony (1875–1910).svg Colony of Natal File:Flag of Orange River Colony.svg Orange River Colony Template:Country data Transvaal Colony |
1909 | Yes | Union of South Africa |
| File:Flag of the British Empire (1910–1921).svg Imperial Federation | Template:Country data United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland File:Royal Standard of Ireland (1542–1801).svg Ireland File:Canadian Red Ensign (1868–1921).svg Dominion of Canada File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Commonwealth of Australia File:Flag of the Dominion of Newfoundland.svg Dominion of Newfoundland File:Flag of New Zealand.svg Dominion of New Zealand File:South Africa Flag 1910-1912.svg Union of South Africa File:British Raj Red Ensign.svg India |
1911–1937 | No | The British Empire was composed of many states with vastly different constitutions and goals to pursue. Groups like the Imperial Federation League advocated for a political union between the territories of the Empire that could establish a "permanent binding force" between them.[56] Each dominion would be guaranteed representation on equal footing with the United Kingdom in an Imperial Parliament.[57] Ireland would also have been presented representation as an alternative to home rule, and it was deemed possible that an autonomous India could one day join as well. First discussed by heads of government at the 1911 Imperial Conference, and for a second time at the 1937 Imperial Conference where it was eventually dismissed. |
| File:Flag of Canada (1868–1921).svg Dominion of Canada | File:Flag of Canada (1868–1921).svg Dominion of Canada File:Flag of the Bahamas (1904–1923).svg The Bahamas |
1911 | No | In 1911, at the request of the Bahamian House of Assembly, the Canadian and the Bahamian governments began serious negotiations for Bahamian accession to the Canadian confederation.[58] However, a racial panic ignited by the migration of over one thousand African-Americans fleeing violence in Oklahoma derailed the discussions. Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier turned against the idea, citing incompatible "ethnical origin". After Laurier lost the September 1911 federal election, Bahamian Governor William Grey-Wilson travelled to Canada to reopen accession talks with newly elected PM Robert Borden.[59] In a meeting between Grey and Borden on 18 October 1911, Borden rejected the possibility of taking the Bahamas into the Canadian confederation. His reasoning was that the events of the past year had proved that Canadian public opinion would not countenance the admission of a majority-black province. The British Colonial Office concurred: "No doubt for the moment the Dominion government would safeguard their interests, but there are signs of the rise of a colour question in Canada and in any case it cannot be long before U.S. opinion gives the tone to Canada in regard the Negro."[60] |
| Template:Country data Kingdom of Greece | Template:Country data Cretan State Template:Country data Kingdom of Greece |
1913 | Yes | Crete rebelled against Ottoman rule during the Cretan Revolt of 1866–69 and used the motto "Crete, Enosis, Freedom or Death". The Cretan State was established after the intervention of the Great Powers, and Cretan union with Greece occurred de facto in 1908 and de jure in 1913 by the Treaty of Bucharest. |
| Austro-Polish Union | Projected:
File:Flag of Austria-Hungary (1867-1918).svg Austro-Hungarian Empire |
1914–1918 | No | Proposals from Trialists to incorporate Russian Poland in the Habsburg empire, unifying them with Austrian Poland and turn them in a Third Crown like Austria and Hungary.[61] Approved by Karl I of Austria in October 1918.[46] Never implemented due to German empire plans over the Kingdom of Poland, and also Central Powers defeat at World War I. Also rejected by Polish nationalists due to some proposals of create an Eastern Galicia Kingdom governed by pro-Habsburg Ukrainian nobility.[62] |
| Aistija | Template:Flagicon Latvia Template:Flagicon Lithuania |
1915-1940 | No | During World War I and the Interwar period, many Latvian and Lithuanian scholars, such as Jonas Šliūpas, argued that Latvia and Lithuania should unify as part of the Baltic Entente. This idea was originally proposed by Latvia and supported by Lithuania, especially after losing their capital Vilnius to Poland in the Polish–Soviet War, however it was eventually rejected by Lithuania because they would have to give up their claims on Polish land including Vilnius. The idea was still popular until the Occupation of the Baltic states, when it fell out of favour. [2][3] |
| File:Flag of Austria-Hungary (1867-1918).svg Habsburg Danubian Confederation | Proposed:
File:Flag of Austria (state).svg Crown of Austria Projected states to incorporate:
Template:Flagicon Kingdom of Poland |
1917-1918 | Partial | Karl I of Austria proposed reforms to Confederate the Habsburg monarchy (based in traditional kingdoms than nation-states) and also the possible incorporation of some Balkan States and Poland (or give Kingdom of Galicia to German puppet- Poland).[63] Most of the Diets approved the proposals of Kaiser Karl I between October–November 1918 to avoid punishment from the Allies of World War I.[46] Never implemented due to Dissolution of Austria-Hungary and also by Josephinists (Austrian Centralists), Pan-Slavist, Serbian irredentist, Czech nationalist, Polish nationalist, Hungarian nobility and Pan-Germanist opposition. |
| Hungary–Romania | Template:Country data Kingdom of Romania File:Flag of Hungary (1915-1918, 1919-1946).svg Republic and Kingdom of Hungary |
1917–1920 | No | Federation or personal union between the Kingdom of Romania and the Kingdom/Republic of Hungary under one monarch. Proposals were the most active in 1919 and 1920, but they continued to exist up to the Second World War.[64][65][66][67] |
| Template:Flagicon United States of Poland | Template:Flagicon Kingdom of Poland Template:Flagicon Kingdom of Lithuania File:Flag of Galicia-Lodomeria 1890-1918.svg Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria File:Flag of Belarus (1918, 1991–1995).svg Belarusian Democratic Republic |
1917 | Partial | |
| Template:Flagicon Danish–Icelandic Act of Union | Template:Country data Kingdom of Denmark Template:Country data Kingdom of Iceland |
1918–1944 | Yes | |
| File:Flag of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.svg Kingdom of Yugoslavia | File:State Flag of Serbia (1882-1918).svg Kingdom of Serbia File:Flag of the Kingdom of Montenegro.svg Kingdom of Montenegro File:Flag of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs.svg State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs |
1918 | Yes | Creation of Yugoslavia |
| File:Flag of Romania.svg Kingdom of Romania | Template:Country data Kingdom of Romania File:Flag of the Moldavian Democratic Republic.svg Moldavian Democratic Republic File:Flag of Bukowina.svg Bukovina File:Flag of Transylvania before 1918.svg Transylvania |
Yes | Great Union, Union of Bessarabia with Romania, Union of Bukovina with Romania, Union of Transylvania with Romania | |
| Intermarium | Template:Country data Belarusian People's Republic Template:Country data First Czechoslovak Republic File:Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia File:Flag of Finland.svg Finland File:Flag of Hungary (1918-1919; 3-2 aspect ratio).svg Hungarian People's Republic File:Flag of Latvia.svg Latvia File:Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania Template:Country data Second Polish Republic Template:Country data Kingdom of Romania Template:Country data Ukrainian People's Republic File:Flag of Yugoslavia (1918–1943).svg Kingdom of Yugoslavia Template:Country data Kingdom of Bulgaria |
November or December 1918 | No | Also called "Międzymorze" in Polish. Suggested shortly after World War I to combat the influences of Germany and Russia. |
| Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic | Template:Country data Democratic Republic of Georgia Template:Country data Democratic Republic of Armenia Template:Country data Azerbaijan Democratic Republic |
1918 | Yes | A short-lived South Caucasian state that extended across what are now the modern-day countries of Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan plus parts of Eastern Turkey as well as Russian border areas. The state only lasted for a month before Georgia declared independence, followed shortly by Azerbaijan and Armenia. |
| File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden | File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden Template:Country data Aland |
No | Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". | |
| File:Flag of Germany (3-2 aspect ratio).svg Weimar Republic | File:Flag of Germany (3-2 aspect ratio).svg Weimar Republic File:Flag of Austria.svg Republic of German-Austria |
1918–1919 | No | Following the disintegration of Austria-Hungary in the final days of World War I the German-speaking territories of the former Austria-Hungary attempted to begin a process of integration into Weimar Germany. The Allies did not favor the idea, and forced the Austrian rump state to sign the Treaty of Saint Germain, which prohibited Austria from uniting with Germany. |
| File:Flag of Ukraine (1917–1921).svg Ukrainian People's Republic | File:Flag of Ukraine (1917–1921).svg Ukrainian People's Republic File:Flag of Ukraine (1917–1921).svg West Ukrainian People's Republic |
1919 | Yes | Act Zluky |
| File:Flag of the Hispanic peoples.svg Patria Grande | Template:Flagicon Argentina Template:Flagicon Bolivia Template:Flagicon Chile Template:Flagicon Colombia File:State Flag of Costa Rica (1906-1964).svg Costa Rica File:Flag of Cuba (sky blue).svg Cuba Template:Flagicon Dominican Republic Template:Flagicon El Salvador File:Flag of Ecuador (1900–2009).svg Ecuador Template:Flagicon Guatemala Template:Flagicon Honduras File:Flag of Mexico (1916–1934).svg Mexico File:Flag of Nicaragua (1908–1971).svg Nicaragua Template:Flagicon Panama File:Flag of Paraguay (1842-1954).svg Paraguay File:Flag of Peru (1884–1950).svg Peru File:Flag of Puerto Rico (1895-1952, light blue).svg Puerto Rico Template:Flagicon Uruguay File:State flag of Venezuela (1905-1930).svg Venezuela |
1922 | No | The concept of a shared homeland or community encompassing all of Spanish America, and sometimes all of Latin America and the Caribbean. The term is associated with political ideas of Ibero-American integration, rejecting the balkanization of the Spanish Empire in the Americas that followed the Spanish American wars of independence. The term may be also used to talk specifically about projects of Hispanic American unity held by Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín. |
| File:Flag of the Soviet Union (1923).svg Union of Soviet Socialist Republics | File:Flag of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic (1919-1927).svg Byelorussian SSR File:Flag RSFSR 1918.svg Russian SFSR File:Flag of Transcaucasian SFSR (1925-1936).svg Transcaucasian SFSR File:Flag of the Ukrainian SSR (1919-1929).svg Ukrainian SSR |
Yes | Treaty on the Creation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics | |
| File:South Africa Flag 1910-1912.svg Union of South Africa | File:South Africa Flag 1910-1912.svg Union of South Africa File:Flag of Southern Rhodesia (1924–1964).svg Colony of Southern Rhodesia |
No | The 1922 Southern Rhodesian government referendum was held in the colony on 27 October 1922. Voters, almost all of them White, were given the options of establishing responsible government or joining the Union of South Africa.[68] After 59% voted in favour of responsible government, it was officially granted on 1 October 1923. | |
| Baltoscandia | File:Flag of Denmark.svg Denmark File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden File:Flag of Finland.svg Finland File:Flag of Norway.svg Norway File:Flag of Iceland.svg Iceland File:Flag of Estonia.svg Estonia File:Flag of Lithuania.svg Lithuania File:Flag of Latvia.svg Latvia |
1928–1960 | No | The term Baltoscandia was first used by Sten de Geer in an article in "Geografiska Annaler" in 1928 and further developed by Kazys Pakštas.[69] He envisioned Baltoscandia as an economic, political and military unit.[70] Kazys Pakštas proposed that one of the ways for the small nations to withstand the influence coming from the large ones is to unite and to cooperate more closely among each other. As he mentions, unification is possible only among nations that are similar by their size, geographical environment, religion and culture. |
| File:Flag of Indonesia.svg Greater Indonesia | File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Dutch East Indies File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg British Malaya Template:Country data Raj of Sarawak File:Flag of North Borneo (1902–1946).svg British North Borneo File:Flag of Brunei 1906-1959.svg Protectorate of Brunei File:Flag of the British Straits Settlements (1925–1946).svg British Singapore File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portuguese Timor |
1928 | No | A political concept that sought to bring the so-called Malay race together by uniting the territories of Dutch East Indies (and Portuguese Timor) with the British Malaya and British Borneo. It was espoused by students and graduates of Sultan Idris Training College for Malay Teachers in the late 1920s, and individuals from Sumatra and Java including Mohammad Yamin and Sukarno in the 1950s. Indonesia Raya was later adapted as the name of the Indonesian national anthem in 1924. |
| File:Flag of German Reich (1935–1945).svg German Reich | File:Flag of German Reich (1935–1945).svg German Reich File:State flag of Austria (1934–1938).svg Federal State of Austria |
1938 | Yes | Anschluss |
| File:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey | File:Flag of Turkey.svg Turkey Template:Country data Hatay State |
1939 | Yes | On 2 September 1938 the Sanjak of Alexandretta declared itself separate from the French Mandate of Syria and Lebanon, becoming the Hatay State. On 29 June 1939, the legislature voted to merge with Turkey. |
| Polish–Czechoslovak confederation | Template:Country data Second Polish Republic Template:Country data First Czechoslovak Republic |
1939–1948 | No | Proposed by Władysław Sikorski. |
| Greek–Yugoslav confederation | Strictest definition: Template:Country data Kingdom of Greece File:Flag of Yugoslavia (1918–1943).svg Kingdom of Yugoslavia Loosest definition also includes: Template:Country data Albanian Kingdom Template:Country data Kingdom of Bulgaria Template:Country data Kingdom of Romania |
1942–1944 | No | The Greek-Yugoslav confederation was a political concept during World War II, sponsored by the United Kingdom and involving the Greek government-in-exile and the Yugoslav government-in-exile. The two governments signed an agreement pushing the proposal ahead, but it never got beyond the planning stage because of opposition from within the Greek and the Yugoslav governments, real world events, and the opposition of the Soviet Union. The proposal envisioned the creation of a confederation of Greece and Yugoslavia. |
| File:Flag of the USSR (1936-1955).svg Soviet Union | File:Flag of the Soviet Union (1936 – 1955).svg Soviet Union File:Flag of the Tuvan People's Republic (1943-1944).svg Tuvan People's Republic |
1943–1944 | Yes | Tuvan underwent intense Russification of social and economic practices, and virtually all remaining opposition to Stalinist policy was eradicated. The Soviets desired the mineral resources of the republic and a permanent end to Mongolian-Chinese geopolitical intrigues in the region. This process culminated in the absorption of Tuva in 1944, under the rule of General Secretary Salchak Toka and his wife, Head of State Khertek Anchimaa-Toka.[71] |
| File:Proposed Alemannic flag.svg Alpenland | File:Flag of Alsace.svg Alsace Template:Country data South Baden File:Flag of Canton of Basel.svg Canton of Basel File:Flag of Bavaria (lozengy).svg Bavaria File:Flag of Austria.svg Austria File:Flag of Switzerland.svg German-speaking Switzerland |
1945–1952 | No | Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". After the end of World War II, there was a political movement in southern Alsace and South Baden, originating from resistance movements against the Nazi regime, which aimed for the creation of a separate Alemannic state together with the Swiss canton of Basel. Bernhard Dietrich, mayor of Singen, aimed at a larger "Alpine union" which was to include also Bavarian speaking territories (e.g. Bavaria and Austria) and the German-speaking parts of the Swiss Confederation. |
| File:Flag of the Emirate of Transjordan.svg United Arab Kingdom | File:Flag of the Emirate of Transjordan.svg Transjordan File:Ensign of the Palestine Mandate (1927–1948).svg Palestine |
1945–1972 | No | King Hussein's federation plan: In the late 1940s and early 1950s, there were discussions of a potential merger between Palestine and Jordan, which was then known as Transjordan. The idea was initially proposed by King Abdullah I of Jordan, who sought to create a larger Arab state in the region that would include both Jordan and Palestine. The proposal was also supported by some Israeli politicians who believed that a union with Jordan would help to resolve the ongoing conflict between Jews and Arabs in the region. |
| File:Flag of the Ewe people.svg Ewe Land[72] | Template:Flagicon French Togoland File:Flag of the Gold Coast (1877–1957).svg British Togoland |
1945–1956 | No | In 1945 various members of Ewe and wider Togolese leadership began the construction of political organizations which sought to decolonize French Togoland. These developed as the Comité de l'Unité Togolaise, led by Sylvanus Olympio, and the Mouvement la Jeunesse Togolaise. Both possessed political platforms that included the reunification of the French Togoland and British Togoland.[72] |
| Maghreb Federation | Template:Flagicon Algeria Template:Flagicon Libya Template:Flagicon Mauritania File:Merchant flag of French Morocco.svg Morocco Template:Flagicon Spanish Morocco Template:Flagicon Spanish Sahara Template:Flagicon Tunisia |
1945–1958 | No | The first charter to create a Maghreb Federation was signed in Tunisia and Morocco in May 1945, but only became effective in 1958.[73] |
| File:Flag of SFR Yugoslavia.svg Balkan Federation | File:Flag of SFR Yugoslavia.svg Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia File:Flag of Albania 1946.svg People's Socialist Republic of Albania File:Flag of Bulgaria (1971-1990).svg People's Republic of Bulgaria |
1946–1948 | No | Josip Broz Tito came extremely close to persuading Albania to accept integration into Yugoslavia, but relations cooled in 1948 over fears that Yugoslavia only intended to use Albania for raw materials, subsequently resulting in the expulsion of Yugoslav diplomats. Yugoslav/Bulgarian negotiations fell through when Moscow attempted to force both countries into accepting Soviet control over the merge, which caused Yugoslavia to withdraw from negotiations and precipitated the Tito–Stalin split. |
| File:Flag of India.svg India | File:Flag of India.svg India File:Drapeau Junagadh vector.svg Junagadh State Other states |
1947–1948 | Yes | Political integration of India, Annexation of Junagadh |
| File:Flag of Indonesia.svg United States of Indonesia | File:Flag of Bangka-Belitung.svg Bangka File:Banjar Sultanate Flag.svg Banjar File:No flag.svg Biliton File:Flag of Central Java.svg Central Java File:No flag.svg East Borneo File:Flag of the State of East Indonesia.svg East Indonesia File:Flag of Various Autonomous Indonesian States.svg East Java File:Flag of East Sumatra.svg East Sumatra File:Flag of Dayak Besar.svg Great Dayak File:Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia File:Flag of Various Autonomous Indonesian States.svg Madura |
1946–1949 | Yes | Following discussions between Dutch authorities and Indonesian nationalist leaders, the Linggadjati Agreement was signed on 15 November 1946, in which the unilaterally declared Republic of Indonesia agreed to the principle of a federal Indonesia including the territory controlled by the Republic and other territory in the region which the Dutch controlled at that point. The Dutch then organised the December 1946 Denpasar Conference, which led to the establishment of the State of East Indonesia, followed by a state in West Borneo. Further states were set up in former territory of the Republic after they were conquered by the Dutch in 1947. Further Dutch military action faced increasing resistance from governments of the states they had established, and this combined with international pressure caused the Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference to take place in The Hague from August to November 1949. This Conference resulted in the Dutch agreeing to hand over sovereignty to a federal union of these states, which officially became the Republic of the United States of Indonesia. This federation lasted only a year, as its member states agreed to dissolve themselves into a unitary state, the last stage of which took place on 17 August 1950. |
| File:Flag of India.svg India | File:Flag of India.svg India Template:Flagicon Princely states |
1947–1950 | Yes | Instrument of Accession |
| File:Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan | File:Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan Template:Flagicon Princely states |
Yes | ||
| File:Flag of India.svg India | File:Flag of India.svg India File:Asafia flag of Hyderabad State.svg Hyderabad |
1948 | Yes | Annexation of Hyderabad |
| File:Canadian Red Ensign 1921-1957.svg Dominion of Canada | File:Canadian Red Ensign 1921-1957.svg Dominion of Canada File:Flag of the Dominion of Newfoundland.svg Dominion of Newfoundland |
1948–1949 | Yes | In two rounds of referendums in 1948, the Dominion of Newfoundland had the choice of becoming an independent state, merging with the Dominion of Canada, or remaining as a British dominion. The Newfoundland Act of 1949, an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, confirmed and gave effect to the Terms of Union agreed to between the then-separate Dominions of Canada and Newfoundland on 23 March 1949. |
| File:Flag of the Netherlands.svgFile:Flag of Indonesia.svg Netherlands–Indonesia Union | Template:Country File:Flag of Indonesia.svg United States of Indonesia |
1949–1956 | Partial | After the Netherlands had signed a truce with the United States of Indonesia, a transfer of sovereignty took place on 27 December 1949. As part of the Linggadjati Agreement, the Netherlands–Indonesia Union was founded. The Union was abolished when Indonesia left in 1956.[74] |
| State of the Fertile Crescent | File:Flag of Jordan.svg Jordan File:Flag of Iraq (1924–1959).svg Iraq File:Flag of Syria (1930–1958, 1961–1963).svg Syria File:Flag of Lebanon.svg Lebanon File:Ensign of the Palestine Mandate (1927–1948).svg Palestine |
1949–1958 | No | Fertile Crescent Plan |
| File:Canadian Red Ensign 1921-1957.svg Dominion of Canada | File:Canadian Red Ensign 1921-1957.svg Dominion of Canada File:Flag of Bermuda.svg Bermuda |
1949 | No | In 1949 Henry Vassey, then Chairman of the Bermuda Trade Development Board, urged the House of Assembly of Bermuda to pursue a political union with Canada. Four Methodist church congregations in Bermuda are part of the United Church of Canada, forming Bermuda Presbytery of the United Church's Maritime Conference headquartered in Sackville, New Brunswick. The same Salvation Army Church territory serves both Canada and Bermuda with many of their pastors travelling between countries.[75] In January 2009, Nova Scotia's Premier, Rodney MacDonald, and the Premier of Bermuda, Ewart Brown, signed a five-year agreement that would strengthen Nova Scotia's ties with Bermuda and enhance service export opportunities, tourism, transportation and health links in both jurisdictions. Bermuda's ties to Canada include the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Bermuda being overseen by Canada's Chartered Professional Accounting profession. |
| File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg China | File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg People's Republic of China File:Flag of Tibet (1916-1951).svg Tibet |
1950–1951 | Yes | Chinese invasion results in the signing of the Seventeen Point Agreement and annexation of Tibet. |
| Franco-German Federation | Template:Flagicon West Germany File:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg France |
1950 | No | The idea of a Franco-German federation was a proposed merger between France and Germany after the end of World War II. The idea was promoted by French politician Robert Schuman in his declaration on May 9, 1950, which is now celebrated as Europe Day. The aim of the proposal was to create a lasting peace between the two countries and to promote economic cooperation.[4]
The Franco-German federation proposal envisioned a common government, currency, and military. It also sought to establish a European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), which would integrate the coal and steel industries of France and Germany. The ECSC was created in 1952 and was the first step toward the creation of the European Union.[76][77] |
| File:State Flag of Greece (1863-1924 and 1935-1973).svg Greece | File:State Flag of Greece (1863-1924 and 1935-1973).svg Greece File:Flag of Cyprus (1922–1960).svg Cyprus |
No | An unofficial referendum on enosis (reunification) with Greece was held in Cyprus between 15 and 22 January 1950, and the proposal was approved by 95.71% of those taking part. | |
| File:Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia | File:Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia File:Morning Star flag.svg Netherlands New Guinea |
1950–1969 | Yes | Following Dutch recognition of Indonesian Independence, Indonesia continued to claim the remaining Dutch territory in the region, Netherlands New Guinea, as its rightful territory. The dispute escalated into low-level conflict in 1962 following Dutch moves in 1961 to establish a New Guinea Council. Facing diplomatic pressure from the United States, fading domestic support and continual Indonesian threats to invade the territory, the Netherlands decided to relinquish control of the disputed territory in August 1962. Following a short period of UN administration, the territory was transferred to Indonesia on 1 May 1963. |
| File:Flag of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland (1953–1963).svg Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland | File:Flag of Nyasaland (1925–1953, 1963–1964).svg Protectorate of Nyasaland File:Flag of Northern Rhodesia (1939–1964).svg Protectorate of Northern Rhodesia File:Flag of Southern Rhodesia (1924–1964).svg Colony of Southern Rhodesia |
1953 | Yes | |
| Afghanistan-Pakistan Confederation[78] | Template:Flagicon Kingdom of Afghanistan Template:Flagicon Dominion of Pakistan |
1953–1954 | No | Afghanistan–Pakistan Confederation plan referred to a plan proposed between the governments of Afghanistan and Pakistan between 1953 and 1954 to merge both countries under a single confederation. These plans were started by Ayub Khan, the president of Pakistan and the monarchy of Afghanistan under King Zahir Shah.
President Zia-ul-Haq too was for such confederation. "Charles Wilson recalled a map that Zia had also shown to him in which overlay indicated the goal of a confederation embracing first Pakistan and Afghanistan and eventually Central Asia and Kashmir. Zia further explained about the Pakistan-Afghanistan confederation in which Pakistanis and Afghans could travel freely back and forth without passports."[79] General Akhtar Abdur Rahman, considered Zia's right-hand man and more importantly the DG-ISI (1979–1987), himself a Pashtun, "also shared Zia's vision of a post-Soviet "Islamic Confederation" composed of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kashmir and even the states of Soviet Central Asia."[80] |
| Argentina-Chile Unification | File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina File:Flag of Chile.svg Chile |
1953 | No | President of Argentina, Juan Domingo Perón, proposed to Chilean presidente, Carlos Ibáñez del Campo, to unify both countries and be the first step for a Hispanoamerican Unification.[81] It was rejected due to Chilean fears of Argentinian absortion, and the fall of Peronist regime in 1955. |
| File:Flag of Germany.svg West Germany | File:Flag of Germany.svg West Germany Template:Country data Saar Protectorate |
1955–1957 | Yes | 1955 Saar Statute referendum. Saarland became a state of Germany and exited France's economic union. |
| File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom | File:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom File:Flag of Malta (1943-1964).svg Crown Colony of Malta |
1956 | No | 1956 Maltese United Kingdom integration referendum |
| File:Flag of Ghana.svg Ghana | File:Flag of the Gold Coast (1877–1957).svg Gold Coast Template:Flagicon British Togoland |
Yes | In the 1956 British Togoland status plebiscite 58% of voters supported a union with Ghana, whereas 42% voted in favor of remaining a United Nations Trust Territory under British control until neighbouring French Togoland had decided its future.[82] | |
| File:Flag of the North Borneo Federation.svg North Borneo Federation | File:Flag of North Borneo (1948–1963).svg Crown Colony of North Borneo File:Flag of Sarawak (1947–1963).svg Crown Colony of Sarawak File:Flag of Brunei 1906-1959.svg Protectorate of Brunei |
1956–1960 | No | Sarawak and North Borneo merged with the independent Federation of Malaya several years later, forming Malaysia, while Brunei later became an independent state on its own. |
| Template:Flagdeco United States of Latin Africa | File:Flag of Portugal.svg Angola File:Flag of the Congo Free State.svg Belgian Congo File:Flag of Belgium.svg Ruanda-Urundi File:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg French Congo File:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg Ubangi-Shari File:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg French Chad File:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg French Cameroon File:Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg French Gabon File:Flag of Spain (1945–1977).svg Spanish Guinea File:Flag of Portugal.svg São Tomé and Príncipe |
1957–1959 | No | Proposed union of Romance-language-speaking Central African countries envisioned by Barthélemy Boganda. Boganda first called for it in May 1957.[83] The idea's implementation was cut short by Boganda's death in a plane crash on 29 March 1959.[84] Boganda viewed this entity to be a counterweight to the powerful British-influenced southern bloc of South Africa and the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland.[83] |
| Melanesian Federation | File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Dutch New Guinea Template:Country data Solomon Islands Protectorate File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Territory of Papua and New Guinea |
1957 | No | Australian Governor General John Kerr was a vocal proponent of the idea of a Melanesian Federation as a solution to the West Papua dispute.[85][86][87] |
| File:Flag of Cameroon (1961-1975).svg Cameroon | File:Flag of Cameroon (1961-1975).svg Cameroon File:Flag of Spain (1945–1977).svg Spanish Guinea |
1958–1963 | No | The Equatoguinean independence leader Enrique Nvo and the first formal Equatoguinean political party, IPGE, advocated for independence from Spain and a political union between Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea.[88] The idea of a union was deemed unfeasible after the 1963 Spanish Guinean autonomy referendum.[88] |
| Template:Flagicon Union of African States | File:Flag of Ghana.svg Ghana File:Flag of Guinea.svg Guinea File:Flag of Mali (1959-1961).svg Mali (joined in 1961) |
Yes | The union planned to develop a common currency and unified foreign policy amongst members; however, none of these proposals were implemented by the countries. The union was the first organization in Africa to bring together former colonies of the British and the French. Although the union was open to all independent states in Africa, no other states joined. | |
| File:Flag of the West Indies Federation (1958–1962).svg West Indies Federation | File:Flag of Barbados (1870–1966).svg British Barbados File:Flag of Jamaica (1957–1962).svg British Jamaica File:Flag of Leeward Islands (1952–1958).svg British Leeward Islands (except the Virgin Islands) File:Flag of Trinidad and Tobago (1889–1958).svg British Trinidad and Tobago File:Flag of the British Windward Islands (1903-1953).svg British Windward Islands Also invited: File:Flag of the Bahamas (1923-1953).svg Crown Colony of the Bahama Islands File:Flag of British Guiana (1919-1955).svg British Guiana File:Flag of British Honduras (1919–1981).svg British Honduras File:Flag of the British Virgin Islands.svg British Virgin Islands |
1958 | Yes | The expressed intention of the Federation was to create a political unit that would become independent from Britain as a single state. However, before that could happen, the Federation collapsed due to internal political conflicts. |
| File:Flag of the United Arab Republic.svg United Arab Republic | File:Flag of Egypt (1952-1958).svg Republic of Egypt File:Flag of Syria (1932-1958; 1961-1963).svg Syrian Republic |
Yes | A short-lived Pan-Arab state. | |
| United Arab States | File:Flag of the United Arab Republic.svg United Arab Republic Template:Country data Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen |
Yes | Loose confederation between the United Arab Republic and North Yemen. | |
| File:Flag of the Arab Federation.svg Arab Federation | Template:Country data Kingdom of Iraq File:Flag of Jordan.svg Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan |
Yes | An attempt to unify the two Hashemite kingdoms of Iraq and Jordan. While successful, the short-lived union was disestablished after a military coup deposed Faisal II of Iraq. | |
| Sahel-Benin Union | File:Flag of Upper Volta.svg Republic of Upper Volta Template:Flagicon Niger Template:Flagicon Republic of Dahomey Template:Flagicon Ivory Coast |
1958 or 1959 ?–1959 | Yes | |
| Template:Flagicon Mali Federation | File:Flag of Senegal (1958–1959).svg Senegal Template:Flagicon Sudanese republic |
1959–1960 | Yes | Senghor became very wary of unification efforts after the failed experiment and despite attempts to create other federations in West Africa and with Senegal's neighbours, Senghor often restrained these efforts and they only progressed after his rule.Template:Sfn In addition, as the first failed unification experiment in Africa, the Mali Federation served as a lesson in future attempts at unification throughout the continent.Template:Sfn Keïta became more assertive with pushing his ideology after the collapse of the federation and refused diplomatic relations with Senegal for many years.Template:Sfn Nonetheless, Mali under Keïta still pursued the goal of West African unity but did so in a variety of different international connections.Template:Sfn |
| File:Flag of Somalia.svg Somali Republic | File:Flag of Italy.svg Trust Territory of Somalia File:Flag of Somalia.svg State of Somaliland |
1960 | Yes | On 26 June 1960 the former British Somaliland protectorate briefly obtained independence as the State of Somaliland, with the Trust Territory of Somaliland following suit five days later.[89][90] The following day, on 27 June 1960, the newly convened Somaliland Legislative Assembly approved a bill that would formally allow for the union of the State of Somaliland with the Trust Territory of Somaliland on 1 July 1960.[91] Following the collapse of Barre's government in early 1991, local authorities, led by the SNM, unilaterally declared independence from Somalia on 18 May of the same year and reinstated the borders of the former short-lived independent State of Somaliland. |
| File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg Soviet Union | File:Flag of the Soviet Union.svg Soviet Union Template:Country data People's Republic of Bulgaria |
No | The leader of the People's Republic of Bulgaria, Todor Zhivkov, suggested in the early 1960s that the country should become a union republic, but the offer was rejected.[92][93][94] | |
| File:Flag of the East African Community (1967-1977).svg East African Federation | File:Flag of Kenya (1921–1963).svg Kenya Colony Template:Country data Tanganyika Territory File:Flag of the Uganda Protectorate.svg Uganda Protectorate File:Flag of Zanzibar Under British Rule.svg Sultanate of Zanzibar |
1960–1964 | No | Proposed political union between the four territories (one colony, two protectorates and one League of Nations mandated territory) under British rule in East Africa in the 1960s. Tanganyika proposed to delay its imminent independence in 1960 so that the four territories might achieve independence together as one federation. In 1963 the leaders of all of the territories (some now independent) pledged to work towards a federation by 1964, but ultimately disputes over the nature of the federation and concerns about sharing power led to the collapse of effort to federate. Only Tanganyika and Zanzibar eventually united in 1964. |
| File:Flag of Cameroon (1957-1961).svg Cameroon | File:Flag of Cameroon (1957-1961).svg Cameroon File:Flag of British Cameroon.svg British Cameroon |
1961 | Partially (Southern Cameroons) | In the 1961 British Cameroons referendum, the Christian majority in the south of British Cameroon voted to integrate with Cameroon, whereas the Muslim-majority Northern areas voted to integrate with Nigeria. |
| File:Flag of Nigeria.svg Nigeria | File:Flag of Nigeria.svg Nigeria File:Flag of British Cameroon.svg British Cameroon |
Partially (Northern Cameroons) | ||
| File:Flag of India.svg India | File:Flag of India.svg India Template:Country data Portuguese India |
1961 | Yes | Annexation of Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Annexation of Goa |
| File:Flag of India.svg India Template:Country data French India |
1962 | Yes | Coup d'état of Yanaon | |
| Confederation of Himalayan States | File:Flag of Bhutan.svg Bhutan File:Unofficial flag of Nagaland.svg Nagaland File:Flag of Nepal.svg Nepal File:No flag.svg North-East Frontier Agency Template:Flagcountry |
No | In 1962, the Chinese Government proposed a Confederation of Himalayan States.[95][96][97] | |
| File:Flag of the Federation of South Arabia.svg Federation of the Emirates of the South | Template:Country data Fadhli File:No flag.svg Audhali Template:Country data Beihan Template:Country data Dhala Template:Country data Lower Yafa File:No flag.svg Upper Aulaqi Sheikhdom File:علم مشيخة العلوي.png Alawi File:علم مشيخة العقربي.png Aqrabi File:علم جمهورية دثينة.png Dathina File:سلطنة الحواشب.png Haushabi Template:Country data Lahej File:No flag.svg Lower Aulaqi File:No flag.svg Maflahi File:No flag.svg Shaib Template:Country data Wahidi Balhaf |
Yes | The Federation of the Emirates of the South (Arabic: اتحاد إمارات الجنوب العربي Ittiḥād ʾImārāt al-Janūb al-ʿArabiyy) was an organization of states within the British Aden Protectorate in what would become South Yemen. The Federation of six states was inaugurated in the British Colony of Aden on 11 February 1959, and the Federation and Britain signed a “Treaty of Friendship and Protection,” which detailed plans for British financial and military assistance. It subsequently added nine states and, on 4 April 1962, became known as the Federation of South Arabia. This was joined by the Aden Colony on 18 January 1963. | |
| Maphilindo | File:Flag of Malaya (1950–1963).svg Malaya File:Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia File:Flag of the Philippines (navy blue).svg Philippines |
1963 | No | Proposals to create a union of the people of the Malay race and deal with the continued decolonisation of Southeast Asia led to leaders of the three countries signing the Manila Accord on 5 August 1963. However, cooperation quickly broke down following the formation of Malaysia by Malaya and other former British colonies in the region, which was opposed by Indonesia and the Philippines.[98] |
| File:Flag of Malaysia.svg Malaysia | File:Flag of Malaya (1950–1963).svg Federation of Malaya File:Flag of North Borneo (1948–1963).svg Crown Colony of North Borneo File:Flag of Sarawak (1947–1963).svg Crown Colony of Sarawak Template:Country data Colony of Singapore Also invited: File:Flag of Brunei.svg Brunei |
Yes | Singapore was expelled from the federation on 9 August 1965, later forming the Republic of Singapore. Brunei Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddien III accepted the idea but rejected after the Brunei revolt. | |
| File:Flag of Tanzania.svg United Republic of Tanzania | Template:Country data Republic of Tanganyika File:Flag of Zanzibar (January-April 1964).svg People's Republic of Zanzibar |
1964 | Yes | |
| File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia | File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia Template:Flagdeco Nauru |
1964–1965 | No | In 1963 the Australian Government proposed that the citizens of Nauru, a United Nations trust territory under Australian administration, would move to Curtis Island and become Australian citizens.[99][100] By that time, Nauru had been extensively mined for phosphate by companies from Australia, Britain and New Zealand damaging the landscape so much that it was thought the island would be uninhabitable by the 1990s. The cost of resettling the Nauruans on Curtis Island was estimated to be Template:Australian pound, which included housing and infrastructure and the establishment of pastoral, agricultural, and fishing industries.[101] However, the Nauruan people did not wish to become Australian citizens and wanted to be given sovereignty over Curtis Island to establish themselves as an independent nation, which Australia would not agree to.[102] Nauru rejected the proposal to move to Curtis Island, instead choosing to become an independent nation operating their mines in Nauru.[103] Nauru became self-governing in January 1966, and following a two-year constitutional convention, it became independent in 1968 under founding president Hammer DeRoburt.[104] |
| Territory of the Marianas | File:Flag of Guam.svg Territory of Guam File:Flag of the Northern Mariana Islands.svg Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands |
1969 | No | 1958 Saipan integration referendum, 1961 Northern Mariana Islands status referendum, 1963 Northern Mariana Islands integration referendum, 1969 Guamanian unification with the Northern Mariana Islands referendum, 1969 Northern Mariana Islands status referendum |
| File:Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg United Arab Emirates | File:Flag of Abu Dhabi.svg Abu Dhabi Template:Flagicon Dubai File:Flag of Sharjah and Ras Al Khaimah.svg Sharjah File:Flag of Ajman.svg Ajman File:Flag of Umm al-Qaiwain.svg Umm Al Quwain File:Flag of Fujairah (1952–1972).svg Fujairah Template:Country data Ras Al Khaimah Also invited: File:Flag of Bahrain (1932 to 1972).svg Bahrain File:Flag of Qatar (1949).svg Qatar |
1971–1972 | Yes | Six independent emirates formed the United Arab Emirates on 2 December 1971. Ras Al Khaimah later joined the federation. |
| Template:Flagicon Federation of Arab Republics | File:Flag of Libya (1969–1972).svg Libya File:Flag of Egypt (1972–1984).svg Egypt File:Flag of Syria (1972–1980).svg Syria Also invited: File:Flag of Iraq (1963–1991); Flag of Syria (1963–1972).svg Iraq File:Flag of Sudan.svg Sudan |
1972–1977 | Yes | An attempt by Muammar Gaddafi to build a Pan-Arab state. |
| File:Drapeau de la République Arabe Islamique (Union tuniso-libyenne).svg Arab Islamic Republic | File:Flag of Libya (1969–1972).svg Libya File:Flag of Tunisia (1959–1999).svg Tunisia |
1974 | No | Proposed by Muammar Gaddafi. |
| Indochinese Federation[105] | File:Flag of North Vietnam (1955–1975).svg North Vietnam File:FNL Flag.svg South Vietnam File:Flag of Democratic Kampuchea.svg Democratic Kampuchea File:Flag of Laos.svg Laos |
1975 | No | Despite Kampuchea's cooperation with the Vietnamese, the Khmer Rouge leadership feared that the Vietnamese communists were planning to form an Indochinese federation, which would be dominated by Vietnam. In order to pre-empt any attempt by the Vietnamese to dominate them, the Khmer Rouge leadership began, as the Lon Nol government capitulated in 1975, to purge Vietnamese-trained personnel within their own ranks. Then, in May 1975, the newly formed Democratic Kampuchea began attacking Vietnam, beginning with an attack on the Vietnamese island of Phú Quốc.[106][107][108] |
| File:Flag of India.svg India | File:Flag of India.svg India File:Flag of Sikkim (1967-1975).svg Sikkim |
Yes | After independence in 1947, joining the new Indian Union was rejected by popular vote. Sikkim grew closer to India over time, becoming a protectorate and later a suzeraintyScript error: No such module "Unsubst". of India. With Indian pressure and support, Sikkim voted to join India in 1975.[109][110] | |
| Template:Flagicon Republic of Guinea-Cape Verde[111][112] | File:Flag of Guinea-Bissau.svg Guinea-Bissau File:Flag of Cape Verde (1975-1992).svg Cape Verde |
No | The African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) advocated for the independence of the colonies of Portuguese Guinea and Portuguese Cape Verde, and governed both countries immediately after independence (1974 for Guinea-Bissau, and 1975 for Cape Verde) with the goal of unifying the two. However, following a 1980 coup in Guinea-Bissau, the Cape Verde branch of the party separated to form the African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV), ending plans for a union.[113] | |
| File:Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia | File:Flag of Indonesia.svg Indonesia File:Flag of East Timor (3-2).svg East Timor |
1975–1976 | Yes | Indonesian invasion of East Timor |
| File:Flag of Vietnam.svg Vietnam | File:Flag of North Vietnam (1955–1975).svg North Vietnam File:FNL Flag.svg South Vietnam |
1976 | Yes | Fall of Saigon, Reunification Day |
| File:Flag of the Solomon Islands.svg Solomon Islands | Template:Country data British Solomon Islands File:Flag of Bougainville.svg Republic of the North Solomons |
No | The Interim Provincial Government announced that they would declare independence on 1 September, ahead of Papua New Guinea's own planned independence day of 16 September. On 1 September, they issued the 'Unilateral Declaration of Independence of the Republic of the North Solomons'. They sought international recognition through the United Nations, but were unsuccessful. They also failed in an attempt to unite with the Solomon Islands. | |
| Socialist Union of the Horn of Africa[114] | File:Flag of Ethiopia (1975–1987).svg Ethiopia File:Flag of Somalia.svg Somalia File:Flag of South Yemen.svg South Yemen |
1977 | No | In early 1977, Castro brought together the leaders of Somalia, Ethiopia and South Yemen to create a socialist federal state in the region. General Mohamed Nur Galal was the former deputy defense minister of Somalia and the vocal point of Somalia's military contacts with Cuba at that time. He was present at the meeting in Aden in March 1977.[115][116] |
| Libyan-Syrian Union | Template:Flagicon Libya File:Flag of the Syrian revolution.svg Syria |
1980 | No | |
| File:Flag of North Korea.svgFile:Flag of South Korea.svg Democratic Confederal Republic of Koryo | Template:Flagicon North Korea File:Flag of South Korea.svg South Korea |
No | In accordance with the three principles and the ten point programme, Kim Il Sung elaborated on the proposed state, called Democratic Confederal Republic of Koryo (DFRK),[117] on October 10, 1980, in the Report to the Sixth Congress of the Workers' Party of Korea on the Work of the Central Committee. Kim proposed a confederation between North and South Korea, in which their respective political systems would initially remain. It is described by North Korea as a "...peaceful reunification proposal to found a federal state on the condition that the north and the south recognize and tolerate each other's existing ideologies."[72] It was stated that the DFRK should be a neutral country which does not participate in any political, military alliance or bloc, embracing the whole of the territory and people of the country.[118] | |
| Template:Country data Swaziland | Template:Country data Swaziland Template:Country data KaNgwane Also invited: Template:Country data KwaZulu |
1982–1989 | No | An attempt to transfer the bantustan, along with parts of the Zulu homeland KwaZulu, to the neighbouring country of Swaziland in 1982 was never realized.[119][120] This would have given land-locked Swaziland access to the sea. The deal was negotiated by the governments, but was met by popular opposition in the territory meant to be transferred.[121] The homeland's territory had been claimed by King Sobhuza of Swaziland as part of the Swazi monarchs' traditional realm, and the South African government hoped to use the homeland as a buffer zone against guerrilla infiltration from Mozambique. South Africa responded to the failure of the transfer by temporarily suspending the autonomy of KaNgwane, then restoring it in December 1982 and granting it nominal self-rule in 1984.[122][123] |
| File:Flag of Senegal.svg File:Flag of The Gambia.svg Senegambia Confederation | File:Flag of Senegal.svg Senegal File:Flag of The Gambia.svg The Gambia |
Yes | A loose confederation was formed, but ended due to the Gambia's lack of interest in integration. | |
|
Burkina Faso-Ghana Union |
File:Flag of Burkina Faso.svg Burkina Faso File:Flag of Ghana.svg Ghana |
1983–1987 | No | With the coming to power of Thomas Sankara in Burkina Faso in 1983, relations between Ghana and Burkina became both warm and close. Indeed, Jerry Rawlings and Sankara began discussions about uniting Ghana and Burkina in the manner of the defunct Ghana-Guinea-Mali Union, which Nkrumah had sought unsuccessfully to promote as a foundation for his dream of a unified continental government.[124] |
| File:Flag of Yemen.svg Yemen | File:Flag of the Yemen Arab Republic.svg North Yemen File:Flag of South Yemen.svg South Yemen |
1989-1990 | Yes | Yemeni unification |
| File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany | File:Flag of Germany.svg West Germany File:Flag of East Germany.svg East Germany Template:Country data West Berlin |
Yes | German reunification | |
| Union of Soviet Sovereign Republics | Template:Flagdeco Russian SFSR Template:Country data Byelorussian SSR File:Flag of Ukraine (1991–1992).svg Ukrainian SSR Template:Country data Azerbaijan SSR Template:Country data Kazakh SSR Template:Country data Kirghiz SSR Template:Country data Tajik SSR Template:Country data Turkmen SSR Template:Country data Uzbek SSR |
1990–1991 | No | 1991 Soviet Union referendum |
| Windward Union | File:Flag of Dominica.svg Dominica File:Flag of Grenada.svg Grenada File:Flag of Saint Lucia.svg Saint Lucia File:Flag of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.svg Saint Vincent and the Grenadines |
1991 | No | On January 14, 1991, the four Caribbean island nations of Dominica, Grenada, Saint Lucia, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines began an initiative to create a political union encompassing themselves.[125] |
| File:Flag of Yugoslavia (1992–2003); Flag of Serbia and Montenegro (2003–2006).svg FR Yugoslavia | Template:Flagcountry Template:Flagcountry Template:Flagcountry |
No | Zulfikarpašić–Karadžić agreement | |
| Template:Flagcountry Template:Flagcountry |
1992 | Yes | ||
| Volga Confederation | File:Flag of Tatarstan.svg Tatarstan File:Flag of Bashkortostan.svg Bashkortostan Minor support File:Flag of Mordovia.svg Mordovia File:Flag of Mari El.svg Mari El File:Flag of Chuvashia.svg Chuvashia |
1992–1995 | No | Post-Soviet proposals for a Confederation of Volga republics |
| Balkania | Template:Flagcountry Template:Flagcountry Template:Flagcountry |
1993–2006 | No | Suggested by the Kosovo Albanian politician Adem Demaçi |
| File:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa | File:Flag of South Africa (1928–1982).svg South Africa File:Flag of Bophuthatswana (1972–1994).svg Bophuthatswana File:Flag of Ciskei.svg Ciskei File:Flag of Transkei.svg Transkei File:Flag of Venda (1973–1994).svg Venda |
1994 | Yes | During apartheid the South African Government granted nominal independence to four autonomous bantustans within it. While no external country recognized these states, South Africa strongly promoted their independence and the four mutually recognized each other. As South Africa moved to end apartheid, the African National Congress (ANC) party advocated reintegration of all bantustans, including the nominally independent ones, into a unitary South African state. Resistance to integration by leaders of some bantustans led to violence, such as in the Bisho massacre and the Bophuthatswana crisis. Nonetheless, inhabitants of all four independent bantustans participated in the 1994 South African general election, during which a new constitution came into effect which reintegrated all bantustans into South Africa. |
21st century
| Proposed state | Components | Time period | Successful? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asymmetric Federal Moldavian State | File:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova File:Flag of Transnistria (state).svg Transnistria |
2003–2005 | No | The Kozak memorandum, officially Russian Draft Memorandum on the Basic Principles of the State Structure of a United State in Moldova, was a 2003 proposal aimed at a final settlement of relations between Moldova and Transnistria and a solving of the Transnistria conflict. It was seen as an extension of the 1997 Moscow memorandum but was ultimately rejected by Moldovan president Vladimir Voronin.
The plan, presented in mid-November 2003 by Russia, was a detailed proposal for a united asymmetric federal Moldavian state. First published in Russian on the website of Transnistria's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the text was promoted by a Russian politician Dmitry Kozak, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin and one of the key figures in his presidential team. For Transnistria, the memorandum presented an end to the previous Moscow policy, which assumed that the region would have equal status in federation with the rest of the country. According to the memorandum, Russian troops (no more than 2000 strong, without heavy armaments) would remain in Transnistria for the transitional period but not later than 2020. |
| File:Proposed flag of the United Cyprus Republic.svg United Republic of Cyprus | File:Flag of Cyprus (1960–2006).svg Cyprus File:Flag of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.svg Northern Cyprus |
2004 | No | A referendum was held in Cyprus on 24 April 2004.[126] The two communities were asked whether they approved of the fifth revision of the United Nations proposal for reuniting the island, which had been divided since 1974. While it was approved by 65% of Turkish Cypriots, it was rejected by 76% of Greek Cypriots. |
| File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation | File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation File:Flag of Transnistria (state).svg Transnistria |
2006 | No | Proposed Russian annexation of Transnistria |
| File:Flag of the Gran Colombia.svg Gran Colombia | File:Flag of Colombia.svg Colombia File:Flag of Ecuador (1900–2009).svg Ecuador File:Flag of Panama.svg Panama File:Flag of Venezuela.svg Venezuela |
2008 | No | Reunification of Gran Colombia, In 2008, Hugo Chávez, president of Venezuela, announced the proposal of the political restoration of the Gran Colombia, under the Bolivarian revolution.[127] |
| Lucayan Federation | File:Flag of the Bahamas.svg Bahamas File:Flag of the Turks and Caicos Islands.svg Turks and Caicos Islands |
2010 | No | The Lucayan Archipelago (named for the original native Lucayan people), also known as the Bahama Archipelago, is an island group comprising the Commonwealth of The Bahamas and the British Overseas Territory of the Turks and Caicos Islands. The archipelago is in the western North Atlantic Ocean, north of Cuba along with the other Antilles, and east and southeast of Florida. In 2010 the leaders of The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands discussed the possibility of forming a federation.[128] |
| File:Flag of the Peru-Bolivian Confederation.svg Peru–Bolivian Confederation | File:Flag of Bolivia.svg Bolivia File:Flag of Peru.svg Peru |
2011 | No | President Ollanta Humala of Peru proposed Bolivian president Evo Morales to reunite the countries in a confederation.[129][130] The Cabinets of the two countries have held joint meetings.[131] |
| File:Flag of Hejaz (1917).svg Gulf Union | File:Flag of Bahrain.svg Bahrain File:Flag of Kuwait.svg Kuwait File:Flag of Oman.svg Oman File:Flag of Qatar.svg Qatar File:Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia File:Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg United Arab Emirates |
2011–2012 | No | In 2011, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia proposed a Gulf Union.[132] |
| File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation | File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation File:Flag of Crimea.svg Crimea |
2014 | Yes | Crimea seceded from Ukraine and later conducted a referendum to join the Russian Federation and was later annexed by Russia. The referendum was extremely controversial and most countries continue to recognize Crimea as part of Ukraine. |
| File:War flag of Novorussia.svgFile:Flag of Novorussia.svg Novorossiya | Template:Country data Mykolaiv Oblast File:Flag of Odesa.svg Odesa Oblast Template:Country data Kherson Oblast Template:Country data Crimea |
2005–2008 | No | After the Orange Revolution, Dmitri Trenin of the Carnegie Moscow Center wrote that in 2005 and again in 2008 some quarters in Moscow, that were not entirely academic, discussed the idea of a Russia-friendly buffer state, "Novorossiya", being formed out of Southern Ukraine from the Crimea to Odesa in response to perceived Western penetration into the former Soviet Union.[133] |
| Template:Country data Donetsk People's Republic Template:Country data Luhansk People's Republic Also planned: File:Flag of Kharkov People's Republic.svgKharkiv Oblast Template:Country data Kherson Oblast File:Flag of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.svg Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Template:Country data Mykolaiv Oblast File:Flag of Odesa.svg Odesa Oblast Template:Country data Zaporizhzhia Oblast Planned, later removed: File:Flag of Sumy Oblast.svg Sumy Oblast |
2014–2015 | Partial | Novorossiya (Full name: Federal State of Novorossiya) was a confederation between the two self-declared nations of the Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk People's Republic, proclaimed on June 24th, 2015.[134]
According to Gubarev the full confederation would include Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, Mykolaiv, Odesa, Zaporizhzhia and possibly Sumy (later removed).[135][136][137] | |
| Levantine Confederation | File:Flag of the Syrian revolution.svg Syria File:Flag of Jordan.svg Jordan Template:Country data Palestine File:Flag of Lebanon.svg Lebanon File:Flag of Israel.svg Israel |
2014–2021 | No | In 2014, a Lebanese political activist and revolutionary Anis al-Naqqash proposed that the solution to the problems of the Middle East region was the establishment of a confederation that unites the states of the Levant, called ‘West Asian region’ by Naqqash.[138][139] |
| File:Proposed flag of Malorossiya.svg Malorossiya | Template:Country data Donetsk People's Republic File:Flag of Ukraine.svg Ukraine |
2017 | No | A project was declared on 18 July 2017 by the Donetsk People's Republic to include all of Ukraine, but the name was changed to "Malorossiya" (Little Russia).[140][141] The Luhansk People's Republic, however, stated that it would not be taking part in the project. The announcement was widely condemned by nations, including Russia, which pointed to the Minsk agreement.[142] |
| File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation | File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation File:Flag of South Ossetia.svg South Ossetia |
2022 | No | On 30 March 2022, President Anatoly Bibilov suggested a referendum on joining Russia,[143] which was to be held on 17 July 2022; the referendum was cancelled on 30 May 2022.[144] |
| File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation | File:Flag of Russia.svg Russian Federation Template:Country data Donetsk People's Republic Template:Country data Luhansk People's Republic File:Flag of the Russian administered Kherson Oblast.svg Kherson Oblast File:Flag of the Russian administered Zaporizhzhia Oblast.svg Zaporizhzhia Oblast |
Partial | In late September 2022, Russian-installed officials in some parts of Ukraine[145] organized referendum on annexation of occupied territories of Ukraine.[146][147][148] On 27 September, Russian officials of the Central Election Commission in Zaporizhzhia claimed that the referendum passed, with 93.11% of voters in favour of joining the Russian Federation.[149] According to the data provided by the commission, the support for the annexation was 90.01% in the Melitopol Raion, while in its administrative center, Melitopol, it was 96.78%.[150] On 29 September, Russia announced that it would formally annex the four regions Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson the next day, on 30 September.[151] The referendums were illegal under international law[152] and most countries continue to recognize as part of Ukraine.[153] | |
| File:Confederation of Sahel Flag.png Alliance of Sahel States | File:Flag of Burkina Faso.svg Burkina Faso File:Flag of Mali.svg Mali File:Flag of Niger.svg Niger Also invited: File:Flag of Guinea.svg Guinea |
2023–2024 | Partial | In early 2023, Burkina Faso's prime minister after his visit in Mali suggested that the two countries should form a federation to boost their economic clout and fight against the jihadists in the region.[154][155] Later in December of the same year, the foreign ministers of Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger recommended the establishment of a confederation that includes every member of the Alliance of Sahel States.[156] The confederation was established on 6 July 2024.[157] |
See also
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- Arab Union
- Atlantic Union
- Balkan Federation
- Celtic union
- Composite monarchy
- Confederation
- Dynastic union
- 51st state#Canada
- Estonian–Finnish federation
- Alldutch Movement
- Union of Kėdainiai
- Fertile Crescent Plan
- Great Timor
- Greater Austria proposal
- Greater Mauritania
- Hellenoturkism
- Iberism
- Independence referendum
- Indo-Pakistani Confederation
- Irredentism
- List of confederations
- List of irredentist claims or disputes
- Lists of active separatist movements
- North American Union
- Pan-Americanism
- Pan-Hispanism
- Pan-Latinism
- Pan-nationalism
- Papuan unification
- Patria Grande
- Personal union
- Political union
- Proposed United States acquisition of Greenland
- Samoan unification
- Supranational union
- Turanism
- Turkic Council
- URSAL
- United Ireland
- United States of Africa
- United States of China
- United States of Europe
- World government
References
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- ↑ Lukashenko warns annexation of Belarus would mean war
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- ↑ https://www.argentina.gob.ar/sites/default/files/enviado_a_europa-_la_monarquia_borbonica_en_el_rio_de_la_plata.pdf
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- ↑ Argirópolis o la capital de los estados confederados del Río de la Plata / Domingo Faustino Sarmiento. Cervantes virtual
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- ↑ a b c d Template:Cite thesis
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- ↑ Bernard Porter, The Lion's Share: A Short History of British Imperialism 1850–1970 (1975) p 133
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- ↑ Heinz Lemke: Die Regierung Stürgkh und die Pläne zur Teilung Galiziens. In: Österreich-Ungarn in der Weltpolitik 1900 bis 1918. Berlin/DDR 1965, S. 267–283, hier: 273f.; und Heinz Lemke: Die Politik der Mittelmächte in Polen von der Novemberproklamation 1916 bis zum Zusammentritt des Provisorischen Staatsrats. In: Jahrbuch für Geschichte der UdSSR und der volksdemokratischen Länder Europas 6 (1962), S. 69–138, hier S. 74.
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- ↑ A.Z. Hilali, US-Pakistan Relationship: Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan, Taylor & Francis (2017), p. 100
- ↑ Owen L. Sirrs, Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate: Covert Action and Internal Operations, Routledge (2016), p. 119
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- ↑ a b Gérard Prunier, Africa's World War, Oxford University Press, 2009, Template:ISBN, pp. 102–103
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- ↑ Encyclopædia Britannica, The New Encyclopædia Britannica, (Encyclopædia Britannica: 2002), p.835
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- ↑ https://www.marxists.org/portugues/tematica/livros/paigc/42.pdf Template:Bare URL PDF
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- ↑ https://www2.lib.uct.ac.za/blacksash/pdfs/cnf19830311.026.001.000b.pdf Template:Bare URL PDF
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- ↑ Owusu, Maxwell. "Burkina". A Country Study: Ghana (La Verle Berry, editor). Library of Congress Federal Research Division (November 1994). This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.[1]
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- ↑ Middle East Observer - Naqqash’s solution for Middle East: A Levantine Confederation (Pts. 1, 2, 3, 4)
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Sources
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