Hello,
According to 'The Road of Cinnabar', we know that Julius Evola
planned to write a 'Secret History of the Secret Societies', but that
this project never materialised, because the materials he had
gathered for it during his stay in Vienna, where he had been invited
by certain senior members of the S.S. to study Masonic documents,
were destroyed during a bombardment of the city.
The first evidence of Evola's interest in occult history, in what is
now called 'conspiracy theory', comes from as far back as the period
of the Ur&Krur group, with an article called 'Remarks on Counter-
Initiation' (signed Arvo). Further evidence appears in the 1930's
with the publication of 'The Instruments of the Occult War' in 1938
in La Vita Italiana, and in his translation into Italian of the work
of Léon de Poncins and Emanuel Malinsky, 'La Guerre occulte'. He had
reviewed this work three years before in La Vita Italiana. His
interest was not to flag after the Second World War, since he
published two articles on this theme in 1952 in Il Meridiano
d'Italia, 'The Occult War' and 'Behind the Scenes of History', and
the following year examined more systematically, in 'Men among the
Ruins', the tactics, weapons, and goals of the "occult war", re-
examining certain of the considerations he had already put forward in
all the writings we have just mentioned.
We present here the conclusion written by Evola for the 1961 edition
(Le Rune):
http://members.tripod.com/thompkins_cariou/id48.html
Thompkins&Cariou