The Third Position is a set of neo-fascist political ideologies that were first described in Western Europe following the Second World War.[1][2][3] Developed in the context of the Cold War, it developed its name through the claim that it represented a third position between the capitalism of the Western Bloc and the communism of the Eastern Bloc.
History and ideology
The term "Third Position" was coined in Europe during the Cold War as an umbrella term for neo-fascist and nationalist syncretic ideologies, mostly those decedent from Italian fascism and other, primarily but not exclusively non-Hitlerite, fascist movements. These ideologies were generally united in their rejection of both Western Bloc capitalism and liberal democracy as well as Eastern Bloc Marxist communism, instead wishing to establish a third ideological force on the world stage, hence its name. Third Positionist ideologies also generally had in common the wish to overthrow existing governments to replace them with homogeneous states, either as independent nation states or within the context of a larger pan-European nationalism as espoused by Oswald Mosley's Europe a Nation idea. Economically, most Third Positionist ideologies, like their predecessors, advocated for a form of corporatism or national syndicalism. Third Positionist groups and ideologues cooperated with the Libyan regime under Muammar Gaddafi and were generally sympathetic towards national liberation movements in the Third World.[4][5][6]
Germany
After World War II, the German far-right primarily consisted of the Socialist Reich Party (SRP), lead by Otto Ernst Remer, which directly attempted to revive the just defeated Nazism. The SRP was however later brought under the influence of Francis Parker Yockey who had, in his book Imperium, developed more unorthodox ideas for the Nazi movement such as an alliance with the Soviet Union, pan-European nationalism, and a spiritual, rather than biological, racism influenced by Julius Evola.
The German Social Movement (DSB) of Karl-Heinz Priester was a non-Nazi neo-fascist movement in West Germany that was founded as the German chapter of the Third Positionist European Social Movement (ESM) also included parties like Oswald Mosley's Union Movement, the Italian Social Movement, and the New Swedish Movement of Per Engdahl. Both the ESM as a whole and its German chapter specifically advocated a pan-European fascism.[9] Like other Third Positionist movements at the time, the DSB of Priester supported national liberation projects abroad, particularly the Algerian National Liberation Front, while also pushing for European–African cooperation via the Eurafrica concept.[10]
France
During the 1930s and 1940s, a number of splinter groups from the radical left became associated with radical nationalism. Jacques Doriot's French Popular Party (from the French Communist Party) and Marcel Déat's National Popular Rally (from the French Section of the Workers' International). Third Position ideology gained some support in France, where in 1985 Jean-Gilles Malliarakis set up a "Third Way" political party, Troisième Voie (TV). Considering its main enemies to be the United States, communism and Zionism, the group advocated radical paths to national revolution. Associated for a time with the Groupe Union Défense, TV was generally on poor terms with Front National until 1991, when Malliarakis decided to approach them. As a result, TV fell apart and a radical splinter group under Christian Bouchet, Nouvelle Résistance, adopted National Bolshevik and then Eurasianist views.[21]
Italy
In Italy, the Third Position was developed by Roberto Fiore, along with Gabriele Adinolfi and Peppe Dimitri, in the tradition of Italian neo-fascism. Third Position's ideology is characterized by a militarist formulation, a palingenetic ultranationalism looking favourably to national liberation movements, support for racial separatism and the adherence to a soldier lifestyle. In order to construct a cultural background for the ideology, Fiore looked to the ruralism of Julius Evola and sought to combine it with the desire for a cultural-spiritual revolution. He adopted some of the positions of the contemporary far-right, notably the ethnopluralism of Alain de Benoist and the Europe-wide appeal associated with such views as the Europe a Nation campaign of Oswald Mosley (amongst others). Fiore was one of the founders of the Terza Posizione movement in 1978. Third Position ideas are now represented in Italy by Forza Nuova, led by Fiore; and by the movement CasaPound, a network of far-right social centres.
United Kingdom
In the 1980s, the National Front, a British fascist party that had experienced the height of its success in the 1970s, was taken over by a Strasserist faction that referred to themselves as Third Positionist. The Strasserist-led National Front was also characterised by Baker as National Bolshevist in ideology. Reflecting the Nouvelle Droite's influence, the Strasserist Official NF promoted support for "a broad front of racialists of all colours" who were seeking an end to multi-racial society and capitalism, praising black nationalists like Louis Farrakhan and Marcus Garvey. Their publication, Nationalism Today, featured positive articles on the governments of Libya and Iran, presenting them as part of a global anti-capitalist and anti-Marxist third force in international politics; its members openly acknowledged the influence of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and his Third International Theory. This may have had tactical as well as ideological motivations, with Libya and Iran viewed as potential sources of funding. This new rhetoric and ideology alienated much of the party's rank-and-file membership. It experienced internal problems, and in 1989 several of its senior members—Nick Griffin, Derek Holland, and Colin Todd—split from it to establish their International Third Position group. One of its leaders was Roberto Fiore, an ex-member of the Italian far-right movement Terza Posizione.[22]
United States
In the United States, Political Research Associates argues that Third Position politics has been promoted by some white nationalist and neo-Nazi groups such as the National Alliance, American Front, Traditionalist Worker Party, Patriot Front, and White Aryan Resistance, as well as some black nationalist groups, such as the Nation of Islam, since the late 20th century.[23] In 2010, the American Third Position Party (later renamed American Freedom Party) was founded in part to channel the right-wing populist resentment engendered by the 2008 financial crisis and the policies of the Obama administration.[24]
See also
- Anti-corporate activism
- Antoun Saadeh
- Brazilian Integralism
- Corporatism
- Ecofascism
- Eurasianism
- Getulism
- Kokkashugi
- MIÉP–Jobbik Third Way Alliance of Parties
- National syndicalism
- New antisemitism
- Nouvelle Droite
- Pērkonkrusts
- Peronism
- Peruvian Ethnocacerism
External links
- Political Research Associates. What is the Third Position?, on PublicEye.org (2000).
- Southern Poverty Law Center. Third Position on the Web.
References
- Rogers Griffin. Fascism's new faces (and new facelessness) in the 'post-fascist' epoch Forum für osteuropäische Ideen- und Zeitgeschichte, 3 July 2023^
- Ryan Shaffer. Pan-European thought in British fascism: the International Third Position and the Alliance for Peace and Freedom Patterns of Prejudice, 23 January 2018^
- Alberto Spektorowski. The New Right: Ethno-regionalism, ethno-pluralism and the emergence of a neo-fascist 'Third Way'