General Timeline III (Hitler's Anxiety)

The New Order
Hitler was a bit disheartened at the re-election of William King in 1948 since he had successfully diminishe German power, but he did not allow it to interfere with the new order project. Germany dominated 2 continents already, but was losing ground on the others. Starting in 1949, the New Order Project began planning ways to align the world with German interests. One way or another, the Soviet Union had to go. Its size was preventing the advancement of Germany and it counterbalanced German African influence with Asian influence. Eventually, the New Order Project decided that the best way to get a foot hold in Asia was to force America to relinquish India, then invade Tibet, and, when ready, China. Hitler tried a variety of means to do this, such as threatening nuclear war, bargaining territories, and trying to dismantle the UDN throught the 1950s, all to no avail. Nothing he tried was working, but his popularity stayed at a comfortable 80%.

In 1952, Adolf Hitler married Eva Braun and had a son, named Dominik. Dominik was to become Führer upon Adolf's death. Little progress was made throughout the rest of Hitler's life, aside from his African allies becoming economic powerhouses due to oil, natural gas, and diamonds. In 1961, at the age of 72, he saw his final opportunity to gain a foothold over the west, which he could use to gain power in Asia. Fidel Castro came to power in Cuba, and Hitler conducted a joint operation with the United States to topple his regime. The operation was a success, and Hitler used the Kriegsmarine's unprecedented closeness to German Honduras to secretly transport 30 nuclear missiles there. He would later use this to force the United States to relinquish India or face nuclear destruction. President Kennedy, seeing no other options, did relinquish India, however reluctantly, to ensure the safety of the American people. Just 3 days later, Hitler died of a heart attack and a national day of mourning in Germany was declared.

Asia Takes the Stage in the 60s
A few weeks after Dominik Hitler came to power, things took a turn for the worse in the Americn situation, although Dominik's decisions were made for him by others due to his young age. The Second Turkish-Saudi War began, which would eventually end in the demise of Saudi Arabia, solidifying the German economic stranglehold on the globe, and Tibet fell to the Nazis. Because of this, all American influence in Asia disappeared. Desperate, Kennedy reached out to the now Democratic Japanese Empire to join the UDN, which they did in 1963. This again gave the UDN a foothold in Asia.

In 1965, the tensions in Asia exploded into a 3-way war in China after the nation broke into a civil war. Eventually, in 1967, the nation broke into different spheres of influence, the UDN zone in the east, the German zone in the south, and the Soviet zone in the north. The situation remained a stalemate for another year, until the UDN pushed the Soviets out of the eastern half of China entirely. Later the same year, the Soviets, through brilliant tactics, were able to outsmart the Germans and push them back to Tibet.