People's Republic of Japan (21st Century Crisis)

The People's Republic of Japan (Japanese: 人民共和国 日本) was the Japanese state that existed from 1946 to 2004. After the Soviet victory over the Turkish and German invasion, and the subsequent Soviet conquest of Constantinople and Berlin, the Soviets advanced their conquest into the Japanese Archipelago.

Having already dealt with enough fighting, the Japanese showed no resistance to the Soviet invaders.

The Soviets armed the pro-communist People's Japanese Army, to fight against the pro-western People's National Defense, in which the former ended up victorious. As a result, a communist government was established in Japan, which led to a large exodus of Japanese refugees to Manchuria and Korea.

During the Sino-Soviet Split, the Japanese government became influenced by Mao Zedong, and started to distance themselves from the Soviet style of communism. Japan became a Maoist country at this point, and shifted their military relations from that with the USSR with that to the People's Republic of China.

The PRJ's exist from the Soviet sphere of influence influenced the People's Republic of Mongolia to exit, forming a new power bloc against the Soviet bloc. They formed the Asiatic Bloc, also known as the Alliance of Asian Communists, which included Japan itself, as well as China, Mongolia, Indochina and Indonesia.

During the fall of communism in Europe, Japan's economy and government resembled that of China's, communist in name only, but truly capitalist and democratic in practice. In 2004, mass protests against the communist and Maoist regime led to the collapse of the communist government in Japan. The new Japanese government also ordered the destruction of communist-era buildings in Tokyo, in what is known as the "Rebirth Program".