Al Gore (The Era of Relative Peace)

Al Gore was the 42nd President of the United States of America. He succeded George H.W. Bush after he finished two terms in office. As the new president of a new administration, Gore would continue Bush's version of the Marshall Plan to the countries still rebuilding from Word War III, including the Russian Federation. Trade and investment would pour in to the newly formed Russia as hostilities from the war began to fade towards the beginning of the new millennium. It was also under Gore's administration that the Panama Canal was returned to Panama on December 31, 1999. Notably, the Gore administration focused on environmental issues domestically and globally.

However, not everything seemed to be in place. A group of ex-Soviet soldiers and officers, led by other East German, Bulgarian, Ukrainian, Romanian and other international communists began banding together and attacking post-Soviet Union states. The organization called themselves the World Revolution Army, a terrorist group that aims to destabilize world governments in favor a communist ruling system. Even the new Russia and the former Soviet republics was targeted by the WRA for abandoning communism. The WRA also waged war in the current Afghan Civil War, which was fought between the Afghan Coalition Government (ACG), Al-Qaeda, Taliban, and few Soviet stragglers (which some joined the WRA). The Gore administration would provide funding and covert aid to the ACG.

Gore would later try to run for the 2000 elections but lost to John Kerry. He ended his term on January 20, 2001. In 2006, he would release An Inconvenient Truth, a film about global warming.