Edgardo Sogno
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Count Edgardo Sogno (Turin 29 December 1915 - 5 August 2000) was an Italian diplomat, Partisan and a controversed figure of Italian politics. He was from an aristocratic family of the Piemont.
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[edit] Under Fascism
He joined the Italian military at 18 and was named sub-lieutenant in the regiment Nizza Cavalleria. After being laureate in jurisprudence, he volunteered for Mussolini's auxiliary units which fought in the Spanish Civil War in 1938 on the Francoist side. He then became collaborator of the Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1940, during World War II. He achieved two others diplomas in Rome and started frequenting some anti-fascist circles, which included Benedetto Croce and Giaime Pintor.
He was called by the army in 1942 to go to France. However, he was arrested a year later on charges of high treason for having publicly prophetised the victory of the United States. Monarchist, he was during these years close to the Italian Liberal Party (PLI), and became representant of the PLI at the National Liberation Committee (Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale). He created the Partisan group Organizzazione Franchi and obtained a gold medal for his acts.
[edit] After the war
After the Liberation, he founded the Corriere Lombardo newspaper as well as Costume. Edgardo Sogno was then elected deputy to the Constituent Assembly during the 1946 general election. He contested the June 2, 1946 referendum creating the Republic of Italy, deposing numerous appeals before the Corte di Cassazione in the aim of repealing the results of the vote (and restore monarchy). Although this failed, he became diplomat of the new regime, first in Buenos Aires where Juan Peron was head of state, then in Paris, London, Washington DC and Rangoon.
He returned to Italy in 1971, two years after the Piazza Fontana bombing. He founded the Comitati di Resistenza Democratica (Committee of Democratic Resistence), an anti-communist politic centre. Three years later, he was accused by magistrate Luciano Violante of having planned, along with Randolfo Pacciardi, the Golpe bianco, a right-wing coup d'état. Following a year and a half of prison, he was freed in 1978, the investigative magistrate declaring that he was in the impossibility to proceed in the trial.
Edgardo Sogno then returned to politics only in 1996, as candidate to the Italian Senate, in Cuneo, for the National Alliance (Alleanza Nazionale) "post-fascist" party founded by Gianfranco Fini. Failing to be elected, he retired to private life.
In his 1998 memoirs, Sogno revealed how he had visited the CIA station chief in Rome in July 1974 to inform him of his plans for an anti-communist coup. He wrote: "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," and then: "He answered what I already knew: the United States would have supported any initiative tending to keep the communists out of government." [1]
[edit] References
- ^ Philip Willan, The Guardian, March 26, 2001 Terrorists 'helped by CIA' to stop rise of left in Italy (English)
[edit] Bibliography
- Due fronti (1998), memoirs ("Two Fronts", two accounts of the Spanish Civil War, one from the Francist side and Sogno, the other from Nino Isaia who took part to the International Brigades) EAN : 9788882700041
- La grande utopia: I confini delleconomia, della natura, della morale Sugarco (1982) ASIN: B0000ECLR6
- De Gaulle: La spada appesa al filo Bietti (1997) ISBN-13: 978-8882480059