Origins (1969–1970) Attack! was founded in 1969 as the house publication of the right-wing youth organization the
National Youth Alliance (NYA), founded by the far-right activist
Willis Carto. It was their official periodical. The first issue of Attack was released in fall 1969. In 1970,
William Luther Pierce joined the NYA; Pierce was a former physicist, previously a member of the
National Socialist White People's Party (NSWPP); he had edited the NSWPP's affiliated magazine,
National Socialist World. He left the ANP following
the assassination of its leader,
George Lincoln Rockwell, and joined the NYA. The paper was launched to help membership in the NYA, which was faltering. Pierce borrowed 2000 dollars from NYA member
Louis T. Byers to launch the periodical. Its first issue lists the publisher as Byers and the editor as Carey J. Winters. It was originally published where the NYA was incorporated in
Washington, D.C. Pierce wrote articles for the magazine as "Luther Williams", and was the editor of the magazine by June 1970. He later published it as well. Pierce soon became a leader in the group. Carto saw Pierce as a useful leader for the NYA, while Pierce wanted to have an organization to spread his views to colleges. Additionally, Pierce desired to operate a publication for young radicals that was right-wing in orientation, which he found was fulfilled in
Attack! Pierce became involved in publishing and editing the paper.
Schism, Pierce takeover, and The Turner Diaries (1970–1978) in 1970|upright=.7 Less than a year after Pierce joined the NYA, Pierce and Carto had a falling out which split the group. The reasons for this split are disputed; Pierce said Carto had left the organization swamped in debt, which would kill the organization. Following the split, Pierce got the periodical and control of the National Youth Alliance name. After the split, Carto's other paper,
Statecraft, accused Pierce of being an FBI agent, while Pierce in turn accused Carto of embezzlement in
Attack! Following the dissociation from Carto, the paper took an anti-conservative bent. In 1974, Pierce changed the name of his side of the organization to simply the
National Alliance (or, alternatively, formed a new organization called that) and with the name change reorganized the group. Whereas before the periodical had focused on practical instructions for violence, in late 1974 fictional stories began to appear. The first of these was entitled "A Parable", and appeared in late 1974. Beginning in the January 1975 issue,
Attack! serialized Pierce's story
The Turner Diaries in every issue. The story focuses on a group of violent white nationalists overthrowing a government that oppresses white people. The periodical continued to print its typical fare in the meantime, though was during its serialization undergoing a change from a more explicitly violent direction to a more elitist one. Alongside
The Turner Diaries,
Attack! serialized a second story, a comic strip called "Future Zero", with similar themes. Issues that ran the
Diaries also contained commentary tying it into current events. The story was very popular with readers and members of the National Alliance. Owing to its popularity, when the story was concluded in the periodical, the full story was collected as a paperback book in early 1978 under the pseudonym Andrew MacDonald.
As the National Vanguard (1978–) In April 1978, Attack! was renamed the
National Vanguard, or, the
National Vanguard replaced
Attack! The
National Vanguard shifted to a glossy magazine format. The publication of the
National Vanguard was irregular, and was aimed at members of the National Alliance.
The Turner Diaries was sold through the magazine. In 1984, Pierce outlined his racist religious philosophy of
Cosmotheism in a
National Vanguard article called "A Program for Our Survival", which outlines a three-part plan to appeal to people's racism on a spiritual basis. A book of the "highlights" of the periodical was issued by National Vanguard Books as
The Best of ATTACK! and National Vanguard Tabloid in 1984, made up of writings in the publication from 1970 to 1982. Following the terroristic actions of
the Order, a neo-Nazi group inspired by
The Turner Diaries, the paper mused that, while their actions may have been "ill-advised [...] a new level of action has been set, which will be the baseline for future efforts". NA member
Kevin Alfred Strom edited the magazine beginning in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, the magazine slowed its production rate, and was halted for a time as Pierce shifted their media focus to a radio program,
American Dissident Voices. It had reappeared by the 2000s. By 2000, it was still the National Alliance's main periodical, though they later also launched several other periodicals, including the members' bulletin the
National Alliance Bulletin, another magazine for wider distribution entitled
Free Speech, and the music magazine
Resistance. Its main focus in comparison to these other periodicals was more in-depth ideological matters. Following Pierce's death in 2002, there was a leadership dispute in the National Alliance with Pierce's successor,
Erich Gliebe, and his leadership style alienating many members. Strom led a schism in 2005, and was with several people ousted. He afterwards founded a group also called the
National Vanguard, taking the name from the magazine. With it he also took the magazine's website domain, and the print magazine became defunct. Strom's schism organization eventually ceased, and he was brought back into the National Alliance by its new leader,
Will Williams, in 2014. Strom continues to operate the
National Vanguard magazine as a website under Williams' National Alliance. == Contents and ideology ==