Multipolar Europe after WWII

Two multipolar Western Europes I've seen in two timelines lately:

1941: Hitler's Mediterranean Strategy- U.S. liberates Eastern Europe during WWII, Stalin left with only East Germany and Finland. West Germany is U.K.-influenced, South Germany is American/French/Italian-influenced. Tripolar division of Europe into blocs:

The EEC is founded in 1957, having the members France, South Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and Italy. After South German chancellor Figl and Austrian chancellor Raab negotiate, it's extended in 1963 to Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Yugoslavia.

Great Britain founds the EFTA as a counterpart in 1960, consisting of the Scandinavian states, GB, West Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Portugal. When the EEC extends, the EFTA in return lets the Baltic states join in 1966.


For All Time- In the 1960s, Spain, France, Portugal, and Sardinia "are tied together by bonds of fascism and language, if not by any ties more formal than interlinking defensive treaties" (Vichy France declared war on the Axis and Francois Darlan is the premier, Sardinia is where the post-Mussolini fascist Ciano government fled to after communists took over the mainland). Great Britain, Sicily, and the Low Countries are the liberal democracies with a pet post-German state in Palatinate. All of continental Europe east of East Germany to Austria to Italy are Soviet or satellites.
 
Top