Thorez? ennenetnnentnetnententnententene
No, not quite.
Well, I personally happen to like Sharon. Largely for war-mongering.

But, yeah, like Insane said.
Btw, here's the Hitler-less timeline:
Late 1914 in a forest somewhere in France was rather noisy due to constant gunfire.
"Forward!" - a bloodied Bavarian volunteer officer commanded - "Forward!" - he shouted yet again, firing at what seemed to be a Frenchman. The battered remnants of his unit followed him. One of them shot another Frenchman as they went through the forest, charging to break out of here.
Suddenly, that particular volunteer heard an odd noise. He stopped, and was afraid to turn around. When he did, he noticed an odd, big, white, furry shape. It had big claws, too. Enraged, it tore apart the unfortunate volunteer, thus making sure he doesn't one day beat that... thing's internesional genocide record.
Thus died Adolph Hilter. I mean Hitler.
---
This is a rather brief description of the consequences of the aforementioned occurance in 1930-1950 period.
Hitlerless as it was, Germany continued under conservative/moderate rule with growing socialist involvement. Eventually, in 1936, there is a military coup caused by the infuriation with the SLOWNESS of the reparation decrease and the generally humiliating peace terms. A military junta led by Erich von Mannstein took over, combating inflation and in the same time stopping reparations and beginning re-armament. Mannstein played carefully on the "Red Menace" card with France and Britain, and thus was allowed to do all this (note that there is no remilitarization of the Rhine, no Anchluss and no Munich Congress); meanwhile, he secretly negotiated with Stalin about Poland. Mannstein wanted 1914 borders restored, in the east at least. Stalin wanted the same, and clearly, the two leaders struck common ground. In 1937, Colonel Koc, a Polish nationalist and government strongman, came to power in Poland. Mannstein claimed "mistreatment of Germans" and invaded Poland before the western powers could as much as say anything. The rearmed German army DID face some problems with the Polish one, but the risky attack towards Warsaw paid off. Colonel Koc was overthrown, Poland ceded the old German lands back. Then, just as the Germans withdrew, the power struggle that followed in Poland was exploited by the USSR. Soviet forces crushed the stunned (two sneak attacks in a row) Polish forces quite handily, facing major resistance only around Warsaw itself. Eastern Polish territories were divided between BelSSR and UkrSSR, the remnants were at first declared a "people's republic" and later annexed as the Polish Soviet Socialist Republic into USSR. Mannstein condemned it "in the harshest of terms", but did nothing "for the sake of peace". Almost immediately after, the newly-gained positions allowed the Soviets to stage the 1920s plan for Pribaltic annexation once again. Well-organized communist coups took place in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Soviet forces entered to "defeat the counter-revolutionary forces". After that, the Polish annexation scenario was carried out. Shocked, Britain, France, Germany and Italy signed the Elminau Entante and guaranteed territorial integrity of Finland, Czechoslovakia, Romania and Turkey. But Stalin was satisfied with the western border for now anyway. Meanwhile, he begun fostering good relations with Turkey and with Spain, where the Nationalists were finally defeated in mid-1938 due to bad organization of Entante intervention.
Thus, a "cold war" has started in Europe. But Stalin by then switched his attention from there.
In 1939, a Japanese army (as in OTL) invaded Mongolia. It was crushed with humiliating ease by Zhukov at Nomonhan. As this time around, there was no serious "fascist threat", Stalin ordered a counter-attack. Superior Soviet doctrine and weaponry was used well by Zhukov, who, with reinforcements, blitzkrieged through much of Manchuria. Stalin's alliance with Chiang Kai Shek was reactivated, and the Nationalist Chinese started an offensive of their against the Japanese. Concerned with the Soviets possibly overruning Japan (after their fleet won a series of minor skirmishes) and getting all of its lands, the Americans decided to attack Japan as well, claiming war atrocities in China. January 1st 1940 became the "Day that Will Live in Infamy", as Emperor Hirohito put it, as the American sneak attack on Japan caused major damage to their fleet. Pacific colonies were secured by the quickly-mobilized marines, but at this point American luck ran out - the Japanese naval counteroffensive defeated their fleet in the First Battle of Luzon, while attempts to seize Okinawa were repulsed. Soviets meanwhile bogged down in South Korea, after a naval defeat at Sapporo. Stalin decided, while the steady offensive went on, to use his secret weapon... Soon after, Japanese-occupied Sakhalin faced, after an intensive air battle, an airborne attack. The Japanese were surprised by it, and failed to use their opportunity to destroy it in the earnest. Eventually, the Soviets managed to sneak through some reinforcements and to establish a fairly working supply route, enabling their forces to overrun Sakhalin. This seriously frightened the Americans, who accelerated their new attack preparations. It must be noted that by then the Japanese "dunkirked" out of China and Korea. They prepared to face the onslaught on the Home Islands...
It was then that the British intervenned, proposing to hold negotiations. They suggested war reparations and some territorial cessions that the Japanese accepted, as it gave them a peace with honor and a chance for a later revenge. Manchuria was directly joined with the USSR; in Korea, a People's Democratic Republic was set up as a puppet state. South Sakhalin went to USSR as well. USA got the Japanese Pacific island colonies, but to the enragement of the American general public, Taiwan and Okinawa remained Japanese. Stalin viewed this as acceptable, and signed peace, followed by Nationalist China out of which the Japanese withdrew and to which they paid reparations. USA was very bitter about it, but faced with the (rather, lets be true, unlikely) prospect of a war with Japan AND the Entante all alone decided to accept this.
The remaining 40s were filled with minor tension, of which the most notable three included Peruvian military expansion at the behalf of Ecuador, Brazilian-Argentinian war over Uruguay which Brazil won and in which it annexed Uruguay and some borderlands (causing Argentina to improve relations with USSR following a "People's Front" coup) and finally the Italian-Greek war (1941-1942) which ended in an Italian defeat and the loss of the Dodecanese. It was also a time of preparation and brooding. USA was brooding at the Soviets for getting more then they did, at the Entante from preventing it from getting more then the USSR and at Japan for not losing and was preparing to take revenge at whoever seems the weakest - the fleet was being built up rapidly. Brazil and Argentina prepared for rematch. The Entante generally was preparing to face an "inevitable" Soviet attack, and was also trying to unite Europe in its alliance - not very succesfully, as Hungary and Yugoslavia had improving relations with USSR due to large amounts of shared enemies. Stalin, for his part, didn't like the Entante a whole lot for barring the western expansion, and was thus further industrializing and adopting the lessons learned in Manchuria, as well as building up his military quantity-wise. Oh, and he also integrated Mongolia and Sinkiang after there was no Japan left to limit expansion in that direction. Oh, and Japan wasn't happy neither, it has surrendered on the topic of land wars and instead decided to fight a naval-and-aerial war in the future. It was making some approaches towards the Entante, which made the Americans seriously wonder whom did they hate less, the Soviets or the Entante. Thus far, it is a draw.
The British already let go of Iraq, and were now considering creating a parliamentary monarchy bi-lingual state in Jordan (basically Transjordannia and Israel). That project is the most popular in Britain. Not in Jordan, though, where the Arabs are bitterly polarized on the "Jewish Question" - mostly, those in Palestine want to kill the Jews off, while those in Jordan are beginning to lean towards the British version just because it makes the Palestinians mad. Meanwhile, the Egyptians plot.
In 1950, the technologic levels are largely "1943", though the missile, jet plane and nuclear research is coming along VERY slowly. The Entante nuclear project is doing the best, with USA and USSR behind it by a significant margin.