Fourth Reich

Hypothetical successor of Nazi Germany
title: "Fourth Reich" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["anti-german-sentiment", "conspiracy-theories-in-germany", "euroscepticism", "far-right-politics-in-germany", "nazi-analogies", "nazi-related-conspiracy-theories", "neo-nazi-concepts", "fictional-countries", "political-terminology-in-germany", "proposed-countries"] description: "Hypothetical successor of Nazi Germany" topic_path: "politics" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_Reich" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Hypothetical successor of Nazi Germany ::
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/97/Nazi_order_of_the_phoenix.jpg" caption="1946}}, flanked by an unknown flag"] ::
The Fourth Reich () is the hypothetical successor to Nazi Germany, also known as the "Third Reich" (1933–1945). The term is used to describe the regime's possible survival (e.g. in South America) or its resurgence as envisioned by Neo-Nazis.
The term has also been used pejoratively by leftist commentators in the United States to describe the rise of right-wing populism and by Eurosceptics to decry Germany's influence on the European Union.
Origin
The term "Third Reich" was coined by Arthur Moeller van den Bruck in his 1923 book Das dritte Reich (Germany's Third Empire). He defined the Holy Roman Empire (962–1806) as the First Reich, the German Empire (18711918) as the Second Reich, while the Third Reich was a postulated ideal state including all German people, including Austria. The term was used by Nazi Germany to position their regime as a successor to these two empires.
The term "Fourth Reich" has been used in a variety of different ways. Neo-Nazis have used it to describe their envisioned revival of an ethnically pure state, especially Nazi Germany. Conspiracy theorists like Max Spiers, Peter Levenda, and Jim Marrs have used the term derogatorily to refer to what they perceive to be a covert continuation of Nazism.
Neo-Nazism
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9c/Grey_Wolf_-_Hardy_configuration.jpg" caption="Chile's probe"] ::
As many as 10,000 Nazis escaped to South America in the aftermath of World War II. Various neo-Nazis in South America aimed to establish a Fourth Reich, with former Nazi officer Otto Skorzeny facilitating the transfer of Nazi plunder to Argentina which helped Nazi sympathizer Juan Perón come into power, along with former Nazi Hans-Ulrich Rudel, the transport of other escapees. From about 1945 to 1947, Chile led an international probe (supported by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation), which documented Nazi activity on the continent until 1947. In 2017, numerous files from the investigation were released to the National Archives of Chile, which History's investigative documentary series Hunting Hitler visited in 2018; the evidence was implied to support the existence of a Fourth Reich and possibly Adolf Hitler's secret escape from Berlin.
Neo-Nazis envision the Fourth Reich as featuring Aryan supremacy, anti-semitism, Lebensraum, aggressive militarism and totalitarianism. Based on pamphlets published by David Myatt in the early 1990s, many neo-Nazis came to believe that the rise of the Fourth Reich in Germany would pave the way for the establishment of the Western Imperium, a pan-Aryan empire encompassing all land populated by predominantly European-descended peoples (i.e., Europe, Russia, Anglo-America, Australia, New Zealand, and White South Africa).
As a political pejorative
Right-wing populism
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/79/Dump_the_Turd_Reich_(54436998382).jpg" caption="An anti-[[Donald Trump]] protester in 2025 with a sign reading "Dump the Turd Reich""] ::
The term has come to be used by leftist commentators to compare the rise of right-wing populism to the emergence of fascism in Europe in the 1920s and 1930s. In a 1973 interview, black American writer James Baldwin said of Richard Nixon's reelection, "To keep the nigger in his place, they brought into office law and order, but I call it the Fourth Reich."
In 2019, Gavriel D. Rosenfeld, a professor of history at Fairfield University, argued that:Too many hyperbolic comparisonsfor example, between Donald Trump and Adolf Hitlerdulls the power of historical analogies and risks crying wolf. Too little willingness to see past dangers lurking in the present risks underestimating the latter and ignoring the former.
Prior to the 2024 United States presidential election, Trump posted then deleted a video on his social media accounts alluding to a "unified Reich" should he win. His victory and subsequent administration also spurred renewed accusations of a "new Reich".
German influence in the European Union
Some commentators in Europe have used the term "Fourth Reich" to point at the influence that they believe Germany exerts within the European Union (EU). For example, Simon Heffer wrote in the Daily Mail that Germany's economic power, further boosted by the European financial crisis, is the "economic colonisation of Europe by stealth", whereby Berlin is using economic pressure rather than armies to "topple the leadership of a European nation". This, he says, constitutes the "rise of the Fourth Reich". Likewise, Simon Jenkins of The Guardian wrote that it is "a massive irony that old Europe's last gasp should be to seek ... German supremacy".
In August 2012, a headline in the Italian newspaper Il Giornale used the phrase Quarto Reich (Fourth Reich) to protest what it considered to be German hegemony. This hegemony perspective gained traction in the United Kingdom leading up to 2016 EU referendum and the subsequent Brexit negotiations. In December 2021, against the background of the Polish rule-of-law crisis, Jarosław Kaczyński, then- Deputy Prime Minister and head of Law and Justice, told the far-right Polish newspaper GPC that "Germany is trying to turn the EU into a federal 'German fourth Reich'". He asserted that he was only referring to the continuance from the Holy Roman Empire, not Nazi Germany. He criticized the vision of greater federalism, as displayed by Olaf Scholz and his coalition, as "utopian and therefore dangerous". Kaczynski remarked that, "if we Poles agreed to such a modern submission we would be degraded in many ways".
References in popular culture
Film
- In the Finnish comedy science fiction film Iron Sky in 1945 some Nazis escaped to the far side of the Moon and established the Fourth Reich.
- In the 1978 film adaption of The Boys from Brazil, Dr. Josef Mengele (Gregory Peck) creates clones of Hitler and places them around the world so they would eventually rise to political power and start the Fourth Reich.
Television
- In the 1967 episode of Mission: Impossible, "The Legacy", descendants of Adolf Hitler's most trusted Nazi officers meet in Zurich, Switzerland, to locate Hitler's hidden personal fortune in order to launch a new Fourth Reich.
- In the TV series Hunters, several Nazi leaders escaped to South America and plan to establish the Fourth Reich.
Novels
- The 1978 Robert Ludlum novel The Holcroft Covenant involves the discovery of a plot by hidden Nazis around the world to create a Fourth Reich by infiltrating many different businesses and countries' governments. His 1995 novel The Apocalypse Watch reaches its climax with the destruction of a Fourth Reich set in the 1990s, and the discovery of an ancient Adolf Hitler controlling a massive multinational corporation.
- Ira Levin's 1976 novel The Boys from Brazil Dr. Josef Mengele creates clones of Hitler and places them around the world so they would eventually rise to political power and start the Fourth Reich.
Video games===
- In Call of Duty: Vanguard, the term "Fourth Reich" is used to describe either a Nazi government-in-exile that the antagonists are forming.
- In the Metro franchise, there is a faction within the Moscow Metro known as the Fourth Reich.
- In the Hearts of Iron IV expansion Trial of Allegiance, an alternate history path for Argentina allows the player to create a Fourth Reich.
References
Footnotes
Citations
References
- Lauryssens, Stan. (1999). "The Man Who Invented the Third Reich: The Life and Times of Arthur Moeller van den Bruck". Sutton.
- Reitman, Janet. (2018-05-02). "All-American Nazis: Inside the Rise of Fascist Youth in the U.S.".
- Bullen, Jamie. (17 October 2016). "Conspiracy theorist discussed 'Fourth Reich' in final interview". Evening Standard.
- (2016-01-14). "The Failed Coup That Led To Hitler's 'Mein Kampf'".
- Knickerbocker, H. R.. (2008). "Is Tomorrow Hitler's?: 200 Questions on the Battle of Mankind". Kessinger Publishing.
- Klein, Christopher. (2015-11-12). "How South America Became a Nazi Haven".
- Goñi, Uki. (2002). "The Real Odessa: Smuggling the Nazis to Perón's Argentina". Granta.
- Infield, Glenn. (1988). "Secrets of the SS". Military Heritage Press.
- Wechsberg, Joseph. (1967). "The Murderers Among Us: The Simon Wiesenthal Memoirs". McGraw-Hill.
- Tetens, T. H.. (1961). "The New Germany and the Old Nazis". Random House.
- "Descifrando las redes de espionaje nazi: historia del Departamento 50 (1)".
- (January 11, 2018). "Documentos Dpto.50 (II parte)". Archivo Nacional de Chile.
- "Nazi Networks in Chile: Declassified Documents".
- (2017-06-22). "Chile publishes details of Nazi spy rings in World War Two". Reuters.
- (2018). "Hitler's Last Will".
- Schmidt, Michael. (1993). "The New Reich: Violent Extremism in Germany and Beyond".
- E.g. the 14 pamphlets in his ''Thormynd Press National-Socialist Series'', most of which were republished by Liberty Bell Publications (Reedy, Virginia) in the 1990s, and essays such as ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20040712101315/http://www.geocities.com/myattns/newreich.html Towards Destiny: Creating a New National-Socialist Reich]'' and a [https://web.archive.org/web/20041208070520/http://www.geocities.com/myattns/cons_reich.html constitution for the 'fourth Reich'].
- Goodrick-Clarke, Nicholas. (2002). "Black Sun: Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and The Politics of Identity". [[New York University Press]].
- (5 May 2019). "Fears of a Fourth Reich".
- Price, Michelle L.. (21 May 2024). "Trump's social media account shares video referencing 'unified Reich,' then deletes it". [[PBS]].
- Evans, Richard J.. (2025-04-02). "A new reich?". [[Prospect (magazine).
- Heffer, Simon. (15 May 2016). "The Fourth Reich is here – without a shot being fired". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
- (4 May 2016). "Merkels Tyskland – Fjärde Riket?". [[Yle]].
- (23 March 2015). "'The Fourth Reich': What Some Europeans See When They Look at Germany". [[Spiegel Online]].
- Evans, Richard J.. (24 November 2011). "The myth of the Fourth Reich". The New Statesman.
- Charlemagne. (11 June 2019). "Wurst among equals: Contrary to popular belief, Germany does not in fact run the EU". The Economist.
- Greenslade, Roy. (2012-08-07). "Germany outraged by Italian newspaper's 'Fourth Reich' headline".
- O'Toole, Fintan. (2018-11-16). "The paranoid fantasy behind Brexit". The Guardian.
- (24 December 2021). "Polish deputy PM says Germany wants to turn EU into 'fourth Reich' {{!}} Jarosław Kaczyński's remarks in far-right newspaper are latest episode in Poland's lengthy standoff with EU". The Guardian.
- (24 December 2021). "Berlin wants EU to be 'Fourth German Reich', says Poland's Kaczynski". euronews.
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