[quote=@Dinh AaronMk] I wanted to make a Wiki page for the battle of Djibouti, and the only detail I may need from Vilage and Googer are casualty reports from either side. But after that I should probably go in and re-review the First North American War page to accomodate for the extended conflict with the revised Florida, the Republic of Dixie. So when I do that I should probably pull Byrd aside so we can work on it together. [/quote] Casualty reports are difficult to work out because I don't really know how large the Ethiopian military should be. The old [url=http://www.minecraftforum.net/forums/off-topic/forum-games/forum-roleplaying/440287-precipice-of-war-and-like-a-gypsy-band-we-move?page=92#c1840]Military Reform Bill[/url] from way way back in the old days of the MCF has the entire Ethiopian military numbering at 360,000, with 95,000 men per Sefari. With This is probably peacetime numbers though. Either way, Hassan is commanding the seventh and fourth Sefaris, with some parts of the fourth being stationed in Mogadishu and Mombasa to put up a fight should the Spanish try to occupy those cities. Hassan did not command all of his available forces at Djibouti though, because Djibouti is an isolated city in the hottest desert on the planet and the logistics of a large army in that desert wouldn't be worth defending an undefendable city. So I'm guessing probably dealing with only about ~40,000 Africans involved in Djibouti. This number gets complicated by the involvement of Harari shiftas and the Afar, but they probably couldn't be accurately accounted for anyway. So for casualties, for Ethiopia most of these would have accrued late in the battle. The first phase of the battle, fought at night, would have seen a very low African military casualty rate, but a terribly high civilian casualty rate with the bombardment of Djibouti taking place with probably ~20,000 people still in the city. Most of those people would have tried to flee, but the city purposely set up to burn so the Spanish couldn't get it, we're still looking at probably ~10,000 or more dead civilians. This is also the phase where the Spanish would have taken heavy losses. Ethiopia's ground troops spent the battle watching from the sidelines and skirmishing with what few Spaniards managed to clear the inferno. The Ethiopian airforce only had that one jet as a significant threat, so their losses were negligible. The next few days of the battle involved the African forces being pushed away from the city, and this is where military casualties would start to mount for them. If we are looking at ~40,000 troops on the field, and Hassan purposely slipping his forces backward to minimize casualties at the cost of losing the battle, I'd say we're looking at probably an Ethiopia casualty rate of roughly 15%. So lets go with ~1000 Ethiopian dead, ~5000 Ethiopian wounded or missing, and ~10,000 Civilian dead.