|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Italy
Italian government implicated in cover-up of US rendition
By Marianne Arens and Peter Schwarz
10 November 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The Muslim cleric Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, better known as
Abu Omar, was kidnapped in Milan in February 2003 in broad daylight
and rendered by the CIA to Egypt, where he was tortured and where
he remains imprisoned.
The right-wing government at the time, headed by Silvio Berlusconi,
always claimed that Italy had not supported the abduction of Abu
Omar and had possessed no advance knowledge of it. At the same
time, his administration used all means possible to prevent an
investigation of the kidnapping and the pursuit of those responsibleeven
though at the time of his kidnapping Abu Omar had been granted
political asylum in Italy and his abduction by a foreign secret
service represented a serious breach of the law.
Now the cover-up is unraveling. In the three-and-a-half years
since Abu Omar was kidnapped, details have surfaced about the
abduction and those responsible. The identity of his CIA kidnappers
is now certain, and there is no doubt that the Italian military
secret service, SISMI (Servizio per le Informazioni e la Sicurezza
Militare), and in all probability the government, were not only
informed about the abduction but actively participated in it.
The Milan public prosecutor responsible for investigating the
case has filed charges of kidnapping or aiding kidnapping against
26 American and 13 Italian citizens. With one exception, the Americans
accused belong to the CIA. The Italians include three high-ranking
SISMI officers.
Although Italian complicity is now a matter of record, Italys
current center-left government headed by Romano Prodi is upholding
its predecessors policy of secrecy. Undersecretary Enrico
Micheli, responsible for the coordination of the secret services,
told a parliamentary commission that since the September 11 attacks,
any cooperation between the Italian and American secret services
on matters of terrorism is subject to strict secrecy.
The chairman of the parliamentary commission on the secret
services, Claudio Scajola, said that Undersecretary Micheli had
responded to our direct questions about whether the American
authorities had informed the Italian government before, after
or during the abduction of Abu Omar by saying this matter was
a state secret. Micheli stressed that the Prodi government
would uphold this policy, even before the Milan court if necessary.
This secrecy is all the more significant since the activities
of the Italian secret services were not limited to Abu Omars
kidnapping. According to media reports, they also bribed journalists
to keep quiet about the operation and sought to discredit politicians
and judges involved in the investigation.
The editor-in-chief of the right-wing daily Libero,
Renato Farina, admitted he had received payments in exchange for
cooperating with SISMI and had published falsified documents in
order to discredit Prodi, who successfully challenged Berlusconi
in the last general election. Two journalists from the newspaper
Republica who had been investigating Abu Omars kidnapping
were placed under surveillance by SISMI.
There are indications that the collaboration of SISMI and the
CIA in the Abu Omar case was only one part of a larger conspiracy
directed against politicians, judges and other public figures.
There are links to a recently exposed illegal wiretapping operation
conducted by the head of security at Telecom Italia, Giuliano
Tavaroli. In cooperation with tax investigators, policemen, bank
employees, legal officials and private agents, Tavaroli conducted
a profitable business involving the sale of wiretap data. SISMI
Deputy Chief Marco Mancini, who was arrested last summer in connection
with Abu Omars kidnapping, is a close friend of Tavaroli,
met him regularly, and had thousands of telephone conversations
with him.
Shortly after this illegal wiretap operation was exposed, an
additional spying affair was uncovered. For many years the tax
returns of prominent politicians, particularly those involved
in the current center-left government, were examined in a systematic
and illegal fashion.
Both scandals entail the surveillance of a considerable number
of opponents of former Prime Minister Berlusconi, including Prodi,
former Italian Communist Party (PCI) member and current state
president Giorgio Napolitano, his predecessor, Carlo Azeglio Ciampi,
industrialists such as the Benetton brothers and Carlo De Benedetti,
and many more.
Although numerous members of the present administration, including
the prime minister, were victims of these conspiracies, the government
has drawn a veil over the secret services that it is not prepared
to lift either for parliamentary or judicial investigation.
Italy and NATO
The reason for such secrecy is that the Prodi government does
not want to endanger the traditionally close military and secret
service links between Italy and the US.
Italy is member of NATO and the American and Italian security
forces cooperated closely throughout the Cold War. Their priority
was to prevent the PCI, which maintained relations with the Soviet
Union and was on occasion the largest party in parliament, from
entering government.
The NATO secret organization Gladio, which specialized in sabotage
and acts of terrorism, was particularly active in Italy. In the
1960s, 1970s and 1980s a network including the CIA, SISMI, neo-fascists
and the mafia committed numerous terrorist acts which destabilized
the country and undermined the influence of the PCI.
Also implicated were the Vatican and the secret Masons P2 lodge,
within whose circles Berlusconi began his ascent toward becoming
the richest man in Italy. The most spectacular bomb attack by
these right-wing forces came in 1980 at the main railway station
in Bologna, where 85 people died and some 200 were injured.
These conspiracies are well-documented. Courageous journalists
and some state attorneys have uncovered countless details that
have been presented in films and theatre pieces. But only a few
people have ever been held to account.
Now the old structures have been revived within the framework
of the war against terrorism, while Prodi and his
coalition allies in the orgainsations that emerged from the PCI
do nothing about it.
The new Italian government has withdrawn Italian troops from
Iraq, as it had promised in the elections. But the last soldier
had barely returned to Italy when the government sent a far larger
contingent to Lebanon, where its mission is to block Hezbollahs
weapons supplies.
Italy also continues to supply troops to Afghanistan. Rome
therefore stands at the military forefront in the Middle East
and Central Asia. Italy has greater freedom of action in these
regions than it had in Iraq, but the Italian secret services and
military continue to cooperate closely with their US partners.
The Prodi government wants to avoid an open conflict with the
CIA and the Bush administration, even if the right-wing conspiracy
threatens its own political future, or evenas was the case
with Aldo Moro in the 1970sthe lives of cabinet members.
At that time there were many indications that Gladio was involved
in the abduction and murder of the Christian Democratic politician
by the Red Brigades.
The kidnapping of Abu Omar
It did not prove difficult for the Milan public prosecutor
to uncover who was involved in Abu Omars kidnapping. The
CIA agents involved had felt so safe that they acted recklessly
and made no special effort to cover their tracks.
The kidnapping took place in broad daylight on a public street.
Three men pulled the Muslim cleric, who was walking from his Milan
apartment to the mosque, into a mini-bus and drove away. An eye-witness
was later able to describe the events in detail to the police.
Abu Omar was taken to Aviano Air Force Base and then flown
to Cairo via Germany, ending up in an Egyptian prison where he
was tortured.
Only in April 2004, when the Egyptian authorities temporarily
released him, was he able to make contact with friends and relatives.
He described to them the details of his abduction and mistreatment;
reporting that he had been beaten, given electrical shocks and
other forms of torture. He had lost hearing in one ear. Three
weeks later he was rearrested and has since remained in prison,
without ever having been put on trial.
The Milan public prosecutor, at the behest of Omars family
and the Muslim community in Milan, has been able to reconstruct
quite precisely the course of events surrounding the abduction,
since the CIA operatives used mobile phones and credit cards,
hired cars, left their names on hotel registries, and spent a
great deal of money. Surveillance photos were even found in the
apartment of a CIA agent in Milan.
In July 2005, the Milan public prosecutor filed arrest warrants
against the thirteen Americans involved, who had already left
Italy. In December, the arrest warrants were expanded, bringing
to 22 the number of Americans charged.
Role of SISMI
Further information came from Brussels, where a committee of
the European Union parliament was investigating the CIA practice
of extraordinary renditions. The former CIA agent
Michael Scheuer gave evidence to the committee and in several
newspaper interviews accused the Italian government of complicity.
From 1996 to 1999, Scheuer had led the CIAs bin Laden
unit and had left the service only in November 2004.
The Italians allowed us to kidnap the Imam in Milan,
Scheuer told the Italian newspaper Republica.
Scheuer is well acquainted with Jeffrey W. Castelli, who was
the CIA boss in Rome until the summer of 2003. Scheuer said the
American secret service had never carried out an abduction without
the agreement of the country concerned, particularly if it concerned
an ally such as Italy. He said Italian agreement to the abduction
was given by Marco Mancini, responsible for counter-espionage
operations in SISMI.
In July 2006, Mancini and his superior at the time of the abduction,
General Gustavo Pignero, were arrested. Telephone calls between
the two, which Corriere della Sera published on July 7
2006, show that they were involved in the abduction and its preparation.
Several other secret service operatives have since confessed to
having been involved in the kidnapping.
Shortly before the abduction, Pignero and Mancini had removed
local SISMI chiefs in Milan, Padua and Trieste from their posts
because they had expressed doubts about the legality of the undertaking.
One of them gave evidence to the effect that he had expressed
opposition to the CIA-SISMI operation because the planned action
was obviously illegal and was against the principles
of our democracy. He said he was relieved of his post so
that he would not endanger the operation.
In prison, Mancini began to sing. He reported the existence
of a top-secret organization, the so-called Counter-Terrorist
Intelligence Center (CTIC), which operates in parallel with the
secret service. The organization, to which selected SISMI agents
belonged, acts under the direction of the CIA to arrest terrorist
suspects, he said.
The Wall Street Journal and Washington Post,
citing high-ranking CIA agents, have reported on similar organizations
that cooperate with the CIA in other countries. There are thought
to be dozens of such groups in US-friendly states in Europe, Asia
and the Middle East.
The Milan public prosecutors office has also filed charges
against SISMI boss Nicolo Pollari, who had always protested the
innocence of his service in the Abu Omar kidnapping case, even
giving false testimony to the European parliament.
Pollari is considered to be a close friend of ex-Prime Minister
Berlusconi, and was instrumental in his campaigns against the
Milan judiciary and state attorneys, and against Prodi. Despite
this, the Prodi government kept him at his post. His dismissal
was only considered at a later time, in the context of a comprehensive
reorganization of the secret services.
Meanwhile, neither the Italian government nor the European
Union has called on Egypt to release Abu Omar.
See Also:
Rifondazione Comunista mobilizes
for Italys military intervention in Lebanon
[28 October 2006]
Italy: Prodi government submits
austerity budget
[7 October 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |