Thank-you for the idea.
I did have a short explanation in the alt-text, which I'll repeat here with some clarification: they are the three arrows (as in: from a [cross]bow) to strike at the heart of ideologies against peoples' self-determination: capitalism, monarchism, and vanguardism [eg. Soviet communism].
It's a symbol that's used by antifascists, socialists, anarchists, and left-leaning social democracts.
EDIT: It's a very good thing you asked. Asking questions makes us all smarter :)
To clarify, and someone more knowledgeable please correct me where I'm wrong, I believe the "three arrows" symbol of the SPD-aligned Iron Front represented opposition to monarchism, fascism, and communism.
@DaveMWilburn @XenoPhage @cR0w
Communism in the context of the Iron Front referred to Soviet Union [note the symbol to which the arrow is directed].
Soviet Union's ideology was vanguardism. It was a core-leninist idea about a small ruling group ("professional revolutionaries") being the best choice to advance communism.
EDIT: You can spot the similarities to fascism and monarchism.
EDIT2: Heavy edits to add clarity. (Hopefully.)
@DaveMWilburn @XenoPhage @cR0w
You are allowed to disagree. Personally I feel this distinction is one of those hills worth dying for, as the alternative makes the symbol over-defined, and subject to be used in a nihilistic fashion, and/or to support the horseshoe theory.
(Everything is bad, and as such present which doesn't require system-changes is the best choice.)