A full fledged Soviet-Chinese alliance plus worldwide decolonization rebellions and a still isolationist USA in the 50s = Red Alert Scenario.
But to answer your question, while the general civilian consensus would point to complacency, the political and elites' attitudes would likely still...
A panicked (or badly advised) Chiang Kai-shek secretly offers docking rights to the Germans in exchange for advisors and weapons, and Germany complies, hoping that future U-boat campaigns from the Chinese mainland can destabilize the British Asian possessions and trade if China holds; but this...
Without a mighty Soviet Union, the Nazis may not exist or be a viable party, and their elements cannot ascend within the DVNP. Without Hitler's rise, there's a good chance that the SPD and KPD are tied into a coalition, and Germany becomes a communist state instead. WW2 would be VERY different...
Wait, did you just cancel the T-90 program? I urge you to reconsider, India has shown great interest in a heavily upgraded version of the T-72 and is potentially willing to acquire up to 1000 of these units, so it would be a huge income boost for our industries.
(Based on OTL T-90 Bhishma...
1) B. It doesn't seem like India will drift away from the Soviet partnership, it's not in their interest to do it, so respect the democratic procedure
2. Support of the plans of @Kriss and @Rysesaka
The 1942 Río Protocol can now be enforced a bit more forcefully in favor of Peru, with American arbitration being more closely followed. It's likely to butterfly away the 1981 Falso Paquisha conflict and the 1995 Cenepa war.
Curious to see places like New Zealand in the top10 list instead of Argentina and Mexico. These two had all kinds of natural resources and a significant industrial base. In the case of Argentina, it was still richer per capita than Brazil by far, for example, and its debts would be wiped out...
Peruvian here. IF (and that's a big if) we manage to stabilize the food and advanced imports situation long enough, perhaps we can do well. Especially since it doesn't seem that the nuclear exchange was large enough to cause a true nuclear winter. Food will be in high demand and Peru is still an...
There were serious propositions of true Pan-asianism in Japan after WW1, but they never had much support from the Japanese establishment unfortunately. If they succeeded it'd had to be before the end of the Taisho democracy most likely, since the armed forces were always expansionist.