Both Valdurenmaa and Alpenhorst have claimed Germany in some form, so the main issue comes down to equipment and a few other overlapping areas. Instead of treating one nation as the “true” Germany, it makes more sense to accept that there are two German successor states. They can differ in certain areas, but when it comes to equipment, there should be a fair way to handle overlapping claims. For example, if Alpenhorst claims the Skyranger system and Valdurenmaa also wants to use it, there are a few ways to settle it: co-development, licensed production, or importation. That way, the equipment can exist in both nations without it feeling like one side’s claim is being ignored. In simple terms, both countries can use German equipment, but if one side has already claimed something and the other also needs it, they should negotiate or work out a compromise instead of just overriding the claim. If you want it even more natural, this version sounds a bit more like how someone would actually say it: Both Valdurenmaa and Alpenhorst have claimed Germany in their own way, so the main problem is equipment and other overlapping claims. Rather than arguing over which one is the “real” Germany, it makes more sense to treat them as two German states with shared heritage. They can still be different from each other, but when it comes to equipment, there should be a fair compromise. So, for example, if Alpenhorst claims the Skyranger and Valdurenmaa wants it too, then it could be explained through co-development, licensing, or importing it from Alpenhorst. That way both nations can use similar German equipment without it feeling like one side is just ignoring the other’s claim. In short, both countries can use German equipment, but if one nation already claimed something first, the other should work it out through negotiation and lore rather than just taking it.
However if we cannot agree I am willing to become Prussia or not use Swiss equipment…