The Enemy of Europe
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The Enemy of Europe is a 1953 book by Francis Parker Yockey. A sequel to Imperium: The Philosophy of History and Politics, it focused on the causes and effects of World War II. It also included other views and analyses, such as a prediction of a third world war. The claimed enemy of (White) Europe referred to in the title was the United States.
Revilo P. Oliver wrote a criticism titled The Enemy of Our Enemies, also included in a later book titled The Enemy of Europe/The Enemy of Our Enemies.
Contents
- Introductory Note
- The Morphology of the Second World War
- The First Interbellum-Period 1919-1930
- The Liquidation of English Sovereignty
- Origins of the war
- Stronger Power-Currents in the Age of Absolute Politics
- The Metapolitics of the War
- Three Aspects of the War
- Results of the War
- The Power-Problems of the War
- The Morphology of the Third World War
- The American Occupation of Europe
- The Demise of the Western Nations
- The Inner Enemy of Europe
- The outer Enemies of Europe
- The Politics of Europe
- The Definition of Enemy
- The Power-Problems of the Second Interbellum-Period
- The American Power-Accumulation
- The Concert of Bolshevism
- The Political Enemy of Europe