The nations participating in this meeting in Sydney were few, but they were all significant components of Arthur's strategic deployment.
At the forefront were Finland, the United Kingdom of the West Coast, and the Kingdom of California, followed by the Philippines, Kalimantan, Sweden, and Norway, including the Baltic States.
Lastly, there were a few powers from the Island Nation, and the matter of whether to integrate the Island Nation was something William would have to consider in the future.
The reason for summoning so many countries to Australia for the meeting was to stabilize Australasia's global hegemony while defensively positioning against Britain and Russia, the current second and third strongest countries in the world.
Actually, the threat posed by Britain and Russia to Australasia was quite limited. Unless these two countries joined forces, they posed no fatal threat to Australasia.
But then again, was Australasia afraid of these two countries uniting?
Not exactly.