-Caveat Lector-

Terrorists 'helped by CIA' to stop rise of left in Italy

http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,462976,00.html

Philip Willan in Milan
Monday March 26, 2001
The Guardian

US intelligence services instigated and abetted rightwing terrorism in Italy
during the 1970s, a former Italian secret service general has claimed.

The allegation was made by General Gianadelio Maletti, a former head of
military counter-intelligence, at the trial last week of rightwing
extremists accused of killing 16 people in the bombing of a Milan bank in
1969 - the first time such a charge has been made in a court of law by a
senior Italian intelligence figure.

Gen Maletti, comannder of the counter-intelligence section of the military
intelligence service from 1971 to 1975, said his men had discovered that a
rightwing terrorist cell in the Venice region had been supplied with
military explosives from Germany.

Those explosives may have been obtained with the help of members of the US
intelligence community, an indication that the Americans had gone beyond the
infiltration and monitoring of extremist groups to instigating acts of
violence, he said.

"The CIA [Central Intelligence Agency], following the directives of its
government, wanted to create an Italian nationalism capable of halting what
it saw as a slide to the left and, for this purpose, it may have made use of
rightwing terrorism," Gen Maletti told the Milan court. "I believe this is
what happened in other countries as well."

The general has been living in South Africa for the last 21 years as a
fugitive from Italian justice. He has been sentenced to 14 years
imprisonment for leaking a secret service document to the press and last
year received a 15-year sentence for obstructing justice. He was granted a
special 15-day immunity from arrest to enable him to give evidence at the
trial for the bombing of a bank in Milan's Piazza Fontana, the atrocity that
inaugurated the "strategy of tension", a series of bombings intended to
shift the country's political centre of gravity to the right.

"The impression was that the Americans would do anything to stop Italy from
sliding to the left," Gen Maletti said during an interview at his Milan
hotel.

"Don't forget that [former US president Richard] Nixon was in charge and
Nixon was a strange man, a very intelligent politician but a man of rather
unorthodox initiatives."

The CIA supported SID, the Italian defence intelligence service,
financially, but Gen Maletti's US counterparts were rarely willing to share
information. There may have been good reason for the American caginess. In a
posthumous memoir published last year, the wartime resistance hero Count
Edgardo Sogno described how he visited the CIA station chief in Rome in July
1974 to inform him of his plans for an anti-communist coup.

"I told him that I was informing him as an ally in the struggle for the
freedom of the west and asked him what the attitude of the American
government would be," Mr Sogno wrote. "He answered what I already knew: the
United States would have supported any initiative tending to keep the
communists out of government."

Despite contacts with his CIA counterparts, no word of the Sogno plot was
uttered. "I, for one, didn't know about the Sogno thing. I knew Mr Sogno was
being investigated by a Turin magistrate but I didn't know he had such
important contacts with US agencies in the United States and Italy," Gen
Maletti said. "Clearly, Sogno had great confidence in the complicity of the
American service."

The lucid 79-year-old general, whose English is almost perfect, has spent
his retirement in South Africa painting and writing his memoirs, which are
due to be published soon. He admits to feeling nostalgic for his homeland.

But the judges who convicted him in absentia last year were far from
convinced of his gentlemanly qualities. In their written verdict they said
he had obstructed an investigation into a 1973 attack on the interior
minister by withholding crucial information from the magistrates.

Four members of the public were killed and 45 injured when an anarchist,
Gianfranco Bertoli, hurled a grenade into a crowd outside police
headquarters in Milan. Bertoli, according to the judges, was really a man of
right-wing sympathies and a long-standing SID informant, codenamed Negro.
Gen Maletti's men were warned in advance of the attack on the minister,
Mariano Rumor, but took no action to prevent it and failed to pass on their
information on Bertoli even after the killings.

Gen Maletti's role at the heart of the complex intrigues makes him an
illuminating witness. Italy must clarify the mysteries of that time if it is
to recover its national dignity and sovereignty, he said.

"Among the larger western European countries, Italy has been dealt with as a
sort of protectorate. I am ashamed to think that we are still subject to
special supervision."

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