Stall speed is a function of indicated air speed. An aircraft at 20,000 feet indicating 100mph will have a higher true airspeed than it does indicating 100mph on the deck, but it will still stall at 100mph IAS. And the aircraft that stalls at 105 mph IAS on the deck will still do so at 20,000 feet.
Accelerated stalls speed for any aircraft is obtained by multiplying the 1G stall speed of that aircraft by the square root of the Gs being pulled. Therefore, if an aircraft stalls at 100ph IAS at 1G, it will stall pulling 4Gs at 200mph IAS. And the aircraft that stalls at 105 mph will stall at 210 at 4gs. So on and so forth. Again, altitude will not change the IAS at which these things occur.
What you say about the IAS stall speeds are correct, the ANGLE OF ATTACK of the wing has everything to do with the stall speed. The center of gravity will also affect how quickly you reach that AOA. A lot of pilots in this game, who fly the ponie, does not understand that they should burn off AUX first, then drops to move the CG further to the front, which will increase your maneuvering ability during ACM's.
The only time the AOA doesn't come into effect during stall maneuvers is when doing a hammerhead! In all other realms of flight, where are not doing 300IAS or 85IAS, the wing will always stall at the same AOA!
However there are things which can affect the stall speed to, such as wing damage, ice on the wing, or clipping that South Georgia pine tree at Moody AFB. (no, wasn't me, was section leader, he lived through it).