Red Brigades, Italy's Communist Terrorist Group, Threatens Officials

Italy’s notorious communist terrorist group the Red Brigades has sent a
string a letters with bullets threatening various public officials in
Italy, according to the Italian press agency Adnkronos. The public
officials threatened, as of now, include former Prime Minister Massimo
D'Alema,

former Justice Minister Clemente Mastella, Labor Minister Maurizio
Sacconi, mayor of Rome Gianni Alemanno, and several others.

The threatening letters were “posted in the seaside town of Fiumicino
near Rome and ... mailed to Italy's
Adnkronos
news agency in the capital on Tuesday,”
Adnkronosreported
.

The letter threatening former justice minister Mastella was sent to his
home just two days after he was attacked by “a group of unemployed
youths,” as described by
Sify News
.

The letter to Mastella, who currently leads the centrist Popular Party
of the South and has political aspirations to run for mayor of Naples,
read in part:

Remember the Red Brigades, we’ll finish you in Naples. But we won’t
screw up next, also because we won’t rely on our bare hands. Do you see
the bullet?

Don’t try to become mayor of Naples. Stay on your own turf. Easter’s not
that far off, and you know what happens to lambs then!

Although the other letter, threatening the mayor of Rome and others, was
signed by Informal Anarchist Federation — the same group which claimed
responsibility for a package bomb placed in the Greek embassy that was
defused by law enforcement authorities on December 27, 2010 — it was
also signed “For Communism, the Red Brigades, and the Galesi Centre for
an Anti-imperialist Armed Movement.”

In 2010, the Red Brigades sent similar letters with bullets to former
Speaker of Parliament and anti-terrorism Judge Luciano Violante and his
wife.

The Red Brigades group does not discriminate among their targets'
politics: Rome’s Mayor Gianni Alemanno belongs to The People of Freedom,
a center-Right party, while Judge Violante is a member of the
center-Left Democratic Party.

In addition to letters, the Red Brigades has sent threats through acts
of vandalism. In Turin, AGI News
reported
that new graffiti appeared on January 10 “with with the Red Brigades'
logo, all addressed [to] FIAT's CEO Sergio Marchionne, only a few days
before the referendum on the Mirafiori plant.”

In a self-interview in the 1970s, Renato Curcio, the original founder of
the Red Brigades, described the goal of the group: “Faced with
working-class terror, the bourgeoisie by now has an obligatory course:
to reestablish control by intensified repression and progressive
militarization of the state.”

Curcio’s admission confirms what high-ranking KGB defector Anatoliy
Golitsyn alleged in his book
New Lies for Old
(1984) when explaining why the Soviet Union sponsored terrorism:

The objective of violence is to create chaos and anarchy, to impose
additional strains on ruling democratic parties, to eliminate their
ablest leaders, to force them to resort to undemocratic measures, and to
demonstrate to the public their inability to maintain law and order,
leaving the field open to the legal communist party to present itself as
the only effective alternative force.

Throughout the Cold War, the Red Brigades was responsible for a wide
array of terrorist attacks in Italy, including the kidnapping and
execution of former Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro in 1978.

Renato Curcio, Red Brigades leader at the time, had connections with
Czech intelligence — the StB, which was dominated by the Soviet KGB.
Curcio also frequently traveled to Czechoslovakia.

Despite the purported "fall" of communism and "demise" of the Soviet
Union, the Red Brigades maintains ideological solidarity with Russia. In
a secret U.S. State Department
cable
dated January 26, 2009, then-U.S. Ambassador to Italy Ronald Spogli
observed that although “Putin's Russia bears little resemblance to
Communist ideals, this fact has not deterred Italian communists and
other radical left politicians from being openly pro-Russia on the basis
of ideological solidarity.”

In a document posted on the Internet in 2002, the Red Brigades stated
that the September 11 terrorist attacks demonstrated the “need for the
forging of alliances between anti-imperialistic forces and revolutionary
forces in the regions of Europe, the Mediterranean and the Middle East.”

The threat of communism is indicative in the current terror activities
of the Red Brigades, which challenge the accepted mainstream perception
that the Cold War is over. In a 2009 televised interview shortly before
he died, high-ranking KGB/SVR defector Sergei Tretyakov commented: "Who
told you that Cold War was ever over? It transforms — it’s like a
virus."

That virus continues to plague Italy as more and more of its public
figures are threatened by the Red Brigades and other Italian communists.

Photo: Former Governor of the Bank of Italy Antonio Fazio arrives at the
funeral wake of late former Italian President Francesco Cossiga, who led
Italy's fight against domestic terrorism in the 1970s and 1980s but
resigned after failing to save the life of a politician kidnapped by the
Red Brigades: AP Images

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