AHC: Japan and germany situations reversed.

Japan is defeated first, with a joint invasion from the U.S.S.R. and U.S.A., and conferences are held to divide it into spheres of influence. It's government is totally abolished, and Japan is compltely de-imperialized; the military leadership is put on trial, the Emperor is probably killed by supernationalists to prevent him being on trial.

Germany, upon seeing how the U.S. and U.K. are trying the Japanese military leadership, as well as how they abolished the Japanese government and divided the country (and gabve half of it to filthy reds), decides to ditch the fuhrer and surrender unconditionally to the U.S. and U.K. - this is as the U.S.S.R. has just reached Warsaw, before it has reached Germany proper except maybe poznan and southern east prussia.

Also what are the consequences?
 
The reason Japan didn't have something like what happened to Germany, IIRC, was because the Japanese religious practice of ancestor worship would have made it really hard to do -- would piss people off a lot, and whatnot. Not to mention the importance of the Emperor in Shinto.
 

iddt3

Donor
The reason Japan didn't have something like what happened to Germany, IIRC, was because the Japanese religious practice of ancestor worship would have made it really hard to do -- would piss people off a lot, and whatnot. Not to mention the importance of the Emperor in Shinto.

Also Japan had no convenient land borders to invade.
 
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