An opponent attacked my square and I won, so he retreated the units to the square they came from and were thus routed. Now what would happen if I attacked his square with the routed units on the same turn? Is it like having a zero army? so he can call for support (the square was well supported) or is it like having no army and so it can't be supported and I could just sweep in (and kill his routed units)?
The directions (though clear about nearly every other scenario) don't address this one exactly. They do say that if you attack a square that contains a normal soldier and routed soldiers than only the live soldier counts in defense, but it doesn't specify what happens if you attack a square with only routed soldiers--that could be supported.
After thinking about it, I think its most appropriate to make it an occupied square with a 0 valued army (so the attacked party can call for support and use cards), but I could also make an argument that its like attacking a square with just a power token. Is there an official rule??