London, May 1st 1941. Oswald Mosley is radiant, as he greats representations from the Progressive Nations of the World to the 2nd Congress of the Third International. He feels the Eyes of the Planet on him, and he likes it.
After adressing every delegation, with special emphasis on the German States, and not forgetting the Indian brothers suffering under Pricely Federation opression, the Chairman of the British Trade Union Congress procedes to transmit the progress of The War.
With a speech writen with obvious help of his Poet Foreign Minister, he tells of the Heroic Defense of Liberec...
...of the Twin Offensives of Lubin and Zamosc, "saving Warsaw a second time"...
...of the Vistula Push...
...some success in the forgoten Eastern Front...
...and he even talks emotionally of the first big Naval defeat, where the sailors of the RNS Liliburne prefered to scuttle their own ship then have it sunk by Imperialist guns.
But the most grandious and dramatic part of the speech is reserved for the Liberation of Prague! It was hard to tell who was enjoying the speech the most, Oswald or the delegates, as Mosley told how the battle started against an encircled Prague...
...and soon after was beeing fought and won, defending a besieged Free Prague!
The speach did it's Magic, and Oswald got his apotheotic ovation. The first part of his partnership with Niclas y Glais had worked, but now came the crucial point of all their effort: consolidating British leadership of the Third International and formalizing new memberships, in the form of military allies against the Agressors.
Comrade Oswald wasn't happy. He was
de facto leader of the Free World, but at a cost of facing all of the Old World in a all-out War, and one that even the rest of the similar-minded leaders he met didn't think he'd win. The future of the Worker's Movement was never safe it seemed, no matter how many armies and Emperors one defeats.