@General:
Excellent work CWO Marc, very well done. Gives food for thought regarding the status of Commonwealth Dominions, China as well as South American and Middle Eastern neutrals. One thing with Saudi Arabia is the map territory includes the British protectorate of Aden, which would then become part of Yemen.
Thanks. Yes, I aimed to keep it a straight description of the political status of the various territories as they actually existed at the time and of whether they corresponded correctly with what’s shown on the map. In the cases where the correspondence was arguable (or even flat-out wrong), I indicated this in the list so that people could make up their own minds about whether they might want to adjust their map accordingly, and/or perhaps make use of this information to see what credible possibilities might have existed for revised power blocks in the game. I found various clear-cut cases plus quite a few borderline ones too, but in all cases I labeled them as “disputable” to underline the fact that they could be argued one way or the other. The borderline cases in particular potentially have a lot of flexibility for creative use, since they offer room for interpretation.
One amusing thing that emerged when I looked at South America was to see that (with only one or two exceptions) the countries with pro-Axis sentiments acted like true neutrals, while the countries with true neutral sentiments acted like pro-Allied ones. In other words, they all of them pretty much thought in one way and acted in another way. I suspect that they all realized that it would be unwise to have a wartime position which flatly contradicted the position of the major power in their hemisphere, the US – so they all compromised, and the US went along with the compromises. The Americans would have wanted all of them to follow the example of Mexico and Brazil (both of which not only declared war on the Axis but also sent men to fight overseas), but obviously this wasn’t achievable in every case. So in the case of states which could possibly have joined the war on the Axis side, the US considered it acceptable for them to act like neutrals; in the case of states which wanted to be neutral, the US considered it acceptable for them to take this position on paper but to act in ways which supported the American war effort.
Regarding Saudi Arabia, I left out Aden/Yemen because it’s not depicted on the map as a named territory. The game map omits lots of territories, and it would have complicated matters enormously for me to account for places like Goa, East Timor, Saint Pierre & Miquelon, and French Somaliland/Djibouti (though I did make a passing reference to Macao).