- What Happened: James O'Keefe went undercover inside Cyklopen, a Stockholm-based autonomous center described as an Antifa organizing hub, capturing hidden camera footage of how the network operates internationally.
- Why It Matters: The investigation exposed ties between Swedish Antifa networks, U.S.-based organizers, and Islam.
- Bottom Line: Swedish taxpayers are funding youth centers connected to these networks, and the cross-border reach of Antifa organizing is now on camera for the world to see.
James O'Keefe just pulled back the curtain on something the mainstream media has zero interest in covering: Antifa does not stop at the border.
O'Keefe and his team traveled to Stockholm, Sweden, where they went undercover inside Cyklopen, an autonomous cultural center that locals describe as an Antifa organizing hub. To gain entry into a space that is typically closed to journalists and hostile to cameras, O'Keefe posed as an American convert to Islam. A masked individual eventually let the team inside, where a hidden camera captured members explaining that newcomers had to prove their commitment to the cause before being granted fuller access.
One member told the team: "You're welcome to be here but we came to see if you are here that you are participate in whatever is happening here."
James O’Keefe finds an ANTIFA Headquarters and goes undercover as a Muslim
— Wall Street Apes (@WallStreetApes) February 18, 2026
Because he’s dressed as a Muslim he’s granted entry
This is the Left and Islam working together to bring down the West. It doesn’t her any clearer than this. It’s a partnership
pic.twitter.com/6SfuudlElr
The investigation did not stop there. Working with Swedish citizen journalist Christian Peterson, the team tracked down Johan Victorin and Caroline Victorin, two organizers who were previously identified in earlier Project Veritas hidden-camera footage from inside Rose City Antifa headquarters in Portland, Oregon. After that exposure, the pair packed up and relocated to Sweden. Peterson found them anyway.
The investigation also uncovered taxpayer-funded youth centers like Framtidens Hus, or "House of the Future," where roughly 15 staff members each earn around $5,000 per month providing free activities for teenagers. Music, cooking, gaming, all of it paid for by Swedish taxpayers with ties to these activist networks operating nearby.
"Totally taxpayer funded," O'Keefe noted.
This investigation also pulls back the curtain on what analysts have called the "Red-Green" alliance, a growing convergence between radical leftists and Islamist movements across Western nations. United by shared anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist agendas, this coalition has raised serious concerns among national security experts who warn that the partnership is reshaping protest movements in Europe and quietly making its way back to American soil.
The urban warfare we see isn’t chaos—it’s the battle plan of Leftist and Islamist militias, acting as an insurgency for malign foreign interests. Look for them in every protest. You’ll see them. Read #WokeArmy to understand—and win—the war we’re in.
— Asra Nomani (@AsraNomani) June 8, 2025
📘 https://t.co/Iv1TKWWx11 pic.twitter.com/B1qSUGImw9
Cam Higby recently blew the whistle on this as well, posting on X to draw attention: “Whatever you do, don’t Google ‘Red-Green Alliance.’”
Whatever you do, don’t google “Red-Green Alliance”
— Cam Higby 🇺🇸 (@camhigby) February 18, 2026
This is what an international activist pipeline looks like up close. It does not stay in Portland. It does not stay in Stockholm. It moves, it hides, and it organizes while nobody is supposed to be watching.
O'Keefe was watching.

