Pri Minister Abezo also recalled his grandfather's will.
[Never give up on Korea. Even if you cede everything to the Allied Forces, you should keep Korea. That's how Japan lives. Korea and Japan are like oil and vinegar. As Japan grows, Korea declines. Conversely, when Korea grows, Japan declines. In other words, we must keep Korea at bay, monitor them, and suppress them to hold back their economic growth. Over ti, we must completely assimilate it into Japan. That is how Japan can survive.]
In the end, Japan had no choice but to give up Korea as a result of their defeat.
Since then, Pri Minister Abe has never forgotten his grandfather's will.
In fact, when Korea was devastated because of the Korean War, Japan experienced rapid economic growth. Later when Korea showed big economic growth, Japan's economy slid into recession.
So Pri Minister Abezo made it his top priority to revise the current Peace Constitution that stipulated that Japan should neither wage war nor possess an army.
Clearly, Korea was still among the highest war-risk countries. Japan would be forced to intervene if sothing like a war or a major conflict between the two parts of Korea broke out. Actually, that would be an opportunity for Japan to annex Korea like they did in the early 20th century.
'But I… I was too narrow-minded because my opponent is Korea!'
He was not unaware of the outside criticism that he was so submissive to the United States like a dog wagging its tail to his master. Even though he knew it, he kept wagging his tail to Arica because he wanted to make Arica side with Japan if it was forced to choose between them and Korea.
He has been putting a lot of effort into deepening ties with the United States since he took office, but the United States joined hands with Korea overnight.
What's more, there erged a Korean superman who made his great dream co to nothing.
"What the hell did I do?" Pri Minister Abezo uttered in frustration.
At the sa ti, he shouted, "Tell Chief of Staff Yamamoto to withdraw all the fleet! Retreat!"
Japan has built the current naval fleet by investing a huge amount of money and ti, so he could not lose even one battleship.
At Pri Minister Abezo's order, Chief Cabinet Secretary Kono picked up the phone.
"Yes, I'll convey your order right away!"
He then called the Defense Secretary's office.
Shortly afterwards, his chief secretary told him, "We've received the report that they can't turn back imdiately because there are so many battleships mobilized in one area on the sea. Of course, they've said they are going to retreat as quickly as possible at your order."
"Tell them to hurry up."
"Yes, understood!"
Pri Minister Abezo gave such an order because he also knew that they could not retreat in a hurry because of their close formation in the area.
At the sa ti, the pri minister muttered in a low voice, "I wonder if we can stop the typhoon even now."
Obviously, he was just asking it to himself.
But sobody in the corner of his office replied, "No, that's impossible."
***
The waters off the coast of Tokyo were quite a distance away from the pri minister's office, but that did not pose a problem to at all. Using Blink with zero cooldown, I moved to the pri minister's office to confirm how wrong his choice to mobilize the navy fleet was.
As soon as I arrived, I saw them hurriedly retreating after the pri minister gave the order to withdraw. And I saw the pri minister toying with hope against hope that he could stop the typhoon even now.
But it was too late. He should have made the decision to forfeit early on.
So I answered the pri minister's question by saying, "No, it's impossible!"
"!!!"
"!!!"
"!!!"
No wonder not only Pri Minister Abezo, but everyone in the pri minister's office turned their heads to , startled by my reply.
But I ignored them, and continued, "You don't think this is the ring where the referee rules, right? Oh, it doesn't matter even if you think that way because the referee's ruling doesn't affect at all."
Even when I was talking with them, the typhoon, accompanied by ice and gusts of wind as seen on the screen installed on one side of the pri minister's office, kept advancing.
The Japanese naval battleships, which were in the thick of retreating in a hurry, were directly in the path of the typhoon.
Watching that, the pri minister uttered desperately, "Damn, it's really a waste of the tens of billions of yen that we spent on them!"
Obviously, they would incur more than tens of trillions of yen in losses.
The huge fleet of naval battleships were shaking more violently than before.
At that mont, Pri Minister Abezo shouted urgently, "Let surrender! Surrender!"
But I didn't respond right away to his ntion of 'surrender.'
Why? Because he decided to surrender with great reluctance after he belatedly found out that he could not beat . And this kind of half-hearted surrender would definitely cause trouble later.
So did I accept his surrender and stop the typhoon?
Given his cunning personality, Pri Minister Abezo would obviously regard as a coward, and his wrong judgnt would cause larger problems later. When that happened, I would have no choice but to sink half of this island country.
So I said in a low voice at his words, "It's already too late."
Startled, the pri minister shouted, "There are a lot of Japanese people on that ships! I don't think you're planning on burying all those innocent people in the sea, right?"
"So why did you let such a situation develop when you already knew that? You already witnessed my capabilities with your own eyes. Moreover, it took about a week for the huge typhoon created in the North Pacific to reach the sea off Japan. I gave you enough ti, but you even refused my minimal consideration!"
"…"
Pri Minister Abezo didn't respond as if he was speechless.
At that mont, a scene that was so terrible in his eyes was displayed on the screen installed in the corner of his office.
Puck! Puck! Puck! Puck!
Ice chunks the size of a human body pounded the giant battleships relentlessly.
Generally speaking, ice chunks could not break tal, but the ice chunks I created were not ordinary ice.
Crunch! Bang! Bang!
The decks of the battleships had holes here and there after being hit hard by the big ice chunks.
Even the missile launchers installed on the deck were also shattered to pieces by the ice.
That was nothing, compared with what was to co.
My ice didn't just fall from the top due to the gust of a typhoon. Instead, they buffeted the ship from all direction.
As the ice chunks hit the side of the ships, huge holes were created instantly, through which seawater more than a few ters high began to flow into.
No wonder the damaged battleships began to sink one by one.
It was literally hell.
The pri minister was witnessing the tragic sinking of the battleships with nurous crew on board.
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