Post WW2 Europe with multiple EU's

Ok, so how to achive this? What POD is required?

upload_2018-9-17_2-16-36.png


Red - Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

Blue - European Economic Union and European defence union (Federal Republic of Germany, Kingdom of Netherlands, Kingdom of Belgium, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, French Republic, Kingdom of Italy, Kingdom of Spain, Portuguese Republic)

Grey - Atlantic free trade treaty and NATO - (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, United States of America, Canada, Republic of Ireland)

Brown - Nordic Council (economic and military union, without common political institutions) - Republic of Finland, Kingdom of Denmark, Kingdom of Norway, Kingdom of Sweden, Republic of Iceland

Yellow - Central European Free Trade Agreement and Mutual defence agreement (started as Visegrad bloc, expanded in mid 50s) - Republic of Poland, Czechoslovakian Federal Republic, Republic of Austria, Kingdom of Hungary, Kingdom of Romania, Kingdom of Bulgaria, Republic of Cyprus, Kingdom of Greece, Kingdom of Albania, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia).

Orange - neutral Republic of Turkey

Is this map possible?
How would Cold war look like?
 
I doubt that could happen immediately after WW2 without something POD during the war or even earlier. Soviet Union effectively occupied most of East Europe so it not be going form its own economy alliance. And Finland was quiet much under Soviet thumb so it not accept Finland forming any alliance even if not military alliance with other burgeois Nordic nations.
 
Ok, so how to achive this? What POD is required?

[SNIP]

Yellow - Central European Free Trade Agreement and Mutual defence agreement (started as Visegrad bloc, expanded in mid '50s)...
Well the obvious answer is that you either have to have a radically different World War II to our own, or one where at least the Soviet Union did much worse. When you write 'Post WW2' in the title does that mean after our timeline's Second World War, or can it be any Second World War that occurred some time after the First? Germany with its modern borders, likewise Poland where they've been 'moved' westwards, Rhodes being Turkish etc. all require some careful working around.


And Finland was quiet much under Soviet thumb so it not accept Finland forming any alliance even if not military alliance with other burgeois Nordic nations.
Depends on how far back you push the point of divergence. Have the Winter War be something of a mixed bag for the Soviets so that they keep all of Petsamo, which IIRC they captured in our timeline, instead of just the Rybachi peninsula but don't get the lease of the Hanko peninsula for a naval base. The British have better luck in April of 1940 and working with Norwegians the German invasion is defeated. With a Western Allied nation sharing a border, albeit a short and very northern one, the Finns feel just secure enough to not launch the Continuation War, and like many other countries declare war on Germany in 1945 towards the end of the war. As one of the Allied nations and not having had to sign peace agreements with the Soviets whilst they would still have to give the USSR due consideration they'd have a much freer hand in their choices.
 
Top