Good to see new chapters.
Another glimpse at the second Russo-German war at that, too.
And more details on the conservative revolution.... They then continued ruling throughout the second war, right?
For a given value of 'rule'. These were not the most organised people, and many of the important decisions get made by the traditional elite - military officers, top-tier civil service, court officials.
Also who will get the "honor" (and later the blame) for authorizing the atomic bombs dropped on Moscow and who knows where else. Will it be the Kaiser, the Chancellor or some military leader?
Nothing on this level gets decided without the emperor's signature. Of course it will be talked about in the general staff and Militärkabinett, but he says yes or no.
What's the obsession with dropping A-bombs on capitals? Sometimes - like here - it's Moscow, sometimes it's Berlin, but there's no precedence in OTL for it, and the US could definitely gotten away with nuking Tokyo.
I think we already know that the bomb is going to drop on Moscow ITTL. And from what I recall Germany's situation in the war against Russia will be much more desperate than the USA vs. Japan. If there's only 100km between the Russian army and Berlin, you are in a very different position than the USA who had essentially already won the war for all intents and purposes. You presumably only have one or at most two bombs available in the medium term. So you got to make it count. Nuking two smaller cities in the hopes that Russia gets the message could very well be considered too risky.
Not Moscow. Too risky to decapitate a frangible, strategically 'deep' enemy at the time you want to make peace. It may be because i wrote there is peace in Europe forevermoer 'because people like to keep their capital cities'. Indeed, everyone can't help imagine what would happen if one of those bombs took out paris, london, Berlin or Rome. but I originally planned for Zarizyn to be the target. not entirely sure that's plausible, but there's no shortage.
Im not sure if this timeline Moscow became the Capital.
Didn't it effectively become capital during the first German-Russian war when the Tsar moved there in light of the revoltiness of the Petersburgers, then also considering it to be much more suitable to the traditional land-tsar-orthodoxy russia?
Yes, and it stayed that way because a) the PU have a Holy Russia thing, b) St Petersburg is too close to the Finns and Balts and c) St Petersburg is kinda not all there any more after becoming the accidental demonstration model of how a firestorm works.
Whats the situation with denmark? They tend to be very close to britian and russia. Germany is dominates the east now but have been bleed, france is wants war at some point. UK is now being forced out of isolationism.
Denmark is in an uncomfortable place. Russia's not anyone to be close to. Britain is effectively their guarantor, but they still need to tread carefully, wedged in between Germany and a pro-German (and not exactly friendly) Sweden. Closely aligned with Norway as a not-exactly-pro-German state with no interest in alienating their biggest trading partner and worryingly powerful neighbour, but precious little liking for them, either. Making good money exporting agricultural products, but not exactly rich as European countries go. Very much aware there is no leeway for political manoeuvering in their place when the hammer drops.