Even though victory had been achieved with relative ease, awe in our accomplishment was abundant. A dreamy haze descended upon the high command for months after we had received the surrender notice from the remainder of the British government. The Empire for which singlehandedly started the modern world, for centuries was the most powerful state on the planet, lead colonization, and gave birth to the industrial revolution --which shaped the world and events that lead our great Reich here,-- was brought to its knees after centuries in power by a much greater power. Its somewhat ironic, the nation for which we have defeated is the parent, the father of the next nation we will spread our greatness too; Amerika.

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An unnamed German soldier some days after the landings, looking back across the channel to France.

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Barbarossa had been our greatest challenge, a legendary triumph of logistics and strategy, Britain however, was beaten before we set foot on the beaches. The Royal Navy was a shell of its former self, their armies were hopelessly outnumbered, under-equipped and above all, outgunned, most of it was preoccupied with the Japanese desperately trying to hold onto Singapore, doing so only with the help of the American's. Crossing the channel was little more challenge than stepping over a puddle, however, the fighting spirit of the British people would keep the Lifeboat of Democracy afloat for just a little bit longer.



Planning began as soon as the Soviets had capitulated to our demands, Operation Sealion would have to wait until 1943 however, winter was setting in.​



Plans for Operation Seelowe.​



Field Marshal Rommel, who had gained valuable logistical experience in the mountains of the caucuses, was given command of the entire operation. April 1943 was the set date for the beginning of the operation. A second landing would also take place on the north of the island whenever our fleets were doing less work in the channel and could be freed up for other duties.​



Our famous mountain infantry would triumph here.​

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The invasion began and went on as planned, many British divisions had been completely wiped out. The Brit's propaganda campaign stated that us Nazi's would never get our feet wet in the channel much less land on the island, they were wrong, in fact Churchill and his Cabinet were already gone, to India.



About a month into the operation England was ours, Northern Ireland was weakly defended by one division and was about to be taken, Ireland along with it, however our Gebirgsjager's were having trouble in the north. Every retreating division on the entirety of the British island had set up a defensive perimeter around Glascow and none of our forces could get within 100 miles of the city our Panzers were also less effective in the hills. The entirety of a still-formatable British airforce had been rebased here as well, raining hell upon our units. In June an amphibious landing took place on the west side of the British perimeter, and their lines broke, Glascow was no surrounded and the last city on the island fell some days later.​





Our victorious forces parade through a British city.

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Like roaches, Churchill and his wilting government survived and fled to India, the last seat of British power, the Raj. A quick defeat of the Raj in India was invisioned and a single Marinekorps was landed in western India. The first weeks went well getting within 200 miles of Delhi, but a strong Allied counter attack cut us off from the ocean and our entire Korps were destroyed, it was disaster.



Field Marshal Erwin Rommel was furious with the high command of the Sudost theater in there rash and impatient actions and took command of the operation himself. Operation Sandsturm --the invasion of Persia and through it, India-- was set to begin October 1943. Taking the Persians by surprise the battle was over within a month, however, repositioning forces and logistical problems delayed the invasion of India until December. The Brit's would find it much harder defending against a sizable army rather than a single Korps.​





Panzers in Persia.

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In January 1944, 4 more carriers were commissioned by the Kriegsmarine, the showpiece of these, the KMS Barbarossa. These were the largest and most powerful carriers in the world, the Fuhrer himself was present at their sea trials, after they were commissioned he stated that Germany "now has the greatest fleet the world has ever seen." 8 Carriers, 12 H-Class battleships and innumerable amount of smaller ships and destroyers, Donitz finally had what he wanted, and in the coming months the Oberkommando der Marine would realize they now have the capabilities to invade the America's.



The final months of the British Raj in India were characterized by a special kind of Allied brutality, Indian civilians were forcibly conscripted to be thrown into our lines, those who refused were shot, some parents were killed in front of children. Churchill had authorized the "Indian Recruitment" himself, he was becoming desperate and his drinking problems were becoming apparent, eventually being seen by his remaining people as an enraged drunkard.



4 years prior Churchill stated "We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender," however here there were no streets, fields or beaches to speak of here, only desert, and surrender was certainly a reality. Churchill still refused to surrender, until in March 1944 after Delhi was occupied, he was exiled by his own cabinet, a mixed back of Generals and ministers forcibly sent him away to Canada to live the rest of his days. Peace was made 5 days later after Mandalay was taken by German marines, a Nazi puppet government was installed in the place of the old monarchy, the war, as Europe had seen it, was over, or so it thought...

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Churchill would spend the rest of his life in Canada, he had seen our German troops in Britian and thousands of miles south in India, but he never in his life would expect to see them again, it North America. He thought wrong...



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