Chapter 507: Scheming Roosevelt!

At night at the White House, there was a tense atmosphere in the tranquility. Pen × fun × Pavilion www. biquge。 info

Returning to the White House as a guest was not an honor for Roosevelt.

In the last round of the presidential election, Roosevelt now understood that he had not lost to Edgar Hoover, but to the Donghua Empire, which Edgar Hoover had backed.

Roosevelt has not slept well ever since the new Japanese army crossed the former U.S.-Canada border and moved southward to occupy 12 states in the western U.S., including California, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Las Vylvia, and Arizona.

Although he is no longer the president of the United States, Roosevelt was constantly concerned about the fate of the United States in World War II.

After learning the news of Japan's landing in Canada, Roosevelt finally realized why Cheng Gong, who was Chinese, would continue to provide the Japanese with all kinds of advanced military and civilian technology.

Cheng Gong, the emperor of the Donghua Empire with a mysterious origin, obviously did not want the Republic of China, which was also Chinese, to have a full-scale war with Japan, thus causing a war disaster in the land of China, so he planned to guide Japan's national strategy to Southeast Asia and the North American continent from the beginning.

The sudden Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran led to Japan's strategic vision of advancing into India and West Asia to join Germany and Italy at the Suez Canal.

Japan has long been arguing about two different strategies: going north and going south. After being forced to withdraw troops from the Chinese battlefield, the debate over whether to go north or south first became more intense at the top of Japan.

In the end, it was Hirohito who made the final decision and decided on a new strategic plan to go south first and then go east.

Hirohito's reason is simple, because the Soviet Union was one of the initiators of the Paradise Island Cooperation Organization. If Japan went north to attack the Soviet Union, no one dared to guarantee whether the Donghua Empire would choose to go to war with Japan in order to maintain the trade and cooperation between the East and the Soviet Union.

Japan was more vigilant and cautious than any other country in dealing with the Donghua Empire, which could sell such important weapons as Yamato-class aircraft carriers and King-class battleships at will.

Japan could not attack China, and the strategy of westward expansion with German and Italian armies at the Suez Canal could not be continued because of the Soviet Union. Continuing to go south to challenge the Donghua Empire, the Japanese did not dare even more.

Then, under the premise that the Pacific War had broken out between the United States and Japan, Japan's eastward march to land on the North American continent became a strategic decision that Japan had no choice but to choose. Unless the Japanese can be satisfied with their vested interests in Southeast Asia.

And the insatiable greed of the Japanese is well known to the international community.

As a result, China, which was supposed to endure the huge war disasters brought by the Japanese invaders, was liberated, and the North American continent was reduced to the blood, fire, and mountains trampled by the Japanese invaders.

After Japan landed in Canada and quickly changed to New Japan, Roosevelt watched as the Donghua Empire sent a steady stream of Donghua ocean-going fleets to and fro the Pacific Ocean to help Japanese immigrants and relocate machinery and equipment.

It can be said that without the help of ocean transportation from the Donghua Empire, it is unlikely that New Japan would have wanted to gain a foothold in Canada in such a short time.

In order to provoke more acute war contradictions between the Japanese and the Americans, the Donghua Empire spared no effort and made great efforts.

Roosevelt knew that the Japanese were not all fools. The Donghua Empire was using Japan to deal with the United States, and Roosevelt believed that there must have been many people in the Japanese military and political leadership who could see it clearly.

It's just that, compared with the barren war resources of the Chinese land, the temptation of the North American continent. The confusion is obviously much greater than that of Huaxia.

It was because the Japanese decided to gamble on the national fortune with all their national strength, knowing that their North American strategy was being used by the Donghua Empire.

Perhaps God was at odds with Amaterasu in Japan during this time.

Once again, the Japanese won the bet. The rise of a new, more powerful Japan on the North American continent has become unstoppable.

With Roosevelt's political wisdom and strategic vision, he could certainly see that if the United States and New Japan were allowed to continue fighting, the final result would inevitably be a defeat for both sides.

When both the United States and New Japan had exhausted their war resources, what other forces could stop the expansion and penetration of East China, the Soviet Union, and Germany into the American continent?

Between countries, there is no eternal hatred, only eternal interests.

For the sake of the future interests of the United States and the new Japan, the US-Japan armistice and peace talks have become an inevitable choice for the US Government and the new Japanese Government.

It can be said that the reason why Hoover was in a hurry to contact Hirohito was that Roosevelt, the former president, did a lot of work.

Politics is the art of compromise. This is an article of faith that politicians in Western countries believe in.

There is no irreconcilable century-old feud between the United States and Japan, and Roosevelt and Hoover would certainly not mind sacrificing the interests of Canada and Britain in exchange for peace in the United States.

The question that Roosevelt was considering at the moment was whether the interests of the East German and Soviet Triple Alliance would continue to fight World War II after East China and Germany defeated Britain.

Thinking about it from another perspective, if Roosevelt had been Hitler, with the strategic advantage of Germany conquering all of Europe and also cutting off half of Ukraine and Belarus from the Soviet Union, he would definitely choose to stop and digest the war dividends he had absorbed first, rather than cross the Atlantic to the American continent.

Of course, in Asia, there is also the Indian subcontinent and China that can be divided between East China, Germany, and the Soviet Union.

Now, however, New Japan has extended its hand into India, and has quickly seized a large area of territory in eastern India, relying on Burma as a springboard. In contrast, the Soviet Red Army moved much more slowly than the new Japanese army.

Whether the Soviet Union and the new Japan would fight for India's interests was another major question that Roosevelt repeatedly pondered and analyzed.

In addition, whether it is possible to use the Outer Mongolia issue to aggravate relations between China and the Soviet Union is a big game of chess that Roosevelt has been pondering in his mind.

Roosevelt was not at all surprised that the Soviet Union would sacrifice the interests of the United States and Britain for the sake of its national interests.

After all, the two ideological antagonisms between communism and capitalism determined that the United States and the Soviet Union could never be true allies in the same pants.

The Donghua Empire would certainly see China as its sphere of influence, Roosevelt had no doubt about that. And Roosevelt was certain that Germany and the Soviet Union would choose to make concessions on the Chinese issue.

Perhaps, in the future, if there is such an incentive to provoke contradictions between China and Israel in East China and Germany and the Soviet Union, it will be the Chinese problem.

"Mr. Roosevelt, do you think there is a possibility of a full-scale war between the Donghua Empire and New Japan?"

Hearing President Hoover's question, Roosevelt quickly sorted out all kinds of thoughts in his mind, pondered for a while, and then replied:

"With the current landscape in Southeast Asia, this is still very likely. If I were Cheng Gong, I would not want to see the Japanese-controlled countries of Malaya, Vietnam, Thailand, the Philippines, Laos, Cambodia, Burma, and Bangladesh standing between Donghua and China. ”

(To be continued.) )