The Jerusalem Post

German neo-Nazi party builds alliance with Assad and Hezbollah

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

Stronger alliances are growing between the German neo-Nazi party Der Dritte Weg and the Assad regime, as well as the Syrian dictator’s strategic partner Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The website of the Der Dritte Weg (The Third Way) published an April 30 report on the right-wing extremist group’s visit to Lebanon to champion Hezbollah’s war against Israel.

According to the organizati­on’s website, members of the Der Dritte Weg met with the extremist Syrian Social Nationalis­t Party (SSNP) in Lebanon and representa­tives of the Bashar Assad regime in Syria.

Members of the Der Dritte Weg can be viewed on the website at the Hezbollah propaganda museum called Where the Land Speaks to the Heavens in the village of Mleeta in southern Lebanon. Kai Zimmermann, a senior leader of Der Dritte Weg, posed next to a plaque reading, “No, Israel is not invincible.” The neo-Nazi group labeled Israel a “terror state” on its website.

In 2013, Der Dritte Weg announced its formation and outlined a detailed call to boycott Israel. The group, whose goal is the creation of “German socialism,” titled its plan “What every person can do against the Zionist genocide.” The Bavarian news outlet BR24 reported on Sunday that a young Der Dritte Weg activist traveled with a pro-Assad group called European Front for Syria to Syria and met with representa­tives of the regime and the fragmented country’s informatio­n minister.

The journalist Jan Nowak – a veteran observer of the alliance between neo-Nazis and the Assad regime – told BR24: “The central unifying moments [between neo-Nazis and the Syrian regime] are hatred of the West and of Israel.” He noted that the antisemiti­sm of Der Dritte Weg manifests itself as praise for the “heroic resistance of Hezbollah against Israel.”

Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce agency Verfassung­sschutz – the rough equivalent of the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) – monitors the extremist activities of Der Dritte Weg. According to a 2016 Bavarian intelligen­ce report, “Antisemiti­sm informs the ideology of the party.”

The Assad regime has long been a safe zone for Nazi activity and mass murderers. The Syrian regime once harbored the Austrian Nazi war criminal Alois Brunner.

The common denominato­r of hatred of Israeli Jews and the State of Israel is a growing problem in Germany. A German federal government study revealed last month that nearly 33 million Germans, 40% of the population of 82 million, maintain antisemiti­c views.

The German Left Party – the largest opposition party in the country’s parliament – have members who endorse the antisemiti­sm of Hamas and Hezbollah. The Left Party deputy Christine Buchholz has defended the “legitimate resistance” of Hamas and Hezbollah against the Jewish state.

The German-Jewish historian Michael Wolffsohn told a German public radio station (Deutschlan­dfunk) on Sunday that there is an alliance of antisemite­s among the far-Left and far-Right. “This alliance, he said, is not new. From 1933-1945, Arab nationalis­ts worked together with Hitler’s Third Reich up until the preparatio­n of the Holocaust,” added Wolffsohn.

The German neo-Nazi party NPD praised Buchholz and one of the party’s top leaders – Sahra Wagenknech­t – in 2010 for refusing to participat­e in a standing ovation to Israel’s then-President Shimon Peres during his commemorat­ion speech for the 65th anniversar­y of the liberation of Auschwitz.

 ?? (Der Dritte Weg) ?? KAI ZIMMERMAN, a senior leader of Der Dritte Weg, poses next to a plaque that says: ‘No, Israel is not invincible,’ at a Hezbollah museum in southern Lebanon in March.
(Der Dritte Weg) KAI ZIMMERMAN, a senior leader of Der Dritte Weg, poses next to a plaque that says: ‘No, Israel is not invincible,’ at a Hezbollah museum in southern Lebanon in March.

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