Ingledsva
HEATHEN ALASKAN
They might be speaking of the same war(if you're taking all Nebuchadnezzar's conquests as one war) too some extent; but one prophecy is for the king of Babylon and the other for the king of Tyrus. The thing both these pagan cities have in common is they would have had both a human ruler and a patron deity for their city that they would call the king/queen of their city as well. So in Babylon it was Bel Marduk and in Tyrus; although I don't know the name off the top of my head; he would commonly be called Baal by the Phoenicians.
Ezekiel 28 is actually split between two different prophecies. First it is to "the prince of Tyrus" (Ezekiel 28:2) and afterwards the "king of Tyrus". (Ezekiel 28:12) So, you're apparently claiming these are the same person. However, that's not a fact. It is only when prophesying about the "king of Tyrus" that the prophesy begins to sound like it's speaking of an angelic being. A "cherub" to be precise.
As I said, - their are several Tanakh books giving this same story from different angles.
It involved multiple Babylonian and ally cities.
They are all the same war - which is a real historical war - which historians agree on.
There is no Satan in any of the stories concerning this war.
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