Today it seems that even the cat and the fox agree for looking at the dark side of the things...
Evola judged fascism and nazism from on high, and it is also permitted to think he had a similar outlook on the Jewish and Masonic influence in Italy or elsewhere.
He pointed out the popular/plebeian side of the fascism and/or Mussolini, within some ambits, and it's clear he did not consider the approach of Hitler as aristocratic.
It is true that the racial laws of Mussolini have been bland, but it is as much true that also Evola upon the years turned his opinions on the methods of the final solution (Madagascar or Zyklon-B, as you please).
In the seventies it seems that Evola never was contrary to the State of Israeli.