A Thought Experiment

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Karl_fallout4
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A Thought Experiment

Post by Karl_fallout4 »

The Philadelphia Trials

It was over. America lost the Second World War.
The sun struck twice at New York and Chicago. It was a horrifying sight, as Me 264s crossed into American airspace to drop bombs of terrifying capacity. Capable of leveling entire city blocks.
Vice President Truman was under charges of treason, having tried to assume office when President Roosevelt was still alive. Still, there was no refuge that he could take. Seeing that the walls were closing in, President Roosevelt shot himself, joining his wife Eleanor. But before his suicide, he handed over the duties of the Presidency to Gen. Chester Nimitz. America signed a declaration of unconditional surrender, as did Britain. The Swastika flew over the Capitol.

The propaganda machine of Berlin, Rome, and Tokyo had worked tirelessly to frame the former U.S. government as the true villains of the war.

The trials, held under the Permanent Court of International Justice (Now under Axis control) had begun months earlier in London, where British officers and politicians had been tried for "atrocities" against both Germans and their own subjects in British colonies. The British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, had been captured and resuscitated after his suicide attempt by the SS soldiers sent to arrest him. He was sentenced to death for War Crimes, waging wars of aggression; war in violation of international law; unprovoked or aggressive war against various nations; and ordering, authorizing, and permitting inhumane treatment of prisoners of war.

Now, it was America’s turn to face judgement. De-democratization had already begun. The Democratic Party was declared a criminal organisation and dissolved. American civilians were herded into dark rooms where recordings of mass graves and emaciated bodies (which were in actuality a result of the nuclear bombings). Some things were outright fabricated, such as shrunken Native American heads or bars of soap made from the fat of dead Italian-Americans. Completely fake, of course, but highly effective as propaganda. This genocide, they said, was called the "Brandopfer".
The city of Philadelphia, once the cradle of American democracy, was now a stage for its humiliation.
Among the accused sat men who, before the war, had been symbols of American strength—high-ranking officers of the National Guard, former OSS operatives, generals, and Democratic Party leaders who had survived the fiery collapse of Washington. Their uniforms had been stripped, their dignity shattered. Many bore the scars of interrogation hidden under their clothes, their eyes sunken from weeks of torture in various military checkpoints set up across the United States. Roland Freisler served as the Chief German Prosecutor. Germany, Italy, Japan and Vichy France each provided one judge and one alternate.

The charges were as sweeping as they were absurd. The United States was accused of genocide—not just for the internment of Japanese Americans but for an elaborate, fabricated campaign of mass murder against Native Americans, German Americans, Italian Americans, and Japanese Americans. The prosecution presented doctored reports and coerced testimony, painting a picture of a nation whose leaders had systematically exterminated millions.

The proceedings were more spectacle than trial. Any defendant who tried to protest was gagged. When General George S. Patton, one of the few who had survived Axis captivity, attempted to shout that the trials were a sham, he was silenced. He had to express his displeasure through other ways - laughing, crying. It didn't matter.

The evidence was a parade of forgeries, edited and context-removed documents, and tortured confessions. A photograph of a National Guard unit standing near a group of Japanese American detainees was presented as proof of mass executions. A speech by President Roosevelt, edited and spliced, was played to the court, making it seem as if he had ordered the extermination of Axis-aligned ethnic groups.

An OSS officer detailed horrifying crimes. He stood, trembling, as he muttered, “I— I was following orders. I didn’t know…” His voice cracked, but he had no more tears left to shed.

The administrator of the Tule Lake Concentration Camp had stated that they had the capacity to carry out 3000 exterminations per minute, that 3 million were killed in his camp alone. In total, the estimate was 6 million dead.

The new American press hailed the trials as the final reckoning of a barbaric regime. Propaganda posters depicted the United States as a bloodthirsty, genocidal empire, while newsreels broadcast the confessions of the accused. The message was clear: America had been a nation of murderers, and its leaders deserved their fate.

After weeks of staged deliberation, the verdicts were announced. Almost every defendant was found guilty. The only exception was Admiral Chester Nimitz, whose charges of engaging in unrestricted submarine warfare was overturned thanks to his attorney, who pointed out that Germany's Karl Dönitz had done the same thing.

The lucky ones received life imprisonment. The rest, Death by hanging.

The executions took place in Independence Hall, another calculated insult. One by one, the former generals and officials were led to the gallows. Truman had already taken his own life via cyanide, preferring death on his own terms. The executioners were cruel. They used a short drop so that they would suffocate slowly. Byrnes, Marshall, Hoover, Eisenhower, Bradley, Ickes, Paley, McNutt, MacArthur, and Clark met their end this way.

Their corpses were then incinerated so that they would be deprived of a burial. Their ashes were thrown into Delaware.
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Nazgul
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Re: A Thought Experiment

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Archie
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by Archie »

Philip K. Dick was also what came to my mind. And Philip Roth.

There are a few different scenarios to consider.

1) Britain & France never declare war to begin with: I think there probably would have been a war between Germany the the USSR at some point and without lend-lease or having another front I think Germany might well have won it. I suppose this might have meant "fascism" instead of communism in eastern Europe. Hard to say how this would have played out, maybe a bit like it did in Franco's Spain.

2) Some sort of peace deal during the phony war period: Probably would have worked out about the same as #1, but not likely with Churchill in power. Note that in this case it would have likely just been a negotiated peace, not a complete victory for either side.

3) Total German victory: I don't think an outright conquest of Britain and America was ever realistic. But if it did happen we could only guess how it might have been run. Maybe they would have put Henry Ford or Charles Lindbergh in charge?

As far as war crimes trials, it's hard to say if the Germans would have bothered with this. The Soviets of course had their practice of show trials. America had no tradition of this prior to Nuremberg (look at the Civil War for example). I do think Nuremberg was largely guided and shaped by Jewish influence and involvement. I don't think the Germans would have come up with anything as elaborate and sanctimonious as Nuremberg.

Another interesting counterfactual would be how history might have played out without Nuremberg and the other war crimes trials. Even fairly late in the war it was not clear how it was going to play out. There had been mentions of such trials during the war but this was more for propaganda purposes rather reflecting any definite plans. One of the main results of the trials has been that Germans who might have wished to dispute the Allied narrative had an incentive to lay low and keep quiet about things. Had there been a general amnesty or even a reasonable statute of limitations then we would have heard more contrary narratives from the German perspective.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by Karl_fallout4 »

Archie wrote: Sun Mar 30, 2025 6:26 pm
I don't think an outright conquest of Britain and America was ever realistic.
...
As far as war crimes trials, it's hard to say if the Germans would have bothered with this.
I wasn't exactly aiming for strict realism here, but many people can easily imagine the Axis Powers doing something like this, it's blatant enough to be recognised as a parallel to the Holocaust and the Nuremberg trials.
The goal is to show that victor's justice doesn't necessarily translate to actual justice, and that it is possible to fabricate a genocide to discredit the vanquished side.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by HansHill »

Karl_fallout4 wrote: Mon Mar 31, 2025 3:57 am
Archie wrote: Sun Mar 30, 2025 6:26 pm
I don't think an outright conquest of Britain and America was ever realistic.
...
As far as war crimes trials, it's hard to say if the Germans would have bothered with this.
I wasn't exactly aiming for strict realism here, but many people can easily imagine the Axis Powers doing something like this, it's blatant enough to be recognised as a parallel to the Holocaust and the Nuremberg trials.
The goal is to show that victor's justice doesn't necessarily translate to actual justice, and that it is possible to fabricate a genocide to discredit the vanquished side.
Hard to say, and of course we'll never know. It's very fun to speculate though, such as - perhaps there could have been localised trials for very specific incidents, for example Katyn, the firebombing of Dresden etc. I would generally agree with Archie that it would be hard to see something as sweeping as Axis-Nuremberg though.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by Stubble »

Doing what if's, I'm more keen on what if the western allies had brokered peace with Germany and united with them to fight bolshevism instead of giving Stalin half of Europe...
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

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Have any of you guys watched the Man in the High Castle? If so, do you recommend checking it out? Maybe we should create a new thread where we can watching it and critique it.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

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Stubble wrote: Tue Apr 01, 2025 8:08 pm Doing what if's, I'm more keen on what if the western allies had brokered peace with Germany and united with them to fight bolshevism instead of giving Stalin half of Europe...
It was not in the Allies' interests to make peace with the Reich. But if it had happened...
Let's say that Hitler for some reason does not become a political ally of Japan, or betrays it by declaring war and siding with the United States after Pearl Harbor. I think something like this will happen: the USSR is divided between America and Germany, with the Russian and Central Asian buffer states between them (complete control of the territories east of the A-A line is difficult for the Germans to achieve). The Jews are not killed, since there is no radicalization of the regime from military failures, but instead they are evacuated to territory not controlled by the Nazis. Perhaps under pressure from the fact of the alliance between Washington and Berlin, Churchill (an ardent anti-communist) makes peace with the Germans. Then negotiations are held, and part of the Jewish population is evacuated to Israel (British Mandatory Palestine) from Europe, and part - to Madagascar. The Slavic population flees to Siberia and the Far East (controlled by the US), the Germans gradually populate the former Soviet Union. It's a bad time for the Japanese, they are facing defeat and military invasion, there is no "Germany first" strategy, so the Pacific Front rolls to the home islands. Bloody landing, many losses, destruction of cities and the capitulation of Japan. The post-war future of the country is roughly like in OTL.
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HansHill
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by HansHill »

InuYasha wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 12:29 am
Stubble wrote: Tue Apr 01, 2025 8:08 pm Doing what if's, I'm more keen on what if the western allies had brokered peace with Germany and united with them to fight bolshevism instead of giving Stalin half of Europe...
It was not in the Allies' interests to make peace with the Reich. But if it had happened...
Let's say that Hitler for some reason does not become a political ally of Japan, or betrays it by declaring war and siding with the United States after Pearl Harbor. I think something like this will happen: the USSR is divided between America and Germany, with the Russian and Central Asian buffer states between them (complete control of the territories east of the A-A line is difficult for the Germans to achieve). The Jews are not killed, since there is no radicalization of the regime from military failures, but instead they are evacuated to territory not controlled by the Nazis. Perhaps under pressure from the fact of the alliance between Washington and Berlin, Churchill (an ardent anti-communist) makes peace with the Germans. Then negotiations are held, and part of the Jewish population is evacuated to Israel (British Mandatory Palestine) from Europe, and part - to Madagascar. The Slavic population flees to Siberia and the Far East (controlled by the US), the Germans gradually populate the former Soviet Union. It's a bad time for the Japanese, they are facing defeat and military invasion, there is no "Germany first" strategy, so the Pacific Front rolls to the home islands. Bloody landing, many losses, destruction of cities and the capitulation of Japan. The post-war future of the country is roughly like in OTL.
So many aspects to this are fascinating, thanks for sharing. Some thoughts:

"The Jews are not killed"

Obviously ;)

"alliance between Washington and Berlin"

This would be a fascinating alliance, it would almost be mathematically certain to be more productive than what we actually got with the West + SU alliance that crumbled immediately and led to the near end of all life on planet earth. So you know, better in every conceivable way.

"It's a bad time for the Japanese"

Even in this "worst case scenario for Japan", we can assume they are still on a net-positive by not being nuked twice.

"and part - to Madagascar"

Interested how you see this playing out, you haven't actually mentioned the French in any of this - would this be a reverse League of Nations scenario where the Germans "redistribute" French colonies to themselves?
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Re: A Thought Experiment

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I think a prerequisite for an axis/western allies alliance would have been a cessation of economic warfare with Japan. A truce with the emperor of China would have had to be settled as well, and then Chang and the Japanese could have opened Russia up to a 2 front war.

American supplies and industrial might (not blood) would have been brought to bare against the red commie @#$%.

The world would be a very different place.
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by InuYasha »

HansHill wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 8:49 pm So many aspects to this are fascinating, thanks for sharing. Some thoughts:

"The Jews are not killed"

Obviously ;)
Welcome

Yes, without the crisis of the second half of WWII, most of the Jews sent to concentration camps would have subsequently been transported outside - or to the outskirts of - the Axis control zone.
HansHill wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 8:49 pm "alliance between Washington and Berlin"

This would be a fascinating alliance, it would almost be mathematically certain to be more productive than what we actually got with the West + SU alliance that crumbled immediately and led to the near end of all life on planet earth. So you know, better in every conceivable way.
Frankly speaking, it is unlikely that cooperation between America and the Third Reich would continue for a long time, since after the end of the wars with Japan and the USSR, ideological differences would become obvious.

On the other hand, the US and RIII spheres of influence would have been much more isolated from each other, and the nuclear arms race would have been more moderate - if it had started. The Soviet-Western alliance not only collapsed almost immediately, but also led to the Cold War, the arms race, and, apparently, the tragedy of 1983, the circumstances of which I am trying to find out.
HansHill wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 8:49 pm "It's a bad time for the Japanese"

Even in this "worst case scenario for Japan", we can assume they are still on a net-positive by not being nuked twice.
Yes, there would have been no A-bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but it would still have been heavy fighting on Japanese soil. Without the need to confront communism in the East (also keep in mind that the CCP could not have defeated the KMT in the civil war without massive help from Stalin, and half of the Korean people did not fall under the influence of a brutal communist regime in this TL) the Americans have less motivation to rebuild Japan. But the Japanese themselves will sooner or later come to economic development, and become a first world country, I have no doubt about it.
HansHill wrote: Wed May 14, 2025 8:49 pm "and part - to Madagascar"

Interested how you see this playing out, you haven't actually mentioned the French in any of this - would this be a reverse League of Nations scenario where the Germans "redistribute" French colonies to themselves?
As for France, I think they would have been allowed to keep most of their colonial possessions. Madagascar would have been a region that would have been under their control, but where the Jews would have been taken. I seriously doubt that AH had any interest in annexing the colonies, but he would have had the ability to exert political pressure on the French.

It is also possible that the Axis would have created some kind of UN, but in a more limited form - some kind of commission on Axis affairs and their spheres of influence.
Last edited by InuYasha on Fri May 16, 2025 12:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by InuYasha »

Stubble wrote: Thu May 15, 2025 1:26 am I think a prerequisite for an axis/western allies alliance would have been a cessation of economic warfare with Japan. A truce with the emperor of China would have had to be settled as well, and then Chang and the Japanese could have opened Russia up to a 2 front war.

American supplies and industrial might (not blood) would have been brought to bare against the red commie @#$%.

The world would be a very different place.
This is unlikely, given how strong anti-Japanese - and anti-Asian in general - sentiment was in the US in the pre-war years. In comparison, there was no such strong hatred for Germans, the propaganda attacks were mainly on "Nazis and Japanese". This is due to the strong influence of German Americans.

But the alliance between Berlin and Washington left the communists - Soviet, Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, etc. - no chance.

I still think it was a mistake for the AH to declare war on America on December 11, 1941.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

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The whole exercise is hugely unlikely.

Fair points though.
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
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Re: A Thought Experiment

Post by InuYasha »

Stubble wrote: Fri May 16, 2025 3:35 am The whole exercise is hugely unlikely.

Fair points though.
Yes, the alliance between the Allies and the Germans is implausible. Even before Hitler was in power, they were anti-German, especially France and Britain. Roosevelt also seems to have interest in joining WWII, and provoked Pearl Harbour attack by sanctions in 1941. In our reality, even in Hitler haven't declared war on US, they probably turn against the Reich somewhere in 1942. After all, it was just thought experiment.
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