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I've just started out with worldbuilding and got this idea of a state/country that has no need for any armed forces as they don't want to go to war because of religious reasons, and no other state would want to attack them. But during what circumstances could such a state exist?

I'm guessing that the state shouldn't have or produce any unique or better resources that no other state already has. But then I'm posed with the problem as to why people should want to stay within this state and not move to another. Geographical accessibility perhaps?

I've read that there are countries like Iceland and Andorra without their own military forces, but receiving protection from other countries. That's not what I'm looking to create. I want to create a state without any military defense at all, simply because there is no need for it. The state should neither participate in any military alliance.

The state isn't going to be a large one. In relative measures based on europe I'd say the area would be something like Switzerland and the population a bit less than Norway.

There is some magic within this world, but none so great that it could protect an entire city from a military attack for example. The same for religion and gods.

bork
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they don't want to go to war because of religious reasons

I think this is where your answer might lie. This is a country that, if attacked, cannot and will not fight back, because their religion forbids it. Attacking them would be the military equivalent of drop-kicking a puppy off a cliff. Yes, you will win easily, and nobody will intervene to stop you. But every other country in the world is going to treat you like a pariah for it.

There will be international condemnation. Possibly even sanctions. There will definitely be protests, from silent marches of solidarity to people burning your country's flag in the streets. You will forever be known, metaphorically-speaking, as "the country that drop-kicked a puppy off a cliff". And so, no sane country would ever, ever attack your state-without-a-military, because the damage it would cause to their international reputation is simply not worth it.

As for why nobody would intervene in this scenario, I can only think that this would be at the country's own request. A war being fought in their territory on their behalf, is still a war being fought in their territory, and that's still against their religion.

F1Krazy
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    It reminds me of Tibet for some reasons. – Hawker65 Jun 28 '18 at 09:38
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    To make the restriction more relevant for the surrounding countries, have that pacifist refuge be somehow related to the surrounding areas' religion(s), too, not just their own. People in the other countries are much more likely to care if it touches them too, instead of just being a hideout for some odd faraway hippies.
    Perhaps a bit like Vatican or Jerusalem for Christians, ...well except for the bit about "not having armies or waging war", that is.
    – ilkkachu Jun 28 '18 at 13:16
  • This is especially effective if the country has geographical barriers (mountains or on an island) or has few economically exploitable resources. Lots of international sanction for little benefit. – Charles Jun 28 '18 at 13:25
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    This only works if the nation is landlocked and the adjacent countries are all vehemently opposed to allowing anyone through their territory. Relying upon every leader of every country in the world to always throughout time forever be morally upstanding is... well if that were true then war would be practically nonexistent anyway. – pluckedkiwi Jun 28 '18 at 13:27
  • @pluckedkiwi Not necessarily. The #1 question following an invasion is "and then what?" They didn't put up a fight and you expect them to be impressed by your big guns? You've just conquered a country that will never obey your power, and any resource you devote to try to break them is resource not spent on your own territory. Your enemies might get ideas. Your people might wonder why their taxes serve to finance a social experiment in futility. Why bother? – AmiralPatate Jun 28 '18 at 13:45
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    That reasoning really strains suspension of disbelief. It might hold true for the modern world, at least in places with Western sensibilities. However the the overwhelming majority of human civilizations saw conquest of other countries as legitimate. In a typical fantasy setting this justification would seem completely absurd. Perhaps if the pacifist nation was of supreme religious significance this could work (but that's really an entirely different justification). – EldritchWarlord Jun 28 '18 at 13:49
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    @AmiralPatate History is full of examples of this. People invade and conquer for many reasons - to enslave the population, to plunder resources, to subjugate for the purpose of subjugation (be it for forced religious conversion or just bragging rights as owning that territory). Sometimes they just do it because they can. History is not an endless string of pacifist tolerant pluralistic democracies - rape and plunder and enslavement is more prevalent than not. – pluckedkiwi Jun 28 '18 at 13:58
  • A country could defend them by having the war direct in the invading country's territory – Antony D'Andrea Jun 28 '18 at 14:18
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    @pluckedkiwi It's a can of worms though. There were periods in history when the French and Germans didn't need a reason to kill each other, and seeing the other one busy flailing about trying to pacify an hypothetically unmilitarised and uncooperative Belgium could be opportunity enough. And maybe the Brits love the Belgians enough to pile on Germany. I mean, maybe nobody bats an eye, maybe they do, but it's a quite the gamble. – AmiralPatate Jun 28 '18 at 14:29
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    Looks like the country you're after is the Vatican City... – Ynneadwraith Jun 28 '18 at 14:43
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    Take the religion aspect up a notch. The country is the holy land for the local dominate religion. The surrounding countries may have their differences, but the holy land is religiously enforced neutral territory. Outsiders are kept away by the neighbors, in neighboring territory. – jaxad0127 Jun 28 '18 at 16:17
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    @AmiralPatate Occupation and colonialism was often a net loss for the occupying power, yet it still happened. Basing the entire notion that a country could avoid having a defense because every country everywhere throughout time will always and forever come to the conclusion that living in pacifist harmony is the "right choice" because occupation might be costly is outright absurd. Eventually someone will invade, even if only because the guy in charge at the moment is a narcissist who just wants to claim more land for his ego. History bears this out time and time again. – pluckedkiwi Jun 28 '18 at 16:33
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    Plot twist: ... some organization like ISIS comes along, which not only doesn't mind being "the guys that drop-kicked a puppy off the cliff", but will proudly share videos of it. – Masked Man Jun 29 '18 at 08:34
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    Something like Switzerland. The country's major industry is neutrality: whenever two countries without good relations need to talk, they end up here. Also, they're the central hub for that planet's version of the internet: all traffic goes through there, because they're the only country everyone trusts. (Sort of like Swiss Banks used to be.) If anyone attacked them, they'd be cut off from the rest of the world. – Jeffiekins Jun 29 '18 at 20:15
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    I think this could work in a Vatican-like situation, in that it technically has no army or defense treaties (though its implied Italy would defend it) but other nations regard it as important enough to come to its aid absent any request. My point here being that many countries who have a strong catholic demographic would presumably react violently to the Vatican being attacked. This takes your "other countries would view the aggressor as a pariah" to a more reliable level – Gramatik Jun 29 '18 at 21:29
  • The Vatican has the swiss-guard, which are not a local army but are hired as mercenaries to protect the state. – Miguel Bartelsman Jun 30 '18 at 16:23
  • @Ynneadwraith I suggest you look up the history of the Papal States. – Smartybartfast Jul 01 '18 at 10:10
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It's a leper colony

The pacifistic country is in fact a leper colony where all the ill from the surrounding countries are sent. The land is not worth much and nobody wants to be close to the ill - so no one wants to conquer it. The country is run by monks and/or nuns, who care about the ill, but will never do something like fighting or even defending themselves, let alone doing military service.

DLosc
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Julian Egner
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    Firebomb the country. Then send in soldiers with hazmat suits to clean up the stragglers. No one wants to be close to the ill, so best to kill them all – Aethenosity Jun 28 '18 at 15:08
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    @Aethenosity why should you invade if the is nothing to win? And do not forget: if the leper country gets the ill from the surrounding countries, "your" country is probably one of them, so part of the monks and the ill as well came from your country. You should not tell your soldiers to kill monks and ill, especially not if some of them could be their own relatives. Never give a command if you cannot be sure it will be obeyed. – Julian Egner Jun 29 '18 at 06:51
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  • You would gain the land, and security from the illness. Having a country like that as a bordering country is a HUGE direct threat. 2. You can convince soldiers to do anything, as all of human history has shown us. If you say that the illness is already spreading to other countries, they would want to protect their families. I would purposely, and secretly, infect some of the soldiers families to really drive that home.
  • – Aethenosity Jun 29 '18 at 14:02
  • Although really thinking about it, leprosy can be treated with a mdt, so shy would there even be a leper colony? It would have to be a magical form of leprosy that can't be treated like normal. – Aethenosity Jun 29 '18 at 14:12
  • @Aethenosity think of times where leprosy could not be cured or a different illness. I used this term as a fixed term. And the leper country makes your country more save because you know where to put the ill people. The leper country is no thread, because the monks stop anyone fom leaving. maybe there is also a natural obstacle in the way so that the ill cannot leave so easiely. – Julian Egner Jul 02 '18 at 08:26
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    it still relies on a magnanimous spirit of neighboring countries. You just have more faith in people than I do. And that is perfectly fine. If it can't be cured, it's a bigger reason to slaughter them. Natural borders are nice to control, so more reasons to slaughter. Not being a military threat is not the same as not being a threat at all. Not being worth much hasn't prevented countries from taking land in the past. Differing opinions though, i'm not gonna keep responding, as we've both made our points I believe. – Aethenosity Jul 02 '18 at 14:34
  • @Aethenosity I am totally fine with that. – Julian Egner Jul 05 '18 at 15:23