Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-02T19:36:41.788Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Rise and Fall of ‘Mediterranean Atlanticism’ in Italian Foreign Policy: the Case of the Near East

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 January 2016

Abstract

The article aims at studying the reasons for the new way of looking at the Palestinian-Israeli conflict by the Italian political world: the mutual recognition of Israel and the Vatican, the visit to Jerusalem by the leader of the formerly fascist party, Mr. Gianfranco Fini, and the beginnings of a movement of interest towards the Jewish State also within the political left. From a historical viewpoint, anti-Semitism in Italy found its origins in the Church's attitude toward the ‘deicide people’. Beginning with WWI, to this position was added the worry that the Holy Places might fall under Jewish control. From those times dates the Holy See's evermore manifest liking for the Arab populations of Palestine. Nowadays the line of conduct of the Church has as its basic objective the defense of Christian minorities in the Middle East, and for this reason it maintains dialogues with all actors in the region. The weight of the Church influenced also the attitude of the Italian State, even though from its inception the latter had to make adjustments because of other international requirements. This multiple subordination caused the different republican governments to always keep an official equidistant stance among the conflicting parties in the Near East. Behind this apparent neutrality, however, the feelings of benevolence for the Arab countries and the Palestinians have gradually intensified. Italian leaders have been trying to conduct a Mediterranean policy on the borders of the Western alliance, and their feelings have been oriented in consequence. During the 1970s, the governments went as far as to conclude a secret pact with Palestinian terrorists, to avoid terror acts on the Peninsula in exchange for some freedom of action. And in the mid-eighties the Craxi government did not hesitate to challenge the US in order to guarantee the continuity of that line of conduct. On that occasion Craxi, speaking in Parliament, compared Arafat to Mazzini. The end of the Yalta-established order has modified the traditional data of Italian foreign policy. However, the increased attention paid to Israel has also other causes: the changed attitude of the Church after the civil war and the Syrian occupation in Lebanon, events which both caused difficulties for the consistent Christian minorities; the hope that the Oslo process could reward the Italian ‘clear-sightedness’; last, but not least, the quarrelsome internal politics that make the Palestine conflict a mirror of the Roman conflicts. Lastly, the article connects the recent goodwill for Israel with the threats of Islamic terrorism in Italy. A political opinion trend would revisit the Middle Eastern conflict as the upturned perspective of a ‘clash of civilizations’ already existent nowadays. And a possible act of terrorism in Italy might give to this opinion a mass basis.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for the study of Modern Italy 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Agence FlashPress Infocatho, 3, 4, 5 November.Google Scholar
Allam, M. (2003) ‘Bin Laden in Italia’, Interview in Gnosis. Rivista italiana di intelligence , no. 25, January–April.Google Scholar
Andreotti, G. (2003) ‘È antiamericano il Patto Atlantico?’, interview in L'Unità , 25th March.Google Scholar
Annuario statistico della Chiesa, (2000) available at: http://www.fides.org/ita/statistiche/vaticano_100206.html Google Scholar
Aubert, R. (1975), ‘L’Église catholique de la crise de 1848 à la Première Guerre mondiale’, in Nouvelle Histoire de l'Église , eds Daniélou, J., Rogier, L-J., Aubert, R., and Knowles, D., Vol. 5, L'Église dans le monde moderne , Seuil, Paris.Google Scholar
Autorità garante della concorrenza e del mercato, Autorità per l'energia elettrica e il gas (2004) Indagine conoscitiva sullo stato della liberalizzazione del settore del gas naturale, Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato, Rome.Google Scholar
Cafagna, L. (2003), ‘Legittimazione e delegittimazione nella storia politica italiana’, in Due nazioni. Legittimazione e delegittimazione nella storia dell'Italia contemporanea , eds Di Nucci, L. and Galli della Loggia, E., Bologna, Il Mulino.Google Scholar
Caldarola, P. (2003), ‘La sinistra e Israele’, in Perché Israele. Appuntamento a Gerusalemme , Salomone Belforte & C, Livorno.Google Scholar
Candeloro, G. (1972) Il movimento cattolico , Feltrinelli, Milan.Google Scholar
Cervetto, A. (1980), ‘L'interventismo di sinistra' a fianco delle borghesie arabe’ in Lotta comunista , No. 19–20, September–October 1967, in L'imperialismo unitario , ed. Comunista, Lotta, Milan, pp. 956967.Google Scholar
Corradini, E. (1980), ‘Principii di nazionalismo’ (1st Nationalist Congress, December, 3, 1910), in Scritti e discorsi (1901–1914), ed. Strappini, L., Einaudi, Turin.Google Scholar
Cossiga, F. (2003) Italia e Israele dal 1948 ad oggi, in Isreal Diplomatic Network , http://roma.mfa.gov., May.Google Scholar
Cossiga, F. (2005) ‘Basta, facciamo un bel patto con Bin Laden’, interview with, in Libero quotidiano , 27 July.Google Scholar
De Giovannangeli, U. (2005) ‘La rivincita dei cristiani d'Oriente’, Limes , ‘L'agenda di papa Ratzinger’, no. 2 (supplement).Google Scholar
Ferrari, S. (2004) ‘La politica vaticana in Medio Oriente: oltre lo scontro di civiltà’, Vita e pensiero , no. 1, January–February.Google Scholar
Finkielkraut, A. (1983) La Réprobation d'Israël , Denoel/Gonthier, Paris.Google Scholar
Galoppini, E. (2001) Il fascismo e l'Islam , Ed. All'Insegna del Veltro, Parma].Google Scholar
Jemolo, A.C. (1965) Lo Stato e la Chiesa in Italia , Einaudi, Turin.Google Scholar
Lanaro, S. (1992) Storia dell'Italia repubblicana , Marsilio, Venice.Google Scholar
Laurens, H. (2000), ‘Le Vatican et la question de la Palestine’, in Nations et Saint-Siège au XXe siècle , eds Carrère d'Encausse, H. and Levillain, P., Fayard, Paris.Google Scholar
Liddell Hart, B.H. (1998) Storia di una sconfitta. La Seconda Guerra mondiale raccontata dai generali del Terzo Reich , Rizzoli, Milan, p. 280. Original version: The Other Side of the Hill, 1948.Google Scholar
Paternò, F. (2003) ‘L'Italia nel mirino. Non per caso’, Il Manifesto , 13 November. Google Scholar
Romano, S. (2003) ‘Andreotti, l'ex nemico (della sinistra)’, Corriere della Sera , 5 April. Google Scholar
Romano, S. (1993) ‘Guida alla politica estera italiana’, Rizzoli, Milan.Google Scholar
Romano, S. (2005) Memorie di un conservatore , TEA, Milan.Google Scholar
Sarfatti, M. (2003) ‘Ebrei italiani: la salvezza è a Sud’, Diario del mese , no. 1, year II, 24 January.Google Scholar
Silvestrini, Cardinal A. (21 December 2004) Conference on La Chiesa cattolica e il popolo giudaico dal Vaticano II a oggi , Gregorian University of Rome. Available at: http://www.nostreradici.it/Silvestrini-VatIsr.htm Google Scholar
Tas, L. (2002) Gli ebrei italiani . Available at: http://www.ucei.it/giornatadellacultura2002/ebreiitalia.html (website of Union of Italian Jewish Communities).Google Scholar
Teissier, B. (1996) Géopolitique de l'Italie , Ed. Complexe, Brussels.Google Scholar
Tremolada, I. (2003) All'ombra degli Arabi – Le relazioni italo-israeliane 1948–1956. Dalla fondazione dello Stato Ebraico alla crisi di Suez , M&B Publishing editore, Milan, Preface by Romano, S..Google Scholar
Webster, R.A. (1974) L'imperialismo industriale italiano , Einaudi, Turin. Modern Italy , Vol. 12, No. 3, November 2007, pp. 309325 Google Scholar