Chapter 195:

Chapter 195:

Chapter 195

The Emperors Abolition!

No one knew where it came from, but the Soviet declaration to abolish the emperor hit the entire Japanese archipelago.

Major General Eisenhower, who became the US military governor of the Japanese archipelago on the recommendation of Marshal Chief of Staff and General MacArthur, had to face the anger of the US military administration area, or South Japan, that boiled every day.

Damn it again?

Yes, sir. We cant stop them from sending letters

Of course, the Japanese were a thoroughly servile nation to the victors.

They had experienced the great power of the two great powers with their whole body.

In the metropolises that had been hit by dozens of Soviet nuclear bombings, they did not even dare to raise their flags.

The rural people who had experienced the US defoliant bombing and strategic bombing also knew their tremendous power well.

So they expressed their dissatisfaction in a strictly restrained way.

They either wore rags in front of the US military administration building, sent blood letters, or did both.

The US military police were on the verge of losing their minds as they had to clean up the corpses of people who had killed themselves in various gruesome ways every day.

Wasnt there any instruction from the homeland?

Not yet. It seems to be a serious debate in the homeland.

The Japanese emperor was the head of the government who planned and approved Japans foreign wars, and whether he should be abolished or dragged by the military as he actually claimed.

In the homeland, they argued over which of the two claims was correct, and which one to adopt was beneficial.

Those who wanted to maintain the emperor argued that acknowledging the emperor would bring the majority of Japanese to the US side, and that the Soviet attempt to forcibly implant a republic would cause fierce backlash.

On the contrary, there was also an argument that if the emperor was not abolished, Japan would break out of the US control at some point and become militarized again.

The maintainers argued that Japan no longer had the industrial base to militarize again.

It was a problem that had to be decided first where South Japan was in the Far East strategy.

China was corrupt, South Japan was a hostile country and its industrial base was devastated Korea was too pro-Soviet communist.

Even if they got along well with the Soviet Union, they needed a junior partner in the local area to guarantee the USs core interests in Asia, at least in the Western Pacific region.

First of all, China, which had been the USs partner in the Sino-Japanese War, was suffering from extreme corruption.

The Four Families, including Chiang Kai-shek, had embezzled and sold the materials that the US had aided and took care of their own interests, and as a result, Japan was able to easily defeat the Chinese army with its weak military power.

In addition, the US State Department officials were increasingly frustrated by Chiang Kai-shek, who continued to refuse the US mediation and only insisted on his own stubbornness.

He must think were some kind of faucet. He can turn it on when he wants money and shut it off when hes annoyed.

Chiang Kai-shek is incompetent! If he gives him full authority, China will be torn apart again and cause chaos.

Actually, I hope the US will provide aid as a pretext to distance ourselves from the Soviet side. Because of the Soviet aid? The Soviet influence is too strong here. Hahaha! Please keep it a secret that I said this.

Is that so? Do you want the US aid in the Republic of Korea, is that what youre saying?

That would be nice, but I wish we had a reason to get along well with the US. We think that there is a possibility of radicalization because of the help we received during the independence process and the many poor people.

And that remark by Yeoun-hyung could drive a wedge into the US side.

A person who was known as a thorough communist who cooperated with the Soviet Union requests support to secretly get out of the Soviet influence?

The US, which was looking for a politically stable and economically uncorrupted partner in the Far East, rejoiced and started to run the factories that had started to decline in operation rate after the war.

***

Comrade Secretary-General, is it okay for the situation to go like this?

Of course! We Soviet think that the current situation is the most ideal. We hope that the Republic of Korea will be a bridgehead for enhancing relations with the US.

Is that so

That meant that the Korean Peninsula was important as a buffer zone to prevent the USs extreme choice.

The US chose the Republic of Korea as an external cooperation partner, but would they choose a confrontation with the Soviet Union, leaving the possibility that the US influence and invested assets here could all evaporate?

Would the shareholders who invested their money here leave it alone? The more buffer zones there were, the better.

There was a theory that had not yet come out in this era, but there was a saying that <countries that drink Coca-Cola and eat McDonalds do not go to war with each other>.

That meant that if economic exchanges progressed to a certain extent, they would not enter a mutually destructive war for the sake of their homeland.

Think about it. You built a factory with cheap wages and friendly conditions, and then the war broke out and the facilities you built in that country flew away! How could the situation of trade being cut off and product prices rising be unfavorable to the US, which is aiming for the world market?

Prime Minister, dont worry and try to find the means necessary for the reconstruction and economic development of your country. We Soviet will help the peaceful development of Korea as much as possible.

Thank you. The Soviet Union must also have a hard time rebuilding after the war, thank you for helping me so much.

Hahaha, we have our own way.

Its true.

The huge amount of money that the US sent in the form of aid and loans gave life to the Soviet national economy. At this rate, the goal of the fourth five-year plan would be far exceeded.

Considering the special situation of post-war reconstruction and overseas aid, they set a very high level of goals, but even if they invested in areas that did not directly affect productivity, the goal exceeded achievement.

Anyway, I wish you all the best for the new Republic of Korea! For the eternal Soviet-Korean friendship and the advancement of socialist brother countries!

Thank you! I look forward to the next call.

Of course, the Soviet influence will still be stronger in Korea.

Why?

We did so much for them.

It will take at least a generation to get rid of this Soviet water.
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