Foreign reactions to America's war against the Ottomans were mixed. Some foreign leaders thought the US was doing the right thing in helping the Songhai and Russia and attempting to defeat Turkish tyranny. Others thought the United States should only liberate Russian and Songhai lands and only defend it's borders from the Ottomans. And yet some foreign leaders opposed the war altogether, claiming that the US was a menace to the civilized world. Strangely enough, one of the nations most upset about the war was the newly re-formed Iriquois state.
A while after the war began, the Iriquois monarch requested to meet with the President. He minced no words, denouncing the American declaration of war, and referring to the President as an "uncivilized brute".
The now-island nation of China was also with the Iriquois in believing the US to be a menace to the world.
But the United States was not without it's supporters. Persia, although small, supported the United States in denouncing the Ottomans.
Japan seemed neutral in their opinion of the war, and the United States' relations with them stayed about as good as they could be with a communist nation. And Japan continued to trade with the US.
France did not seem to oppose the war either. They continued trading with the United States, and even allowed an American general to pass through their land in order to more quickly get to the northern front.
The Aztecs, however, were a different matter. They did not seem to openly oppose the war, but relations with them remained strained.
And in January of 2130, the treaty ending the Aztec-American war expired. This was slightly worrying, and the US considered how possibly easy it might be for the Ottomans to convince the Aztecs to join the war on their side, since they had lost so much land to America during the war. But only time would tell....