The North Star is Red: a Wallace Presidency, KMT Victory, Alternate Cold War TL

Kennedy going the way he’d have wanted, I’m sure!
A shitload of drugs and alcohol. This is who killed him probably

When you read about Kennedy's health, it is miracle that he lasted as long as he did.

He was so ill, that he had already been given last rites several times in his life.

Twin Devils dancing on the face of mankind.

This JFK is certainly more ruthless, but it is unfair to call him a devil.

I also hesistate to call ol'Lavrentiy a devil, since that is an insult to devils.
 
Note: For any new readers, please use the bookmarks because my chapters aren't actually posted in chronological order.

Considered, but rejected titles include: The Place Promised In Our Early Days. So without ado, here's the POD intro post.
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The 1944 DNC and End of World War II

Wide swaths of Democratic party leaders wanted to chase Henry Wallace off the ticket, feeling that he was too close to organized labor, while Southern Democrats wanted him off, viewing him as too hostile to "Southern interests" as vaguely defined. Roosevelt generally did not favor Henry Wallace either, but did not actively move against him. During the critical spring before the 1944 Democratic National Convention, Roosevelt sent Wallace to China and the Soviet Union, where while fulfilling normal Vice Presidential duties, he also famously brought large amounts of honeydew seeds to China, causing honeydew to be forever known as "Wallace melons" in China.

The President's favored choice to replace Wallace was Missouri Senator Harry S. Truman, but on June 19, under pressure by his family (they did not want to move to the White House and Truman did not want them to suffer in the presidential spotlight), Truman, after lightly saying no to Roosevelt and Democratic party leaders, forcibly told them no, stating that he would help support Roosevelt's original pick, South Carolina Governor James F. Byrnes. The convention vote was remarkably close between Wallace and Byrnes. Although most Southerners supported Byrnes, it was not unanimous, because many Southerners raised questions about Byrnes's Catholic faith. Byrnes in fact had spent much of his career (as a Catholic) ferociously opposed to the Ku Klux Klan and although those delegates had no intention of voting for Wallace, they weren't lining up behind Byrnes either. In addition, organized labor lined up almost uniformly against Byrnes, not out of hostility to Byrnes, but just due to friendliness towards Wallace.

Roosevelt clearly favored Byrnes and told a few delegates this, but he couldn't exactly openly campaign against his own sitting Vice President. For one, Roosevelt actually liked Wallace a lot and actually would have liked to see him as VP if it weren't just for overwhelming opposition in his own party. In the first ballot, Wallace triumphed with 529/1176 delegates (short of the 588 needed to clinch the race), with Byrnes trailing far behind at 220 delegates (nevertheless in a strong second). On the second ballot, whereupon most of the other candidates lost their support (most endorsing Byrnes), Wallace only increased to 555/1176, while Byrnes had surged to 473. At that point, most of the other candidates dropped out, leaving Wallace at 578 and Byrnes at 521. Although Wallace was 10 delegates short of a majority, Byrnes judged victory to be unlikely and hoping to keep the myth of a "united Democratic Party", dropped out and endorsed Wallace, whereupon many of his allies reacted in fury. Regardless, with only minor candidates left on the ballot, Wallace took 788 delegates (most of the rest refused to vote), a clear supermajority.

FDR, having mixed feelings about the outcomes, realized he could live with this. The 1944 elections, much like 1940, were a landslide victory for FDR and Wallace against Dewey and Bricker. For his part, FDR made sure to prep Wallace for the Presidency, realizing that his own health might be failing. Ultimately on April 12, 1945, President Roosevelt suffered a fatal stroke. With the Japanese and Nazi Empires on the brink of collapse, Henry Wallace was sworn in as the 33rd President of the United States. Henry Stimson only informed President Wallace of the atomic bomb on April 25th, two weeks before the surrender of Nazi Germany on May 8th. Berlin was ruled out as a target simply because it was currently under siege by the Soviet Union. Wallace was loathe to authorize continuation of the Manhattan Project, until he was reassured by the non-generals, aka his cabinet members, including Secretary of State Stettinius) that it would ultimately save lives.

Realizing that he was unpopular among many elements of the Democratic Party, Wallace believed his strength relied on continuing to stick with old Roosevelt loyalists, many who had worked with him for years and liked him, such as Henry Stimson, Frances Perkin, Harold Ickes, and Henry Morgenthau (who had originally recruited Wallace). Unfortunately for the Americans, this meant increasing reliance on Harry Dexter White, Morgenthau's chief aide who had Henry Wallace's close confidence. Unbeknownst to Wallace - White was a spy for the Soviet Union and eagerly leaked all of Wallace's internal discussions to the Soviet Union. There was absolutely no shuffle in the cabinet, but many of these friendships would be soon tested.

The Potsdam Conference began on mid-July, between the Big Three, Joseph Stalin of the Soviet Union, Winston Churchill of the United Kingdom (replaced in the middle by Clement Attlee), and Henry Wallace of the United States. France was notably excluded, a decision made before Wallace's ascension (FDR and De Gaulle did not like each other). The biggest issue of Potsdam were a proposed Soviet entry against Japan, the division of Germany, and the economic future of Germany. Much to the dismay of Churchill, Wallace agreed with most of the Soviet proposals, often siding with the Soviets against the United Kingdom. The only difference between the two was that the Soviets only pretended to be super-interested in pushing the Polish border to the Western Neisse rivers (it was already decided that the Oder would be used). In reality, they ceded most of Silesia (using the Eastern Neisse as the border) in "exchange" for Stalin's true goal, the dismemberment of Germany. Roosevelt at Yalta had floated that possibility but largely did not approve. As another "concession", Stalin gave up on his goal of extracting mass industrial reparations from Germany.

After all, having dismembered Germany, Stalin could just take his desired wealth from his proposed occupation zone. East Germany, including Berlin, was detached and to be a "Prussosaxon Democratic Republic" under Soviet influence. The Northwest was detached into the Republic of Hanover, under British influence, while the Southeast was divided into a French-dominated Swabian-Rhenish Republic and an American-dominated Free State of Bavaria. The supposed dismemberment of Germany didn't actually last very long, but Stalin still viewed it as a triumph, heavily aided by his spies in the U.S. government. In theory, heavy reparations were due from each nation to their respective power, though they all did something different with it. The United Kingdom and United States reinvested their share of reparations in the economy, while the French split their share 50/50 between France and the locals (the Soviets did not share). This quickly caused a horrible, very personal split between former friends Henry Morgenthau and Henry Wallace.

Wallace, a strong believer in Christian humanitarianism, demanded that the reparations from Germany be immediately reinvested in American Bavaria. Morgenthau demanded that Bavaria be deindustrialized. Eleanor Roosevelt, also an advocate of a harsher peace against Germany, similarly viewed Wallace as a weak leader. Morgenthau's resignation caused a walkout of most of Morgenthau's closest cronies, leaving the American President increasingly isolated. When Wallace sought to replace Morgenthau, he found the task relatively difficult, as Republicans, conservative Democrats, and Morgenthau-types all refused to deal with him. However, most FDR-loyalists stuck with Wallace, as FDR himself had rejected the Morgenthau Plan (after initially approving) once he realized its contents. Although it proved not to be a blessing, at least a few Morgenthau types stuck with Wallace, namely Harry Dexter White (albeit only to spy on him for Stalin). Wallace appointed William Davis, a man trusted by both labor and management, largely because he was the only person Wallace could get through an increasingly hostile Senate.

In addition on Potsdam, in exchange for a quicker Soviet declaration of war on Japan, Wallace agreed to partition (though not dismember) Japan into various occupation zones, as follows. Amusingly to many in China, especially Mao Zedong, Chiang Kai-Shek was given an occupation zone he neither asked for nor wanted.

CaKyDhLW0AAZngy.jpg:large


On August 6th, 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on the shipping industrial city of Hiroshima. The Soviets had advanced warning, as Wallace had informed Stalin of the development of the bomb and the two powers had worked out a secret agreement to cooperate towards "peaceful atomic development." The atomic bombing killed an estimated 90,000 to 150,000 Japanese, mostly civilians, shocking the nation. When the US military planned on dropping a second atomic bomb, President Wallace vetoed the decision, horrified by the death toll of the first atomic bombing. After a very nasty fight with his generals, Wallace refused to listen to their counsel, claiming that the planned Soviet intervention would force a Japanese surrender. On August 9th, the Soviet Union declared war on the Empire of Japan, crushing the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo. On August 15th, the Showa Emperor officially surrendered in a radio address in the famous Jewel Voice Broadcast. World War II was over. President Wallace declared that a "global people's revolution against want, hate, fear, and fascism" had ensured global peace and that the new powers, including the Soviet Union of Joseph Stalin, on behalf of the new United Nations, would provide for perpetual peace and freedom in the world. He was wrong.
I feel obliged to point out, that
1) FDR wanted Wallace on the ticket.
2) FDR floated Douglas or Truman as possible compromises with no bias
3) Organized Labor hated Byrnes because he had a union busting history
4) the US Military OPPOSED the bombing, Leahy, Eisenhower, MacArthur, Halsey, Nimitz, King and Arnold all denounced the bombing as militarily unnecessary, morally reprehensible or BOTH. The US intelligence predicted the USSR entry would cause surrender. Telegrams from Japan to their Soviet ambassador literally said 'Unconditional Surrender is the only obstacle to peace', the Japanese sent envoys to Allen Dulles in Bern and pressed for peace even the Portuguese legation was making peace feelers
 
Chapter 192 - Nilfgrads
Nilfgrads
After years fighting a nightmarish war in East Indonesia, Soviet resolve had run out. Veterans returning home from the Second Indonesian War spoke of "Nilfgrads" (from the term NILF, or National Islamic Liberation Front), the tendency of NILF militants to create heavily dug-in mountain fortresses. Increasingly, these veterans became some of the most radicalized vanguards of the new revolution, demanding an end to the war in Indonesia as well as a fundamental reform of Soviet government, and setting up blockades along the roads that were also quickly referred to as Nilfgrads. These Nilfgrads were instrumental to the Moscow Commune gaining almost total control of traffic into and outside of Moscow - which they inevitably turned to their advantage.

The death of Beria threw the Politburo into a panic, and it was begrudgingly agreed that the least damaging way to deal with an increasing threat was to invite all four dominant members of the Moscow Commune's leadership into the Central Committee of the Communist Party, a shocking act to most in the Communist Party. To most of the world, as well as the Warsaw Pact, it seemed as if the Soviet government had simply surrendered to an insurrection. Indeed, the Politburo, largely stuck in Moscow, saw no choice but to capitulate to the demands of the Moscow Commune after it was clear that the Red Army was not going to get involved. The fate of Beria made many of them fear what could happen to them and their families if they didn't "ride the revolution", so they did choose to give way.

The denunciation from the Warsaw Pact was fierce and swift. In the span of a few days, almost the entire Warsaw Pact minus Bulgaria-Macedonia penned a furious letter slamming "Soviet revisionism" and calling on the Soviet Union to return to "orthodox Marxism-Leninism." Initially, the response of the Communist Party was to reassure its allies and the public that although the Central Committee had added new members, it would not be giving any leadership positions to the new members. The response did nothing to calm the country down. In fact, furious Soviet sailors mutinied in Kola. In the November Storm, Soviet sailors under an officer by the name of Valery Sablin seized control of the Kola Naval Base, declaring the creation of a Revolutionary People's Government in support of the 'Second Revolution'. Although the RPG would step down after a month, its creation would sufficiently spook the Soviet government into capitulating again.

Fearing the creation of future governments like the Moscow Commune, the Soviet government flip-flopped again, announcing the appointment of each of the new ''Gang of Four" to ministerial positions that significantly enhanced their power bases. For all intents and purposes, Andropov was put in charge of the NKVD, which dramatically strengthened their influence on Soviet government. Moreover, appointing Snezhnevsky to a position of influence did not actually curb the violent excesses of his supporters, who quickly established a de facto reign of terror in Soviet academia. Emboldened by the success of the "November Storm", Soviet workers often simply tossed out disliked local governments and replaced them with new "revolutionary governments" staffed by members of the self-managing enterprise unions introduced by Beria's reform. These new governments were loyal on paper to Moscow but essentially autonomous. The Soviet central government was amusingly unable to act against them, largely because they actually exceeded all of the original quotas despite the tendency of people to be clubbed to death in "revolutionary struggles." In addition, the flip-flop further shredded Soviet credibility abroad. The final blow came a day later, when Foreign Minister Shevardnadze (with the support of the Four) announced that the USSR would be seeking to extricate itself from the war in East Indonesia, entering into direct negotiation with NILF leaders for the first time - which shocked both the Warsaw Pact and the Americans (who were about to vote for their new President).

Although peace negotiations would not be concluded until 1965, the eventual terms would eventually further infuriate the rest of the Warsaw Pact. The Soviet Union would withdraw from East Indonesia and NILF would cease armed resistance, on the condition of the other powers (namely Pakistan and North China) also withdrawing their powers. At no point had the Pakistanis or North Chinese actually consented to these terms, which infuriated both nations. However, the true crisis for the Warsaw Pact would eventually start due to an unexpected development in Poland...
 
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