What's the statuses of the following Axis collaborators of OTL?
Belgium
--Staf Declerq
--Léon Degrelle
--Hendrik Elias
--Ward Hermans
--Joris Van Severen
Burma
--Ba Maw
Croatia
--Mile Budak
--Slavko Kvartenik
--Nikola Mandić
--Ante Pavelić
Czechoslovakia
--Emil Hácha
--Jozef Tiso
Denmark
--Frits Clausen
Hungary
--Ferenc Szálasi
India
--Subhas Chandra Bose (Does he lead a successful rebellion, secure independence, and perhaps be a prominent politician in the new Bharat?)
Latvia
--Viktors Arājs
Lithuania
--Kazys Škirpa
Netherlands
--Anton Mussert
Norway
--Vidkun Quisling (Collaboration with the invading British?)
Mengjiang
--Demchugdongrub
Philippines
--José P. Laurel
Russia
--Sergei Bunyachenko
--Bronislav Kaminski
--Konstantin Rodzaevsky (Secretary General of the Russian Fascist Party and Japanese collaborator IOTL. With the Whites wining the Civil War, does he rise to prominence?)
--Andrey Vlasov
--Anastasy Vonsyatsky (IOTL he was arrested and went to prison in the US for engaging in contacts with the Nazis. Does he become prominent post-Civil War.)
Serbia
--Pavle Đurišić*
--Dobroslav Jevđević*
--Draža Mihailović*
--Milan Nedić
--Kosta Milovanović*
Slovenia
--Leon Rupnik
Thailand
--Plaek Phibunsongkhram ("Marshal P")
Ukraine
--Stepan Bandera*
--Mykhaylo Omelianovych-Pavlenko
--Roman Shukhevych*
--Yaroslav Stetsko
Vietnam
--Bảo Đại (Last Emperor of Vietnam)
*selective role
I recommend you split answering these on a country-by-country basis.
Before I post my replies, I will repeat the caveat that these replies do not reflect what Turtledove himself would consider to be canon in the world of TL-191, but is canon in this ATL.
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Ba Maw’s analogue in TTL, of the same name, was born on a slightly different date in comparison to our world. Unlike in our world, Ba Maw never went into Burmese politics, beginning an academic career in Rangoon prior to the outbreak of the Second Great War. Ba Maw fled Burma during the Japanese invasion at the end of the SGW, and eventually joined the Burmese refugee community in Delhi, which was the largest Burmese refugee community in Bharat. Ba Maw did not return to Burma until after the end of the Fourth Pacific War, but would leave again for Bharat in the early 1970s after running afoul of the country’s military rulers. He died in exile, still living in Delhi, in 1978.
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Subhas Chandra Bose’s analogue, of the same name, was born on a slightly different date in comparison to our world. Bose became involved in the growing pro-independence nationalist moment in British-ruled India after the end of the First Great War, but would eventually split from the Indian National Congress by the end of the 1920s over the question of Bengali independence, which Bose came to favor over the cause of a hypothetical independent India.
Bose, by the early 1930s, was engaged fully in the cause of Bengali independence. He was arrested by the British in 1934, as part of an early crackdown by the new British Coalition government on nationalist leaders in India. He died in prison in 1936, under mysterious circumstances. It would not be until 1974 that historians, working in both Bengal and the United Kingdom, were able to confirm that Bose had been murdered on direct orders from the Coalition government.
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Bao Dai, in TTL, was the Emperor of the Japanese puppet state of Indochina following Japan’s acquisition of Indochina from France. During the Fourth Pacific War, Bao Dai reigned over a collapsing state, as the Japanese and Imperial Indochinese forces faced multiple revolts from Vietnamese, Laotian, and Cambodian groups. In September 1969, following the fall of Saigon to Vietnamese rebel and CDS forces, Bao Dai was captured and summarily executed by Vietnamese rebel soldiers.