PHOTO: Adeyinka
Makinde
A
Christmas holiday in Milan back in December 2011 while naturally stimulating me
into the spirit and ethos of the aesthetic of what the Milanese refer to as La bella Figura, did not preclude me from seeking out the more serious aspects of the city’s history.
So while
taking in the towering architectural and cultural achievements manifested in such
creations as Duomo di Milano and La Scala as well as the high fashion consumerist
paradise of the Quadrilatero d’Oro and the legendary San Siro Stadium; home to the
football teams AC Milan and Internazionale, my interest in political history
drew me to Piazza Fontana located about a hundred yards from Piazza Duoma.
Piazza
Fontana is of course the location of the notorious 1969 bombing at Banca
Nazionale dell’Agricoltura which killed 17 people and wounded 88.
The
massacre was blamed on anarchists and Guiseppe Pinelli, an anarchist, who was
arrested later died in police custody.
Early
concerns about the conduct of the police investigation and Pinelli’s suspicious
demise would be confirmed in the future when the full extent of state collusion
with neo-Fascist groups in the perpetration of terrorist operations was
revealed.
The bombing is now attributed to Right-wing
extremist groups linked to the Gladio stay-behind network, a secret army which
had been designated by NATO to fight the forces of the Warsaw Pact guerrilla style
in the event of a Soviet-led invasion of Western Europe, but which shape-shifted into something quite sinister.
In
concert with American intelligence operatives, this and other bombings were
instigated to create a climate of fear and uncertainty in which people would
call for the installation of a ‘strong’ authoritarian Right-wing government
which would prevent social chaos and the possible takeover of Italy by the
political Left.
The
bombing is seen as the inaugural event of an overall campaign known as La Strategia
della Tensione: The Strategy of Tension.
(C)
Adeyinka Makinde (2013)
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