American Collaborators of the Japanese Empire
Collaborators are many loyalists who worked with the Axis powers, due to the Allied powers losing World War II and did not know what freedom really is after being submitted under Axis rule. Some of them stay loyal to their occupiers out of fear, while others worked with the Axis powers for their own benefits, privileges, and their wealth. These actions results them becoming traitors to their country and their people, thus making them targets from members of the extremist cells within the American Resistance, including Gary Connell and George Dixon.
History[]
American Collaborators of the Japanese Empire
After the Allies lost World War II, due to the atomic bombing of Washington D.C., many American people lost their hope in winning the war against the Axis powers and were forced to submit under the Greater Nazi Reich and the Japanese Empire. Mike Bolden mentions that some of the U.S. Military soldiers will be given good positions in the Reich if they join but if they refuse, they will face the consequences. Because they were under the rule of the Greater Nazi Reich and the Japanese Empire, many people who are loyal to them don't even know what freedom really means. Many white Americans in the American Reich have become Nazis themselves. Even the New York City Police Department collaborated with the Nazis. According to Mark Sampson, during the early days of Nazi rule in America, the American collaborators formed a lynch mob to kill the American Jews. American Nazi bounty hunters begin hunting down many Jewish people in the Neutral Zone. Some of the Americans worked for the Japanese intelligence unit of the Kempeitai.
The NYPD Nazi police officers arresting people.
According to Nobusuke Tagomi, he implied that a non-Japanese woman, whom Rudolph Wegener was sleeping with, could be a collaborator for the Kempeitai.
When the Kempeitai began executing citizens, many Americans were forced by the Japanese to remove their dead bodies.
Juliana Crain looking at the American Collaborators for the Japanese.
Years later, when the Black Communist Rebellion finally gained control of the Western States, the Americans who were presumably collaborators and loyalists to the Japanese Empire, are facing the nightmare of the BCR rule as they sends letters to the Reich headquarters for their pleas for help, while some of them tries to travel on the ships with the Japanese people, but were rejected by the Japanese. Some of them are being smuggled out of the Western States by the Yakuza.
Some of the American vigilantes, including Raymond Doyle, resented the Japanese Empire, and became Nazi sympathizers, after living under oppression by the Japanese, who discriminated all American people. Because of this, Raymond Doyle and some of other American vigilantes began to extremely express their support of the American Reich.


































