On a similar vein to the questions about Neutrals and movement. From what I am reading; if the US is at war with Japan, and USSR is not. USA can land planes in Pacific Russian territories. Say bombers, from west USA attack Sz 6 and land in Amur. It’s total legal?
No restrictions saying a party at war can’t land in a party not at war’s territory?
The same could be said for the British bomber - it could attack a baltic fleet and land in russia without consequence?
Powers Not at War with One Another When two powers on opposite sides are not yet at war with one another, they operate under some special conditions and restrictions.
Movement: A power�s ships don�t block the naval movements of other powers with which it�s not at war, and vice versa. They can occupy the same sea zones.
Combat: A power can�t attack a territory controlled by or containing units belonging to a power with which it is not at war. If a power at war attacks a sea zone containing units belonging to both a power with which it�s already at war and a power with which it�s not at war, the latter power�s units are ignored. Those units won�t participate in the battle in any way, and a state of war with that power will not result.
Comments anyone? Please prove me wrong, because I’ve long been under the assumption you couldn’t land in territories that were not at war.