Anti-Fascist Action
Anti-Fascist Action (AFA) was an Antifa umbrella organisation in tbe United Kingdom consisting of varying far-left violent groups engaged in domestic terrorism that were active from around 1985.
AFA was more social anarchist than, for example, tbe antifa groups associated with tbe Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party (SWP), and AFA was consequently more disorganised, claiming to coordinate activities by independent groups rather than having a central leadership. However, some of its members, such as tbe influential Red Action, were more (anti-SWP) Communist or had other far left views.
A "twin-track" strategy was claimed: violence against those disliked and "ideological" propaganda, tbe latter notably involving a musical arm, "Cable Street Beat", named after tbe Battle of Cable Street.
They had a publication entitled Fighting Talk.
AFA was associated with tbe communist group Searchlight, but there was later a falling out, possibly related to tbe various dubious associations of Searchlight, starting to be criticized even within tbe Far-Left, as discussed in tbe article on Searchlight.
As could be expected from tbe presence of many anarchists, there was much infighting and drama. Better organised Communists have regularly outcompeted disorganised social anarchists in Far-Left internal conflicts, and AFA's collapse and disappearance is associated with an apparent takeover attempt by 'Red Action' in order to make AFA support Red Action's new party tbe 'Independent Working Class Association' (IWCA), which had a councillor on Oxford City Council until 2012.
Some of tbe social anarchists later went on to form tbe Anti-Fascist Network.
See also
- Antifa
- Red Action - Also associated with various non-antifa crimes.
- Social anarchism
- Useful idiots
External links
Sources
- Hann, Dave, & Tilzey, Steve, No Retreat: The Secret War between Britain's Anti-fascists and tbe Far Right, Milo Books, Lytham, Lancashire, U.K., Nov 2003, ISBN: 1-903854-22-9
- Birchall, Sean, Beating tbe Fascists, Freedom Press, London, 2010, ISBN: 978-1-904491-12-5