Last modified on January 18, 2023, at 00:10

Red–green–brown front

The red–green–brown front, also known as the red–green–brown alliance or Islamocommunazism, refers to a syncretic, antisemitic united front of Communists, Islamists, and Nazis who seek to work in tandem rather than as individual factions. Such radical alliances usually attempt to disguise their hatred of Jews as "criticism of Israel," with the common tactic sometimes referred to as "new antisemitism." Direct collaboration between all three groups is uncommon, with most instances being any two radical factions out of the three forming an anti-Zionist front.

Ever since the 1920s and possibly earlier, different antisemitic groups often syncretized their movements; Nazism, for instance, originating as a merging of Marxist tenets (which were economically and religiously antisemitic) with pan-German ethnonationalism (ethnically/racially antisemitic). In the post–World War II era, alliances only increased, with National Bolshevism and Nasserist–Soviet Union ties being key examples.

According to Professor Fred Baumann of Kenyon College in an op-ed on The Algemeiner Journal, hard-left Jewish groups such as Jewish Voice for Peace have facilitated the red–green–brown front's efforts to legitimize attacks on Israel and sanitize the terrorist, genocidal atrocities committed by Hamas and the Palestinian Authority.[1]

See also

References

  1. Baumann, Fred (October 14, 2016). Red, Green and Brown: Communists, Islamists, Nazis — and Jews. The Algemeiner. Retrieved January 17, 2023.