The idea of this story is to explore what would happen in a universe where Germany won World War II and Nazism ends up falling at the beginning of the 90s, where a democratic Germany will have to deal with its Nazi past and assume responsibilities before the world of the atrocities that little by little will be known.
I am not a native English speaker, so if there is any incoherence in the words, I hope you will excuse me.
Chapter I
Winds of Change

Year 1989. The Serbo-Croat war had been a disaster. 30,000 dead German soldiers and more than 200,000 million Reichsmarks spent for nothing. In the end, Serbia had swallowed whole Croatia and reformed Yugoslavia, which was soon recognized by most of the international community. As if the defeat were not enough, the horrible images of the aerial bombardments and the civilian victims of the war had shaken the conscience of the younger German generations and had initiated a wave of historical revisionism in Germany itself. Something similar had happened in the late 60's during the third Greek-Turkish war but the victory of Greece in that war coupled with the brutal repression of the Hermann Göring regime had drowned the incipient movement of protest at that time.
The economic bleed brought about by the war was compounded by the boycott that the recently formed Latin Union (France, Italy and Spain) was submitting to the Reich, one to which Boris Yeltsin's Russia had enthusiastically joined. From one moment to another, German exports had fallen by 35% and the Reich proved bitterly that it did not have the political or economic influence to force a change in relations. What was even worse was that Pope John Paul II tirelessly preached anti-Nazism for the world, causing the antipathy to the Reich to be in crescendo.
The old Chancellor Otto Remer had things very clear, a profound internal reform was needed that made the regime appear more benign to the world and reassure the uncontrollable student protests that were unleashed throughout the Reich. It was thus that the biggest reform since the proclamation of the Great Germanic Reich in 1949 was promulgated, the Umänderung. Among other things, the reform established freedom of the press, ended the segregation of the Slavs by converting them into full citizens and converted the Reich into a Confederation of autonomous states composed of Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Norway.
The reform was nevertheless rejected by the Reichstag, both by the softer factions of the party, led by Helmut Kohl, and by the most fanatical faction, led by Josef Bachmann. Since 1951 when the Great German Reich was declared it had been stipulated that there would be two sources of power in the Reich, the Chancellor, representative of the will of Adolf Hitler who would be elected by the former Chancellor through his political testament and the Reichstag, representative of the German people whose members would be elected through popular votes.
At the beginning this system worked because, being a single-party state, the Reichstag simply approved the decrees of the Chancellor without further ado. However, over time the state had turned to a de facto multiparty system with the same NSDAP factions ranging from Nazi fanatics to strasserists, conservative Catholics and liberals. This time the president of the Reichstag, Helmut Kohl, had opposed the reform of Remer and demanded that the Reichstag be granted legislative initiative and also demanded the release of political prisoners including Rudi Dutschke, serving a life sentence since 1970. The project was forwarded to the chancellery with the respective observations. For the Chancellor there was no possible alternative and even with the opposition of the SS he made the corrections that were demanded and he forwarded the project to the Reichstag, being approved with 70% of positive votes. Would Remer's reform work?