Radical Network

Radical Network ({{langx|fr|Réseau radical}} was a French far-right study group from 2002 to 2006. Formed in June 2002, a number of its early members came from those who split from Unité Radicale that April, notably Christian Bouchet, Luc Bignot and Giorgio Damiani.[http://www.france-politique.fr/annuaire-extreme-droite.htm 'Dossier - Extrême Droite Radicale]

Adhering to solidarism, the group avowedly rejected Left-Right politics and claimed to be inspired not only by rightists like Aleksandr Dugin, François Duprat, Julius Evola and Jean-François Thiriart but also by socialists such as Louis Auguste Blanqui. It used the trident as its emblem and also organised a youth movement, Jeune dissidence. In keeping with their status as a study group it numbered around 40 hardcore activists.[http://www.tau.ac.il/Anti-Semitism/asw2006/france.htm 'France'] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121119110652/http://www.tau.ac.il/Anti-Semitism/asw2006/france.htm |date=2012-11-19 }} from the Stephen Roth Institute

With their activities co-ordinated by a Conseil solidariste radical, it adopted a position of Anti-Americanism, Anti-capitalism and Anti-Zionism, whilst leaning towards the ideas of Neo-Eurasianism. In keeping with such ideas, it supported Saddam Hussein, Serbia and Montenegro, Carlos the Jackal and Hugo Chávez, amongst others. It was close to the magazine Résistance, a National Bolshevik publication produced by sometime member Bouchet.

The group was dissolved by its creators in early 2006, with some regrouping as Les nôtres.

References

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