To Live And Die For America, Pt. One
December 1942-February 1943
In Panic
Following secession of the Mexican States and their alignment with the Axis, and Japan and Germany's cooperatively prepared declaration of war on the USSA, and Brazil's abandonment of alliance, the Communist Party fought alone. Half of the American troops intended to invade Japan and end their imperialism in Asia had to divert back home to defend from the National Synarchist Union of Mexico that received military aid from Germany. The troops that did sail for Japan made a heroic offensive in the Philippines which led to the recapture of the islands.
With the world dividing and the Communist international bond dissolving, Chancellor Browder went into a period of isolation. Refusing to answer the telephone, refusing to see anyone. He had made some disastrous decisions leading up to the war and they had come back to bite him. After three days, the Communist Party had unanimously agreed to override the Chancellor's authority and break into his office. After the door came down, they saw the Chancellor at his desk with an augur of fear. He had no doubt that they had come to impeach him, but instead they had come to plead with him to lead the nation towards victory. The Chancellor had gained weight, looked haggard, and had not changed his clothes.
With a growing tiredness from traveling, he demanded that Joseph Stalin come to America for diplomatic meeting. During an important, strategic conference, America and Russia agreed to an alliance. Following the signing of the
Hull-Molotov Treaty, a rush of Russian soldiers came through Alaska to aid America from Japanese, Mexican, and German attacks. Germany, now infuriated with their eastern neighbor, began massing on the Russian-German border.
Cordell Hull, Secretary of State of the USSA during the treaty
Friends were key to this world war. Earl Browder realized this while listening to his top advisers. Egypt was the key to distracting Italy, which could otherwise lead to Axis control of the Suez Canal and thus throw the war into immeasurable odds in favor of Germany. Chancellor Browder, in one of the only acts of giving dealt by his administration, shipped supplies of oil to Egypt and Sweden to aid in their defense. Although the American economy received a slight hit from the large export of oil, the aid immensely helped the Communist friends.
Disaster
Tens of thousands of soldiers returning from Australia were promised naval aid. In fact, during the infamous Dewey presidency, a law was passed that dictated that all transports must be accompanied by warships. Chancellor Browder, losing his warships by the day, refused to aid their return as they were needed on the seas to combat the Japanese. On a calm and quiet day, with sea salt in the air and the sounds of birds overhead, the navy passed by Pacific islands and enjoyed the spring breeze. As the calling of birds stopped, the seas seemed to follow the breathing of the sailors. The shriek of fighters filled the sky with laughter, and the roar of the enemy ship pushed great waves into the ocean. The soldiers, fighting back with guns, were mowed down by the large artillery of the planes. The hulls were ripped apart by Japanese missile cruisers. Tens of thousands of men lost their lives.
In the Gulf of Mexico, the navy was overwhelmed by a Mexican offensive. The entire American navy in the Caribbean was lost, and Mexican forces took advantage of it.
Japanese assaults then extended to Hawaii, where Japanese soldiers took islands one at a time, where many Japanese-Americans welcomed to Japanese soldiers with tears in their eyes, thanking them for freeing them from the Browder dictatorship.
With buildings setting ablaze and collapsing, Mexican forces pushes through central America, capturing the cities and purging them of non-Catholic influence.
Mexico's invasion of Cuba was successful, as the local farmers gladly aided the fascists. Pushing out American troops, the island joined the Mexican Union but formally declared itself independent as the Communist State of Cuba.
With allies among friends firing at the incoming Mexican forces, the Mexican-American border became a forsaken land. With poison being carried by the wind, soldiers had to wear terrifying masks, and the thick fog led to hundreds of friendly fire victims. Screams and war-cries sounded distant and alien. Obliterated by a prepared Mexican offensive led by modern tanks, the border was abandoned and the state of Texas was lost.
On the Atlantic, a wave of Nazi submarines assaulted the American navy. On high alert with high stress and high blood pressure, the ships diligently patrolled the seas and sank several submarines before they could do serious damage. The quantity of Nazi Germany's assault soon overwhelmed the eastern coast, and by 1943 the entire American navy in the Atlantic was lost. Eastern cities were in panic, and blame was directed towards the Chancellor. A wave of opposition again arose against the Chancellor, and this time it seemed to go unpunished. Anti-propaganda was plastered on the streets, portraying Browder as the devil. Many soldiers abandoned their posts and fled the nation.
With the streets in panic, and the enemies closing in, the Chancellor began to weep in silence. He was losing control of his country, and his military. The soldiers that were educated to listen to the Communist Party without question, and fight for the Communist ideology, learned to live and die for America.