http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/02/21/290090/italy-risks-new-round-of-destabilization/
Berlusconi targeted, overthrown by CIA?
Webster G. Tarpley
Feb 21, 2013
This coming Sunday and
 Monday, Italians will go to the polls to choose a new parliament and 
thus a new prime minister, while setting the stage for the election of a
 new president of the republic shortly thereafter.  
Most indications are that the most numerous faction in the coming 
parliament, with just over one third of the votes, will be the Common 
Good coalition, composed of the Democratic Party (the remains of the old
 Italian Communist Party), the Left Ecology Freedom movement of Nichi 
Vendola, which includes various paleocommunists, and some smaller 
forces. This coalition is led by Pier Luigi Bersani, a colorless 
bureaucrat. Ironically, despite its leftist rhetoric, the Common Good is
 the formation most likely to continue the austerity policies which are 
currently tearing Italy apart.
Coming in second with almost 30% should be the center-right 
coalition around the People of Freedom, the party of the irrepressible 
former prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, joined by the Northern League 
of Umberto Bossi, a xenophobic group which also articulates the 
resentments of northern Italy against the south, the Mezzogiorno. 
Another important leader is Giulio Tremonti, the former Minister of 
Economics and Finance.  Berlusconi, a wealthy businessman and three-time
 prime minister, was most recently in power from 2008 to November 2011. 
 Berlusconi’s fall had been prepared through a series of lurid 
revelations about his personal life, including an attack by the CIA 
document dump known as Wikileaks.  Berlusconi’s second-place status 
represents a remarkable comeback, and the last polls show him closing on
 Bersani.
Third place with almost 20% is likely to belong to a new and 
unorthodox political formation, the Five Star Movement (5SM), where the 
dominant personality is the former Genoese comedian Beppe Grillo, a 
colorful and talented demagogue. The 5SM is anti-politician, anti-euro, 
anti-infrastructure, anti-tax, and anti-mainstream media. Like the GOP, 
they want to reduce the public debt, meaning they want deflation. Grillo
 proposes a guaranteed annual income for all Italians, a 30-hour work 
week, and a drastic reduction of energy consumption and of production. 
He demands free Wi-Fi for all. Without modern production, how can these 
benefits be provided?
Grillo wants to abort the infrastructure projects - like the new 
high-speed train tunnel between Turin and France and the bridge between 
Calabria and Sicily - upon which Italy’s economic future depends.  He is
 long on petty bourgeois process reforms like term limits, media reform,
 corporate governance, and banning convicted felons from parliament, but
 short on defending the standard of living for working people. On a 
bizarre note, he has praised the British response to the 2008 banking 
crisis. As many as 100 members of the 5SM, many of them total political 
novices, and more than a few adventurers who have jumped on board 
Grillo’s bandwagon, may now enter parliament, with predictably 
destabilizing consequences. Grillo could be the vehicle for an Italian 
color revolution along the lines of Ukraine or Georgia.
In fourth place, with less than 10%, is expected to be the current 
prime minister of Italy, Mario Monti, a former eurocrat of the Brussels 
Commission who has led a brutal technocratic austerity regime since 
coming to power in November 2011 through a coup d’état sponsored by the 
International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank, and executed by 
Italian President Giorgio Napolitano with help from Mario Draghi at the 
European Central Bank. 
Both Monti and Draghi are former employees of Goldman Sachs, the widely hated zombie bank. When Monti seized power, he was widely acclaimed as a savior and enjoyed an approval rating of 70%; his approval has now fallen to about 30%. Like Gorbachev, he is unpopular at home but remains the darling of foreign leaders. Even the London Financial Times is bearish on Monti, accusing him of starting his austerity regime when Italy was already in recession.
Among the also-rans are Civic Revolution of Antonio Ingroia, a 
merger of the Greens with Antonio Di Pietro’s anti-corruption forces 
left over from the “Clean Hands” movement of the early 1990s, which 
targeted politicians but did very little to attack the larger corruption
 of the Bank of Italy and the big banks. 
Another smaller list is Stop the Decline, led by the strange Oscar 
Giannino, backed up by a clique of US-educated professors of neo-liberal
 austerity economics. This list was paid to poach votes from Berlusconi.
 But now Giannino has been hit with a scandal based on his false claim 
of holding a master’s degree from a Chicago university.
The Italian political landscape is extremely fragmented, so public 
opinion polls - which cannot by law be published after February 8 - are 
more than usually unreliable. Under the Italian system, the political 
force which comes in first gets 54% of the seats in the lower house. 
Multi-party coalitions must get 10% to enter parliament. If the 10% is 
not achieved, the individual parties fall back under the rule which 
prescribes that parties not in a coalition must get 4% to win seats.
Italian politics, which for many decades after World War II had 
eight parties, has undergone massive Weimarization, especially since 
Monti’s coup. There are now no fewer than 25 political parties or 
organizations. This time around, there are four new parties, including 
those of Monti and Grillo.  Two parties, including one led by Gianfranco
 Fini, the president of the Chamber of Deputies, and another by former 
Defense Minister Ignazio LaRussa, have split from Berlusconi.  Two 
parties have also split from the Democratic Party, including the 
libertarian Radicals of Marco Pannella and Emma Bonino.
Banks hope for Bersani-Monti regime to continue austerity
The banking community, as represented by Mediobanca and others, is 
hoping for a Bersani-Monti coalition government to continue the savage 
austerity policies that Monti’s technocratic ministers have been 
imposing over the last 15 months. Bersani’s party and its predecessors 
have always seen their business model as begging the big banks to let 
them join the government, in exchange for which they will break the 
labor movement, suppress strikes, and impose budget austerity across the
 board. Incredibly, Bersani has been one of Monti’s warmest admirers.  
Bersani has not learned the lesson of Weimar Germany, when the Social 
Democrats (SPD) supported Hunger Chancellor Heinrich Brüning’s austerity
 program, wrecking the economy and the political system, and opening the
 door to National Socialism.
Mediobanca concedes that a Bersani-Monti tandem will be weak, and 
might need more support from smaller parties, leading to instability 
with early elections likely in the short term. Although the Common Good 
will have a majority in the Chamber of Deputies due to the majority 
bonus, there is no bonus in the Senate, where most members are directly 
elected by winning their districts. This is where the Common Good plus 
Monti may fall short.
Some might say that Italians can choose among a genocidal professor,
 a party hack, a genial satyr, and a scurrilous clown. How did the 
current situation arise?
During the Obama years, the first goal of the US intelligence community has been to destroy the Berlusconi government, for geopolitical reasons. Based on Berlusconi’s close personal relationship with Putin, he had secured for Italy an important role in the construction of the Nordstream pipeline, and an even more important participation in the Southstream pipeline -- both projects which Washington wanted to sabotage.
Berlusconi also made overtures to President Lukashenko of Belarus, 
much demonized in Foggy Bottom. The State Department wants to turn the 
European Union against Putin’s Russia, but the pro-US eurocrats and 
eurogarchs complained that Italy was becoming an advocate for Moscow 
within the Brussels bureaucracy. Lucia Annunziata wrote in La Stampa
 of May 25, 2009 under the title “The Shadow of a Plot” that 
center-right circles believed US-Italian relations were being hurt by 
“the excessive closeness of premier Silvio Berlusconi to the Russian 
Prime Minister Putin.” 
The London Economist commented: Italy is one of the countries
 which have gotten much closer to Moscow than Washington desires, 
starting from the [August 2008] crisis in Georgia.  By 2010 at the 
latest, US agencies were fully mobilized to overthrow Berlusconi.
State Department campaign to topple Berlusconi, 2008-2011
One part of this effort involved Gianfranco Fini, the former 
neofascist whom Berlusconi had made President of the Chamber of Deputies
 in 2008. Fini had been a member of the official neofascist party. In 
July 2010, after a faction fight, Fini was expelled from Berlusconi’s 
party, managing to take with him 34 deputies and 10 senators in a move 
which weakened, but did not destroy, Berlusconi’s governing majority. It
 was later revealed that Fini’s actions had been closely coordinated 
with the US embassy in Rome.
During 2009, David Thorne took over as US ambassador to Italy. 
Thorne was a Yale roommate of John Kerry, who has just become US 
Secretary of State. Thorne, like Kerry and the Bushes, is a member of 
the infamous Skull and Bones secret society, and is the twin brother of 
Kerry’s ex-wife. Thorne’s first meeting on becoming ambassador was with 
Fini, and not with Berlusconi.  Fini is also reported to be a close 
personal friend of Nancy Pelosi, when Speaker of the House had the same 
job as Fini. (Il Fatto Quotidiano, September 15, 2010)  
Fini, true to form, is now a part of the pro-austerity With Monti 
For Italy coalition. Bur despite his US backing, Fini may be close to 
the last hurrah. He had rented a theater in Agrigento, Sicily for a 
major appearance, but found the premises empty except for a few dozen 
supporters.
When the Fini operation failed, the CIA turned to exposés of the 
wild parties at Berlusconi’s mansion in Arcore, near Milan, feeding an 
immense international propaganda campaign. In December 2009, Berlusconi 
was struck on the face and seriously injured by an alabaster model of 
the Milan Cathedral. Italian judges, some of them politically motivated,
 pursued scores of legal actions against Berlusconi. One of these 
judges, Ilda Boccassini, was a sympathizer of the left countergang Lotta
 Continua well into the 1980s. Wikileaks documents made public in 
December 2010 confirmed the deep hostility of the State Department to 
Berlusconi.
Giorgio Napolitano, Henry Kissinger’s favorite communist
The coup that finally ousted Berlusconi in November 2011 was managed
 by Giorgio Napolitano, the president of the Italian Republic and thus 
the head of state. The Italian presidency has often been almost a 
ceremonial office, but it acquires significant powers when governments 
fall, which is frequently. Napolitano has vastly expanded these powers.
For most of his life, Napolitano has been an active member of the 
Italian Communist Party. He belonged to the right-wing faction around 
Giorgio Amendola - Napolitano was known as Skinny Giorgio, and Amendola 
as Fat Giorgio. It has recently been revealed that between 1977 and 
1981, Napolitano conducted secret meetings with the Carter 
administration’s ambassador to Rome, Richard Gardner of the Trilateral 
Commission. These meetings only became public knowledge in 2005, with 
the publication of Gardner’s memoirs, Mission Italy. This puts 
Napolitano in contact with the US embassy during the kidnapping and 
murder of former Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro, in whose death US 
intelligence agencies played an important role.  
Henry Kissinger once called Napolitano “my favorite communist.”  Business Week
 referred to him as the point man in Italy for the New York Council on 
Foreign Relations. The Italian press has dubbed him King George. But 
thanks in large part to Putin’s support for the Italian prime minister, 
it took the CIA two years to overthrow Berlusconi. In the end, only 
economic and financial warfare, plus Napolitano’s treachery, would prove
 decisive. 
 
Mario Monti: Bilderberg, trilateral, Goldman Sachs
In October 2011, the Yale-educated economist Mario Monti, a 
eurogarch of the Brussels Commission from 1994 to 1999, was president of
 the Bocconi University of Milan, a business school. He had worked on 
the Santer, Prodi, and Barroso commissions in Brussels. He was and 
remains the European Chairman of the Trilateral Commission, founded by 
David Rockefeller, as well as a member of the secretive Bilderberg 
group. He was also a consultant for Goldman Sachs and Coca-Cola.
While Berlusconi was under siege by the Anglo-Americans, Napolitano 
plotted for months to make Monti the kingpin of a regime of technocrats -
 supposedly nonpartisan experts who did not represent any political 
party and could therefore more readily impose pitiless austerity. This 
was a formula the International Monetary Fund had been trying to force 
on Italy for 30 years and more.  
A modern coup d’état using spreads, not tanks
The indispensable ingredient in the Napolitano-Monti coup was a 
broad-based and coordinated attack on Italian government bonds by Wall 
Street, the City of London, and their European satellites. This attack 
involved threats by ratings agencies to downgrade Italian debt, backed 
up by massive derivatives speculation against the bonds using credit 
default swaps (CDS) to increase the interest-rate premium - or spread - 
paid by Italy compared to Germany in borrowing. (The agencies were later
 investigated for fraud by Judge Michele Ruggiero of Trani.)  Of course,
 the European Central Bank could at any time have wiped out the 
speculators by purchasing large quantities of Italian bonds in the open 
market and driving up the price. 
But Napolitano and Monti knew that they could count on the new boss 
of the European Central Bank Mario Draghi to sabotage the Italian bonds.
 Draghi took over from the Frenchman Trichet in the night of Halloween 
2011, and the attack on Italy began immediately on November 1.
During the summer of 2011, Berlusconi had resisted demands for draconian austerity, perhaps because he knew that Italy was too big to fail and that sooner or later Wall Street and London would have to back off. He was vilified for a lack of civic virtue. During the final attack on Berlusconi, Italian bond yields reached 7%, and the famous spread peaked at 575 basis points over the rate on German bonds. The New York Times cited reports that Draghi “had restricted… purchases of Italian bonds to put more pressure on Mr. Berlusconi to quit” and to extort more austerity from Italy. “If so, the pressure worked.” (NYT, November 9, 2011) The parliament was in panic.
On November 8, 2011 Napolitano appointed Monti, who had never been 
elected to any public office, as senator for life. This also meant 
immunity from prosecution for life, unless and until the Italian Senate 
voted to take this parliamentary immunity away. Also on November 8, 
Berlusconi concluded that he had lost his parliamentary majority. On 
November 10, 2011, the new senator for life Monti met with Napolitano at
 the Quirinal Palace for a two-hour discussion of economic “growth” by 
means of “structural reforms.” Napolitano still ridiculed rumors that he
 would make Monti the next prime minister. On the same day, Obama called
 Napolitano to assure him of US support in his management of the 
post-Berlusconi crisis. Just this month, Napolitano visited Obama with 
the obvious goal of getting more US support for Monti.
Berlusconi and other politicians like the anti-corruption activist 
Di Pietro were pressing for early elections to let the Italian people 
show what they wanted. But Napolitano was intent on carrying out his 
cold coup: “markets trumped traditional democratic processes,” wrote the
 New York Times on December 2, 2011. On November 13, Napolitano 
officially charged Monti with forming a government of non-party 
austerity technocrats, and Monti won a vote of confidence in the Chamber
 of Deputies by 556 to 61. Only the Northern League opposed Monti. This 
lopsided vote recalled a similar one carried out in the resort town of 
Vichy, France on July 10,1940 in which the National Assembly voted 
dictatorial powers for Marshal Pétain, effectively replacing the Third 
French Republic with a fascist regime. On that day, the vote -- managed 
by the infamous Pierre Laval -- had been 569 in favor, 80 against, and 
18 abstentions.
Monti’s cabinet was composed of little-known figures, mainly from 
northern Italy, with Catholic, academic, or military backgrounds. One 
who has become infamous is Labor Minister Elsa Fornero, a professor who 
cried in public over her own cruelty when she presented her anti-retiree
 measures. There was the impression that the Monti cabinet were bit 
players reading lines that had been written by the IMF and the ECB.
Presidential powers from von Hindenburg to Napolitano
Napolitano was following in the footsteps of German Reich President 
Field Marshal von Hindenburg, who pushed aside the Reichstag 
(parliament) as the maker of governments when he named the austerity 
enforcer Heinrich Brüning as chancellor in March, 1930. After this 
point, no German government could obtain a governing majority, and all 
relied on Hindenburg’s emergency powers to stay in office -- including 
von Papen, von Schleicher, and finally Hitler in the first weeks of 
1933. These were all called presidential governments, as Monti’s has 
been. By relegating the parliament to irrelevance, von Hindenburg 
contributed mightily to the atrophy and death of German democracy.  
At the time, I called attention to the obvious coup d’état by 
Goldman Sachs and its allies, with a similar operation in Greece around 
the same time. Paolo Becchi, Professor of the Philosophy of 
Jurisprudence at the University of Genoa, noted that Napolitano “telling
 a technocrat from Brussels to form a government is nothing but a coup 
d’état ordered by powerful forces, partly from outside Italy, and 
managed by the President of the Republic.” Up until now, the bankers had
 been willing to govern indirectly, masking their power with the faces 
of politicians.  
Now, the bankers wanted to seize power directly:  “But it was 
necessary at least to keep up appearances.  With an attitude which is 
typical of all the followers of Cataline [who attempted a coup against 
the Roman Republic in the time of Cicero], Monti’s main concern was to 
seize power with legal means.” Becchi added: “In the moment when 
political power is brought down to the level of financial power, a coup 
d’état is always possible, and so easy to carry out that almost nobody 
realizes it.” (Libero, December 1, 2011)
Monti’s economic measures aimed at shifting an initial €24 billion over three years of the cost of the economic depression away from bankers and speculators and onto the shoulders of working people. The minimum of years on the job to obtain a pension was raised from 40 years to 42 years and one month for men. The minimum age for old-age pensions was raised from 60 years to 62 and then to 66 in 2018. Increases in pension payments would generally be frozen. The property tax (IMU) was increased by 30% and extended to resident homeowners, who had previously been exempt. The value added tax (IVA) was raised from 21% to 23%. As camouflage, a luxury tax on yachts, private planes, and Ferraris was introduced. Only the Northern League and Di Pietro voted against these measures.
Then came a push to make Italy a hire and fire society on the 
American model, striking down protections that had been in place for 
decades. Taxi drivers, pharmacists, doctors, lawyers, and notaries were 
deprived of minimum fees for their services, and their professions were 
deregulated.
Thanks to Monti’s measures, the Italian unemployment rate has risen 
from 8.5% in November 2011 to 11.2% in February 2013, the worst in 13 
years. Almost 3 million Italians are out of work, with 644,000 or 29% of
 them laid off on Monti’s watch. Youth unemployment is now at an 
all-time record of 37%. By December of 2012, industrial production, 
after falling every months since Monti took power, was down by 7% 
compared to December 2011.
Grillo: Endless referendums, endless instability
The early Northern League told Italians and foreigners and 
southerners were responsible for their problems. Grillo blames 
politicians and political parties. Bersani’s support for Monti’s 
austerity, combined with Berlusconi’s personal excesses, has focused new
 attention on the comedian Beppe Grillo and his 5SM. Grillo may well 
emerge as the big winner of these elections. Grillo has a recent 
precedent: the comedian Guglielmo Giannini, who in 1944 founded the Man 
In the Street (uomo qualunque) movement, an Italian precursor of French 
poujadisme. 
Giannini appealed to the angry postwar petty bourgeoisie with populist themes of anti-politics, anti-politicians, anti-corruption, anti-government, deregulation, and anti-taxes. Grillo uses many of the techniques of Giannini, such as obscene and abusive slogans, or mocking the names of his opponents: for Grillo, Monti becomes Rigor Montis.
Grillo, ignoring the lessons of the Weimar Republic, recommends 
hyper-democracy as a method of governing. The basic approach to all 
controversies is to organize a referendum. This can work at the level of
 local government, where some of Grillo’s supporters started, but might 
lead to chaos if applied nationwide. Grillo wants a referendum on 
whether Italy should stay in the euro, an idea which appeals in Italy to
 a few ultra-lefts, but mainly to reactionaries. Grillo (like the 
framers of Weimar) focuses on the need of government to make sure that 
all voices receive representation, but neglects the equally imperative 
need on to promote majorities capable of deciding issues and exercising 
power.
Grillo mayor fails to solve pre-school issue in Parma
The first big success for Grillo came in Parma, traditionally the 
turf of the PCI/Democratic Party.  Here Grillo’s candidate took over as 
mayor early in 2012. Within less than a year, Grillo was greeted by 
protests over the rising cost of living, especially for the mayor’s 
raising of the price of pre-school for working families, while 
eliminating multi-child discounts. Up to this point, Grillo had enjoyed 
all the advantages of the Muslim Brotherhood under Mubarak, or of Jesse 
Ventura running for governor of Minnesota, meaning the ability to 
criticize without any responsibility. 
When confronted with an attack on his own record, Grillo responded 
with petulance, suggesting he cannot take criticism. Grillo has been 
declining television interviews, preferring to give speeches to large 
crowds in the piazza of many cities. But observers note that this is 
also a way to avoid probing questions from hostile journalists. In any 
case, big crowds do not necessarily indicate election majorities. Grillo
 portrays himself as a victim of the mass media, even though enjoys 
extensive coverage in the current phase. He is rich, but campaigns in a 
mini-van to increase his populist appeal.
According to Elisabetta Gualmini and Piergiorgio Corbetta in their 
survey of the Grillo movement entitled Il Partito del Grillo (Bologna: 
Il Mulino/Istituto Cattaneo, 2013), about 60% of Grillo’s support comes 
from angry, male, sometimes unemployed generation X technicians, IT and 
software personnel, and small businessmen born between 1969 and 1978, 
and thus aged between 35 and 44. There are few pensioners, few 
housewives, few women of any background. Over 50% describe themselves as
 extreme left, left, or center-left, while about 30% self-described as 
center-right to right. Grillo represents a protest movement that cuts 
across the other political parties.
An ominous symptom is the dictatorship of Grillo inside the party. 
In recent weeks, Grillo has ousted a regional councilor from 
Emilia-Romagna for complaining on television of the lack of democracy 
inside the 5SM. He also expelled a Bologna city councilwoman for taking 
part in Ballaró, a widely viewed television talk show, after Grillo 
banned such appearances, presumably to keep the spotlight on himself. 
Previously, he had expelled three candidates from Bologna and a member 
of the Ferrara city council. Grillo considers the 5SM is a trademark 
which he owns.  The dissidents are generally excommunicated by means of a
 tweet. Does Grillo write the tweets, blog, scripts, and speeches by 
himself, or is he controlled and supported by a syndicate?
Grillo’s Svengalis:  Casaleggio associates
Some say Grillo is a synthetic candidate. According to published 
accounts, Grillo’s Svengali and teleprompter is political consultant 
Gianroberto Casaleggio, 58, of Casaleggio Associates, a company 
specialized in political and media consulting and strategies for 
Internet marketing - more or less the methods which have put Grillo 
where he is today. 
Casaleggio and Grillo confer by telephone on average three times a 
day. Casaleggio, like Grillo, sports the hair style of an aging freak, 
trying to look like John Lennon, but unlike Grillo usually wears a suit.
 (Tommaso Caldarelli, Giornalettismo, May 25, 2012) Casaleggio’s office 
is near Piazza Scala in Milan. The dominant partner at Casaleggio 
Associates is Enrico Sassoon, currently the director of the Italian 
edition of the Harvard Business Review.  
Sassoon has worked for Pirelli, and is currently a leading light of 
the American Chamber of Commerce in Italy. Sassoon is also on the board 
of the Italian branch of the Aspen Institute, where his colleagues are 
mostly members of the Bilderberg group. Giampietro Zanetti, a Berlusconi
 backer, writes in his blog: “Who is behind Grillo? Bilderberg and the 
Aspen Institute!”
Casaleggio, who once advised Di Pietro and Olivetti, believes that 
“by 2018 the world will be divided into: the West with direct democracy 
and free access to the Internet, and the enemies of freedom like 
China-Russia-Middle East.” In 2020 there will be a new world war, with 
the population reduced by a billion, then catharsis, and finally rebirth
 in the name of Gaia, and world government.”  (Marco Alfieri, La Stampa,
 May 26, 2012)  Is this really what Grillo’s voters want?
Grillo and Casaleggio are the authors of a book called We Are At War - meaning that Grillo is the Guy Fawkes or Ludendorff of a war against political parties as such. The need to destroy political parties is one of the favorite themes of various disinformation channels of the US intelligence community, who see this as part of the effort to smash the national states and impose the Empire. A coincidence?
In 2012, the big political news from Europe was the emergence of 
Alexis Tsipras and Syriza to fight austerity in Greece with program, 
leadership, organization, and strategy, and not with utopias of 
participatory democracy. Grillo is the opposite of Syriza on most 
points, meaning that Italy now risks a new round of destabilization. 
Which method will prevail? 
 
 
 
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