[promoted by BooMan]
Yes, with all due respect, you’ve been had… by Italy’s Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.
Whether you realize it or not, you are now being used as election propaganda by the center-right coalition in Italy, and by all the media over here who believe – perhaps in good faith (considering the input they’ve received, what should they believe?) – that you all repeatedly, wholeheartedly, enthusiastically, intentionally, conscientiously, independently, freely and spontaneously applauded Italian Prime Minister Berlusconi during his address to Congress on Wednesday, and therefore that you sincerely approve of everything he said and – it would appear to logically follow – what he stands for.
And yet we have now come to know, thanks to Congressman Jim McDermott’s Daily Kos diary Friday, that the repeated (15 – count’em – 15!) rounds of seemingly spontaneous applause and standing ovations (3 – not just 1, but 3!) were probably prompted, that numerous seats in the Chamber were occupied by planted fill-ins (interns), and that none of you even knew what Berlusconi was saying except, perhaps, when he spoke in English.
Plus, very shrewdly on his part, when he spoke in English, it was to tell the heart-tugging, patriotic story of his father taking him to an American war cemetery as a boy and making him promise never to betray the Americans who had saved Italy. (Please excuse me as I dab my eyes.) For those who may not know it, Congressman McDermott then followed up his diary statements with a letter of inquiry to Speaker of the House Hastert. I would say that means something.
You, in particular, Senator Clinton, have been shown repeatedly on Italian television, nodding approvingly, your eyes seemingly moist with emotion, and you have been quoted as saying something to the effect that you were very “moved” by Berlusconi’s address. (You can see a short video clip here: Click in the right-hand column on “Calda accoglienza per Berlusconi a Congresso Usa” – “Warm reception for Berlusconi at the U.S. Congress”.)
One newspaper, for example, “Il Tempo”, published this article, focusing solely on Senator Clinton (sorry if the quote isn’t exact, but I’ve had to translate it back into English from the Italian):
”I was very moved by the memory of our dead in Italy”
WASHINGTON – “It was an excellent speech, which really expressed the deep ties between Italy and the United States,” declared Senator Hillary Clinton, commenting the Prime Minister’s address. The former First Lady wanted to be present at a meeting of the Italian-American parliamentary delegation with Berlusconi, at the end of his visit to the Congress, and was warmly greeted by the Italian Premier. “The end, especially, touched me,” she said, “when Berlusconi paid homage to the young Americans who died in Italy, because I felt involved through my family: my husband’s father was wounded in Italy.”
Another, “Il Giornale”, published another article with an eloquent title: “Applause for Berlusconi, America is with him”. In addition to mentioning the same quote as above, it also says:
Because Congress gives him three standing ovations and interrupts him 15 times with thunderous applause. And because yes, the audience has a majority of Republicans and a few Democrats are absent, but it is substantially bipartisan. To the point that even Hillary Clinton is one of the small group of Senators (including Bill Frist, the majority leader in the Senate) who, as protocol dictates in the case of illustrious guests, accompany Berlusconi into the hallway that leads to the entrance to the floor of the House. It will be precisely the former First Lady who first wishes him a warm “Good luck” and then applauds him a number of times, to the point that – during two passages – she accompanies the Prime Minister’s words with eloquent assenting nods of her head.
What to say?
To give you the benefit of the doubt, over here we all know what a charmer he can be when he really turns it on. Maybe you didn’t. But after all, among his past trades, he’s been an actor and a singer, and has spent decades in the entertainment business; he knows how important image is (have you noticed that, unlike the rest of us, he’s getting younger as the years go by?), and knows how to give a rousing speech. And were you aware that there is an election campaign in progress in Italy (elections are just 5 weeks away), and that Berlusconi is quite possibly fighting for his political life (and to guarantee a continuation of his prosecution immunity)?
So I can only think that you fell for it. You fell into his trap. And, whether you know it or not, you are now being used to validate Berlusconi’s and the center-right’s prestige and legitimacy on the international, and therefore and automatically the Italian, political stage. By the way, the two newspapers above, the ones that focus on you, Senator Clinton, are rightwing papers. You are being used as election propaganda for President Bush’s rightwing buddy and ally and, as a result, the hawkish center-right coalition. Did you know that Berlusconi and his government sent Italy into the Iraq war (even if allegedly only for “peacekeeping” purposes) as Bush’s ally against the will of the majority of the Italian people? Did you ever hear about the “peace banners from every balcony” campaign, or see the huge protests that took place in Italy? There are still a few banners still hanging, as a matter of fact.
Do you realize that if the center-right wins again in Italy, it could be a boost for voter confidence in the Republicans in the U.S.? The Italian and American conservative pals will just continue ping-ponging their mutual support back and forth, bolstering each other as needed, all the while denying with a straight face that they meddle in other countries’ politics (as Bush did after his meeting with Berlusconi on Tuesday).
May I respectfully say that I’m extremely pissed off and very, very worried?
Unfortunately it seems the harm may have already been done – the cows have left the barn, and it might not be possible to get them back in again. Just to give you an idea of what effect the whole story has had over here, I am including my translation of an article by Gaetano Quagliariello that appeared in Rome’s newspaper, “Il Messaggero” on Friday, two days after the address before Congress.
HOW MUCH A SPEECH WEIGHS ON THE ELECTIONS
Giovanni Sabbatucci was right when, in the columns of this newspaper, he maintained that foreign policy does not, in itself, change votes. However, I believe that Berlusconi’s performance before the American Congress may affect the rest of the election campaign, for at least two reasons, which are only indirectly connected with foreign policy problems.
The first reason has to do with the importance of the event and the quality of the address. Since yesterday, it has become more evident that the action of the center-right government has had its dignity, which has been acknowledged at the international level. (…) It may be stated that the strategy of that part of the opposition that tends to depict this last legislature as a nightmare from which we must free ourselves, has suffered a hard blow. After Washington, it is more difficult to paint the Berlusconi government as a tainted parenthesis that must be closed as soon as possible. If the center-right manages to ride the wave created by the American success, Prodi will have to modify his strategy (…) thus running the risk of exposing the cracks that exist between the moderate and the more radical parts of his alliance.
At this point, it is easier to understand the second indirect result that Berlusconi’s speech could produce. The Prime Minister tied the policy of his center-right government in with a plausible scenario of the evolution of world balances. (…) In this analysis he used very moderate tones. (…) His address thus focused on the most solid aspects of neoconservative analyses, discarding the excesses and most controversial angles. For this reason, he managed to draw the earnest applause of women and men like Hillary Clinton and Ted Kennedy, who certainly cannot be suspected of having an electoral fondness for the Italian Prime Minister.
This success creates embarrassment in the ranks of the center-left. Not only because it makes it even more difficult to limit Berlusconi’s Americanism to his privileged relationship with Bush. Even more so because it will be arduous for the opposition to contrast, as it has up to now, the Prime Minister’s America with another America that is more moderate and less extremist than Bush’s. Now, in fact, it is clear that with regard to the fundamental problems of international balance, even that America agrees with Berlusconi’s way of thinking.
(…)
We must limit ourselves to stating that, for the reasons given here, Berlusconi scored a bull’s eye in Washington, also in the election perspective. Otherwise, for the sake of seriousness, it is better to wait until after April 10th to discuss the matter.
(Emphasis mine)
As far as I’m concerned, April 10th will be too late.
Is it too much to ask for an explanation or justification for the exceptionally warm reception, rounds of applause, standing ovations, and starry eyes? Or perhaps, on the contrary, for a stance-taking statement by other Congresspersons and Senators who feel they were duped into playing the unwitting chorus in an election campaign commercial for Silvio Berlusconi? Don’t you feel used? If so, where’s your outrage?
Who else, among our distinguished elected readers and diary writers, was present? Could someone else please speak up and tell us how, in their opinion, it really went?
Grazie.
(Cross-posted at Daily Kos and European Tribune)
interesting stuff. Media manipulation taken to a fine art form.
Yeah, and I wish this story, at least, would get more exposure… but it’s not (and the diary is going practically ignored so far. Maybe I didn’t guess the right time slot?). I am SO pissed off! 🙁
I was hoping that the diary would have hung around at least long enough to allow some Congresspersons/Senators to see it.
Anyway, I have also had Congressman McDermott’s diary and letter translated into Italian, and intend to send them to some newspapers over here (at least the letter, which is what McDermott evidently prefers — but both my translator friend and I find the diary oh, so much more eloquent!).
I am also planning on posting it/them here and elsewhere, for any people who may have Italian-speaking connections, friends, relatives, etc. to show it/them to.
do you have an account at European Tribune?
Yes, and I’ve posted it there, too.
I’ll cross-post this comment here from Eurotrib by de Gondi, just for added coverage.
The story that Luigi Berlusconi hauled his kid to a allied cemetery is highly unlikely. As Mastella pointed out, the cemeteries are all in the South, Anzio on down. When did it happen? During reconstruction? How long after the war?
So let’s hear it for Silvio’s icon, his daddy who threw the foundations for the Berlusconi empire. Luigi spent much of the Salò days in Como and Lugano as a bank clerk for the Rasini family bank. He stayed in Switzerland a good two months after the liberation of Italy. All of this while his brother effectively fought for the allies on the Adriatic.
It doesn’t sound like Luigi was all that interested in an allied victory.
It remains a mystery what exactly a small bank clerk was doing in Lugano during the Salò period, apparently not fleeing from the Republicans despite his age, mid-thirties.
There are several reasons for staying in Lugano which do not necessarily apply in Luigi’s case. One was smuggling. There was a massive influx of money towards Switzerland from fascist hierarchs, either for personal gain, or for creating a fund for a future democratic fascist party. There was also an attempt to latch on to Dulles through what is known as “Operation Sunrise.” Basically it involved letting off fascist hierarchs if they didn’t fully cooperate with their Nazi allies. Small sabotage, useful information. And of course the fascists could stash all they could in Switzerland. Which they did.
Luigi went on to become the head of the Rasini bank which financed his son’s business adventures through holdings and banks in Lugano, some of which strangely enough had some right wankers (Ercole Doninelli, Gianfranco Cotti and Genevieve Aubry) on their board of directors.
When Michele Sindona was asked how the mafia laundered money he replied that there were two banks in Italy that did it: the Bank of Sicily and a small little bank with one counter in Milan known as a “boutique de credit,” the Rasini bank. Sindona was not the only person to indicate the Rasini bank as a mafia money-laundering outfit.
Attempts by judiciary authorities to unravel the mysteries of the Rasini bank and the enumerable over-night holdings set up by Silvio and his father have been of no avail. The statute of limitations has eliminated any necessity for a judiciary investigation. However recent cases, such as the Dell’Utri appeal or the up-coming Calvi murder trial, could benefit from consulting the Rasini archives.
Unfortunately, the Rasini bank was taken over by the Banca Popolare di Lodi which is now under fire after the Fiorani scandal. Fiorani is presently in prison and receives a daily feed of virulent support from Silvio. Sort of like Bush defending Ken Lay every other day and attacking the usual clockwork commie judges.
Under Fiorani the bank of Lodi did not cooperated with justice despite numerous requests concerning the Rasini archives. For a while they asserted that the archives had been lost. Then they found a few pieces. Too bad some of the microfilms had suffered from spontaneous auto-combustion. In the meantime, the Bank of Lodi became the second largest bank in Sicily, the number one bank of the Lega Nord, and a favourite hangout for the Opus Dei.
So maybe in the end, Luigi was very pro-American even if he didn’t drag his brat to a cemetery. Of course, his idea of America may not coincide with ours which excludes crony capitalism, organized crime and the extreme right wing that now has receptive ears in Washington.
And of course, Silvio is the only Council president who has steadfastly refused to celebrate the national liberation holiday, has fought to put the fascist militia on the same footing as the partisans, and allied himself with extremist right wing elements who deny the holocaust.
Michelle Sindona was involved in the Bank of Ambrosia scandal with Chicago’s own Arch Bishop Marcinkus (actually from Chicago Mob Suburb called Cicero absolutely infamous for mob activity) who is wanted in Italy for embezzlement, Marcinkus was head of Vatican finances in the 1980′
s
What connection did Marcinkus have if any to this small Bank that Berlusconi was involved in?
Is there any truth to the rumour that Berlusconi is about to announce that he is replacing hitler youth Pope Benedict with himself and procliaming himself as “Pope for Life”?
Conveniently enough, Marcinkus died recently — I think about a couple of weeks ago, more or less (I just found it — around Feb. 20th). He was living in the States — in Sun City, Arizona.
Most of the old P2 (Propaganda Due) gang are dead now, but I think the group has reconstituted itself with new names and new people. Groups like that don’t just stop existing; they morph into something else.
A few weeks ago (February 14th, to be precise) the TV show “Le Iene” had a bit where they met up with and tried to interview Licio Gelli in Pistoia.
It’s a really chilling piece. You can watch it if you like, here: click on a “Licio Gelli (Alessandro Sortino)” selection. There’s also an interview (7-8 minutes long), about 6 minutes into the clip, with his creepy, enthusiastic, self-admittedly fascist grandson.
If you understand Italian, it’s worth watching. I must admit, it sort of freaked me out when I saw it.
Thanks a lot for the link to the Gelli video. I don’t know why but I sort of just assumed that Gelli was dead by now, having been pretty old already at the time he was searched/busted back in the early 1980s. (It just goes to show that the really nasty types often do live long lives, despite the bad karma they incur from their criminality.)
My Italian language skills are not what they once were so I couldn’t keep up with the rapid dialogue, but what little I didpick upseemed to be pretty predictable; various denials of criminal and covert activity, and avoidance of addressing the Masonic aspect to P2 honestly and directly.
In any case I’m going to send thelink off to a former girlfriend who speaks Italian and ask her to translate the interesting parts.
Thanks again.
You’ve described the family background very well.
I just now realized that there were two other things I had originally wanted to include in the diary. One was the fact (which you mention) that doubt had been cast on the cemetery tale by Mastella (but then I thought it might be taken as a gossipy repeating of a supposition of his).
The other was a quote I found on the first page of the newspaper “L’Unità” the other day, taken from an interview with Arthur Schlesinger Jr. by “La Repubblica”. It pretty much expressed a stance that is opposite that of the guy who wrote the last article I quoted:
“Berlusconi? He’s a political acrobat, one who is very far from American values. He is running once again in the elections backed by his billions and six television networks without any respect for the conflict of interest rules. In the U.S. he wouldn’t have a chance.”
(This is a translation into English from the Italian; I can’t be sure what his original words really were, as I haven’t found any trace of it in English anywhere.)
Wow.
I’ll have to go watch Primary Colors and the Godfather in no particular order.
(I apologise to anyone who thinks I brought up the Godfather just because we’re discussing Italy. Don’t remember much of La Piovra and similar domestic fare.)
Hilliary Clinton is in effect to the right of Berlusconi. She is to the right of George Bush. Tha’ts what she says as she wants to win the war in Iraq which requires more troops, more deaths.
That’s how she hopes to move forward in her political ambitions.
That American senators are suckered into anything by Europeans or Asians or anybody should come as no surpirse. Our representative are the dumbest people on the planet Earth representing the dumbest, most naive people on the planet Earth, us. USA Uncultured, Selfish and Arrogant.
But she did much better than Bush, as Bush spoke to Berlusconi for an hour about the entertainment industry before realizing he was not Danny DeVito.
“I can’t believe I met Mr Bean!”
-Homer, The Simpsons: “The Regina Monologues”.
It seems that our purported “leaders” in the Democratic party are just as easily duped and exploited as are the hapless Dem strategists and spokespeople who frequently appear on the talkinghead gasbag circuit and never seem prepared.
Perhaps it’s their overweening ambition, the intensity of their self-absorption, and their illusions of personal awareness and competence that make them so easily outmaneuvered by the rightwing propaganda machine.
The fact that the billionaire criminal imp Berlusconi is more of a fascist than even Mussolini’s own grandaughter Alessandra never even comes up on their radar.
They are pathetic, more concerned with not alienting the potential Italian-American vote than they are with registering their opposition to a rightwing fascist psychopath.
That’s another thing that worries me about the upcoming election, and I never hear anyone mention anything about it.
Italian citizens residing abroad are going to be voting (I believe for the first time) by mail-in absentee ballots this election.
The right (mostly Gianfranco Fini’s former fascist AN party) has long championed this cause, and are the ones that wrote and passed the law allowing it. So they’ve been shrewdly cultivating the “italiani all’estero” (Italians abroad) for quite some time and, since most of those expats haven’t lived here for years, they might not know what it’s really like nowadays — and what Berlusconi is really like.
I’ve been wondering (and worrying) how much the absentee vote may weigh on the elections this time. It might even be one of the reasons for which Berlusconi went to the U.S. right now. I assume his visit and address were well publicized among the Italian community there, even if hardly anywhere else.
I wasn’t aware that this was the first time “Italiani all’ estero” were able to vote in Italian election, but if it is as you say that the fascist right in Italy were the champions of this legislation then it would seem that this media propaganda spin about this Berlusconi visit is almost assuredly part of a clever electoral strategy based in large part on deception.
I haven’t been in Italy in over 20 years but the fact that a creature like Berlusconi is Prime Minister is a sure sign that that country is in jeopardy.
If we could remove Bush, Blair, Berlusconi and the odious John Howard of Australia all from power and send their regime minions packing, we might be able to restore at least a semblance of workable sanity to the politics of the planet. Sadly, the opportunity for such a scenario seems awfully remote.
Here is something from the Berlusconi government’s viewpoint, which only confirms my suspicions and fears (my quick translation):
(2nd sentence emphasis mine)
BTW, the “simpatico Mirko Tremaglia” is about as far-right (as in “nostalgic fascist”) as they come.
Also:
An English-language Tremaglia bio.
And an eye-opening piece in English here, from a completely different standpoint.
for that Ministry for Italians in the World.
I vaugely remember reading something about this guy from last year in the NYT, but I didn’t pay close attention to it.
What an insult to have this guy Tremaglia honored by anyone in civilized society.
Tremaglia made the front page by saying that MPs inthe the European parliament were all fags. He used a term that graphically refers to taking it up the ass.
He said it in reference to the Rocco Butiglione affair. B had nominated this homophobic rightwing Catholic bigot and purported philosopher as European Commissioner of Justice.His candidacy was turned down by the European parliamentary hearing for obvious reasons of incompatibility.
Tremaglia was happy about his remark because, as he said, he got a lot of publicity over it.
Beyond that, Tremaglia, who fought for the Salò government in the Second World War, is considered an eloquent orator.
There seems to be no end to the depth of human ugliness these creatures demonstrate. (And little justice when they’re so well entrenched with the powerful.)
Do you think Silvio is getting a boost from this so near the one-year anniversary of the Calipari/Sgrena shooting by US soldiers?
If Berlusconi is held in such high esteem by l’amico George, why didn’t the U.S. government cooperate in the investigation of the shooting?
Why was the report of the “joint” American-Italian investigation rejected by the Italian who participated in the inquiry?
I hope that these questions would immediately come to mind for Italian voters.
E tante grazie per il diario.