In Germany, the far-right AfD party is on the rise. In recent months, he has benefited greatly from the feeling of insecurity linked to the war in Ukraine, immigration and inflation, as well as the difficulties encountered by the ruling coalition.

On the radar of German intelligence services for years, certain regional branches of the party have been clearly identified as threats because of their radicalism. But it was the revelations of the investigative media Correctiv, whose journalists documented a meeting between members of the AfD and neo-Nazi identitarians, which provoked a startle.